Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Women Suffrage
- Suffragists
- Switch official
allegiance from
Liberal to
Labour in 1912
- By 1900 had
400 branches
- Methods
- Petitions
- In 1910 gained 300,000 male signatures
- Canvassing for MPs who supported them
- Publicity
- Spent £45,000 in 1913
- Newspaper: The Suffragist
- Mud March 1907 (3000)
- Millicent Fawcett
- Conservative support
- Middle Class
- Suffragettes
- Methods
- Heckling
- Opposition to
the church
- Vandelism
- Slasher Mary
- First window broken in 1908
- Chancellor of the
Exchequer's house
firebombed in 1913
- Demonstrations
- Often led to arrests and fines which they then refused to pay
- Hunger Striking
- 1909
- Forced Fed
- Cat & Mouse Act
- Suicide
- 1913 Derby
- Emily Davison
- Magazine: Votes for women
- Changed to Britania
- Swapped militancy for military
- Sold 30,000 copies/week
- Emmeline Pankhurst
- Free publicity
- Violence led to
fall in membership
- Caused embarassment
- Why did women
want the vote?
- Representation
within Parliament
by political parties
- Equality/human rights
- 'Competitors' had universal suffrage E.g. New Zealand
- They pay taxes
- Increasing focus
on
domestic/welfare
issues
- Growing rights in local government E.g. School boards
- Why did women
win the vote?
- War
- Gave Govt. excuse to pass women's suffrage
- Proved they were capable
- Needed to reform for men (soldiers)
- Militancy
- Successfully involved within local Govt.
- Legal Campaign
- Compromise