25 April 2014

The British Women’s Suffrage Movement On the International Stage


                The Twentieth Century observed more women gaining the right to vote than during any other time in history. Few women gained suffrage prior to 1900 and astonishingly a few countries still deny women this essential human right in 2014. Women’s suffrage movements especially took off at the turn of the century, and there was an international component as female suffragists began to travel and saw both the injustices and freedoms experienced by women in other countries. This is exemplified in the 1915 and 1919 conferences held by suffragettes and social reformers from Germany, England, and the United States. Over one thousand delegates attended the anti-war conference in 1915 and formed the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, meeting again in 1919, in Zurich, to promote world peace and to advocate for the rights of women and other minorities (CP 205). Clearly by this point, the women’s movement had reached an international scale and while focused mostly on the suffrage movement in their own countries, suffragettes such as Emmeline Pankhurst were definitely aware of the events and circumstances of women in other areas of the globe.

                Included in the Introduction to Emmeline Pankhurst’s Suffrage Speech at the Old Bailey is the statement that  the “Women’s Social and Political Union, founded in 1903 by Emmeline Pankhurst, attracted large crowds at suffrage demonstrations and adopted the militant tactics of the Irish independence movement” (CP 202). This statement alludes to the fact that the suffragette’s decision to turn to violent demonstrations did not occur in a vacuum.  There were events happening in Europe that had a direct influence upon the movement. In Pankhurst’s 1912 speech, delivered during her trial at the Old Bailey criminal court, she plainly expresses why WSPU members were forced into militancy. They experienced violence from the government and were treated as common criminals for simple acts such as creating petitions, banners, and attending political rallies and asking politicians about their stance on women’s rights. Between 1903 and 1912, Pankhurst and many other suffragettes were imprisoned and treated with excessive cruelty and punishments compared to their crimes. The example of women involved in militant acts abroad as well as Pankhurst’s view that violence was necessary undoubtedly added to the WSPU’s turn towards militancy.

                At the end of Pankhurst’s speech, she uses the example of an Irish woman’s trial in which she was being charged with murder. Because she was young and unmarried, the judge ruled that her father needed to be present and held partially responsible for her actions. Pankhurst uses this example from Ireland to show that if she was guilty of something, because she was a woman and had few rights, men should actually be held responsible for her violent actions. She asks how men can judge her in court when her sex has no say in British laws nor are they allowed to participate in the judicial system. Because the suffragettes were only reacting to harsh treatment from the authority, Pankhurst asserted that “If we are guilty of this offence, this conspiracy, other people, some of the members of His Majesty’s Government, should be in the dock by our side” (CP 205). Pankhurst’s speech demonstrates that she understood not only laws in her own country, but that she was also aware of legal circumstances of women in Ireland.





Emmeline Pankhurst being arrested.

2 comments:

Unknown said...

Great blog Allison! I wonder if maybe Pankhurst was even alluding to the injustice of women all over the world, not just in Europe. As you mentioned, the suffragettes traveled and saw the injustice that women continued to face day after day; do you think Pankhurst's statement of women not having any say in the laws was directed to be heard "around the world"? Meaning, do you think she meant to cause attention to the injustice inflicted upon women across the world not just in Europe? Or do you think she was solely focused on women in England and Ireland?

Unknown said...

Thank you Beth! In my opinion, because Pankhurst used the Irish example in her speech and because of the language she used, such as referring to all women as we or us, I do think pankhurst wanted all women to have more rights. I feel that at first she and the other British suffragettes were solely focused on England, but after facing so much opposition and cruel treatment, it not only made them turn to extreme measures but also led them to recognize that it wasn't only a British problem, but a worldwide problem. It is easy to see how passionate she was about women's rights in her speeches because she talks about being ready to lose everything to further the cause.