The Women's Suffrage Movement
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Process Paper and Bibliography
ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY Primary Sources Books Kenney, Annie. Memories of a Militant. London: Edward Arnold & Co, 1924. Autobiography of Annie Kenney. Lytton, Constance, and Jane Warton. Prisons & Prisoners. London: William Heinemann, 1914. Personal experiences of Lady Constance Lytton. Pankhurst, Christabel. Unshackled. London: Hutchinson and Co (Publishers) Ltd, 1959. Autobiography of Christabel Pankhurst. Pankhurst, Emmeline. My Own Story. London: Hearst’s International Library Co, 1914. Autobiography of Emmeline Pankhurst. Newspaper Articles "Amazing Scenes in London." Western Daily Mercury (Plymouth), March 5, 1912. Window breaking in March 1912, leading to trials of Mrs. Pankhurst and Mr. & Mrs. Pethick- Lawrence. "The Argument of the Broken Pane." Votes for Women (London), February 23, 1912. The argument of the stone: speech delivered by Mrs Pankhurst on Feb 16, 1912 honoring released prisoners who had served two or three months for window-breaking demonstration in November 1911. "Attempt to Burn Theatre Royal." The Scotsman (Edinburgh), July 19, 1912. PM Asquith's visit hailed by Irish Nationalists, protested by Suffragettes; hatchet thrown into Mr. Asquith's carriage, attempt to burn Theatre Royal. "By the Vanload." Lancashire Daily Post (Preston), February 15, 1907. "Twenty shillings or fourteen days." The women's raid on Parliament on Feb 13, 1907: Christabel Pankhurst gets fourteen days and Sylvia Pankhurst gets 3 weeks in prison. "Coal That Cooks." The Suffragette (London), July 18, 1913. Thirst strikes. Attempts to escape from "Cat and Mouse" encounters. "Churchill Gives Explanation." Dundee Courier (Dundee), July 15, 1910. Winston Churchill's position on the Conciliation Bill. "The Ejection." Morning Post (London), October 24, 1906. 1 The day after the October 23rd Parliament session during which Premier Henry Campbell- Bannerman cold-shouldered WSPU, leading to protest led by Mrs Pankhurst that led to eleven arrests, including that of Mrs Pethick-Lawrence and gave impetus to the movement. -
The Battle of Equality Contents 1
The Battle Of Equality Contents 1. Contents 2. Women’s Rights 3. 10 Famous women who made women’s suffrage happen. 4. Suffragettes 5. Suffragists 6. Who didn’t want women’s suffrage 7. Time Line of The Battle of Equality 8. Horse Derby 9. Pictures Woman’s Rights There were two groups that fought for woman's rights, the WSPU and the NUWSS. The NUWSS was set up by Millicent Fawcett. The WSPU was set up by Emmeline Pankhurst and her daughters. The WSPU was created because they didn’t want to wait for women’s rights by campaigning and holding petitions. They got bored so they created the WSPU. The WSPU went to the extreme lengths just to be heard. Whilst the NUWSS jus campaigned for women’s rights. 10 Famous women who made women’s suffrage happen. Emmeline Pankhurst (suffragette) - Leader of the suffragettes Christabel Pankhurst (suffragette)- Director of the most dangerous suffragette activities Constance Lytton (suffragette)- Daughter of viceroy Robert Bulwer-Lytton Emily Davison (suffragette)- Killed by kings horse Millicent Fawcett (suffragist)- Leader of the suffragist Edith Garrud (suffragette)- World professional Jiu-Jitsu master Silvia Pankhurst (suffragist)- Focused on campaigning and got expelled from the suffragettes by her sister Ethel Smyth (suffragette)- Conducted the suffragette anthem with a toothbrush Leonora Cohen (suffragette)- Smashed the display case for the Crown Jewels Constance Markievicz (suffragist)- Played a prominent role in ensuring Winston Churchill was defeated in elections Suffragettes The suffragettes were a group of women who wanted to vote. They did dangerous things like setting off bombs. The suffragettes were actually called The Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU). -
Item Captions Teachers Guide
