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A suffragette being removed from a meeting addressed by Lloyd George in 1913. PA Archive

Pics, video: Suffragette movement 100 years ago

In 1912, the suffragettes were engaged in an increasingly confrontational campaign to secure voting rights for women which included bomb attacks and hunger strikes.

WORLD WAR I proved the seismic turning point in the campaign for women’s suffrage in Britain. However, serious groundwork had been laid by the Suffragette movement in the years leading up to the Great War, particularly a century ago – in 1912 and 1913 – as their tactics became increasingly confrontational and controversial.

Campaigns calling for women to have voting rights began in the mid-19th century in response to the Great Reform Act which blocked women from voting. Millicent Garrett Fawcett launched her peaceful campaign for women’s rights in the 1860s, but the women’s suffrage campaign became more radical with the founding of the Women’s Social and Political Union in 1903 by Emmeline Pankhurst and her daughters Christabel and Sylvia.

Tactics employed by the suffragettes included lobbying campaigns targeting politicians and acts of civil disobedience such as mass protests, arson and disrupting political party meetings. Suffragettes who were arrested in connection with their campaign began holding hunger strikes in prison, but were forcibly fed. Here is an extract from an account suffragette Emily Wilding Davison wrote in 1912 of her force feeding experiences:

(Document via parliament.uk)

In February 1913, Emmeline Pankhurst was sentenced to three years after claiming responsibility for a bomb attack on a house being built for the then-Chancellor of the Exchequer David Lloyd George. No one was injured in the explosion, and Pankhurst was released early after going on hunger strike. According to a Manchester Guardian report at the time, Pankhurst said:

If they torture me with force-feeding, that cannot last very long; they cannot keep me alive very long; and they will have to let me die or let me go. If I drop out of the fight hundreds will take my place.

Photo of broken windows at Lloyd George’s house following the bomb attack. (PA Archive)

Two months after the attack on Lloyd George’s house, the Prisoners Temporary Discharge for Health Act was hurriedly passed through parliament. Under this legislation, hunger striking suffragettes in custody were monitored and released when they became seriously ill or weak, but could be re-arrested again once their health improved. However, the legislation – popularly known as the ‘Cat and Mouse Act’ – was counter-productive in failing to bolster public support against the suffragette movement.

Public awareness of the suffragette campaign was further heightened by a tragic event several weeks later. On 4 June 1913, Emily Wilding Davison stepped out in front of King George V’s horse during the Epsom Derby and died from her injuries a few days later.

(YouTube/britishpathe)

In photos: The Suffragette movement in 1912 and 1913:

The Suffragettes
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  • The Suffragettes

    Suffragettes Lady Barclay (Berkeley) and Miss Fitzgerald attempt to present a petition to the King at Buckingham palace in 1914. (PA Archive)
  • The Suffragettes

    Detail from a poster condeming the 1913 "Cat-and-Mouse" Act. (TOPHAMS/Topham Picturepoint)
  • The Suffragettes

    'Where shall I find the key? - Convicts and lunatics have no vote for parliament - Should all women be classed with these?' A poster from the Suffragette campaign of the early 20th century. (PA/TOPHAMS/Topham Picturepoint/Press Association Images)
  • The Suffragettes

    June 1913: the funeral procession of Emily Wilding Davison, after she was killed by throwing herself under King George V's horse at the Epsom Derby. (PA Archive)
  • The Suffragettes

    St Catherine's church, Hatcham, London, burnt down by suffragettes on 6 May, 1913. (PA Archive)
  • The Suffragettes

    Millicent Fawcett, who founded the National Union of Women's Suffrage, speaks at the Suffragette Pilgrimage in Hyde Park in July 1913. (PA Archive)
  • The Suffragettes

    Suffragettes protest outside of the Albert Hall where the International Congress of Medicine is being held. ( Sport & General/S&G Barratts/EMPICS Archive/PA)
  • The Suffragettes

    A suffragette is removed by police during a meeting in Sutton-on-Ashfield, 1913, addressed by David Lloyd George. (PA Archive)
  • The Suffragettes

    Detectives watching the London home of Emmeline Pankhurst, 1913. (PA Archive)
  • The Suffragettes

    Emmeline Pankhurst leaves Bow Street police station, London after being bailed on a conspiracy charge, 1912. (PA Archive)
  • The Suffragettes

