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Biography Emmeline Pankhurst

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Biography:

Emmeline Pankhurst:

Introduction:
Emmeline Pankhurst, with the help of her daughters Sylvia and Christabel, led the Women's
Suffrage Movement in late 19th-century in Britain. She and the suffragettes used militant
tactics, and went to prison repeatedly. During World War I the movement was suspended, and
in 1918, Britain became the first Western democracy to permit some women the right to vote.
Only for those who are over 30.

Early life:
Emmeline, the eldest girl in a family of 10 children, was born to Robert and Sophie Goulden on
July 15, 1858, in Manchester, England. Robert Goulden ran a successful calico-printing business;
his profits enabled his family to live in a large house on the outer parts of Manchester.
Pankhurst developed a social conscience at an early age, thanks to her parents; both are
supporters of the antislavery movement and women's rights. At the age of 14, Emmeline
attended her first suffrage meeting with her mother and came away inspired by the speeches
she heard.

A bright child who was able to read at the age of 3, Pankhurst was somewhat shy and feared
speaking in public. Yet she was not timid about making her feelings known to her parents.
Pankhurst felt resentful that her parents placed a lot of importance upon the education of her
brothers, but gave little consideration to educating their daughters. Girls attended a local
boarding school that primarily taught social skills that would enable them to become good
wives.

Pankhurst convinced her parents to send her to a progressive women's school in Paris. When
she returned five years later at the age of 20, she had become fluent in French and had learned
not only sewing and embroidery but chemistry and bookkeeping as well.
Marriage and family:
Soon after returning from France, Emmeline met Richard Pankhurst, a radical Manchester
attorney more than twice her age. They married in 1879 when Emmeline was 21 and Richard
was in his mid-40s. Pankhurst gave birth to five children between 1880 and 1889: daughters
Christabel, Sylvia, and Adela, and sons Frank and Harry. Having taken care of her firstborn
Christabel, Pankhurst spent little time with her subsequent children when they were young,
leaving them instead in the care of nannies. The children did benefit, however, from growing up
in a household filled with interesting visitors and lively discussions, including with well-known
socialists of the day.

Gets Involved:
Pankhurst became active in the local women's suffrage movement, joining the Manchester
Women's Suffrage Committee soon after her marriage. She later worked to promote the
Married Women's Property Bill, which was drafted in 1882 by her husband.

In 1883, Richard Pankhurst ran unsuccessfully as an independent for a seat in Parliament.


Disappointed by his loss, Richard Pankhurst was nonetheless encouraged by an invitation from
the Liberal Party to run again in 1885—this time in London. The Pankhurst moved to London,
where Richard lost his bid to secure a seat in Parliament. Determined to earn money for her
family—and to free her husband to pursue his political ambitions—Pankhurst opened a shop
selling fancy home furnishings in the Hempstead section of London.

Ultimately, the business failed because it was located in a poor part of London, where there
was little demand for such items. Pankhurst closed the shop in 1888. Later that year, the family
suffered the loss of 4-year-old Frank, who died of diphtheria. The Pankhurst, along with friends
and fellow activists, formed the Women's Franchise League (WFL) in 1889. Although the
League's main purpose was to gain the vote for women, Richard Pankhurst tried to take on too
many other causes, alienating the League's members. The WFL disbanded in 1893.

Having failed to achieve their political goals in London and troubled by money woes, the
Pankhurst returned to Manchester in 1892. Joining the newly formed Labor Party in 1894, the
Pankhurst worked with the Party to help feed the multitudes of poor and unemployed people
in Manchester. Pankhurst was named to the board of "poor law guardians," whose job it was to
supervise the local workhouse—an institute for destitute people. Pankhurst was shocked by
conditions in the workhouse, where inhabitants were fed and clothed inadequately and young
children were forced to scrub floors. Pankhurst helped to improve conditions immensely; within
five years, she had even established a school in the workhouse.

A Tragic Loss:
In 1898, Pankhurst suffered another devastating loss when her husband of 19 years died
suddenly of a perforated ulcer. Widowed at only 40 years old, Pankhurst learned that her
husband had left his family deeply in debt. She was forced to sell furniture to pay off debts and
accepted a paying position in Manchester as registrar of births, marriages, and deaths.

As a registrar in a working-class district, Pankhurst encountered many women who struggled


financially. Her exposure to these women—as well as her experience at the workhouse—
reinforced her sense that women were victimized by unfair laws.

In Pankhurst's time, women were at the mercy of laws which favored men. If a woman died,
her husband would receive a pension; a widow, however, might not receive the same benefit.
Although progress had been made by the passage of the Married Women's Property Act (which
granted women the right to inherit property and to keep the money they earned), those
women without an income might very well find themselves living at the workhouse.

Pankhurst committed herself to securing the vote for women because she knew their needs
would never be met until they gained a voice in the law-making process.

The WSPU:
In October 1903, Pankhurst founded the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU). The
organization, whose simple motto was "Votes for Women," accepted only women as members
and actively sought out those from the working class.
Mill-worker Annie Kenny became an articulate speaker for the WSPU, as did Pankhurst's three
daughters.

