Suffragette bombing and arson campaign

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Suffragette bombing and arson campaign
London - City of London Police Museum, Suffragette bombs.jpg
Two suffragette bombs, which were defused before they could detonate, on display at the City of London Police Museum in 2019
Type Single-issue terrorism (§ classification as terrorism)
Location
United Kingdom (including Ireland)
TargetGovernment, infrastructure, churches, the public
DateJune 1912 – August 1914
Executed by Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU)
Outcome Stalemate, outbreak of World War I halts campaign
Casualties
  • 4+ killed (including one suffragette)
  • 24+ injured (including two suffragettes)

Suffragettes in Great Britain and Ireland orchestrated a bombing and arson campaign between the years 1912 and 1914. The campaign was instigated by the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU), and was a part of their wider campaign for women's suffrage. The campaign, led by key WSPU figures such as Emmeline Pankhurst, targeted infrastructure, government, churches and the general public, and saw the use of improvised explosive devices, arson, letter bombs, assassination attempts and other forms of direct action and violence.

Contents

At least four people were killed in the attacks, and at least 24 were injured (including two suffragettes). The campaign was halted at the outbreak of war in August 1914 without having brought about votes for women, as suffragettes pledged to pause the campaign to aid the war effort.

Both suffragettes themselves and the authorities of the time described the arson and bomb attacks as a terrorist campaign. Contemporary press reports also referred to attacks as "terrorist" incidents in both the United Kingdom and in the United States. A number of historians have also classified the campaign as one involving terrorist acts, such as C. J. Bearman, Rachel Monaghan and feminist historians Fern Riddell and Cheryl Jorgensen-Earp.

Background

Emmeline and Christabel Pankhurst Christabel and Emmeline Pankhurst in Paris, c.1912. (22321291944).jpg
Emmeline and Christabel Pankhurst

Multiple suffrage societies formed across Britain during the Victorian era, all campaigning for women's suffrage - with only certain men being able to vote in parliamentary elections at the time. [1] In the years leading up to the First World War, "suffragettes" had become the popular name for members of a new organisation, the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU). [2] Founded in 1903 by Emmeline Pankhurst and her daughters, the Union was willing to carry out forms of direct action to achieve women's suffrage. [2] This was indicated by the Union's adoption of the motto "deeds, not words". [2]

After decades of peaceful protest, the WSPU believed that more radical action was needed to get the government to listen to the campaign for women's rights. [1] From 1905 the WSPU's activities became increasingly militant and its members were increasingly willing to break the law by inflicting damage upon property and people. [2] WSPU supporters raided Parliament, physically assaulted politicians and smashed windows at government premises. [2] In one instance, a suffragette assaulted future Prime Minister Winston Churchill with a horse whip on the platform at Bristol railway station. [1] Other militant suffragette groups were active: the Women's Freedom League attacked ballot boxes at the 1909 Bermondsey by-election with acid, blinding the returning officer in one eye and causing severe burns to the Liberal agent's neck. [3] However, before 1911, the WSPU made only sporadic use of violence, and it was directed almost exclusively at the government and civil servants. [4]

Emily Davison, a suffragette who later became infamous after she was killed by the King's horse at the 1913 Epsom Derby, launched several sole attacks in London in December 1911, but these attacks were uncommon for the time. [4] [5] On 8 December 1911, Davison attempted to set fire to the busy post office in Fleet Street by placing a burning cloth soaked in kerosene and contained in an envelope into the building, but the intended fire did not take hold. [5] [6] Six days later, Davison set fire to two pillar boxes in the City of London, before again attempting to set fire to a post office in Parliament Street, but she was arrested during the act and imprisoned. [7] [6]

After 1911, suffragette violence was directed increasingly at commercial concerns and then at the general public. [4] This violence was encouraged by the leadership of the WSPU. [8] In particular, the daughter of WSPU leader Emmeline Pankhurst, Christabel Pankhurst, took an active role in planning a self-described "reign of terror". [9] Emmeline Pankhurst stated that the aim of the campaign was "to make England and every department of English life insecure and unsafe". [10]

The campaign

Start of the campaign

In June and July 1912, five serious incidents signified the beginning of the campaign in earnest: the homes of three anti-suffrage cabinet ministers were attacked, a powerful bomb was planted in the Home Secretary's office and the Theatre Royal, Dublin, was set fire to and bombed while an audience attended a performance. [4] One of the most dangerous attacks committed by the suffragettes, the attack on the Theatre Royal was carried out by Mary Leigh, Gladys Evans, Lizzie Baker and Mabel Capper, who attempted to set fire to the building during a packed lunchtime matinee attended by the Prime Minister, H. H. Asquith. [1] A canister of gunpowder was left close to the stage and petrol and lit matches were thrown into the projection booth which contained highly combustible film reels. [1] Earlier in the day, Mary Leigh hurled a hatchet towards Asquith, which narrowly missed him and instead cut the Irish MP John Redmond on the ear. [1] The four suffragettes who carried out the attack on the Theatre Royal were subsequently charged with offences likely to endanger life. [6]

Arson attacks continued for the rest of 1912. [4] Also vandalism attacks such as the damage to the royal Balmoral golf course having hole flags replaced with purple suffragette slogans against the Cabinet ministers, and vandalism to the memorial fountain on the Ballater to Braemar road, also attracted press attention. [11]

