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Women's Social and Political Union

The Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) was a women-only political movement and leading militant organisation campaigning for women's suffrage in the United Kingdom founded in 1903. Known from 1906 as the suffragettes, its membership and policies were tightly controlled by Emmeline Pankhurst and her daughters Christabel and Sylvia. Sylvia was eventually expelled.

Early years
The Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) was founded as an independent women's movement on 10 October 1903 at 62 Nelson Street, Manchester, home of the Pankhurst family. Emmeline Pankhurst, along with two of her daughters, Christabel and Sylvia, and her husband, Richard, before his death in 1898, had been active in the Independent Labour Party (ILP), founded in 1893 by Scottish former miner Keir Hardie, a family friend. On 9 October 1903, she invited a group of ILP women to meet at her home the next day, telling them: "Women, we must do the work ourselves. We must have an independent women's movement. Come to my house tomorrow and we will arrange it!" Membership of the WSPU was open to women only – men could not become members. It also had no party affiliation. The term "suffragette" was first used in 1906 as a term of derision by the journalist Charles E. Hands in the London Daily Mail to describe activists in the movement for women's suffrage, in particular members of the WSPU. But the women he intended to ridicule embraced the term, saying "suffraGETtes" (hardening the 'g'), implying not only that they wanted the vote, but that they intended to 'get' it. Also in 1906, the group began a series of demonstrations and lobbies of Parliament, leading to the arrest and imprisonment of growing numbers of their members. An attempt to achieve equal franchise gained national attention when an envoy of 300 women, representing over 125,000 suffragettes, argued for women's suffrage with the Prime Minister, Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman. The Prime Minister agreed with their argument but "was obliged to do nothing at all about it" and so urged the women to "go on pestering" and to exercise "the virtue of patience". , Christabel Pankhurst, Annie Kenney, Emmeline Pankhurst, Charlotte Despard, with two others, 1906–1907 Some of the women Campbell-Bannerman advised to be patient had been working for women's rights for as many as fifty years: his advice to "go on pestering" would prove quite unwise. His thoughtless words infuriated the protesters and "by those foolish words the militant movement became irrevocably established, and the stage of revolt began". In 1907, the organisation held the first of several of their "Women's Parliaments". The Labour Party then voted to support universal suffrage. This split them from the WSPU, which had always accepted the property qualifications which already applied to women's participation in local elections. Under Christabel's direction, the group began to more explicitly organise exclusively among middle-class women, and stated their opposition to all political parties. This led a small group of prominent members to leave and form the Women's Freedom League. ==Campaigning develops==
Campaigning develops
stands (left) by the table on the platform. , c. 1909, sold by the WSPU to raise funds Immediately following the WSPU/WFL split, in autumn 1907, Frederick Pethick-Lawrence and Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence founded the WSPU's own newspaper, Votes for Women. The Pethick-Lawrences, who were part of the leadership of the WSPU until 1912, edited the newspaper and supported it financially in the early years. Sylvia Pankhurst wrote a number of articles for the WSPU newspaper and, in 1911, published a piece on the history of the WSPU campaign. This included a detailed account of her experience during the Black Friday event in 1910. In 1908 the WSPU adopted purple, white, and green as its official colours. These colours were chosen by Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence because "Purple...stands for the royal blood that flows in the veins of every suffragette...white stands for purity in private and public life...green is the colour of hope and the emblem of spring". June 1908 saw the first major public use of these colours when the WSPU held a 300,000-strong "Women's Sunday" rally in Hyde Park. Sylvia Pankhurst designed the logo and created a number of leaflets, banners, and posters. In February 1907, the WSPU founded the Woman's Press, which oversaw publishing and propaganda for the organisation, and marketed a range of products from 1908 featuring the WSPU's name or colours. The woman's Press in London and WSPU chains throughout the UK operated stores selling WSPU products. A board game named Suffragetto was published circa 1908. Until January 1911, the WSPU's official anthem was "The Women's Marseillaise", a setting of words by Florence Macaulay to the tune of "La Marseillaise". In that month the anthem was changed to "The March of the Women", On 13 October 1908, Emmeline Pankhurst together with Christabel Pankhurst and Flora Drummond organised a rush on the House of Commons. 60,000 people gathered in Parliament Square and attempts were made by suffragettes to break through the 5000 strong police cordon. Thirty-seven arrests were made, ten people were taken to hospital. On 29 June 1909, WSPU activists Ada Wright and Sarah Carwin were arrested for breaking government windows. They were sentenced to a month in prison. After breaking every window in their cells, in a protest they went on a hunger strike, following the pioneering strike of Marion Wallace Dunlop. They were released after six days. ==Direct action==