    Women protesters being arrested in Hyde Park in 1912. (PA Archive)
  • The Suffragettes

    Suffragettes at a mass meeting in the Royal Albert Hall circa 1913. (PA Archive)
  • The Suffragettes

    A Suffragette meeting in 1912 amid a by-election at Holmfirth. (PA Archive)
  • The Suffragettes

    A Suffragette is led away by the Police during a London demonstration in 1912. (PA Archive)
  • The Suffragettes

    Police raid Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU) offices in Kingsway, London 1913. (PA Archive)
  • The Suffragettes

    Saunderton Station, Buckinghamshire was damaged by members of the Suffragettes as part of their escalating campaign for voting rights. (PA Archive)
  • The Suffragettes

    Image dated January 1913: Suffragettes from various parts of the country cycled to London for a meeting of the Suffragette Movement. (PA Archive)

WWI

The Suffragette campaign for voting rights was essentially suspended during World War I and the war saw a significant social shift in the numbers of women from different classes working in traditionally male-dominated roles to produce weapons and food.

Legislation empowering women to vote, run for office and take their seat in parliament was finally enacted in 1918. However, this legislation still restricted women voting with the inclusion of a clause requiring a minimum qualifying age of thirty for a woman to be allowed vote. Equal terms with male voters were enacted ten years later with the Representation of the People (Equal Franchise Act) 1928.

The first woman elected to the House of Commons was the Irish revolutionary Constance Markievicz, who refused to take up her seat in accordance with her party Sinn Féin’s boycott of the British parliament.

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13 Comments
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    Mute Sean Reddin
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    Nov 6th 2020, 12:32 PM

    Wouldn’t be like the church to break the law and get away with it.

    154
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    Mute Sarah Cullen
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    Nov 6th 2020, 12:12 PM

    Why are the department of health commenting on priests….is there a connection??

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    Mute Critical Thinker
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    Nov 6th 2020, 1:10 PM

    @Sarah Cullen: Because the dept of health has become the government and the judiciary

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    Mute Jim Buckley Barrett
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    Nov 6th 2020, 12:36 PM

    So if I have a house party I could be fined up to €2,500 and face 6 months in prison unless I’m a priest, in which case I can hold multiple mass each week and have no fear….

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    Mute Sarah Cullen
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    Nov 6th 2020, 12:38 PM

    @Jim Buckley Barrett: Invite a priest to the party….sorted!

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    Mute Kevin Kane
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    Nov 6th 2020, 1:03 PM

    @Sarah Cullen: Id’ recommend The Spinmaster, Father Billy O’Dwyer.

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    Mute Patrick Hudi Irwin
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    Nov 6th 2020, 1:54 PM

    @Sarah Cullen: lol

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    Mute Mary Nugent
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    Nov 6th 2020, 4:16 PM

    @Jim Buckley Barrett: drink all the red wine you want, it’s Gods will.

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    Mute Vanessa
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    Nov 6th 2020, 12:29 PM

    We are NOT in anything together beside trying to dodge rules as much as possible as it seems.

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    Mute hasnooneasked
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    Nov 6th 2020, 2:54 PM

    @Vanessa: so what would you do

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    Mute Derek Moran
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    Nov 6th 2020, 12:43 PM

    What about ordained jedi Knights?

    39
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    Mute NotMyIreland
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    Nov 6th 2020, 1:42 PM

    So religious gatherings are ok? So the 30 people coming to mine this evening are ok because we are all members of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster or Pastafarians, celebrating our holy day.

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    Mute dublinguide.ie
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    Nov 6th 2020, 4:40 PM

    @NotMyIreland:
    No they’re not ok, it clearly states that

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    Mute Vanessa
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    Nov 6th 2020, 5:25 PM

    @dublinguide.ie: There’s nothing clear. That’s seems to be the reason for the discussion

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    Mute NotMyIreland
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    Nov 6th 2020, 6:38 PM

    @dublinguide.ie: yeah but for religious reasons I couldn’t get prosecuted

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    Mute Mark Walsh
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    Nov 6th 2020, 11:01 PM

    @NotMyIreland: Jah …Pastafari

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    Mute Critical Thinker
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    Nov 6th 2020, 1:08 PM

    Why is the dept of health commented on what should be judicial matters?

    27
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    Mute Sportmad
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    Nov 6th 2020, 2:48 PM

    I say bring back the Mass Rock Services might be cold but worth it..
    There are a lot of people who miss the services of Mass..