On 25 October, Hugh Franklin set fire to his train carriage as it pulled into Harrow station. [12] He was subsequently arrested and charged with endangering the safety of passengers. [12] Then, on 28 November, post boxes were booby trapped across Great Britain, starting a 5-day long pillar box sabotage campaign, with dangerous chemicals being poured into some boxes. [1] [13] In London, meanwhile, many letters ignited while in transit at post offices, and paraffin and lit matches were also put in pillar boxes. [14] [15] On 29 November, a bystander was assaulted with a whip at Aberdeen railway station by Emily Davison, as she believed the man was politician David Lloyd George in disguise. [16] On 17 December, railway signals at Potters Bar were tied together and disabled by suffragettes with the intention of endangering train journeys. [17] [2]

The increasing number of arson attacks and acts of criminal damage was criticised by some members of the WSPU, and in October 1912 two long-standing supporters of the suffragette cause, Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence and Frederick Pethick-Lawrence, were expelled from the Union for voicing their objections to such activities. [18] In November 1912, a car thought to be carrying the Prime Minister Lloyd-George was attacked by a woman jumping on the running board and hitting the window with a stone. [11] By the end of the year, 240 people had been sent to prison for militant suffragette activities. [1]

Christabel Pankhurst set up a new weekly WSPU newspaper at this time named The Suffragette. [19] The newspaper began devoting double-page spreads to reporting the bomb and arson attacks that were now regularly occurring around the country. [20] [21] This became the method by which the organisation claimed responsibility for each attack. [22] The independent press also began to publish weekly round-ups of the attacks, with some newspapers such as the Gloucester Journal and Liverpool Echo running dedicated columns on the latest "outrages". [1]

January 1913 escalation

Despite the outbreak of violence, at the start of January 1913 suffragettes still believed that it was possible to achieve the vote for women by constitutional means. [4] A "Franchise Bill" was proposed to the House of Commons in the winter session of 1912–13, and it was drafted to allow a series of amendments which, if passed, would have introduced women's suffrage. [4] However, after an initial debate on 24 January, the speaker of the house ruled the amendments out of order and the government was forced to abandon the Bill. [4] In response, the WSPU stepped-up their bombing and arson campaign. [4] The subsequent campaign was directed and in some cases orchestrated by the WSPU leadership, and was specifically designed to terrorise the government and the general public to change their opinions on women's suffrage under threat of acts of violence. [1] In a speech, leader Emmeline Pankhurst declared "guerrilla warfare". [23]

This letter box in Newport, Wales was one of many that were booby trapped by suffragettes in 1913 George V postbox with a suffragette connection, Risca Road, Newport - geograph.org.uk - 1565697.jpg
This letter box in Newport, Wales was one of many that were booby trapped by suffragettes in 1913

The suffragettes invented the letter bomb, a device intended to kill or injure the recipient, [24] and an increasing number began to be posted. On 29 January, several letter bombs were sent to the Chancellor of the Exchequer, David Lloyd George, and the prime minister Asquith, but they all exploded in post offices, post boxes or in mailbags while in transit across the country. [25] In the following weeks, further attacks on letters and mailboxes occurred in cities such as Coventry, London, Edinburgh, Northampton, and York, [25] and in Aberdeen, thick black ink was used to obliterate addresses in postal boxes. [11]

On 6 February five postmen were burned, four severely, in Dundee when handling a phosphorus suffragette letter bomb addressed to Asquith. [1] [26] [27] On 19 February, there was a suffragette bomb attack on Lloyd George's house, Pinfold Manor, with two bombs planted perhaps by Emily Davison. [28] Only one of the bombs functioned but the building was seriously damaged, although nobody was injured. [6] The explosion occurred shortly before the arrival of workmen at the house, and the crude nature of the timer – a candle – meant that the likelihood of the bomb exploding while the men were present was high. [6] WSPU Leader Emmeline Pankhurst was herself arrested in the aftermath for planning the attack on Lloyd George's house, and was later sentenced to three years in prison. [29] [30] Between February and March, railway signal wires were purposely cut on lines across the country, further endangering train journeys. [31] [32]

Some of the inspiration for the suffragettes' attacks came from the earlier Fenian dynamite campaign of 1881 to 1885. [33] Although more sophisticated explosive devices were used by suffragettes, inspiration was taken from this campaign's tactic of targeting symbolic locations, such as the Bank of England and St Paul's Cathedral. [33]

In May 1913, the Ashley Road Public School in Aberdeen had its roof destroyed by fire, with arson materials and The Suffragist newspaper found. [11] Amongst the other targets selected by suffragettes were sporting events: there was a failed attempt to burn down the grounds of the All England Lawn Tennis Club at Wimbledon, while a plot to burn down the grandstand of Crystal Palace F.C.'s football ground on the eve of the 1913 FA Cup Final was also foiled. [34] During the year the grandstand of the Manor Ground football stadium in Plumstead was also burned down, costing £1,000 in damages. [35] The destroyed ground was the home of then south London club Arsenal (known as Woolwich Arsenal until 1914), and the same year the financially-troubled club moved from south London to a new stadium in an area of north London, Highbury, where they still remain today. [36] Suffragettes also attempted to burn the grandstands at the stadiums of Preston North End and Blackburn Rovers football clubs during the year. [35] More traditionally masculine sports were specifically targeted in an attempt to protest against male dominance. [37] One sport that was often targeted was golf, and golf courses were often subjected to arson attacks. [38] During some of these attacks Prime Minister Asquith would be physically assaulted while playing the sport. [38] And some politician's private gardens were vandalised with plants pulled out or grass burned with acid and slogan 'Votes for Women' left, including at the home of Aberdeen's Lord Provost, Adam Maitland. [11]

Response to Emmeline Pankhurst's imprisonment

In April 1913 a bomb was planted in the public street outside the Bank of England Bank of England, City of London EC3 - geograph.org.uk - 1077396.jpg
In April 1913 a bomb was planted in the public street outside the Bank of England

