hid in the
House of Commons to be enumerated in Parliament. This
census was subject to protests by
women seeking the right to vote in the UK. Several suffragette organisations urged women and supporters of women's enfranchisement to boycott the census. The movement was also advertised by suffragist and writer
Laurence Housman through a series of articles published in
The Vote, in which he argued for the reasoning and tactical benefits of the proposal. He also wrote fiction supporting the movement, setting this series in a potential future where the boycott went well. Her husband supported her position as he annotated the Census form that he had 'conscientious scruples' as head of household to note any 'female occupants' to avoid the census statistics being used by legislators for 'further vexatious legislation' against women 'in which they have no voice'. He went on to say he would provide the information if the
Conciliation Committee Bill passed into law. The Registrar did however note two females as 'the probable number'. Other suffragettes evaded the census by hiding overnight so that they could not be counted. In places throughout the UK, activists organised rallies or threw parties for suffragettes away from home, some for recreation, others for making political statements.
Dorothy Evans organised parties for census boycotters in
Birmingham, while
Annie Kenney organised the census boycott in
Bristol, Most famously,
Emily Davison hid herself in a cupboard in the
House of Commons at the
Palace of Westminster overnight, becoming, when found, listed on the form as an occupant of the building. She could thus be enumerated in Parliament. The impact of the census boycott is unclear.
Margaret Nevinson wrote in the
Suffrage Annual that some thousands of women did not appear in the census for that reason. The estimate by
Agnes Metcalfe that the figure was at least 100,000 is doubted. ==Online access==