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Suffragette In the Grip of the Law. Small girl is flanked by two burly policemen arrested for campaignings. Date: circa 1908
Suffragette Holding Railings. Little girl clings to the railings, while policeman guards door of house. Captioned, I will see the Government. Date: circa 1908
Suffragette Girl Protests Trafalgar Square. Little girl stands on a barrell, VFW placard beside her, and cries, Down with man-made laws! Date: circa 1908
Suffragette Little Girl and Policeman. Little Girl is told to move on by policeman as she tries to meet a government Minister. She appeals, somebody please move this horrid man! Date: circa 1908
Suffragette Deputation to Parliament Result. Womens Deputation to Parliament starts peacefully, then the police make arrests. Captioned, Oh what a Difference. Date: circa 1908
Suffragette Attitude of Politicians. Contrasts the, Attitude of Politicians towards womens Suffrage, At Election time, and At Westminster Date: circa 1908
Suffragette Male and Female Political Prisoners. Contrasts the treatment of male and female political prisoners, with the caption, Comparisons are Odious. Date: circa 1908
Suffragette W. S. P. U Christmas CardSuffragette W.S.P.U Christmas Card. A merry Christmas and votes for women in 1910 card produced by W.S.P.U showing a girl dressed in the uniform of the organisations Drum
Suffragette Women Writers Suffrage League. The W.W.S.L was founded in 1908 by Cicely Hamilton and Bessie Hatton. This shows a banner designed for the league in 1909 by William Henry Margetson
Suffragettes in Black Maria. A group of suffragettes arrested at a demonstration are carted off in a police van. Acts of defiance continue as a policeman is pushed
Suffragettes Attack Election Candidate. At a general election meeting, the suffragists were on hand to pelt the hapless candidate with eggs, vegetables and rotten fish. Date: circa 1910
Votes for Women Unity is Strength. The fight for the vote unites women of all ages and all classes who dance together under the chorus Votes for Women. Date: circa 1908
Suffragette Geese want a Vote. A trio of cackling (ceramic) geese appeal to a seated dog to give them the vote. Date: circa 1913
Suffragette Faces Judge in Court. Tiny suffragette waves a Votes for Women flag at the judge, whilst restrained by burly copper. Date: circa 1907
Suffragette Geese Miss Hissy. Miss Hissy addresses a meeting of the Gooses Social and Political Union, asking, Is a question of gander - I mean gender to stand between us and the vote
Suffragette and Bugle. Suffragette in pretty dress with flared skirt, feathered hat and white boots, blows a bugle with banner proclaiming Votes for Women Date: circa 1908
Votes for Women Bill Posting. Suffragettes Keenly sticking bills on everything - Policemen, letter boxes, dogs and even walls. Date: circa 1910
Suffragette Shouts Give me a Vote. Anti-Suffrage view of stereotype. flag-waving screaming harridan on postcard designed by John Hassall for the National League for Opposing Womens Suffrage
Formidable looking Suffragette. Formidable looking Suffragette in pork pie hat and tie, with Votes for Women flag, with caption, A Merry Xmas. Date: circa 1908
Anti-Suffrage Army of Militants. Extreme German view of the English Army of Militant Suffragettes with their weapons of war - bombs, guns, axes, acid and scissors. Date: circa 1913
Suffragette Recipe for Cabinet Pudding. Method, Take one fresh young suffragette, add a large slice of her own importance, and as much sauce as you like
I se a Suffragette. Weeping child, desparate for her familys attention, vows to become a suffragette. Date: circa 1909
Suffragette Caught Bathing. A suffragette is caught bathing at Swansea and hides behind rocks. Gallant gentleman offers his hat so she may cover her modesty. Date: circa 1910
Suffragette Down with Tom Cats. Fierce looking cat proclaims, Down with the Tom cats. i.e the males! Date: circa 1908
Meeting tonight, Votes for women.. Mr. Asquith scurries away from two suffragettes beside the caption, Meeting tonight, Votes for women. Date: circa 1909
A Womans place is the Home.. Shows two young women in shawls, (mill girls?), an elderly mother and a crippled father. Caption reads, Who will then earn the Daily bread? Date: 1909
The Right Dishonourable Double-Face Asquith. Shows Prime Minister Asquith as a two-faced figure, dressed in French Revolutionary style confronting the King
On the Cromer Beach. A Scene on a beach when alarmed mother cries Children!! The tide is coming in! You will be swept away! Children - (reassuringly), Oh no Mummy, Don
Come along Daddy, drink it up. Miss. Jane Bull offers her father a steaming mug labelled Votes for Women, adding, You don t know how much good it may do those rheumatic pains of yours
Consulting the Oracle. Male and female anti-suffragists consult the oracle on how to rid themselves of the child who personifies the womens suffrage movement
In the dim and speculative future. Prime Minister Asquith, dressed as a young maiden picks the petals from a daisy, thinking, This year - next year - sometime - !!