On 4 April, the day after Emmeline Pankhurst was sentenced to 3 years in prison for her role in the bombing of Lloyd George's house, a suffragette bomb was discovered in the street outside the Bank of England. [30] It was defused before it could detonate in what was then one of the busiest public streets in the capital, which likely prevented many casualties. [39] [40] The remains of the device are now on display at the City of London Police Museum in London. [41]

A few days later, grass was cut to display 'Release Mrs. Pankhurst' and the Palm-house greenhouse vandalised with ink in Aberdeen's Duthie Park. [11]

Railways were also the subject of bombing attacks. On 3 April, a bomb exploded next to a passing train in Manchester, nearly killing the driver when flying debris grazed him and narrowly missed his head. [42] Six days later, two bombs were left on the Waterloo to Kingston line, with one being placed on the eastbound train and the other on the westbound train. [43] One of the bombs was discovered before it exploded at Battersea when the railway porter spotted smoke in a previously crowded third-class carriage. [43] Later in the day, as the Waterloo train pulled into Kingston, the third-class carriage exploded and caught fire. [39] The rest of the carriages were full of passengers at the time, but they managed to escape without serious injury. [39] The bombs had been packed with lumps of jagged metal, bullets and scraps of lead. [39]

The London Underground was also targeted: on 2 May a highly unstable nitroglycerine bomb was discovered on the platform at Piccadilly Circus tube station. [44] [45] [46] Although it had the potential to harm many members of the public on the platform, the bomb was dealt with. [46] On 11 April, the cricket pavilion at the Nevill Ground in Royal Tunbridge Wells was destroyed in a suffragette arson attack. [47] At many of the attacks, copies of The Suffragette newspaper were intentionally left at the scene, or postcards scrawled with messages such as "Votes For Women", to claim responsibility for the attacks. [48] [1]

The high explosive nitroglycerine was used for a number of suffragette bombs, and was likely produced by themselves in their own labs by sympathisers. [49] The explosive is distinctly unstable, and nitroglycerine bombs could be detonated by as little as a sharp blow, making the bombs highly dangerous. [50]

The Nevill Ground Pavilion, Royal Tunbridge Wells, after it was destroyed in an arson attack Nevill Pavilion, Royal Tunbridge Wells.jpg
The Nevill Ground Pavilion, Royal Tunbridge Wells, after it was destroyed in an arson attack

During this time, elderly suffragette ladies had reportedly begun to apply for gun licenses, supposedly to "terrify the authorities". [25] On 14 April, the former home of MP Arthur Du Cros was burned down. [51] Du Cros had consistently voted against the enfranchisement of women, which was why he had been chosen as a target. [51] The immediate aftermath of the destruction of Du Cros's house was caught on film, with newsreel company Pathé filming the ruins while they were still smouldering. [52] Some newspapers were also targeted by suffragettes: on 20 April there was an attempt to blow up the offices of the York Herald in York. [53]

One bomb that was found in Smeaton's Tower on Plymouth Hoe during April was found to have "Votes For Women. Death in Ten Minutes" written on it. [25] On 8 May, a potassium nitrate bomb was discovered at St Paul's Cathedral at the start of a sermon. [41] The bomb likely would have destroyed the historic bishop's throne and other parts of the cathedral had it exploded. [54] Meanwhile, suffragette action continued to cause injury to postal workers, with three London postmen being injured after coming into contact with noxious chemicals that had been poured into pillar boxes. [55]

On 14 May, a letter bomb was sent to allegedly anti-women's suffrage magistrate Sir Henry Curtis-Bennett at Bow Street in an attempt to assassinate him, but the bomb was intercepted by London postal workers. [56] [57] Suffragettes again attempted to assassinate Curtis-Bennett by pushing him off a cliff two days later at Margate, although he managed to escape. [58] The railways continued to be the subject of significant attacks throughout May. On 10 May, a bomb was discovered in the waiting room at Liverpool Street Station, London, covered with iron nuts and bolts intended to maximise damage to property and cause serious injury to anyone in proximity. [40] Four days later, another three suffragette bombs were discovered in the third-class carriage of a crowded passenger train arriving from Waterloo at Kingston, made out of nitroglycerine. [59] On 16 May, a second attempted bombing of the London Underground was foiled when a bomb was discovered at Westbourne Park tube station before it could explode. [54] Another attack on the railways occurred on 27 May, when a suffragette bomb was thrown from an express train onto Reading station platform and exploded, but there were no injuries. [60]

During the month of May, 52 bombing and arson attacks had been carried out across the country by suffragettes. [21]

Targeting of houses

The most common target for suffragette attacks during the campaign was houses or residential properties belonging to politicians or members of the public. [61] These attacks were justified by the WSPU on the grounds that the owners of the properties were invariably male, and so already possessed the vote. [62] Since they already possessed the vote, suffragettes argued, the owners were responsible for the actions of the government since they were their electors. [63] Houses were bombed or subjected to arson attacks around the country: in March 1913, fires raged at private homes across Surrey, and homes in Chorley Wood, Norwich, Potters Bar and Hampstead Garden were also set on fire. [20] [23] In Ilford, London, three residential streets had their fire alarm wires cut. [1] Other prominent opponents of women's suffrage also saw their homes destroyed by fire and incendiary devices, sometimes as a response to police raids on WSPU offices. [64] Relatives of politicians also saw their houses attacked: the Mill House near Liphook, Hampshire was burned because the owner was Reginald McKenna's brother Theodore, while a bomb was set off in a house in Moor Hall Green, Birmingham, as the property was owned by Arthur Chamberlain, brother of Conservative politician Joseph Chamberlain (father to future Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain). [65] [66] Houses were also attacked in Doncaster. After some suffragettes were thrown out of a political meeting there in June 1913, the house of the man who had thrown them out was burned down. [67] In response to such actions, angry mobs often attacked WSPU meetings, such as in May 1913 when 1,000 people attacked a WSPU meeting in Doncaster. [68] In retaliation, suffragettes burned down more properties in the local area. [68]