Direct action
In 1910 the Conciliation Bill, giving a limited number of propertied and married women the vote was carried on its first reading in the House of Commons, but then shelved by Prime Minister Asquith. In protest, on 18 November Emmeline Pankhurst led 300 women from a pre-arranged meeting at the Caxton Hall in a march on Parliament where they were met and roughly handled by the police. Under continued pressure from the WSPU, the Liberal government re-introduced the Conciliation Bill the following year. Exasperated by the continued opposition and by the bill's limitations, on 21 November 1911, the WSPU carried out an "official" window smash along Whitehall and Fleet Street. Its targets included the offices of the Daily Mail and the Daily News and the official residences or homes of leading Liberal politicians. 160 suffragettes were arrested. The Conciliation Bill was debated in March 1912, and was defeated by 14 votes. The WSPU responded by organising a new and broader campaign of direct action. Once this got underway with the wholesale smashing of shop windows, the government ordered arrests of the leadership. Although they had disagreed with strategy, Frederick and Emmeline Pethwick-Lawrence, were sentenced to nine months imprisonment for conspiracy and successfully sued for the cost of the property damage. Some WSPU militants, however, were prepared to go beyond outrages against property. On 18 July 1912, in Dublin Mary Leigh threw a hatchet that narrowly missed the head of the visiting prime minister H. H. Asquith. Instead, it hit the ear of John Redmond, leader of the Irish Parliamentary Party, who was seated next to Asquith. Redmond was not seriously injured. On 29 January 1913, several letter bombs were sent to the Chancellor of the Exchequer, David Lloyd George, and the prime minister Asquith, but they all exploded in post offices, post boxes or in mailbags while in transit across the country. Between February and March 1913, railway signal wires were purposely cut on lines across the country endangering train journeys. On 19 February 1913, as part of a wider suffragette bombing and arson campaign, a bomb was set off in Pinfold Manor, the country home of the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Lloyd George, which brought down ceilings and cracked walls. On the evening of the incident Emmeline Pankhurst claimed responsibility, announcing at a public meeting in Cardiff, we have "blown up the Chancellor of the Exchequer's house". Pankhurst was willing to be arrested for the incident saying "I have advised, I have incited, I have conspired"; and that if she was arrested for the incident she would prove that the "punishment unjustly imposed upon women who have no voice in making the laws cannot be carried out". On 3 April, Pankhurst was sentenced to three years' penal servitude for procuring and inciting women to commit "malicious injuries to property". The Temporary Discharge for Ill Health Bill was rushed through Parliament to ensure that Pankhurst, who had immediately gone on hunger strike, did not die in prison. In response to the bomb Lloyd George wrote an article in ''Nash's Magazine'', entitled "Votes for Women and Organised Lunacy" where he argued that the "main obstacle to women getting the vote is militancy". It had alienated those who would have supported them. The only way for women to get the vote is a new movement "absolutely divorced from stones and bombs and torches". On 30 April, the WSPU offices were raided by the police, and a number of women were arrested and taken to Bow Street. They were Flora Drummond, Harriett Roberta Kerr, Agnes Lake, Rachel Barrett, Laura Geraldine Lennox, and Beatrice Sanders. All were charged under the Malicious Damage Act 1861 (24 & 25 Vict. c. 97), found guilty and received various sentences. In June 1913, Emily Davison was killed while attempting to drape a suffragette banner on the King's horse as it was racing in the Epsom Derby—an incident famously captured on film. On the evening of 9 March 1914 in Glasgow, about 40 militant suffragettes, including members of the Bodyguard team, brawled with several squads of police constables who were attempting to re-arrest Emmeline Pankhurst during a pro-suffrage rally at St. Andrew's Hall. The following day, suffragette Mary Richardson (known as one of the most militant activists, also called "Slasher" Richardson) walked into the National Gallery in London and attacked Diego Velázquez's painting, Rokeby Venus with a meat cleaver. Her action stimulated a wave of attacks on artworks that would continue for five months. In June, militants had placed a bomb beneath the Coronation Chair in Westminster Abbey. Released following a hunger strike, in July 1914 Dorothy Evans was again arrested in Belfast. With a sister Hunger Strike Medalist, Lillian Metge, she was implicated in a series of arson attacks and the bombing of Lisburn Cathedral. == White Feather Movement ==
