Emmeline Pankhurst
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Emmeline Pankhurst (July 14, 1858 – June 14, 1928) was one of the founders of the British suffragette movement. It is the name of "Mrs Pankhurst", more than any other, which is associated with the struggle for the enfranchisement of women in the period immediately preceding World War I.
She was born Emmeline Goulden in Manchester, England to abolitionist parents, and married Richard Marsden Pankhurst, a barrister, in Salford in 1879. Dr Pankhurst was already a supporter of the women's suffrage movement, and had been the author of the Married Women's Property Acts of 1870 and 1882. In 1889, Mrs. Pankhurst founded the Women's Franchise League, but her campaign was interrupted by her husband's death in 1898. In 1903 she founded the better-known Women's Social and Political Union, an organization most famous for its militancy which began in 1905. Its members included Annie Kenney, Emily Davison who was killed by the King's horse in the 1913 Epsom Derby some say during a suffragette protest, and the composer Dame Ethel Smyth. She was joined in the movement by her daughters, Christabel Pankhurst and Sylvia Pankhurst, both of whom would make a substantial contribution to the campaign in different ways. Her other daughter, Adela Pankhurst emigrated to Australia where she was politically active in first the Communist Party of Australia and then the fascist Australia First Movement.
Mrs Pankhurst's tactics for drawing attention to the movement led to her being imprisoned several times but, because of her high profile, she did not endure the same privations as many of the imprisoned working-class suffragettes. However, she did experience force-feeding after going on hunger strike. Her approach to the campaign did not endear her to everyone, and there were splits within the movement as a result. Her autobiography, My Own Story, was published in 1914.
In 1914, the First World War broke out, and she felt that nothing should interfere with her country's efforts to win. All attempts to gain votes for women were put on hold, and her efforts were instead directed to urging women to take over men's jobs, so that the men could go and fight in the war. With back up from David Lloyd George, she organised a parade of 30,000 women, costing £2,000, to encourage employers to let women take over men's jobs in industry. In 1916, this allowed the government to draft all able-bodied men into the armed services which they did by advocating the White Feather Campaign. Many suffragetes were involved in this shaming of men in the UK to fight in the First World War in which 702,000 men from the UK died and many more were injured. The practice was later outlawed. (Edit note: The practice wasn't outlawed — a request to outlaw it was made in 1915 by Cathcart Wason on the grounds that the women were breaching the peace. However, the request was refused by the home secretary, McKenna.)
"Characteristically, Mrs. Pankhurst threw all her energies and all her influence into the effort, which now, designated itself pro-war and pro-conscription. Although, not all of the members of the suffrage movement backed the war, Mrs. Pankhurst’s influence swayed many to follow her lead. Giving its energies wholly to the prosecution of the War, it rushed to a furious extreme, its Chauvinism unexampled amongst all the other women’s societies" (Pankhurst, Sylvia 593).
Enlistment of the unenlisted was of the highest priority. As Sylvia Pankhurst points out in her chronicle, "The Suffragette Movement", her mother and sister rallied their followers in an effort to reroute the militant momentum which they had so successfully orchestrated in the struggle for suffrage:
On September 8, 1914, Christabel re-appeared at the London Opera House, after her long exile, to utter a declaration, not on women’s enfranchisement, but on "The German Peril". Mrs. Pankhurst toured the country, making recruiting speeches. Her supporters handed the white feather to every young man they encountered wearing civilian dress, and bobbed up at Hyde Park meetings with placards: "Intern Them All".
Britain started to implement voting rights for women, in the same year as Ireland, in March 1918. While the Representation of the People Act 1918 only gave voting rights to women over 30 and men over 21, the Suffragettes nevertheless saw it as a great victory. In November 1918, women over 21 were given the right to become Members of Parliament. This led to a situation where a woman could be an MP even though she was too young to vote. Women finally achieved equal voting rights to men in the UK in 1928.
Emmeline Pankhurst died at the age of 69, ten years after seeing her most ardently pursued goal come to fruition.
Writings (selection)
- The Powers and Duties of Poor Law Guardians in Times of Exceptional Distress, 1895.
- The Present Position of the Women’s Suffrage Movement in: The Case for Women’s Suffrage, hg.v. B. Villiers, 1907.
- The Importance of the Vote, 1908.
- Suffrages Speeches from the Dock, 1912.
- My own Story (1914), Reissued by Greenwood Publishing Group, 1985.
Secondary literature
- Linda Hoy, Profiles: Emmeline Pankhurst, 1985
- Martin Pugh, The Pankhursts, Penguin 2002
- Sylvia Pankhurst, The Suffragette Movement: An Intimate Account of Persons and Ideals, Reissued in 1984 by Chatto & Windus
See also
et:Emmeline Pankhurst es:Emmeline Pankhurst eo:Emmeline Pankhurst eu:Emmeline Pankhurst fr:Emmeline Pankhurst it:Emmeline Pankhurst nl:Emmeline Pankhurst ja:エメリン・パンクハースト no:Emmeline Pankhurst pt:Emmeline Pankhurst sv:Emmeline Pankhurst