Deaths and further injuries

An arson attack on the semaphore tower in Portsmouth dockyard in December 1913 killed 2 men Portsmouth Semaphore Tower.jpg
An arson attack on the semaphore tower in Portsmouth dockyard in December 1913 killed 2 men

In early June 1913, a series of fires purposely started in rural areas in Bradford killed at least two men, as well as several horses. [69] The acts were officially "claimed" by the suffragettes in their official newspaper, The Suffragette. [69] Over the next few months, suffragette attacks continued to threaten death and injury. On 2 June, a suffragette bomb was discovered at the South Eastern District Post Office, London, containing enough nitroglycerine to blow up the entire building and kill the 200 people who worked there. [21] A potentially serious event was avoided on 18 June when a suffragette bomb narrowly failed to breach the Stratford-upon-Avon Canal in Yardley Wood, Birmingham. [70] Since there was no lock for 11 miles, a breach would have emptied all this section's water into the populated valley below, which likely would have caused a loss of life. [70] [71]

The next day, a suffragette named Harry Hewitt pulled out a revolver at the Ascot Gold Cup horseracing event, entering the track during the race and brandishing the gun and a suffragette flag as the competing horses approached. [72] The leading horse collided with the man, causing serious head injuries to him and the jockey. [73] Hewitt was later impounded in a psychiatric hospital. [73] The incident was a copycat event inspired by the events of the Epsom Derby on 4 June 1913, where Emily Davison had famously entered the racecourse and threw herself in front of the King's personal horse, an incident which not only killed her but that seriously injured the jockey. [73]

On 19 July 1913, letter boxes were filled with noxious substances across Birmingham, seriously burning a postman when he opened one box. [74] On the same day, Edith Rigby planted a pipe bomb at the Liverpool Cotton Exchange Building, which exploded in the public hall. [75] After she was arrested, Rigby stated that she planted the bomb as she wanted "to show how easy it was to get explosives and put them in public places". [76] On 8 August, a school in Sutton-in-Ashfield was bombed and burned down in protest while Lloyd George was visiting the town, with the bombs later being found to have represented a potentially serious threat to life had anyone been present in the building at the time. [65] [62] Then, on 18 December, suffragettes bombed a wall at Holloway Prison in protest of the imprisonment of an inmate inside. [54] [49] Many houses near the prison were damaged or had their windows blown out by the bombs, showering some children with glass while they slept in their beds. [77] One of the perpetrators of the attack was injured by the blast. [78]

In one of the more serious suffragette attacks, a fire was purposely started at Portsmouth dockyard on 20 December 1913, in which 2 men were killed after it spread through the industrial area. [79] [80] [81] In the midst of the firestorm, a battlecruiser, HMS Queen Mary , had to be towed to safety to avoid the flames. [80] Then, two days before Christmas, several postal workers in Nottingham were severely burned after more suffragette letter bombs caused mail bags to ignite. [82]

By the end of the year, The Times newspaper reported that there had been 39 recorded suffragette bombing attacks across the country. [83]

1914 attacks

Contemporary literature showing the damage to the Britannia Pier, Great Yarmouth after it was bombed and burned down by suffragettes in 1914 Britannia Pier Great Yarmouth 1914.jpg
Contemporary literature showing the damage to the Britannia Pier, Great Yarmouth after it was bombed and burned down by suffragettes in 1914

Arson and bombing attacks continued into 1914. One of the first attacks of the year took place on 7 January, when a dynamite bomb was thrown over the wall of the Harewood Army Barracks in Leeds, which was being used for police training at the time. [85] The explosion of the bomb injured one man, while others narrowly escaped without being harmed after being thrown to the ground by the force of the bomb. [85] An arson attack on Aberuchill Castle, Comrie, Scotland on 4 February also nearly caused fatalities. [26] The building was set on fire with the servants inside, and they narrowly escaped harm. [26] The next month, another cabinet minister, Home Secretary Reginald McKenna, had his house set on fire in an arson attack. [23]

Rosslyn Chapel in Scotland, one of many churches bombed by suffragettes Rosslyn Chapel (Mentioned in Dan Brown's DaVinci Code).jpg
Rosslyn Chapel in Scotland, one of many churches bombed by suffragettes

One common target for suffragette attacks was churches, as it was believed that the Church of England was complicit in reinforcing opposition to women's suffrage. [86] Between 1913 and 1914, 32 churches were the subject of suffragette attacks. [61] Several churches and cathedrals were bombed in 1914: on 5 April, the St Martins-in-the-Field church in Trafalgar Square, London, was bombed, blowing out the windows and showering passers-by with broken glass. [30] [87] [77] A bomb was also discovered in the Metropolitan Tabernacle church in London, and in June, a bomb exploded at Westminster Abbey, damaging the Coronation Chair. [30] [1] [88] The Abbey was busy with visitors at the time, and around 80–100 people were in the building when the bomb exploded. [89] [90] The device was most probably planted by a member of a group that had left the Abbey only moments before the explosion. [89] Some were as close as 20 yards from the bomb at the time and the explosion caused a panic for the exits, but no serious injuries were reported. [90] The bomb had been packed with nuts and bolts to act as shrapnel. [90]

