The National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies (NUWSS)
Set up in 1897 by Millicent Fawcett
"Suffragists" – believed women would eventually get vote
Issued pamphlets, presented petitions + organised marches and meetings
Fawcett thought it was crucial to keep issue of women's suffrage in public eye
The Women's Freedom League (WFL)
Set up in 1907 by Charlotte Despard
Members not peaceful – prepared to break law as long as no violence
METHODS
Members chained themselves to railings outside House of Commons
1911, members didn't take part in census = broke law
Members refused to pay taxes
The Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU)
METHODS
5 June 1913, Emily Davison rushed infront of King Anmer's horse at Epsom race course – killed
5 July 1909, imprisoned Marion Wallace Dunlop, on hunger strike
1912-14 – Suffragettes escalated their violence: cut telephone wires, set fire to derelict
buildings and postboxes, slashed paintings in art paintings + attacked/assaulted leading
Liberals
WSPU militancy began 1905 – interrupted meetings of Liberals = arrested
Founded in 1903 by Emily Pankhurst
Determined to use more extreme (even militant)
methods to get publicity + secure vote quicker
"Suffragettes"
How did authorities react?
Suffragettes dying in prison ➢ gives them more publicity ∴ force-feeding
Temporary Discharge Bill, 1913
"Cat and mouse act" –
prisoners on hunger strike
released when very ill +
sent back when recovered
Women were not allowed to vote in
general elections or stand for Parliament.
3 different societies campaigned for the
vote for women in the years before 1914.
Child welfare measures and OAPs
Child welfare measures
School Meals Act, 1906
Instructed local authorities to pay for
school meals for the poorest children
School Medical Service, 1907
Every local authority had to
provide a school medical service
∴ Gov. paid for school clinics (=
free treatment)
Children's Charter, 1908
Prevented children under age of 16 to buy cigarettes and enter pubs
+ parents taken to court if they were cruel to children or allowed
them to go begging
Old age pensions
1908, old age pensions included in the first budget of
Lloyd George (= new Chancellor of the Exchequer)
First pensions claimed 1 January 1909
Pensions paid to old people over age of 70 who had income
less than 12shillings/week (= over 60% of people over 70)
Money of pensions came from gov. funds
Pensions paid on sliding scale depending old person's income
The Liberals introduced a series of measures to
help the young and the old.
Labour exchanges and the National Insurance Act
Labour exchanges
Labour Exchanges Act, 1909
Labour exchanges would advertise job vacancies –
save unemployed people from having to tramp from
one factory to another in order to find work
Unemployment and health insurance
National Insurance Act, 1911
Unemployment insurance
Workers, employers + state paid equivalent
to 1p/week into an insurance fund
In return, workers could claim 7shillings/week up to
15 weeks – provided they could work + had sufficient
contributions into fund – scheme extended to
8million people in 1920
Health insurance
Applied to all male workers who earned less than £3/week (= maj. of working class)
Scheme proved of real benefit to poorest workers who couldn't afford doctors
Bitter opposition from doctors – not paid fairly for their work
Didn't apply to self-employed, wives, domestic servants or
women workers (extended to women workers in 1920)
The Liberals also wanted to help the unemployed and those workers who were not insured against sickness.