Bull was born in
Great Holland Hall in Essex in 1877. She went to
Girton Hall where she won a prize every year until she obtained a first degree in classics in 1899. She was a lecturer at
Westfield College in 1900–1901, then taught at Belvedere High School,
Liverpool (1901–1904) and was a fellow at
Bryn Mawr College (1904–1905). (by
Lena Connell) Bull's mother,
Lilian Hicks, had been associated with the suffrage cause since Amy was a young girl. They were both members by 1902 of the
Central Society for Women's Suffrage and they were soon joining celebrations of civil disobedience in pursuit of their cause. By 1907 they were both in the
Women's Freedom League and Bull was serving as a secretary. Bull was imprisoned for three weeks for obstruction that year. Bull and her mother were arrested on
Black Friday on 18 November 1910. The first World War started in 1914 and Bull served in the
Women's Volunteer Reserve which had been founded by suffragettes to help the war effort. She married John Major Bull on 4 August 1927. She went on be a
rural district councillor and to lecture on home produced food to meetings of
Women's Institutes. She was awarded an MBE in 1948. Bull died in
Little Baddow in 1953. == References ==