Coincidentally, at the time of the explosion, the House of Commons only 100 yards away was debating how to deal with the violent tactics of the suffragettes. [90] Many in the Commons heard the explosion and rushed to the scene to find out what had happened. [90] Two days after the Westminster Abbey bombing, a second suffragette bomb was discovered before it could explode in St Paul's Cathedral. [1] Annie Kenney also attempted a second bombing of the Church of St John the Evangelist in Smith Square, Westminster on 12 July, placing a bomb underneath a pew during a sermon before leaving. [91] However, the bomb was spotted by a member of the congregation, and Kenney, who was already being trailed by special branch detectives, was arrested as she left. [91] The congregation left in the church then was able to disarm the bomb before it exploded. [91]

A hospital was also targeted in Dundee on 22 May, with suffragettes burning down the building. [92] Two planned assaults on public officials also occurred during the year: in March, the Medical Prisoner Commissioner for Scotland was assaulted by suffragettes in public with horse whips, and on 3 June the medical officer for Holloway Prison, Dr. Forward, was also assaulted in a public street with whips. [23] [93] Another individual was injured in July when a suffragette letter bomb ignited a moving train in Salwick. [82] After the bomb caused a train carriage to catch fire, the train's guard attempted to throw the burning materials off the train to avoid further damage. [82] In doing so, he was badly burned on his arms, although he succeeded in disposing of the material. [82] Another attempt to flood a populated area had also taken place on 7 May, when a bomb was placed next to Penistone Reservoir in Upper Windleden. [49] [94] If successful, the attack would have led to 138 million gallons of water emptying into the populated valleys below, although the anticipated breach did not take place. [94]

Aborted plots

Some attacks were voluntarily aborted before they were carried out. In March 1913, a suffragette plot to kidnap Home Secretary Reginald McKenna was discussed in the House of Commons and in the press. [95] It was reported that suffragettes were contemplating kidnapping one or more cabinet ministers and subjecting them to force-feeding. [95]

According to Special Branch detectives, there were also WSPU plans in 1913 to create a suffragette "army", known as the "People's Training Corps". [96] A detective reported attending a meeting in which 300 young girls and women gathered ready to be trained, supposedly with the eventual aim of proceeding in force to Downing Street to forcibly imprison ministers until they conceded women's suffrage. [96] The group were nicknamed "Mrs Pankhurst's Army". [96]

Outbreak of war and ending of the campaign

In August 1914 the First World War began, which effectively led the end of the suffragette bombing and arson campaign. [97] After Britain joined the war, the WSPU took the decision to suspend their own campaigning. [1] Leader Emmeline Pankhurst instructed suffragettes to stop their violent actions and support the government in the conflict against Germany. [98] From this point forward, suffragettes instead largely channelled their energies into supporting the war effort. [30] By the time of the outbreak of war, the aim of achieving votes for women was still unrealised. [99] Later in the war, the increasing focus of the WSPU and the Pankhurst leadership on supporting the war effort led to the creation of the Women's Party, a political party that continued to promote women's suffrage but that was primarily concerned with patriotic support for the war. [30]

Reaction to the campaign

General public

The violence employed by suffragettes caused angry reactions amongst some members of the general public, with some actions inciting violent responses in return. A month after the bombing attack on Lloyd George's house in February 1913, a WSPU rally was held in Hyde Park, London, but the meeting quickly degenerated into a riot as members of the public became violent towards the women. [100] Clods of earth were thrown and some of the women manhandled, with many shouting "incendiary" or "shopbreakers" at the WSPU members. [100] This was not an isolated event, as attacks on individuals' houses often saw angry responses, such as in Doncaster in May 1913 when a 1,000 strong mob descended upon a WSPU meeting after several residential properties were burned down in the area. [61] After one attack on Bristol University's sports pavilion on 23 October 1913, undergraduates avenged the attack by raiding the WSPU office in the city. [70]

Wider women's suffrage movement

The "suffragists" of the largest women's suffrage society, the National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies, led by Millicent Fawcett, were anti-violence, and during the campaign NUWSS propaganda and Fawcett herself increasingly differentiated between the militants of the WSPU and their own non-violent means. [101] [102] The NUWSS also publicly distanced themselves from the violence and direct action of suffragettes. [1] The other major women's suffrage society, the Women's Freedom League, also opposed the violence publicly. [103]

Special Branch response

The counter-terrorist Special Branch of London's Metropolitan Police, which had been set up during the earlier Fenian dynamite campaign of 1881–1885, bore responsibility for dealing with the campaign. [104] Special Branch officers were employed to cover WSPU meetings and demonstrations in order to pre-empt offences, provide public order intelligence and to record inflammatory speeches. [105] WSPU leaders had been followed by Special Branch officers from 1907 onwards, and Emmeline Pankhurst herself was trailed by officers from the branch. [2] [106] A separate suffragette section of the branch had been formed in 1909. [106]

During the campaign, attempts to attend WSPU meetings became increasingly difficult as officers were recognised and attacked. [106] The attacks became so widespread that police had to invent new and never before attempted methods of counter-terrorism. [107] These included the use of double agents, covert photo surveillance, public pleas for funding and the use of a secret bomb disposal unit on Duck Island in St James's Park, London. [107] The branch was also given extra staff in order to protect ministers and their families, who were increasingly being targeted. [106] Prime Minister Asquith wrote that "even our children had to be vigilantly protected against the menace of abduction". [106] Many arrests were also made at WSPU meetings, and raids were often conducted against WSPU offices, in an attempt to find the bomb-makers' arsenal. [64] [104] In one raid on the home of Jennie Baines, a half-made bomb, a fully made bomb and guns were found. [21] Raids were also conducted against the offices of The Suffragette newspaper, and the printers were threatened with prosecution. [108] Because of this, there were periods that the newspaper could not publish, but secret reserves were kept for the newspaper to publish as many issues as possible. [22] [109]

