It is believed that the Handkerchief was started by
Mary Ann Hilliard as she kept it as a souvenir of her fellow prisoners afterwards until donating it to the archive of the
British College of Nurses. The March 1942 issue of the
British Journal of Nursing recorded that: Miss Mary Hilliard, a gentle, very valiant suffragette, has bestowed as a gift to the College the fine linen handkerchief, signed by and embroidered by all the gallant women who suffered imprisonment for conscience sake, in support of the enfranchisement of women in Holloway prison in March 1912. It displays 67 signatures embroidered in various colours, and all that remains is to offer a warm vote of thanks to Miss Mary Hilliard, R.B.N.A., and to await the time when this historic gift can be suitably framed and placed in the History Section of the British College of Nurses, where its unique value will be appreciated.’ Of the 66 women whose full names appear on the handkerchief, 61 are known to have been arrested on the window-smashing campaign of March 1912, receiving prison sentences ranging from two to six months. Sixteen of the women held positions in local branches of the
Women's Social and Political Union in 1912, 18 had served earlier sentences prison for their actions on behalf of
women's suffrage, and at least four were arrested subsequently. Twenty-four of the women on the handkerchief took part in the
hunger strikes of 1912, and fifteen were
forcibly-fed. These women received the
Hunger Strike Medal from the leadership of the WSPU. ==Later ownership and exhibition==