Who was the suffragette Emmeline Pankhurst? - BBC Bitesize (original) (raw)

The WSPU was a group led by Emmeline Pankhurst.

Their aim was to gain equal voting rights for women. Emmeline gave speeches encouraging women to take action in order to achieve this goal.

What did they do?

The WSPU, at the time, became known as a 'radical party', which means they used extreme methods in order to get their message heard.

Because these methods were sometimes violent, WSPU members became the first women labelled as 'suffragettes'.

Members were known to smash windows, damage public property and even start fires.

This got many women in trouble with the police and some even sentenced to time in prison, where they were treated very badly.

When the stories of bad treatment reached the newspapers, it actually helped to increase support for the suffragette movement.

The war years

In 1914 the First World War began. Emmeline Pankhurst encouraged WSPU members to put their demonstrations on hold, in order to focus on the war effort. Emmeline asked women to take up roles in factories in support of the men fighting. In response, the government released all WSPU prisoners.

When the war ended in 1918, the Representation of the People Act was introduced, giving women over the age of 30 who owned property, the right to vote.

Later life

Although Emmeline lived to see some women gain the right to vote, she died on 14 June 1928, just a few weeks before a law was passed giving all women over 21 years of age the right to vote.