At the time, planting bombs was officially a hangable offence, and so suffragettes took special measures to avoid being caught by police when carrying out bombing attacks. [48]

Impact and effectiveness

A 1913 cartoon, showing "Dame London" welcoming a suffragist, while behind her a suffragette holding a bomb threatens London The Sane and Insane Sisters.jpg
A 1913 cartoon, showing "Dame London" welcoming a suffragist, while behind her a suffragette holding a bomb threatens London

At the conclusion of the campaign in August 1914, the attacks had, in total, cost approximately £700,000 in damages (equivalent to £84,850,000in 2023), although according to historian C. J. Bearman this figure does not include "the damage done to works of art or the more minor forms of militancy such as window-smashing and letter-burning". [110] Bearman also notes that this figure does not include the extra costs inflicted by violent suffragette action, "such as extra police time, additional caretakers and night watchmen hired to protect property, and revenue lost when tourist attractions such as Haddon Hall and the State Apartments at Windsor Castle were closed for fear of suffragette attacks". [110] With these additional considerations, Bearman asserts, the campaign cost the British economy between £1 and £2 million in 1913 to 1914 alone (approximately £130–£240 million today). [110] There was an average of 21 bombing and arson incidents per month in 1913, and 15 per month in 1914, with there being an arson or bombing attack in every month between February 1913 and August 1914. [111] Bearman calculates that there was a total of at least 337 arson and bombing attacks between 1913 and 1914, but states that the true number could be well over 500. [110] By the end of the campaign, more than 1,300 people had been arrested and imprisoned for suffragette violence across the United Kingdom. [112]

The extent to which suffragette militancy contributed to the eventual enfranchisement of women in 1918 has been debated by historians, although the consensus of historical opinion is that the militant campaign was not effective. [113] With the aim of gaining votes for women still unrealised by the outbreak of war in 1914, the WSPU had failed to create the kind of "national crisis" which might have forced the government into concessions. [114] Historian Brian Harrison has also stated that opponents to women's suffrage believed the militant campaign had benefited them, since it had largely alienated public opinion and placed the suffrage question beyond parliamentary consideration. [115] In May 1913 another attempt had been made to pass a bill in parliament which would introduce women's suffrage, but the bill actually did worse than previous attempts when it was voted on, something which much of the press blamed on the increasingly violent tactics of the suffragettes. [116] The impact of the WSPU's violent attacks drove many members of the general public away from supporting the cause, and some members of the WSPU itself were also alienated by the escalation of violence, which led to splits in the organisation and the formation of groups such as the East London Federation of Suffragettes in 1914. [1] Bearman has asserted that contemporary opinion overwhelmingly was of the view that WSPU violence had shelved the question of women's suffrage until the organization "came to its senses or had disappeared from the scene". [117] At the time it was largely only suffragettes themselves that argued their campaign had been effective. [117]

In the 1930s, soon after all women over the age of 21 had received the vote under the Representation of the People Act of 1928, some historians asserted that militancy had evidently succeeded. [117] The Suffragette Fellowship, which compiled the sources on the movement that were often used by later historians, also decided in this decade that they were not going to mention any of the bombings in any of the sources. [21] This was partly in order to protect former suffragettes from prosecution, but was also an attempt to step away from the violent rhetoric and to change the cultural memory of the suffragette movement. [21] Many official sources on suffragette violence are only now beginning to be released from archives. [21]

Some feminist historians and supporters of feminist icon Emmeline Pankhurst such as Sandra Stanley Horton and June Purvis have also renewed the arguments that militancy succeeded, with Purvis arguing that assertions about the counter-productiveness of militancy deny or diminish the achievements of Pankhurst. [118] However, Purvis's arguments have been challenged by Bearman. [113] Revisionist historians such as Harrison and Martin Pugh have also attempted to draw greater attention to the role of the non-militants, such as those in the anti-violence National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies (NUWSS) (known as "suffragists"), and emphasised their understated role in gaining votes for women. [119]

Classification as terrorism

During the campaign, the WSPU described its own bombing and arson attacks as terrorism, with suffragettes declaring themselves to be "terrorists" in 1913. [120] [121] Christabel Pankhurst also increasingly used the word "terrorism" to describe the WSPU's actions during the campaign, and stated that the WSPU's greater "rebellion" was a form of terrorism. [93] Emmeline Pankhurst stated that the suffragettes committed violent acts because they wanted to "terrorise the British public". [21] The WSPU also reported each of its attacks in its newspaper The Suffragette under the headline "Reign of Terror". [21] [9] The authorities talked of arson and bomb attacks as terrorism, [121] and contemporary newspapers in the UK [122] and in the United States [123] also made use of the term "Suffragette Terrorism" to report on WSPU attacks. One instance of this was after the bombing attack on David Lloyd George's house in February 1913, when the Pall Mall Gazette reported the attack under the specific headline of "Suffragette Terrorism". [25]

