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How Did Women Win the Right to Vote?

Take a look at some of the key people, places and moments in the campaign for women's rights to vote.

The Representation of the People Act of 1918 granted women over 30, with specific property qualifications, the right to vote.

It would be another ten years before women were granted the vote on the same terms as men.

Here we look at some of the key people, places and moments in the campaign.

A black and white photograph of Annie Kenney and Christabel Pankhurst holding a sign saying 'Votes for Women.'
Suffragettes Annie Kenney and Christabel Pankhurst, members of the Women’s Social and Political Union. Image via Wikipedia.

1792: A Vindication of the Rights of Women is published

Early human rights advocate and educational pioneer Mary Wollstonecraft states the case for women’s equal rights as the emotional and intellectual equals of men, 126 years before the first women get the vote.

A photograph of the entrance of a small chapel.
Newington Green Unitarian Church in North London features a life-size artwork of Mary Wollstonecraft, who lived in the village in the 1780s. The chapel is listed at Grade II. © Historic England Archive. View image DP264776.

1832: First suffrage petition from an individual woman to Parliament

Mary Smith, from Stanmore in Yorkshire, says that she pays taxes and is subject to the law, so she did not see why she should not be able to vote.

The petition was presented by Henry Hunt MP, a radical MP known for his part in the Peterloo Massacre of 1819. The petition is laughed out of the House of Commons.

1851: Sheffield sees the founding of the first women’s suffrage organisation in the UK

Anne Knight, a social reformer, abolitionist and pioneer of feminism, founded the Sheffield Women’s Political Association partly in response to feeling marginalised within the abolition movement.

A black and white photograph of a church with a tall spire.
All Souls Church, Langham Place from the south. © Historic England Archive. View image BL20981/057.

1858: Feminist periodical ‘The Englishwoman’s Journal’ (later ‘The Englishwoman’s Review’) is founded

Barbara Leigh Smith (later Bodichon), daughter of a radical MP, had petitioned Parliament in 1856 in favour of the Married Women’s Property Bill to give wives control over their property and earnings.

The petition was unsuccessful, and so formed the Langham Place Group, which was named after their premises in central London. The group supported initiatives to improve access to education and work for women.

‘The Englishwoman’s Journal’ was the first periodical devoted entirely to women’s issues.

A photograph of an extract of an article from the English Woman's Journal.
The Englishwoman’s Journal Vol I dating from 1 March 1858. Image via Wikipedia.

7 June 1866: The first mass women’s suffrage petition is presented to the House of Commons

The petition was brought to Parliament by Emily Davies and Elizabeth Garrett, and was presented by John Stuart Mill MP. It was said that to avoid attention on arrival in Westminster Hall, they concealed it under the stall of an apple seller, which is where Mill found it.

The petition organisers recorded 1499 names printed in a pamphlet, although the House of Commons Select Committee on Public Petitions logged 1521 signatures – presumably last-minute additions.

April 1868: First public meeting

The Manchester National Society for Women’s Suffrage holds the first-ever public meeting on women’s suffrage at the Free Trade Hall, Manchester.

A photograph of the exterior of a large classical style trade hall.
The Free Trade Hall, Manchester © Historic England Archive. View image AA026921.

Between 1886 and 1904, the House of Commons votes only twice on the issue of women’s suffrage.

Between 1870-1883, a women’s suffrage bill was introduced and defeated each year (except for 1880).

1897: The National Union of Women’s Suffrage Societies (NUWSS) is formed

Led by Millicent Fawcett, the organisation operated democratically, aiming to achieve women’s suffrage through peaceful and legal means.

A photograph of Millicent Fawcett speaking to a crowd of people in Hyde Park.
Millicent Fawcett’s Hyde Park address of 1913. Image via LSE Library on Flickr.

On 24 April 2018, suffragist Millicent Fawcett became the first woman in history to have a statue in Parliament Square in London.

1903: The Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU) is founded at the Pankhurst home in Manchester

Wishing to take more militant action in the campaign for suffrage, the Pankhursts (mother Emmeline and daughters Christabel and Sylvia Pankhurst) founded the WSPU along with three other women.

They adopt the slogan ‘Deeds, not words’.

A black and white photograph of a group of women in Edwardian dress sitting around a table, reading documents.
Meeting of Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU) leaders about 1906 to 1907. Image via Wikipedia.

1905: Christabel Pankhurst and Annie Kenney interrupted a Liberal Party meeting by shouting demands for voting rights for women

They are arrested, gaining media interest and support for the WSPU.