SUFFRAGE IN A BOX: ITEM CAPTIONS TEACHERS GUIDE 1 1 The Polling Station. (Publisher: Suffrage Atelier). 1 Suffrage campaigners were experts in creating powerful propaganda images which expressed their sense of injustice. This image shows the whole range of women being kept out of the polling station by the law and authority represented by the policeman. These include musicians, clerical workers, mothers, university graduates, nurses, mayors, and artists. The men include gentlemen, manual workers, and agricultural labourers. This hints at the class hierarchies and tensions which were so important in British society at this time, and which also influenced the suffrage movement. All the women are represented as gracious and dignified, in contrast to the men, who are slouching and casual. This image was produced by the Suffrage Atelier, which brought together artists to create pictures which could be quickly and easily reproduced. ©Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford: John Johnson Collection; Postcards 12 (385) Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford John Johnson Collection; Postcards 12 (385) 2 The late Miss E.W. Davison (1913). Emily Wilding Davison is best known as the suffragette who 2 died after being trampled by the King’s horse on Derby Day, but as this photo shows, there was much more to her story. She studied at Royal Holloway College in London and St Hugh’s College Oxford, but left her job as a teacher to become a full- time suffragette. She was one of the most committed militants, who famously hid in a cupboard in the House of Commons on census night, 1911, so that she could give this as her address, and was the first woman to begin setting fire to post boxes. -
September 2006.Pub
Lambda Philatelic PUBLICATION OF THE GAY AND LESBIAN HISTORY ON STAMPS CLUB Journal Ï SEPTEMBER 2006, VOL. 25, NO. 2, WHOLE NO. 95 Plus the final installment of Paul Hennefeld’s Handbook Update September 2006, Whole No. 95, Vol. 25, No. 3 The Lambda Philatelic Journal (ISSN 1541-101X) is published MEMBERSHIP: quarterly by the Gay and Lesbian History on Stamps Club (GLHSC). GLHSC is a study unit of the American Topical As- Yearly dues in the United States, Canada and Mexico are sociation (ATA), Number 458; an affiliate of the American Phila- $10.00. For all other countries, the dues are $15.00. All checks should be made payable to GLHSC. telic Society (APS), Number 205; and a member of the American First Day Cover Society (AFDCS), Number 72. Single issues $3. The objectives of GLHSC are to promote an interest in the col- There are two levels of membership: lection, study and dissemination of knowledge of worldwide philatelic material that depicts: 1) Supportive, your name will not be released to APS, ATA or AFDCS, and 2) Active, your name will be released to APS, ATA and 6 Notable men and women and their contributions to society AFDCS (as required). for whom historical evidence exists of homosexual or bisex- ual orientation, Dues include four issues of the Lambda Philatelic Journal and 6 Mythology, historical events and ideas significant in the his- a copy of the membership directory. (Names will be with- tory of gay culture, held from the directory upon request.) 6 Flora and fauna scientifically proven to having prominent New memberships received from January through September homosexual behavior, and will receive all back issues and directory for that calendar 6 Even though emphasis is placed on the above aspects of year. -
Chapter 1 Victorian Feminism and the Periodical Press
Notes Chapter 1 Victorian Feminism and the Periodical Press 1 F.P. Cobbe, Life, p. 535. 2 For further discussion, see B. Caine, ‘Feminism, Journalism and Public Debate.’ Another central suffrage figure, the Mancunian Lydia Becker, was also involved in the British Association for the Advancement of Science, advocated for girls’ science education, and had aspired herself to a profession in science. She printed Botany for Novices privately, though Star Gazing for Novices remained unpublished. See J.E. Parker, ‘Lydia Becker’s “School for Science”.’ See also A. Kelly, Lydia Becker and the Cause. 3 S. Collini, Public Moralists, p. 53. 4 S. Collini, Public Moralists, p. 55. 5 S. Peacock, Theological and Ethical Writings, notes that Froude, editor of Fraser’s Magazine during Cobbe’s time there, tells her that they risk courting controversy over her theist pieces for the magazine, a salutory reminder that what constitutes risk taking has shifted considerably from 1862 to now. See also J.L. Larsen, ‘Where is the Woman in this Text?,’ who analyses Cobbe’s rhetorical style in Broken Lights as a form of feminist activism. 6 B. Caine, ‘Feminism, Journalism and Public Debate,’ 110. The three volumes of E.K. Helsinger, R. Sheets Lauterbach and W. Veeder (eds), The Woman Question gives a very full sense of how thoroughly the question of ‘woman’ infused Victorian books, papers, and periodicals. 7 For an overview of these points, see W. Houghton, ‘Periodical Literature and the Articulate Classes’ and L. Brake, Subjugated Knowledges. For a discussion of the rise of a professional intellectual class see T.W. -