The bombing and arson campaign has seen classification as a single-issue terrorism campaign by academics, [124] [125] [126] and is classified as such in The Oxford Handbook of Terrorism. [127] Many historians have also asserted that the campaign contained terrorist acts. Rachel Monaghan published three articles in 1997, 2000 and 2007 in terrorism-themed academic journals in which she argued that the campaign can be described as one that was terrorist in nature. [128] [124] [129] In 2005, historian C. J. Bearman published a study on the bombing and arson campaign in which he asserted: "The intention of the campaign was certainly terrorist in terms of the word's definition, which according to the Concise Oxford Dictionary (1990 edition) is 'a person who uses or favours violent and intimidating methods of coercing a government or community'. The intention of coercing the community is clearly expressed in the WSPU's Seventh Annual Report, and, according to Annie Kenney, that of coercing Parliament was endorsed by Emmeline and Christabel Pankhurst themselves. The question is therefore not whether the campaign was terrorist, or whether the WSPU (in 1912–14) can be called a terrorist organization, but whether its terrorism worked." [130] Bearman later published a further article in 2007 which also claims that the suffragette campaign was a terrorist one. [131]

Fern Riddell has also highlighted that, as well as being actions that would be defined as terrorism today, suffragette bombing and arson attacks were considered terrorist attacks at the time. [21] [1] Other feminist historians such as Cheryl Jorgensen-Earl have also agreed that the campaign was a terrorist one on the grounds that the WSPU were fighting a just war. [130] Other historians who have asserted that the campaign involved terrorism include Paula Bartley, Laura Mayhall and George Legg. [132] [133] [33]

Feminist historian June Purvis has consistently objected to the characterisation of suffragette actions as terrorism, in part arguing that the WSPU leadership was not responsible for the actions of some of its members. [134] Arguing that the leadership of the WSPU emphasised that their followers were instructed not to endanger human life, she has asserted that suffragettes cannot be compared to modern-day terrorists. [121] She has further argued that the suffragettes did not kill or harm anyone. [24] However, Purvis's arguments remain controversial. Fern Riddell has criticised claims that the suffragettes did not cause harm or intend to cause harm, stating: "The newspapers (and even the accounts of the militant suffragettes) prove that there were numerous instances where injuries occurred, and that personal risk, or even death, was great". [1] Rachel Monaghan has argued that the use of letter bombs by suffragettes can be seen to call into question whether the WSPU truly aimed to avoid endangering human life, while C. J. Bearman has criticised Purvis directly, claiming that it is inaccurate to state that the WSPU was not responsible for the actions of its paid members, and has called this assertion "grotesque". [26] [135] Purvis maintains that those who support the assertion that the suffragettes committed acts of terror "seek to condemn these radical women who were campaigning for their democratic right to the parliamentary vote". [24]

Influence on later campaigns

The campaign in part provided the inspiration for later bombing and terrorist campaigns in Britain, such as those conducted by the Irish Republican Army (IRA). [99] The S-Plan of 1939 to 1940 utilised the tactic of undertaking incendiary attacks on pillar boxes, and also saw the planting of explosive devices. [99] The tactic of packing nuts and bolts into bombs to act as shrapnel, often regarded as a later twentieth-century IRA invention, was also first employed by the suffragettes. [40] Several suffragette bombings, such as the attempted bombing of Liverpool Street station in 1913, saw the use of this method. [40] The combination of high explosive bombs, incendiary devices and letter bombs used by suffragettes also provided the pattern for the IRA campaigns of the 1970s and 1980s. [136] Unknown to many, the first terrorist bomb to explode in Northern Ireland in the twentieth century was not detonated by the IRA but by the suffragettes at Lisburn Cathedral in August 1914. [136] Suffragette tactics also provided a template for more contemporary attacks in Britain. [2]

Timeline of the campaign

Below is a timeline of some of the major recorded events in the campaign:

1912

1913

1914

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Emmeline Pankhurst</span> British suffragette (1858–1928)

Emmeline Pankhurst was a British political activist who organised the British suffragette movement and helped women to win in 1918 the right to vote in Great Britain and Ireland. In 1999, Time named her as one of the 100 Most Important People of the 20th Century, stating that "she shaped an idea of objects for our time" and "shook society into a new pattern from which there could be no going back". She was widely criticised for her militant tactics, and historians disagree about their effectiveness, but her work is recognised as a crucial element in achieving women's suffrage in the United Kingdom.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Emily Davison</span> English suffragette (1872–1913)

Emily Wilding Davison was an English suffragette who fought for votes for women in Britain in the early twentieth century. A member of the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) and a militant fighter for her cause, she was arrested on nine occasions, went on hunger strike seven times and was force-fed on forty-nine occasions. She died after being hit by King George V's horse Anmer at the 1913 Derby when she walked onto the track during the race.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Prisoners (Temporary Discharge for Ill-Health) Act 1913</span> United Kingdom legislation

The Prisoners Act 1913, commonly referred to as the Cat and Mouse Act, was an Act of Parliament passed in Britain under H. H. Asquith's Liberal government in 1913.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Christabel Pankhurst</span> Suffragette, co-founder of the Womens Social and Political Union, and editor

Dame Christabel Harriette Pankhurst was a British suffragette born in Manchester, England. A co-founder of the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU), she directed its militant actions from exile in France from 1912 to 1913. In 1914, she supported the war against Germany. After the war, she moved to the United States, where she worked as an evangelist for the Second Adventist movement.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Women's Social and Political Union</span> UK movement for womens suffrage, 1903–1918

The Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) was a women-only political movement and leading militant organisation campaigning for women's suffrage in the United Kingdom founded in 1903. Known from 1906 as the suffragettes, its membership and policies were tightly controlled by Emmeline Pankhurst and her daughters Christabel and Sylvia. Sylvia was eventually expelled.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Annie Kenney</span> British suffragette (1879–1953)

