Monday, March 18, 2019
The Suffragete Movement :: Papers
The Suffragete Movement In Britain only two thirds of the male population were bothowed to vote, these did not include, men who did not own property or pay at least 10 per year in rent, servants who lived with their employers, criminals and lunatics. Women could not vote at all. In 1906 The Suffragete Movement was used to describe women campaigning for the right to vote, Emmiline Pankhurst was mavin of the commencement leaders of the Suffragete movement. The fight for the right for women to vote was a raving mad revolution for the rights of all men and all women to be treated as this was led by Emmiline Pankhurst and her fellow Suffragettes. On 19th May 1905, 10 women went to speak to the Prime Minister. One of those women was Emily Davies, who was 76 years old. It was Emily who handed the first womens suffrage petition to the Prime Minister. In return all they received was some advice about being patient. This was not the resolve they wanted. Th ey wanted to be taken seriously. In 1906, Christobel Pankhurst and her colleague attended a meeting held by Sir Edward Grey, a leading Liberal. There they assaulted a policeman, were arrested and sentenced to sevensome days in jail or pay a all right They could have paid the fine and gone home. Annie Kenney refused to pay the fine, as distant as she and the movement was concerned it was prison or votes for women. As quantify went by there were more arrests and imprisonment for members of the Suffragettes. They shouted down Ministers, protested in parliament and on the streets, but women were still refused the right to vote. In 1908, dangle Nell chained herself to the railings outside the Prime Ministers front door. She did this for dozens of reasons the Cabinet was in session so they would hear her speech, and so would the pack outside. Furthermore it would take the police a long time to unchain her. Nurse Oliva Smith who followed her example and chained herself to
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