miércoles, 4 de mayo de 2016

Suffragettes

Facts and Figures Up until the middle of the 1800s less than 10% of the population could vote in elections in the UK- and they were all men!

Emmeline Pankhurst set up the Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU) in 1903; the Daily Mail newspaper coined the term ‘Suffragettes’.

From 1908 the WSPU adopted the colour scheme of purple, white and green: purple symbolised dignity, white meant purity, and green stood for hope.

In 1918, after a long campaign by women (and some men) from all over the county and from all backgrounds, around 8.4 million women in Britain were given the vote.
The People  
Constance Lytton was born into a privileged family but rebelled against the conventions of her class and campaigned for better treatment of women, particularly in prison. She disguised herself as

Jane Wharton to make sure she was treated like other Suffragettes. She once carved a V for ‘votes’ into her chest whilst in prison, and was constantly active in the campaigns against the government, even after becoming very ill.

Emmeline Pankhurst was the leader of the British Suffragette movement. Her campaigns used more extreme methods.

Emily Wilding Davison was imprisoned nine times, and force fed on forty-nine occasions. She once spent the night hidden in Parliament to claim it was her address on the census. She was killed at the 1913 Epsom Derby horse race, when she stepped out in front of the King’s horse, to highlight the Suffragette cause.

Herbert Asquith was the Prime Minister from 1908-1916, and was an opponent of giving women the right to vote. 

Key Dates  
1869: Some female tax payers were entitled to vote in local elections around the UK.

1912: The Suffragettes began to use militant tactics, partly in protest of Mr Asquith breaking his promise by not signing a bill to give women the vote, arguably due to fears that they would use their votes against his party!

1914: Militant tactics stopped due to the First Wold War, however during the war women begin to take on a wider range of roles in society, convincing many people that they deserved greater equality and suffrage.

1918: The government created a law enabling women over 30 to vote, this dropped to 21 in 1928, and 18 in 1969.

1919: Nancy Astor became the first women to take a seat in the House of Commons.

1979: Britain got its first, and so far only, female Prime Minister: Margaret Thatcher
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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