Ann "Annie" Kenney was an English working-class suffragette and socialist feminist who became a leading figure in the Women's Social and Political Union. She co-founded its first branch in London with Minnie Baldock. Kenney attracted the attention of the press and public in 1905 when she and Christabel Pankhurst were imprisoned for several days for assault and obstruction related to the questioning of Sir Edward Grey at a Liberal rally in Manchester on the issue of votes for women. The incident is credited with inaugurating a new phase in the struggle for women's suffrage in the UK with the adoption of militant tactics. Annie had friendships with Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence, Baroness Pethick-Lawrence, Mary Blathwayt, Clara Codd, Adela Pankhurst, and Christabel Pankhurst.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Black Friday (1910)</span> Womens suffrage event on 18 November 1910

Black Friday was a suffragette demonstration in London on 18 November 1910, in which 300 women marched to the Houses of Parliament as part of their campaign to secure voting rights for women. The day earned its name from the violence meted out to protesters, some of it sexual, by the Metropolitan Police and male bystanders.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Women's suffrage in the United Kingdom</span> Movement to gain women the right to vote


A movement to fight for women's right to vote in the United Kingdom finally succeeded through acts of Parliament in 1918 and 1928. It became a national movement in the Victorian era. Women were not explicitly banned from voting in Great Britain until the Reform Act 1832 and the Municipal Corporations Act 1835. In 1872 the fight for women's suffrage became a national movement with the formation of the National Society for Women's Suffrage and later the more influential National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies (NUWSS). As well as in England, women's suffrage movements in Wales, Scotland and other parts of the United Kingdom gained momentum. The movements shifted sentiments in favour of woman suffrage by 1906. It was at this point that the militant campaign began with the formation of the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mary Richardson</span> Canadian suffragette

Mary Raleigh Richardson was a Canadian suffragette active in the women's suffrage movement in the United Kingdom, an arsonist, a socialist parliamentary candidate and later head of the women's section of the British Union of Fascists (BUF) led by Sir Oswald Mosley.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Suffragette</span> British movement for womens suffrage

A suffragette was a member of an activist women's organisation in the early 20th century who, under the banner "Votes for Women", fought for the right to vote in public elections in the United Kingdom. The term refers in particular to members of the British Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU), a women-only movement founded in 1903 by Emmeline Pankhurst, which engaged in direct action and civil disobedience. In 1906, a reporter writing in the Daily Mail coined the term suffragette for the WSPU, derived from suffragistα, in order to belittle the women advocating women's suffrage. The militants embraced the new name, even adopting it for use as the title of the newspaper published by the WSPU.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mary Leigh</span> English political activist and suffragette

Mary Leigh was an English political activist and suffragette.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kitty Marion</span> Actress and political activist, Militant Suffragette (1871–1944)

Kitty Marion 12 March 1871 – 9 October 1944) was born Katherina Maria Schäfer in Germany. She emigrated to London in 1886 when she was fifteen, and she grew to minor prominence when she sang in music halls throughout the United Kingdom during the late 19th century. She became known in the field for standing up for female performers against agents, corruption, and for better working conditions. She joined the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) in 1908, engaged in selling their newspaper Votes for Women and became a prominent suffragette in the United Kingdom for her participation in civil unrest protests including riots and arson. As a result, Marion was arrested many times and is known for having endured 232 force-feedings while on hunger strike in prison. She is quoted as saying “there are no words to describe the horrible revolting sensation.” When World War I started she emigrated to the United States, and there she joined the team on Margaret Sanger’s Birth Control Review. Although she used her tenacity and loud voice to get people to pay attention to her cause, she did not use violence as much as she had in the United Kingdom, although she was still arrested many times for advocating birth control.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Janie Allan</span> Scottish suffrage activist (1868–1968)

Jane "Janie" Allan was a Scottish activist and fundraiser for the suffragette movement of the early 20th century.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jessie Kenney</span> English suffragette

Jessica "Jessie" Kenney (1887–1985) was an English suffragette who was jailed for assaulting the Prime Minister and Home Secretary in a protest to gain suffrage for women in the UK. Details of a bombing campaign to support their cause were discovered by the authorities in her flat when Kenney was sent abroad to convalesce. She later trained as a wireless operator but worked as a stewardess.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Women's Sunday</span> Suffragette mass demonstration, London 1908

Women's Sunday was a suffragette march and rally held in London on 21 June 1908. Organised by Emmeline Pankhurst's Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) to persuade the Liberal government to support votes for women, it is thought to have been the largest demonstration to be held until then in the country.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lillian Dove-Willcox</span> British suffragette

Lillian Dove-Willcox (1875–1963) was a British suffragette who was a member of Emmeline Pankhurst's personal bodyguard.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Historiography of the Suffragettes</span>

The Historiography of the Suffragette Campaign deals with the various ways Suffragettes are depicted, analysed and debated within historical accounts of their role in the campaign for women's suffrage in early 20th century Britain.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Grace Roe</span> Head of suffragette operations for the WSPU

Eleanor Grace Watney Roe was Head of Suffragette operations for the Women's Social and Political Union. She was released from prison after the outbreak of World War I due to an amnesty for suffragettes negotiated with the government by the WSPU.

Elizabeth Thomson was a Scottish suffragette and a member of the Edinburgh branch of the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU). She was arrested for her involvement in WSPU protests in Scotland and London alongside her sister, Agnes. The sisters were involved in the first arson attempt in Scotland as part of the WSPU arson campaign in 1913. Elizabeth was awarded a Hunger Strike Medal 'for valour' by the WSPU.

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