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    Mute ÓDuibhír Abú
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    Nov 6th 2020, 3:05 PM

    @Sportmad: Changing bread into a Body and Wine into Blood. It’s a Good Show.

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    Mute David Van-Standen
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    Nov 6th 2020, 4:04 PM

    Any priest or other cleric that holds mass or service during the current restrictions, is clearly demonstrating a complete disregard for the safety of their local community.

    Whether they can or should bend or fudge the measures in place to hold such gatherings isn’t a question of legal clarity, it’s a matter of moral duty and obligation to prevent the spread of covid19 within their communities.

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    Mute Michael Byrne
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    Nov 6th 2020, 5:35 PM

    @David Van-Standen: David, That’s nonsense, even as a non mass goer, i can sympathize with those who want mass and are being denied access to their faith, if distancing can be enforced what difference is people gathering in a church, over gathering in a supermarket??

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    Mute Karel Aija
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    Nov 6th 2020, 6:31 PM

    @Michael Byrne: if their faith resides in the walls of a church and not their heart/soul/mind, then yes they have been denied access, and rightfully so. If they need to listen to a papi, they can do so online. Drink your wine and eat your bread at home. Offer your peace in spirit, not in touch. Completely agree that churches can stay shut to the public for a few weeks. It is not an essential service, since religion resides within us, not churches.

    What what would you do if the church is packed to capacity and not all who want to enter can get in? If god resides in the church then who is the authorised person to say that the ones outside the church doors are not worthy enough to enter the mass but others are? Better to have no ceremony, than a ceremony for some and not all.

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    Mute David Van-Standen
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    Nov 6th 2020, 9:12 PM

    @Michael Byrne: so you don’t believe that priests have a duty of care for their congregations and a responsibility to protect them from a known public health threat during a pandemic?

    Practising faith doesn’t require a physical place if you believe your God is omnipresent does it?

    If people want to observe the ritual of a mass the tools are available to do so online and accessible to anyone with a internet connected device or phone.

    On supermarkets verses church, for engaging with the supermarket of their choice, many people are using technology to order shopping and have it delivered, but others are still physically going to shops to get food, because these are the options.

    Engaging with your God of choice doesn’t require either a delivery service or a franchised outlet…

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    Mute David Corrigan
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    Nov 6th 2020, 12:10 PM

    OK.

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    Mute John Lynch
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    Nov 6th 2020, 6:06 PM

    Did any priest celebrate Mass? None named. So what is this all about? The usual sneering from modern heroes who specialize in insulting old people and priests.

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    Mute Jonathan
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    Nov 6th 2020, 12:25 PM

    Lock them up

    17
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    Mute gary mullen
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    Nov 6th 2020, 7:27 PM

    Leo Martin OUT Mary Lou IN

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    Mute Darren Callaghan
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    Nov 6th 2020, 6:47 PM

    The big churches in Ireland are probably only at about 5% of their capacity on a normal Sunday anyway, you would be hard pressed to find anyone under 60 at a normal Sunday service these days so just let them use social distancing and masks, and as the Catholic Church has so much land and property that they have no use for anymore maybe they should sell this land and properties and give the money they owe to the victims of their past atrocities

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    Mute Mona Murphy
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    Nov 7th 2020, 12:12 AM

    @Darren Callaghan: how do you know how many attend when you dont. The Church I go to mass in, or did before the lock down had a very large crowd attending mass. So speak when you know what you are talking about.

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    Mute Bramer
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    Nov 7th 2020, 2:23 AM

    Well they weren’t arrested when they were screwing kids so what’s new!

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    Mute John Lynch
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    Nov 8th 2020, 11:04 AM

    @Bramer:
    Pavlovian response. Say the word ‘priest’ and here we go again.

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    Mute Michael Mcshane
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    Nov 6th 2020, 7:04 PM

    Only God Almighty can judge thee…. :D

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    Mute thomas patrick
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    Nov 6th 2020, 7:41 PM

    Wow… so my comment was removed… this is what that feels like….

    I didn’t name anyone or call out any “fake information”

    1
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    Mute Sarah Cullen
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    Nov 6th 2020, 8:28 PM

    @thomas patrick: no way?? I do not actually know what was wrong with it, its a fact they haven’t been convicted?!

    1
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