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The Suffragettes

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The Suffragettes Who were the Suffragettes? At the beginning of the 20th century only men were allowed to vote in elections for Members of Parliament. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Suffragettes


1
The Suffragettes
2
Who were the Suffragettes?
  • At the beginning of the 20th century only men
    were allowed to vote in elections for Members of
    Parliament.
  • Many women thought this was unfair and started to
    demand that women should be allowed to vote.
  • These women were called SUFFRAGETTES.
  • They were called this because the word suffrage
    means the right to vote.

3
The Leaders
  • The leader of the Suffragettes was a lawyers wife
    called Mrs Emmeline Pankhurst.
  • In 1903 Mrs Pankhurst started a society called
    the W.S.P.U (Womens Social and Political Union).
  • This was the organisation the Suffragettes
    belonged to.

4
WSPU leaders Annie Kenney (left) and Christabel
Pankhurst
5
The W.S.P.U.
  • The W.S.P.U. had headquarters in Manchester and
    London but soon branches formed all over Britain.
  • It was mainly a middle class movement but got
    some support from the working class.
  • Its motto Deeds, not words attracted many
    younger women.
  • Its aim was to persuade the Liberal government
    to give women the vote but the Prime Minister
    Herbert Asquith was against this.
  • The W.S.P.U. began a peaceful campaign which
    included marches, distributing leaflets and
    posters, sending letters and articles to
    newspapers.

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8
The Militant Campaign
  • As peaceful methods seemed to gain little, the
    W.S.P.U. began to break the law to gain publicity
    and support.
  • They disrupted political meetings of leading
    Liberal politicians and harassed MPs.
  • They began a campaign of vandalism smashing
    shop windows, painted slogans on buildings, cut
    telephone wires and slashed paintings in art
    galleries.
  • They chained themselves to railings near
    Parliament in London.
  • They set fire to letter boxes and empty public
    buildings.

9
Militancy Results in Death
  • On 4th of June 1913 the famous Derby horse race
    was run at Epsom Racecourse.
  • King George V and Queen Mary were there as the
    Kings horse, Amner, was running in the race.
  • During the race as a group of leading horses
    reached the bend called Tottenham Corner a
    suffragette named Emily Davidson ducked under the
    rails and rushed on to the racecourse.
  • The first horse missed her but she ran right into
    the track of the Kings horse.
  • The women was hurled into the air by the force of
    the collision and died later in hospital.
  • The horse fell, rose again and then galloped away
    dragging the jockey who had caught his foot in
    the stirrup. He survived.

10
I M P R I S O N M E N T
  • Many women were imprisoned for breaking the law.
  • Whilst in prison some women went on hunger strike
    to draw attention to their campaign.
  • The prison authorities force fed these women
    though this was dangerous to their health.
  • In one eighteen month period, Emmeline Pankhurst,
    who was 50 years old, endured 10 of these hunger
    strikes.

11
A drawing from the WSPU newspaper in 1909
12
The Cat and Mouse Act 1913
  • Many people were horrified at the cruelty of
    force feeding by prison authorities.
  • In reaction to this and after a general election
    in which the Liberals had lost a lot of support
    the government passed the Temporary Discharge of
    Prisoners Act (1913).
  • Hunger strikers who were very weak were released
    from prison but were then admitted back to prison
    once they were healthy.
  • However it proved difficult to re-arrest those
    released from prison.
  • This was known to the Suffragettes as The Cat and
    Mouse Act.

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14
Reaction to Militancy
  • The suffragettes did gain publicity for their
    cause.
  • Some suffragists left the WSPU and joined the
    Womens Freedom League which used less militant
    tactics.
  • Some members of the public believed that the
    extreme actions of the militants were proof that
    women did not deserve the right to vote.
  • Some ministers like Lloyd George and Winston
    Churchill were sympathetic to the womens cause
    but others were very much against them.
  • After the more militant actions of 1910 the
    government was determined not to give into force
    in case it encouraged other groups.
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