The Supporter. Two Men stand outside the polling station, one asks, You want to know why I am going to vote for the Womans suffrage man
Peoples House. Fido the dog guards the entrance to the Peoples House - the Houses of parliament. Women with banners ask to be let in but Fido Asquith refuses, No
Seven to two. Stark illustration of how 7 million men have votes while under the proposed Parliamentary Bill of 1909, only 1.5 to 2 million women would be eligible. Date: circa 1909
Is this right?. Woman with basket on her back, meets man holding umbrella labelled Franchise. She asks Why can t I have an umbrella too? Voter says, You can t. You ought to stop at home
Give me a bit of your franchise cake.. Miss Jane Bull asks Master Johnnie Bull for a bit of his franchise cake. He declines saying It wouldn t be good for you
Evolution. Chinese women reject traditional shoes and tell Mr John Bull Chinaman, They are no use, we re quite grown out of that sort of shoe! Please take fresh measures
Committee rooms, House of Commons. Jane Bull holds a box labelled, Miss. J. Bull Franchise Realising it is empty, she confronts Herbert Gladstone who thinks, Dear me
The Workers Husband. Lady Canvasser asks man, Have you got a vote Mr. Brown? Loafer, Course I got a vote, and shall have so long as my wife takes in washing Date: circa 1909
The Cry of The Children. A line of little children, each holding a placard reading, Votes for Mammies Stretches into the distance. Captioned, The Cry of the Children by C. Hedley-Charlton
Cage of the unenfranchised. A wicker cage constrains hens and a parrot with a ticket listing those who are outside the democratic process criminals, aliens, Paupers, lunatics and women
The Anti-Suffragist. Depicts a butterfly refusing to emerge from its chrysalis. Verse by C.P. Stetson, (Charlotte Perkins Gilman) Illustrated by Ernestine Mills. Date: circa 1908
Suffragette, Split Red Faced Man. A fat smiling red faced man reads the newspaper placard announcing Great Suffragette Split Remarkable Disclosures Wonder how she did that - at the skating Rink Is
Suffragette Pelted with Eggs. A suffragette is pelted with eggs and faces The Injustice of the masculine Yolk Refers to An incident at Maidenhead probably at a political meeting. Date: circa 1910
Suffragette, poker Rolling Pin. Scruffy woman with a poker in one hand and a rolling pin in the other declares, I want my Vote Date: circa 1910
Suffragette Votes for Womens Sufferage. Types of voters include the hen pecked husband of the dominating suffragette wife and he is suffering! Date: circa 1905
Suffragette Mouse in Houses of Parliament. Mouse sitting on inkwell in Houses of Parliament has a plan to eradicate the suffragette threat
Suffragette Valentine Prison Warder. Addressed to a suffragette Oh my valentine my dear, How I wish that you were here!. Prison warder holding large bunch of keys indicates the sparse interior of