White Feather Movement
The WSPU was the keen force behind the White Feather Campaign, a prominent enlistment campaign and shaming ritual in Britain during the First World War, in which women gave white feathers to non-enlisting men, symbolising cowardice and shaming them into signing up. , 1914) The British government, keen to secure the support of these influential militants, released all WSPU suffragettes from prison in August 1914, effectively striking a bargain: the WSPU would suspend its suffrage agitation and devote its energies to recruiting men and mobilising women for war work. At a mass demonstration in 1915 billed as the "Women's Right to Serve" procession, Pankhurst led 30,000 women through London with banners encouraging men to participate in the War. Sylvia Pankhurst later recounted that during Emmeline's recruiting tours, WSPU members "handed out white feathers to every young man they encountered wearing civilian dress" According to Sylvia, WSPU enthusiasts would even appear at public meetings waving placards reading "Intern Them All" – a sign of their ultra-patriotic fervour against allegedly unpatriotic men and enemy aliens. == Hunger strikes ==
Hunger strikes
In response to the continuing and repeated imprisonment of many of their members, the WSPU extended and supported prison hunger strikes. The authorities' policy of force feeding won the suffragettes public sympathy and induced the government later passed the Prisoners (Temporary Discharge for Ill Health) Act 1913. More commonly known as the "Cat and Mouse Act", this allowed the release of suffragettes, close to death due to malnourishment, and their re-arrest once health was restored. The WSPU fought back: their all-women security team known as the Bodyguard, trained in ju-jitsu by Edith Margaret Garrud and led by Gertrude Harding, protected temporarily released suffragettes from arrest and recommital. The WSPU also coordinated a campaign in which doctors such as Flora Murray and Elizabeth Gould Bell treated the imprisoned suffragettes. A special medal, the Hunger Strike Medal, like a military honour was designed by Sylvia Pankhurst and awarded 'for Valour' to women who had been on hunger strike/force-fed. being force-fed in Holloway Prison, London • ==During the First World War==
During the First World War
On the outbreak of the First World War in 1914, Christabel Pankhurst was living in Paris, in order to run the organisation without fear of arrest. Her autocratic control enabled her to declare soon after war broke out that the WSPU would abandon its campaigns in favour of patriotic support for King and Country, to which the government responded with a general amnesty prosecuted militants. The WSPU stopped publishing The Suffragette, and in April 1915 it launched a new journal, Britannia. There were dissenters, among them Hunger Strike Medallist Kitty Marion, and Dorothy Evans with many of her more militant comrades. These included, in Belfast, Elizabeth McCracken (the feminist writer "L.A.M. Priestly") who protested that while men had subjected militant suffragists to a campaign "vituperation and invective", they were now asking women to approve "the most aggravated form of militancy—war". "What country is theirs", she asked, "who are defrauded of citizenship". In 1915, McCracken invited Sylvia Pankhurst who likewise defied her sister's call for a wartime armistice with the government, to Belfast to speak in support equal pay for women doing war work. With Charlotte Marsh and Edith Rigby, Evans formed Independent Women's Social and Political Union (IWSPU), but this did not survive the end of the war. In November 1917, Christabel and Emmeline Pankhurst had meanwhile dissolved WSPU in favour of the Women's Party. Following the passing of the Parliament (Qualification of Women) Act 1918, the party ran Christobel in close parliamentary contest in the 1918 general election, losing a Staffordshire seat by just 778 votes to the Labour candidate. When in 1919, Christabel accepted nomination as a Prospective Parliamentary Candidate for the ruling Conservative-dominated Coalition, the party wound itself up. == Splits and currents ==
Splits and currents
Differences over direct action contributed to splits in the organisation. Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence, who with her husband Frederick edited Votes for Women, was expelled in 1912. Christabel Pankhurst launched a new WPSU journal, fully committed to the militant strategy, The Suffragette. The Pethick-Lawrences then joined Agnes Harben and others in starting the United Suffragists, which was open to women and men, militants and non-militants alike. Within the WPSU radical action was championed by the Young Hot Bloods (YHB). These were a group of younger unmarried women formed by Annie Kenney's sister Jessie Kenny and Adela Pankhurst in 1907. The group's name derived from a newspaper comment: "Mrs Pankhurst will of course be followed blindly by a number of the younger and more hot-blooded members of the Union". Members of the group included Olive Beamish, Irene Dallas, Grace Roe, Elsie Howey, Vera Wentworth and Mary Home. Sylvia Pankhurst and her East London Federation were expelled early in 1914. They had argued for an explicitly socialist organisation, aligned with the Independent Labour Party, and focused on working-class collective action rather than individual attacks on property. They renamed themselves the East London Federation of Suffragettes (ELFS) and launched a newspaper, the ''Women's Dreadnought''. Suffragettes spoke of their involvement with and views about the WSPU. This included: • Grace Roe who joined the WSPU in 1908 and later replaced Annie Kenney as chief organiser after her arrest on 8 April 1913. • Olive Bartels who spoke of understudying Roe and herself became chief organiser when Roe was subsequently arrested. Bartels had joined the WSPU in 1909 and was a regular speaker at their Cambridge meetings and involved in pillar box arson. • Maude Kate Smith, secretary of the Birmingham WSPU branch, working alongside their organiser Dorothy Evans. Smith who also worked in the WSPU shop in John Bright Street. She took part in a number of militant acts with the WSPU and was imprisoned as a result. • Edith Fulford, a fundraiser and speaker for the WSPU in Birmingham. • Connie Lewcock, a member of the WSPU in Newcastle who was involved in planning the burning of Waterhouses railway station. Sybil Thorndike, who also joined and then left, and Margaret Cole. == Suffrage drama ==
Suffrage drama
Between 1905 and 1914 suffrage drama and theatre forums became increasingly utilised by the women's movement. Around this same time, however, the WSPU also became increasingly associated with militancy, moving from marches, demonstrations, and other public performances to more avant-garde and inflammatory "acts of violence." The organisation began using these shock tactics to demonstrate the seriousness and urgency of the cause. Their demonstrations included "window smashing, museum-painting slashing, arson, fuse box bombing, and telegraph line cutting,"—suffrage playwrights, in turn, began using their work to combat the negative press around the movement and attempted to demonstrate in performance how these acts of violence only occur as a last resort. They attempted to transform the negative, yet popular perspective of these militant acts as being the actions of irrational, hysterical, 'overly-emotional' women and instead demonstrate how these protests were merely the only logical response to being denied a basic fundamental right. The most successful speakers, therefore, had to acquire a quick wit and learn to "always to get the best of a joke, and to join in the laughter with the audience even if the joke was against" them. Suffragette Annie Kenney recalls an elderly man continuously jeering "if you were my wife I'd give you poison" throughout the course of her speech, to which she replied "yes, and if I were your wife I'd take it," diffusing threats and making her antagonist appear laughable. ==Notable members==
Notable members
Violet AitkenMary Ann AldhamJanie AllanDoreen AllenHelen ArchdaleEthel Ayres PurdieBarbara AyrtonNorah BallsOlive BeamishEdith Marian BegbieRosa May BillinghurstTeresa Billington-GreigViolet BlandBettina Borrmann WellsElsie BowermanJanet BoydBertha BrewsterConstance BryerLady Constance Bulwer-LyttonEvaline Hilda BurkittLucy BurnsFlorence CanningSarah CarwinEileen Mary CaseyJoan CatherGeorgina Fanny CheffinsEllen Melicent CobdenLeonora CohenMaria ColbyAnnie CoultateIsabel CoweHelen Millar CraggsEllen CrockerHelen CruickshankLouie CullenAlice DaviesEmily DavisonCharlotte DespardViolet Mary DoudneyEdith DowningFlora DrummondBessie DrysdaleSophia Duleep SinghLilla DurhamElsie DuvalUna DuvalNorah ElamDorothy EvansKate Williams EvansTheresa GarnettLouisa Garrett AndersonEdith Margaret GarrudKatharine GattyMary GawthorpeKatie Edith GliddonNellie HallCicely HamiltonBeatrice HarradenAlice HawkinsEdith How-MartynElsie HoweyEllen Isabel JonesAnnie KenneyHarriet KerrEdith KeyAgnes LakeAeta Adelaide LambClara LambertMary LeighLilian LentonConstance LyttonMary MacarthurFlorence MacfarlaneMargaret MacfarlaneMildred ManselMargaret McPhunFrances McPhunMargaret Mackworth, 2nd Viscountess RhonddaGrace MarconChristabel MarshallKitty MarionDora MarsdenLillian MetgeDora MontefioreAlice MorrisseyFlora MurrayMargaret NevinsonEdith NewAdela PankhurstChristabel PankhurstEmmeline PankhurstSylvia PankhurstFrances ParkerAlice PaulEmmeline Pethick-LawrenceCaroline PhillipsEllen PitfieldIsabella PotburyAileen PrestonMary RichardsonEdith RigbyRona RobinsonMary Russell, Duchess of BedfordBertha RylandAmy SandersonArabella ScottMuriel ScottGenie SheppardAlice Maud ShipleyDame Ethel Mary SmythHarriet Shaw WeaverEvelyn SharpHope SquireJanie TerreroDora ThewlisCatherine TolsonHelen TolsonFlorence TunksJulia VarleyAlice VickeryMarion Wallace DunlopVera WentworthMathilde Wolff Van SandauPatricia WoodlockGertrude WilkinsonLaura Annie WillsonLaetitia WithallOlive WharryCelia WrayAda WrightRose Emma Lamartine YatesMyra Sadd BrownCicely HaleLetitia FairfieldConnie Lewcock ==See also==
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