A photograph of a Suffragette banner with the wording 'Hammersmith - Deeds Not Words'.
Hammersmith WSPU ‘Deeds Not Words’ banner. Museum of London. Image via Wikipedia.

1906: Term ‘Suffragette’ is coined

‘The Daily Mail’ coins the term ‘Suffragette’ to distinguish the more militant WSPU activists from the suffragists of the NUWSS.

9 February 1907: The Mud March

This march sees 3,000 women march from Hyde Park to Exeter Hall in London, organised by the NUWSS.

31 June 1908: 30,000 Suffragettes from all over England congregate in London’s Hyde Park.

During this meeting, purple, green and white officially become the colours of the WSPU.

June 1908: Stones thrown at Prime Minister’s residence

Suffragettes Edith New and Mary Leigh throw stones through the windows of 10 Downing Street.

A photograph of the exterior view of 10 Downing Street.
Exterior view of 10 Downing Street. © Historic England Archive. View image DP133026.

1909: Hunger strikes

Imprisoned suffragette Marion Wallace Dunlop hunger strikes in protest of the government not granting women political prisoner status.

She is released after 91 hours.

September 1909: Force-feeding begins

The prison authorities begin force-feeding huger-striking suffragettes.

A poster showing a suffragette being held down in a chair and being force-fed through a tube. The headline states 'Torturing women in prison: Vote against the government.'
Suffragette-force-fed poster, 1913. Image via Wikipedia.

1911: Some suffragettes boycott the national census because they are not treated as citizens with a voice

Others spoil the forms with protest statements.

A photograph of a census document from 1911 with the words 'Votes for Women' written in large writing across the document.
Spoiled 1911 census form. © National Archives London.

March 1912: London’s West End attacked

Around 150 WSPU members armed with hammers smash windows in London’s West End.

Mrs Pankhurst was among those arrested.

November 1912: The postal system is attacked

WSPU members pour acid, ink, lampblack and tar into post boxes, damaging thousands of pieces of mail.

The destruction was carried out secretly, so no arrests were made, but the Union claimed responsibility.

A black and white photograph of Frederick and Emmeline Pethick Lawrence, Emmeline Pankhurst and Mabel Tuke sitting in a court room, surrounded by other people.
Frederick and Emmeline Pethick Lawrence, Emmeline Pankhurst and Mabel Tuke in court at Bow Street, London 1912. Image via Wikipedia.

June 1913: Emily Wilding Davison dies under the king’s horse

Suffragette Emily Wilding Davison dies after being hit by King George V’s horse at the Epsom Derby.

Davison became a martyr for the cause. Her death was pronounced accidental.

A photograph of the front page of Sketch paper with the headline 'First Martyr for Votes for Women'.
Daily Sketch front page, 9 June 1913. Image via Wikipedia.

1914: Attack at the National Gallery

Suffragette Anne Hunt slashes a painting at the National Gallery with a cleaver.

In the seven months leading up to the outbreak of the First World War, Suffragettes are responsible for 107 incidents of arson.

A black and white photograph of Emmeline Pankhurst being arrested by police outside Buckingham Palace.
Emmeline Pankhurst was arrested by police outside Buckingham Palace while trying to present a petition to George V in May 1914. Image via Wikipedia.

1914 to 1918: The First World War

During the First World War women are appealed to register for paid employment. Many women take on jobs that were once considered only for men including becoming truck drivers, mechanics and munitions workers.

February 1918: The Representation of the People Act becomes law

Women over the age of 30 meeting specific property qualifications are granted the right to vote.

June 1928: The Representation of the People Act

This Act gives women the right to vote on the same terms as men.

A photograph of the front cover of the English Women's Suffrage paper with the headline 'Votes for Women'.
English Women’s Suffrage paper, 1920. Image via Wikipedia.

Further reading

6 comments on “How Did Women Win the Right to Vote?

  1. Reblogged this on History, Archaeology, Folklore and so on and commented:
    his year marks 100 years since the Representation of the People Act 1918 granted women over 30 with certain property qualifications the right to vote

  2. Excellent review of the history of this movement. It goes to show how far back the movement started and reiterates how hard women fought for their right to have a voice. Very inspirational.

  3. How were “certain property rights” defined in 1918 Act?

    What percentage of the female population was thus enfranchised?

    • Hi Gerald. The property qualifications detailed that women would only be able to vote if they owned property themselves or were married to owners of property. Around two-thirds of the total population of women in the UK met the requirements to vote after the 1918 Act. Virtually all men over the age of 21, regardless of property qualification, were eligible to vote.

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