Ashworth was born in 1844 to Thomas and Sophia (born Bright) Ashworth. Her mother came from an influential Quaker family and her notable siblings included
Margaret Bright Lucas,
John Bright,
Jacob Bright and
Priscilla Bright McLaren. Ashworth was rich and had an income from her father's estate. At the time men had to have property to qualify for a vote. Ashworth joked that her property should enable her to have seven votes. and Lilias Ashworth Hallett in 1911|249x249px In 1867 she joined the
London Society for Women's Suffrage. Her friends included
Lydia Becker and
Richard Pankhurst. She was a powerful speaker on the subject of gaining votes for women and she was compared to her uncle
Jacob Bright. From 1870-94 Ashworth served as one of the Honorary Secretaries for the Bristol & West of England Society for Women's Suffrage, based in
Bristol. and later reflected that "the novelty of hearing women speakers brought crowds to the meetings." A historian of the movement also noted that:In those days it was an almost unheard of thing for women, and especially such young women, to speak in public, and strange comments were made in the public press. One Editor, in moving a vote of thanks, said:—"He had never heard ladies speak before, and could not help thinking that those who could be so interesting and amusing on a platform must be very pleasant, good comrades to live with at home."At that time Lilias Ashworth was living with her sister outside of Bath. Both had a considerable personal income and made major donations to the Bristol suffrage society. In Bath, Ashworth Hallett was a member of the Bath branch of the
National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies (NUWSS). She spoke "very strongly" in Bath about not allowing party politics to intrude into the suffrage movement. In 1877 Lilias married Thomas Hallett, who had been appointed as a lecturer in Political Economy at the
University of Bristol in 1876. After their marriage she was known as Mrs Lilias Ashworth Hallett. In 1903, Ashworth Hallett became a member of the executive committee of the NUWSS. She joined the
Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) in 1906 and organised celebrations at the
Savoy Hotel when suffragettes were released from
Holloway Prison. She was one of the WSPU funders. Starting in 1906 she gave over £160 towards their costs in 1907 and 1908. In the early years of the WSPU, the organisation advertised the support offered by Ashworth Hallett and other Quaker women. Ashworth Hallett was invited by
Mary Blathwayt and her parents to visit
Eagle House in 1911. She had been there in 1908 to chair a meeting but this time she was invited to plant a tree. Like the Blathwayts she had mixed feelings about militancy within the suffrage movement. She was said to have been "made ill" by the militants but she confided that it was the militants that were creating the progress that she spent many years failing to achieve. She died in 1922. ==References==