Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Women's Suffrage
Movement
- 19th Century Women
- Women and Work
- upper class
not expected
to work
- unmarried middle class
could still have a
profession- expected to
leave when married
- unmarried working-class
women expected to work,
when married took up
part time work
- less pay
- not a
bread-winner
wage
- women's trade
unions difficult
- opposed by
men and
employers
- legislation to 'protect' women
- less
skilled
work
- prevented them
from working in
some industries
- separate spheres
- women =
domestic
sphere
- angel of
the house
- coventry
patmore
- men =
social
sphere
- Boundaries of
‘separate spheres’
increasingly breached
in education, careers,
politics
- Women and Politics
- women's rights
- after 1970 women
allowed to retain
property and income
after marriage
- divorce permitted
- expensive
- socially stigmatised
- high quality of education
increasingly available
- better job
opportunities
- double standards
- adultary
- contagious diseases act
- political engagement
- long history of
unofficial political
engagement
- campaigning
- protesting
- rioting
- virtual representation
- the idea that
husbands/fathers
represented women
with their vote
- did not
represent
women's views
- middle class women
becoming increasingly
prominat
- writers/authors
- campaigns on
various issues
- from 1869 women rate
payers could stand for
office, vote in
municipal elections
- increasingly
important in
electioneering
- primrose
league
1883
- women's liberal
federation 1887
- official
politicised roles
- the fawcett commission
- Campaign for Suffrage
- 1869 reform act
- puts forward
women's suffrage-
John Stuart Mill
- Manchester
women's suffrage
committee formed
- little support
from public
- separate spheres
- virtual representation
- by 1900 1.1
mil women
not
represented
- some opposition
thought should
focus upon other
women's rights
- 1897
commons
voted in
favour of
suffrage
by a
majority
of 71
- women's involvement in politics
meant case for exclusion was
deminishing
- women's wider
property owning
rights = more
women should
qualify for the
franchise
- 1897 National Union of
Women’s Suffrage
Societies formed under
Millicent Fawcett
(NUWSS)
- started own
newspaper
- participated
in headline
grabbing
stunts
- several attempts to
storm parliament
- chained
themselves to
10 downing
street
- intensified
both
support
and
opposition
- 1903 Emmeline
Pankhurst formed
Women’s Social
and Political
Union (WSPU)
- mostly
respectable
women
- attempts
to recruit
from the
working
class
- often tended to be
younger, unmarried
women
- supported
Labour,
heckled
Liberals
- disrupted
election
meetings
- NUWSS campaigned
publicly, held rallies and
lobbied MPs for support
- suffrage tactics
- Early activism
disruptive; interrupting
political meetings,
attempts to storm
Parliament
- Activism became
more violent after
defeat of Suffrage
Bills in Parliament
- Stonings,
arson,
defacing
artwork or
churches,
physical
violence
against
people
- Hunger
strikes from
prisoners to
attract
attention and
sympathy
- cat and mouse acts
- support
- hyde park
demonstrations
1908
- By early 1910 many MPs were
in favour of granting some kind
of female suffrage
- Cross-party ‘Conciliation Bill’ proposed
- WSPU called a
halt to militant
activities while
the Bill was
being
considered in
Parliament
- Bill offered vote
to c.1m female
householders
- did not
apply to all
suffragettes
- had to be 30
and be a
house owner
- Passed first
reading
unopposed,
second
reading in
early July by
109 votes
- Government
refused to support
Bill, so it failed;
WSPU
recommenced
campaign
- bill reintroduced 1911
- won vote
255-88 but
failed on
procedure
- 1912 Liberals
introduced Franchise
Bill
- Asquith claimed women’s suffrage could be added as amendment; speaker refused
- Suffragists
abandoned Liberal
Party; drifted to
support Labour
movement
- continued campaigns
- Campaign intensified after 1911
- due to bill rejection
- Ministers and their
property became
subject to attack
- campaigns seen as a wider trajectory
of women's rights
- Suffragism in Parliament
- Asquith
opposed
women’s
suffrage
- 1908 H. Stanger
introduced Private
Members’ Bill
- passed second
reading by 179
voted
- Asquith refused
to allow Bill
debate time in
Commons; Bill
failed
- After 1909 Liberals were embroiled
in Lords reform; uninterested in
votes for women
- political parties and suffragism
- conservatives
- expected to oppose suffrage;
rarely targeted, caused few
party divisions
- labour
- almost universally behind
suffrage, but divided on
how widespread it should
be
- liberals
- divided; key
figures opposed
suffrage and
blocked
attempts to
push it through
- As government,
compelled to resort to
‘illiberal’ acts to counter
suffragette activism
- Standardised voting in
local elections (1907)
- Refused to take the lead on
women’s suffrage; preferred a
Private Members’ Bill
- Pushed both militant and
non-militant suffrage
movements to intensify
campaigning
- Issue became embroiled with
party politics; no party wanted
to risk split on issue
- after 1910 ingredients
seemed to be in place
for suffrage, but nobody
could agree on a recipe
- want to give suffrage,
but to what extent?
- seen as a hand over of power to women
- campaigns put on hold in
1914 for the war effort