"Emmeline Pankhurst" Essays and Research Papers

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    How effective were the methods of the WSPU in their struggle for women’s voting rights The Women’s Social and Political union was founded by Mrs Emmeline Pankhurst‚ in her family home in Manchester‚ on the 10th of October 1903. Mrs Pankhurst and her husband Richard were members of the Independent Labour Party and had been since 1893. Emmeline and her eldest daughter Christabel became the leaders of the organization. The WSPU was the most notorious of all the suffrage movements; splitting from the

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    parliament‚ they visited member’s houses and they signed many‚ many‚ many petitions. However‚ there rather feeble attempts were unsuccessful and no news came to them of the law being past. So in 1903 two women Emmeline Pankhurst (Born 1858 in Manchester) and her daughter Christabel Pankhurst (Born 1880 in Manchester) got fed up with the slow and inadequate protesting of Mrs Fawcett. They believed that violence gave results‚ they wanted the right to vote and they wanted it now. So they decided to create

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    Do you agree with the view that the suffrage movement made ‘substantial progress’ during the first decade of the twentieth century? Source 13 is part of a speech made by Emmeline Pankhurst‚ who founded the WSPU‚ in 1908. It was delivered during her trial at Bow Street Magistrates Court in London; she had been arrested for obstruction caused during a suffragette demonstration. She was arrested on a number of occasions for using militancy. Her speech clearly shows that she felt there had been absolutely

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    Why all women got the right to vote by 1928. In 1928‚ all women finally got the right to vote. It took them 78 years to do it‚ but all their hard work had paid off. The women campaigning tried everything‚ for example‚ they got themselves arrested‚ they went on hunger strikes while in prison‚ they tried to get noticed by the media and many more. Some of the main things that really helped women get the vote were The Suffragists‚ The Suffragettes‚ Legislation and War Effort. The suffragists used

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    due to police response to their violent actions. Although it in no way condones the actions of the more violent policeman‚ it does serve to show how the violence of the Suffragette’s led to injury and pain. This is illustrated by a quote by Emmeline Pankhurst‚ the leader of the Suffragette’s‚ who stated “Often we were painfully bruised and hurt.” The militancy campaign led not only to people getting injured‚ yet also to the damage of both private and public property. Many of the more prominent supporters

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    Part a) Study Sources 10‚ 11 and 12. How far do the sources suggest that the actions of Emily Davison at the Derby in 1913 helped to advance the cause of women’s suffrage? (20 marks) Explain your answer‚ using the evidence of Sources 10‚ 11 and 12. SOURCE 10 (From The Times newspaper‚ published on 5 June 1913) The desperate act of a woman who rushed from the rails on to the course as the horses swept round Tattenham Corner‚ apparently from some mad notion that she could spoil the race

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    Discuss the two approaches: Suffragette and Suffragists. Which do you consider the most effective? Women’s suffrage in the United Kingdom was a national movement that began in 1872. Since the 1860s‚ women had been campaigning for the right to vote. Although women had made gains in areas such as education‚ real change could only come through by having a say in parliament. In the course of this movement‚ two parties were formed to fight for the rights of women: the Suffragettes and the Suffragists

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    This essay shall attempt to explain why some women got the vote in 1918 by discussing male and female spheres‚ the emergence of the suffrage societies and the similarities and differences between them. It shall proceed to discuss anti-suffrage‚ the role of politics‚ discuss how the war affected the women’s movement and finally the 1918 Representation of the People Act. It shall conclude was a summary of the points discussed. To understand the reasons behind some women getting the vote in 1918

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    Why Is The Wspu Successful

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    The Women’s Social and Political Union was a militant organization that campaigned for Women’s enfranchisement in the years between 1903 and 1917 (Lance 1979‚ 51-53).Through time‚ the WSPU conducted inadequate militant actions that damaged their cause‚ but they contributed to the war efforts during WWI and were able to help women gain enfranchisement‚ therefore they were partially successful in promoting the British Suffragette movement. They used various forms of propaganda‚ adopted militant strategies

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    After that‚ the suffragettes used more physical and psychological actions‚ as they began to heckle government ministers‚ they constructed mass rallies and they performed raids to various places. One of the consequences was gaol‚ as Christabel Pankhurst soon found out‚ as she was the first suffragette to go to prison in 1905. In the years 1908 and 1909‚ new tactics were created and were used worldwide. The first couple in 1908 included such things as chaining themselves together and becoming

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