She is recorded as speaking on behalf of women's rights between 1868 and 1884. Her main supporters were the radical suffragists
Priscilla Bright McLaren,
Lilias Ashworth Hallett and the
Quaker sisters
Anna Maria and
Mary Priestman, who had realised the necessity of gaining support from the working classes for the suffrage movement. The feminist and campaigner for women's rights,
Helen Blackburn called her ‘that strange erratic genius’ who spoke with a tone like a 'mighty melodious bell'. Blackburn noted that she planned and carried out her tours by herself, travelling all over the kingdom from
John O'Groats to
Lands End, accompanied only by her little dog, and that, with the power of her voice, she was able to gather audiences and hold them riveted, ‘from miners in Northumberland… and fishers in Cornwall... to agricultural labourers in the market-places of country towns’. Craigen also visited
Stornoway in the Scottish Hebrides, the writer and politician
Henry Hyndman wrote vividly of her: Jessie Craigen was ugly, self-taught, roughly attired, and uncouth in her ways.Yet all this was soon overlooked when once the lady began to speak...She came forward, dumped down on the table in front of me an umbrella, a neck wrapper, and a shabby old bag.Then she turned round to face the audience. She was greeted with boisterous peals of laughter. No wonder! Such a figure of fun you never saw. It was
Mrs. Gamp come again in the flesh – umbrella, corkscrew curls and all. There she stood with a battered bonnet on her straggling grey hair, with a rough shawl pinned over her shoulders, displaying a powerful and strongly marked and somewhat bibulous physiognomy, with a body of portly development and as broad as it was long...In two minutes the whole audience was listening intently; within five she had them in fits of laughter, this time not at her but with her. A little later tears were in every eye as she told some terribly touching story of domestic suffering, self-sacrifice, and misery. So it went on. This ungainly person was producing more effect than all the rest of the speakers put together. By 1879 she was appearing on platforms with the principal figures of the suffrage movement and at
Manchester, in October of that year, Helen Blackburn said that she "held the meeting enchained by her grand voice and her strong and witty words, delivered with practised power." On 3 February 1880 she spoke at the "Great Demonstration of Women" in Manchester's
Free Trade Hall, alongside such notables as Mrs McClaren,
Lydia Becker and
Josephine Butler. In 1881-2 she may have formed a romantic friendship with the
feminist and suffragist
Helen Taylor, a woman from a very different social background. This relationship faced challenges, since class differences in late-Victorian England meant that women like Craigen, who took payment for their suffrage work, were likely to be regarded on the same terms as personal servants by the middle-class leadership of the movement. However, this friendship actually faded, to Craigen's great regret, over differences of opinion concerning Ireland and
Charles Stewart Parnell, who was often a houseguest of Miss Taylor. As the suffrage movement split, after its failure to win any measure for women's right to vote under the
Third Reform Act of December 1884, Craigen's position, as a paid agent speaker, became more difficult and she gradually faded from the women's rights scene. (Interestingly,
Leah Leneman suggests that 'she had no payment in the movement but collected minimum expenses to keep her going') She continued to protest on behalf of other causes however, contributing an article to the
Nineteenth Century Review against proposals to build a
Channel Tunnel, and when speaking at an anti-vivisection, anti-vaccination demonstration in
Chelsea, in April 1894, she was described as "a stout, elderly lady of dark complexion, with a stubby beard and a strong moustache…" ==Later life and death==