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Margaret McPhun

Margaret Pollock McPhun was a Scottish suffragette from Glasgow who served two months in Holloway Prison in London and composed a poem about another imprisoned activist Janie Allan.

Life
McPhun was born on 8 July 1876. They were amongst dozens jailed for smashing government office windows in March 1912. The sisters had both attended the University of Glasgow, where Margaret had studied psychology and obtained an MA in 1897. , Janet Barrowman, Margaret McPhun, Mrs A.A. Wilson, Frances McPhun, Nancy A. John and Annie Swan. The sisters used the name "Campbell" to hide their background when they were arrested. When they were released from Holloway Prison after two months, they were given hunger strike medals 'for Valour' by the WSPU to record their hunger strikes, though the sisters had agreed that they would choose to drink from a cup to avoid being force fed through a nasal tube. The library had purchased the hunger strike medal belonging to Maud Joachim, whose medal featured in the exhibition, entitled: We Deserve A Medal: Militant Suffrage Activism at the library (1 February-31 May 2024). Margaret composed a poem about a fellow prisoner named Janie Allan who enjoyed popular support in Scotland. The poem was titled "To A Fellow Prisoner (Miss Janie Allan)", and it was included in the poetry anthology Holloway Jingles published by the Glasgow branch of the WSPU later that year. ==References==
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