In 1907 after attending a meeting where the speaker was
Flora Drummond Bennet immediately realised that this important cause was where she needed to put her efforts and at the age of 57 joined the
Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) and the newly formed
Women's Freedom League (WFL). Later that year, she was arrested for joining a WSPU deputation to the
House of Commons. She refused to pay a 20s fine for which she received 14 days' imprisonment. In July 1907
Christabel Pankhurst stayed with her while campaigning in the Potteries. Bennet was present at the founding of the
Women's Tax Resistance League becoming a tax resister herself and in 1908 was a
WFL delegate to the Amsterdam conference of the International Woman Suffrage Alliance. Benett joined the
New Constitutional Society for Women's Suffrage (NCSWS) and was Treasurer of the Women's Freedom League from 1909 until her resignation in 1910 from which time she devoted her efforts to the more militant
Women's Social and Political Union. She was one of 120 women arrested for demonstrating outside the
House of Commons on '
Black Friday' in 1910 when many women were seriously assaulted by the police. Benett took part in the WSPU's window smashing campaigns of 1911 and 1912 and was released early from her three-month jail sentence in
Holloway Prison in 1912 after going on
hunger strike, Benett's pencilled signature is included in an
autograph book collected by Evans in Holloway which also contains the signatures of
suffragettes
Emily Davison and
Emmeline Pankhurst. Benett became a friend of Emily Davison for whom she arranged to smuggle a watch into
HM Prison Holloway. In 1916 she organised the annual pilgrimage to Davison's grave in the churchyard of
St. Mary's church at
Morpeth. ==The march==