The Suffragettes risked imprisonment and were dubbed “wild” in their campaign for women’s rights to vote, but a century on their stories are being brought out of the shadows.
A hundred years to the day since voting rights were first granted to women in Britain, images of the activists behind the momentous occasion yesterday went on display in London’s Trafalgar Square.
The one-day outdoor exhibition, taking place where Suffragettes once held their rallies, is one of numerous events across Britain to celebrate the movement.
Photo: Reuters
Later this year, a statue of Millicent Fawcett, a heroine of the campaign, will be placed in nearby Parliament Square alongside other historic figures such as former prime minister Winston Churchill.
Fawcett was a “Suffragiste,” a campaigner for voting rights through non-violent action, as opposed to the Suffragettes, who advocated direction action to advance their cause.
However, Helen Pankhurst, great-granddaughter of celebrated Suffragette Emmeline Pankhurst, said their peaceful campaign should not be forgotten.
“The Suffragists have become lost in the story and I think they need to be part of the story,” she told reporters at the Foreign Press Association in London.
While Emmeline Pankhurst and her three daughters — Christabel, Adela and Sylvia — were figureheads of the movement, thousands of women of all ages and social class joined the campaign.
Close to 1,300 activists were arrested and some were force fed after going on hunger strike.
“Emmeline on her own would not have done what she did, no doubt about it,” said her great-granddaughter, whose book on the movement takes its title from the activists’ own motto: “Deeds not Words.”
Describing her great-grandmother as the “icon” of the struggle, a charismatic figure with great strength of character, Helen Pankhurst nonetheless puts the campaign’s success down to the broader movement.
“Without the other people underneath her, in particular her daughters, I think it would have never happened,” she said.
One of those unsung heroines was Alice Hawkins, a shoe factory machinist who led the campaign in Leicester, England, where on Sunday a statue of the Suffragette was unveiled.
A fitting tribute, her great-great-granddaughter Kate Barrat said.
“Suffragettes were not upper class feminists with time on their hands, but fearless mavericks who brought together women [and men] from all economic and social backgrounds,” she told Sky News.
The Suffragettes are also being celebrated by the institutions they once attacked, such as London’s National Portrait Gallery where an image of its founder, Thomas Carlyle, which was slashed in July 1914 is back on display.
The culprit, Anne Hunt, who was dubbed a “Hatchet Fiend,” “Fury with a Chopper” and “Wild Woman” in media reports, was sentenced to six months in jail for the stunt.
Fear of such attacks prompted museums to request women leave their bags and coats in cloakrooms, to stop activists concealing weapons, but a century on the Suffragettes have themselves become exhibition subjects.
“The suffragette general” Flora Drummond, “the arsonist actress” Kitty Marion, and “the organizer” Charlotte Marsh are among the forgotten activists featured at the Museum of London.
Objects used to chain themselves to railings, or to smash windows, are on display alongside postcards and materials such as dolls and games sold to raise funds for the cause.
“I think that it feels to the youngest generation a bit that they are on the shoulders of giants,” Helen Pankurst said.
However, 21st-century feminists should not be dissuaded, she added, as there are “many parallels” with women’s campaigns today.
“They are still challenging the norm,” she said. “The main parallel is women saying, ‘enough!’; women coming together, saying: ‘We can change things!’”
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