The, Suffragette Movement in Great Britain
/al9 THE, SUFFRAGETTE MOVEMENT IN GREAT BRITAIN: A STUDY OF THE FACTORS INFLUENCING THE STRATEGY CHOICES OF THE WOMEN'S SOCIAL AND POLITICAL UNION, 1903-1918 THESIS Presented to the Graduate Council of the North Texas State University in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the Degree of MASTER OF SCIENCE By Derril Keith Curry Lance, B. S. Denton, Texas. December, 1977 Lance, Derril Keith Curry, The Suffragette Movement in Great Britain: A Study of the Factors Influencing the Strategy Choices of the Women's Social and Political Union, 1903-1918, Master of Science (Sociology), Decem- ber, 1977, 217 pp., 4 tables, bibliography, 99 titles. This thesis challenges the conventional wisdom that the W.S.P.U.'s strategy choices were unimportant in re- gard to winning women's suffrage. It confirms the hypo- thesis that the long-range strategy of the W.S.P.U. was to escalate coercion until the Government exhausted its powers of opposition and conceded, but to interrupt this strategy whenever favorable bargaining opportunities with the Government and third parties developed. In addition to filling an apparent research gap by systematically analyzing these choices, this thesis synthesizes and tests several piecemeal theories of social movements within the general framework of the natural history approach. The analysis utilizes data drawn from movement leaders' auto- biographies, documentary accounts of the militant movement, and the standard histories of the entire British women's suffrage movement. Additionally, extensive use is made of contemporary periodicals and miscellaneous works on related movements. TABLE OF CONTENTS Page LIST OF TABLES . Chapter I. -
1 Guardian Archive Women's Suffrage Catalogue Compiled by Jane
Guardian Archive Women’s Suffrage Catalogue Compiled by Jane Donaldson March 2017. Archive Reference: GDN/118/63 Title: Letter from Lydia Becker to C. P. Scott Extent: 1 sheet Scope and Content: Letter from Lydia Becker (1827–1890), suffragist leader, thanking Scott for his comments, which she shall not publish without his permission. She asks if she can use his name and publish his letter among the others she has received, as it is important to obtain various opinions. [This may relate to an article, ‘Female Suffrage’, for the magazine, the Contemporary Review, written after seeing Barbara Bodichon, artist and women’s activist, speak in 1886]. Date: 28 Jun 1886 Archive Reference: GDN/123/54 Title: Letter from A. Urmston to C. P. Scott Extent: 1 sheet Scope and Content: Letter from A. Urmston, Secretary of Leigh Co-operative Women's Guild asking, if Scott was returned [as a member of parliament?], would he vote for a Bill for Women’s Suffrage and support the extension of the Parliamentary franchise to women who already possess the various local franchises? Date: [Oct] 1900 Archive Reference: GDN/123/55 Title: Letter from C. P. Scott to A. Urmston Extent: 1 sheet Scope and Content: Letter from C. P. Scott to A. Urmston, Secretary of Leigh Co-operative Women's Guild, in reply to GDN/123/54, saying that he is in favour of extending the Parliamentary franchise to women on the same grounds as men, and that municipal and Parliamentary registers should be identical. [This last point is scored through]. Date: 6 Oct 1900 1 Archive Reference: GDN /124/149 Title: Letter from W. -
A Prostitution of the Profession?: the Ethical Dilemma of Suffragette
22-4-2020 ‘A Prostitution of the Profession’?: The Ethical Dilemma of Suffragette Force-Feeding, 1909–14 - A History of Force Feeding - NCBI … NCBI Bookshelf. A service of the National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health. Miller I. A History of Force Feeding: Hunger Strikes, Prisons and Medical Ethics, 1909-1974. Basingstoke (UK): Palgrave Macmillan; 2016 Aug 26. Chapter 2 ‘A Prostitution of the Profession’?: The Ethical Dilemma of Suffragette Force-Feeding, 1909–14 In 2013, the British Medical Association wrote to President Obama and US Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel inveighing against force-feeding policies at Guantánamo