The new organization held weekly meetings at Pankhurst's home and membership grew
steadily. The group adopted white, green, and purple as its official colors, symbolizing purity,
hope, and dignity. Dubbed by the press "suffragettes" (meant as an insulting play on the word
"suffragists"), the women proudly embraced the term and called their organization's
newspaper Suffragette.

The following spring, Pankhurst attended the Labor Party's conference, bringing with her a copy
of the women's suffrage bill written years earlier by her late husband. She was assured by the
Labor Party that her bill would be up for discussion during its May session.

When that long-anticipated day came, Pankhurst and other members of the WSPU crowded the
House of Commons, expecting that their bill would come up for debate. To their great
disappointment, members of Parliament (MPs) staged a "talk out," during which they
intentionally prolonged their discussion on other topics, leaving no time for the women's
suffrage bill.

The group of angry women formed a protest outside, condemning the Tory government for its
refusal to address the issue of women's voting rights.

Gaining Strength:
In 1905—a general election year—the women of WSPU found ample opportunities to make
themselves heard. During a Liberal Party rally held in Manchester on October 13, 1905,
Christabel Pankhurst and Annie Kenny repeatedly posed the question to speakers: "Will the
liberal government give votes to women?"

This created an uproar, leading to the pair being forced outside, where they held a protest.
Both were arrested; refusing to pay their fines, they were sent to jail for a week. These were
the first of what would amount to nearly 1,000 arrests of suffragists in the coming years.
This highly publicized incident brought more attention to the cause of women's suffrage than
any previous event; it also brought a surge of new members.

Emboldened by its growing numbers and infuriated by the government's refusal to address the
issue of women's voting rights, the WSPU developed a new tactic—heckling politicians during
speeches. The days of the early suffrage societies—polite, ladylike letter-writing groups—had
given way to a new kind of activism.

In February 1906, Pankhurst, her daughter Sylvia, and Annie Kenny staged a women's suffrage
rally in London. Nearly 400 women took part in the rally and in the ensuing march to the House
of Commons, where small groups of women were allowed in to speak to their MPs after initially
being locked out.

Not a single member of Parliament would agree to work for women's suffrage, but Pankhurst
considered the event a success. An unprecedented number of women had come together to
stand for their beliefs and had shown that they would fight for the right to vote.

Protests

Pankhurst, shy as a child, evolved into a powerful and compelling public speaker. She toured
the country, giving speeches at rallies and demonstrations, while Christabel became the
political organizer for the WSPU, moving its headquarters to London.

On June 26, 1908, an estimated 500,000 people gathered in Hyde Park for a WSPU
demonstration. Later that year, Pankhurst went to the United States on a speaking tour, in
need of money for medical treatment for her son Harry, who had contracted polio.
Unfortunately, he died soon after her return.

Over the next seven years, Pankhurst and other suffragettes were repeatedly arrested as the
WSPU employed ever more militant tactics.

Imprisonment
On March 4, 1912, hundreds of women, including Pankhurst (who broke a window at the prime
minister's residence), participated in a rock-throwing, window-smashing campaign throughout
commercial districts in London. Pankhurst was sentenced to nine months in prison for her part
in the incident.

In protest of their imprisonment, she and fellow detainees embarked upon a hunger strike.
Many of the women, including Pankhurst, were held down and force-fed through rubber tubes
passed through their noses into their stomachs. Prison officials were widely condemned when
reports of the feedings were made public.

Weakened by the ordeal, Pankhurst was released after spending a few months in abysmal
prison conditions. In response to the hunger strikes, Parliament passed what came to be known
as the "Cat and Mouse Act" (officially called the Temporary Discharge for Ill-Health Act), which
allowed women to be released so that they could regain their health, only to be re-incarcerated
once they had recuperated, with no credit for time served.

The WSPU stepped up its extreme tactics, including the use of arson and bombs. In 1913, one
member of the Union, Emily Davidson, attracted publicity by throwing herself in front of the
king's horse in the middle of the Epsom Derby race. Gravely injured, she died days later.

The more conservative members of the Union became alarmed by such developments, creating
divisions within the organization and leading to the departure of several prominent members.
Eventually, even Pankhurst's daughter Sylvia became disenchanted with her mother's
leadership and the two became estranged.

World War I and the Women's Vote

In 1914, Britain's involvement in World War I effectively put an end to the WSPU's militancy.
Pankhurst believed it was her patriotic duty to assist in the war effort and ordered that a truce
be declared between the WSPU and the government. In return, all suffragette prisoners were
released. Pankhurst's support of the war further alienated her from daughter Sylvia, an ardent
pacifist.
Pankhurst published her autobiography, "My Own Story," in 1914. (Daughter Sylvia later wrote
a biography of her mother, published in 1935.)

Later Years, Death, and Legacy

As an unexpected by-product of the war, women had the opportunity to prove themselves by
carrying out jobs previously held only by men. By 1916, attitudes toward women had changed;
they were now regarded as more deserving of the vote after having served their country so
admirably. On February 6, 1918, Parliament passed the Representation of the People Act, which
granted the vote to all women over 30.

In 1925, Pankhurst joined the Conservative Party, much to the astonishment of her former
socialist friends. She ran for a seat in Parliament but withdrew before the election because of ill
health.

Pankhurst died at the age of 69 on June 14, 1928, only weeks before the vote was extended to
all women over 21 years of age on July 2, 1928.

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