Feek was born in 1876 in
Pershore,
Worcestershire, she was the daughter of clergyman Julius and Marion Feek of Myrtle Cottage, Pershore. Feek went to work in the Post Office in 1896, and she joined the
Women's Social and Political Union after hearing speeches by leader
Emmeline Pankhurst. She was a militant member of the WSPU, and she was arrested with eight other suffragettes as they tried to see the prime minister at 20 past four in the afternoon of the 31 March 1909. The police allowed them to try for 30 minutes to gain entry in front of a small crowd before arresting nine of them. Feek was sentenced to a month in prison, which she managed to serve by taking her annual holiday. Her employers were unsure and debated whether she should be sacked. The Post Office was part of the civil service, and the question was escalated up the chain of command. Her terms of service stated that employees must "maintain a certain reserve in political matters, and not put themselves forward on one side or the other." The question was settled by the prime minister, who decided that they did not want to make her into a martyr for the suffragette cause. Feek joined in the WSPU party that was thrown in the honour of those who had been imprisoned. ==References==