Bay. The Association was deeply concerned with the ethical problems associated with feeding prisoners against their will, seeing this as a severe violation of medical ethics. To support its emotive claims, the Association pointed to the Declarations of Tokyo (1975) and Malta (1991) which had 1 both clearly condemned force-feeding as unethical. Nonetheless, American military authorities had resurrected the practice, the Association suggested, to avoid facing an embarrassing set of prison deaths that risked turning 2 international opinion against Guantánamo and the nature of its management. Like other critics, the Association had some compassion for military doctors who seemed to be caught in an unhappy dilemma: Should they prevent suicides by force-feeding or oversee slow, excruciating deaths from starvation? Yet despite showing empathy, critics from within the medical profession, such as British general -
The Other October Revolution
The other October Revolution – art and the advent of women’s tertiary education in Britain Barbara Bodichon and Helen Blackburn at Girton College, 1869 Lara Nicholls, Assistant Curator, Australian Paintings and Sculpture PhD Candidate Alfred Waterhouse, Architectural drawings of Girton College, Cambridge University (DATE, watercolour on paper, Girton College Archives Barbara Bodichon collecting foliage for her painting in Algiers Barbara Leigh Smith Elizabeth Guinness Self-portrait Helen Blackburn Drawing in pen and ink Emily Mary Osborn (1828 – 1925) Nameless and friendless: The rich man’s wealth is his strong city, London 1857, Royal Academy; Tate Britain, purchased 2009 Emily Mary Osborn Barbara Leigh Smith Bodichon, London, 1883 - 84 oil on canvas, Girton College, Cambridge, Gift of A.G. Hastings, 1963. Emily Mary Osborn Barbara Leigh Smith Bodichon, sketch for a portrait of Bodichon, ink on board, Girton College, presented by A Haley & Co., Wakefield, 1949. Whereabouts of the oil painting unknown. Barbara Bodichon Ye Newe Generation Munich, 1850 Painting trip to Europe with Anna Mary Howitt and Jane Benham Howitt writes An Art Student in Munich, the central character of Justina was based on Barbara. Ventnor, Isle of Wight, 1856 Sisters working in our fields, c. 1858 – 60, Algeria Watercolour and bodycolor 28 x 42.5 inches; signed, Watercolour and bodycolor on paper inscribed and dated 1856. Provenance: Christopher From "the villa on the green heights of Mustapha Superieur" which the Wood, London Exhibited: Royal Academy, 1856, no. -
A Study of the Women's Suffrage Movement in Nineteenth-Century English Periodical Literature
PRINT AND PROTEST: A STUDY OF THE WOMEN'S SUFFRAGE MOVEMENT IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY ENGLISH PERIODICAL LITERATURE Bonnie Ann Schmidt B.A., University College of the Fraser Valley, 2004 THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREEE OF MASTER OF ARTS In the Department of History 43 Bonnie Ann Schmidt 2005 SIMON FRASER UNIVERSITY Fa11 2005 All rights reserved. This work may not be reproduced in whole or in part, by photocopy or other means, without permission of the author. APPROVAL Name: Bonnie Ann Schmidt Degree: Master of Arts Title: Print and Protest: A Study of the Women's Suffrage Movement in Nineteenth-Century English Periodical Literature Examining Committee: Dr. Ian Dyck Senior Supervisor Associate Professor of History Dr. Mary Lynn Stewart Supervisor Professor of Women's Studies Dr. Betty A. Schellenberg External Examiner Associate Professor of English Date Defended: NOV.s/15 SIMON FRASER UN~VER~~brary DECLARATION OF PARTIAL COPYRIGHT LICENCE The author, whose copyright is declared on the title page of this work, has granted to Simon Fraser University the right to lend this thesis, project or extended essay to users of the Simon Fraser University Library, and to make partial or single copies only for such users or in response to a request from the library of any other university, or other educational institution, on its own behalf or for one of its users. The author has further granted permission to Simon Fraser University to keep or make a digital copy for use in its circulating collection, and, without changing the content, to translate the thesislproject or extended essays, if technically possible, to any medium or format for the purpose of preservation of the digital work. -
A Virtual Museum by Amelie Wiltshire 7Z Welcome to My Virtual Museum!
