| Who
was Emmeline Pankhurst? Leader of the Suffragette Movement.

Date and Place of
Birth: 14th July 1868, Manchester, England.
Family Background:
Daughter of Robert Goulden a radical businessman and Sophia
Crane a passionate feminist and attendee at Women’s Suffrage meetings.
Education:
Manchester School. Finishing school in Paris at the age of 15.
Chronology:
1870: Richard
Marsden Pankhurst a lawyer, later to become Emmeline's husband,
drafts the first Married Women’s Property Act.
1880: Daughter
Christabel Harriette is born.
1882: Daughter
Sylvia is born.
1889: Becomes
a founder member of the Women’s Franchise League. Her husband
Richard dies of a perforated ulcer.
1894: The League
wins the right for Women to vote in local elections but not for
the national parliament.
1895: Becomes
a Poor Law Guardian which meant regular visits to the Work House
and was particularly shocked at the way women were treated.
1901: Daughter
Christabel meets Eva Gore-Booth who
was trying to encourage working women in Manchester to join the
National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies and is so impressed
with her work that she joins the movement also, closely followed
by Emmeline and her sister Slyvia.
1903: Founds the
Women’s Social and Political Union in Manchester.
1905: (October)
Two of the Union members, Christabel Pankhurst and Annie Kenney
are eventually jailed after being thrown out for disturbing a
Liberal Party meeting and “assaulting” police officers. They refused
to pay their fines.
1906: Emmeline
now organises the WSPU activities from London. Many marches and
rallies are held and the Liberal Candidates are targeted during
the elections. The women disturb Cabinet Meetings. The Daily Mail
newspaper sneeringly described them as Suffragettes but the movement
adopted the title with pride.
1908: Emmeline
is jailed herself three times.
1910: (18th November)
Pankhurst and her followers try to get into the House of Commons
to see the Prime Minister Herbert Asquith to protest against the
dropping of the Conciliation Bill, which would have given votes
to women. Pankhurst is refused entry by the police. The meeting
breaks out into a riot as the women charge police lines and over
100 are arrested.
1912: The WPSU
becomes increasingly more militant under the influence of Christabel
who has fled to Paris to avoid arrest and arson attacks, window
smashing and vandalising works of art take place. Emmeline is
arrested twelve times during the year and serves a total of 30
days in jail.
1913: The so called
“Cat and Mouse Act is brought in. The Prisoners (Temporary) Discharge
for Ill-Health Act which means that hunger-striking prisoners
can be released until they are well enough to serve the rest of
their sentences.
1914: At the beginning
of the First World War Emmeline and Christabel call off their
Campaign to support the War effort and all suffragettes are released
from prison. She tours the United States, Canada and Russia to
encourage the mobilisation of women.
1915: The WPSU
changes the name of its newspaper from "The Suffragette"
to "Britannia".
1917: The WSPU
changes its name to the Women’s Party.
1918: The representation
of the People Act gives the vote to Women over 30. Pankhurst tours
the U.S. and Canada for several years.
1926: Emmeline
returns to England and is chosen as the Conservative Candidate
for a seat in East London but her health takes a turn for the
worse before she can be elected.
1928: The amended
Representation of the People Act is passed a few weeks after her
death which gives the same voting rights to women as to men.
Marriage: 1878
to Richard Pankhurst a lawyer 24 years her senior.
Places of Interest:
LONDON:
Womens Library, Old Castle Street, E1 7NT.
MANCHESTER:
Pankhurst Centre, 60-62 Nelson Street, Manchester,
M13 9WP.
Date and Place of
Death: 14th June 1928, Dr Chetham Strode's Nursing
Home, London, England.
Age at Death:
60.
Site of Grave:
Brompton Cemetery, West Brompton, London, England |