TheThe extensionextension ofof suffragesuffrage A virtual museum by Amelie Wiltshire 7z Welcome to my virtual museum! This museum is about the extension of suffrage, women’s rights and empowerment, I hope you enjoy it! The Langham place group and Barbara Bodichon Barbara Bodichon was the founder of the Langham place group, which she started in 1857 to campaign on issues that affected women , like their non-existent rights to do anything a man could. This group would try and find ‘mens work’ for women and made the issues known to all women through the ‘English Woman's Journal’, some of them being how women could not divorce and how quite a few laws included women being harmed. Selina Cooper From the age of 11, Selina had worked in a cotton mill and she had joined the NUWSS near her. She also previously worked in the Co-operative Guilds, and helped with the 1901 petition for women’s suffrage. A very talented speaker and active in local politics, she quickly got invited to speak at rallies for NUWSS, and in 1910, was one of four woman to present the women's suffrage case to the Prime Minister, and in time became the first ever woman elected to the Boards of Guardians! Harriet Taylor Mill Harriet Taylor Mill was an amazing writer, she wrote an anonymous essay called ‘The enfranchisement of women’.(Her husband, John Stuart Mill,thought her ideas were phenomenal and wrote a similar pamphlet named ‘The Subjection of Women’) The main aim of this was to help women to get the power of voting, but mostly for women just to have equality in all of life, to prove that women are just as good as men. -
From Suffrage to Citizenship Timeline
From Suffrage to Citizenship in Nottingham Early activity 1866: First National Women’s Suffrage Petition presented – signed by 50 Nottingham women. 1869 & 1870: Nottingham Women’s Suffrage Petitions presented in parliament. 1872: Nottingham Committee of Women’s Suffrage Society set up. 1881: Petition from 885 Nottingham women householders presented by Arnold Morley MP. 1897: Nottingham affiliates to National Union of Women’s Suffrage Society (NUWSS) led by Millicent Fawcett with Nellie Dowson as Nottingham chair & national representative. 1903 Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU) set up in Manchester by Emmeline Pankhurst. Above: NUWSS poster. 1906 Left: WSPU badge. Nottingham WSPU branch set up – secretary May Burgis. First use of ‘suffragette’ by Daily Mail. 1907 2 December: WSPU meeting at Mechanics’ Institute – speakers include Christabel Pankhurst, Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence & Una Dugdale. Men/students heckling, The women of Nottingham are with us “ mice released, ‘scenes of unbelievable disorder.’ … the men of Nottingham had to burn 9 December: Women-only meeting at Circus Street Hall – Helen Watts joins WSPU. down the Castle before they got the 1908 vote. We shall continue our tactics. April: Christabel Pankhurst addresses WSPU meeting of 450. ” Nottingham Post May: Emmeline Pankhurst speaks at WSPU meeting. F Alice and Maud Dowson from NUWSS attend WSPU London meeting. A 11 June: Large NUWSS demonstration on Forest Recreation Ground. 14 June: Nellie Dowson plus 30 women attend 10,000 strong NUWSS London demonstration. I 30 June: WSPU London protest – deliberate rough handling by police. T 18 July: WSPU mass meeting on Forest – 8 platforms with 20-30,000 attended. H 1909 P 24 February: Helen Watts arrested outside Parliament for ‘wilful obstruction’.