Emmeline Pankhurst: A Biography

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

75 Britannia, 5 November 1915, p. 44.
76 The Suffragette, 5 November 1915, p. 46; The Times, 6 November 1915.
77 EP to Dear Sir, 12 November 1915, Hugh Franklin–Elsie Duval Papers.
78 E. S. Pankhurst, The home front, p. 270. The old headquarters in Lincoln’s Inn House,
Kingsway, had been given up in September.
79 Morning Advertiser, 17 November 1915; see also Evening Standard & St. James’s Gazette
and Daily Chronicle, 16 November 1915.
80 Daily News and Leader, 17 and 18 November 1915.
81 Particulars of slander on Mary Leigh uttered by Mrs. Pankhurst at The Pavilion on
October 28th 1915, MAS Collection, Vol. 26; Morning Advertiser, 5 November 1915.
82 Daily News and Leader, 27 November 1915.
83 Weekly Dispatch, 5 December 1915.
84 B. Wasserstein, Herbert Samuel: a political life(Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1992), p.
190.
85 New York Sun, 16 January 1916; New York World, 17 January and 10 February 1916;
Eleanor Garrison to her mother, 17 February 1916, SSC.
86 Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 15 February 1916; Philadelphia Public Ledger, 24 and 26 February
1916.
87 Hamilton Daily Times, 8 March 1916.
88 Britannia, 4 August 1916, p. 228.
89 Ibid., 2 June 1916, p. 193.
90 A. Pankhurst, Put up the sword(Melbourne, Cecilia John, 1917, third edition, first pub.
1915); Coleman, Adela Pankhurst, p. 67.
91 Britannia, 28 April 1916, p. 174; Winslow, Sylvia Pankhurst, p. 85.
92 Smyth, Female pipings, p. 239.
93 Ibid., p. 240.
94 E. S. Pankhurst, Emmeline Pankhurst, p. 155.
95 Smyth, Female pipings, p. 241.
96 EP to Una Dugdale, 11 October 1916, Author’s Collection.
97 S. R. Grayzel, Women’s identities at war: gender, motherhood, and politics in Britain and
France during the First World War(University of North Carolina Press, 1999), p. 191.
98 Pugh, The march of the women, p. 287; Rosen, Rise up women!, pp. 258–9.
99 Britannia, 18 August 1916, p. 235.
100 Ibid., p. 236.
101 C. Pankhurst, Unshackled, p. 293.
102 Britannia, 25 August 1916, p. 240.
103 Undated cutting Rose Scott Papers, Mitchell Library, Australia, 38/62, 3/13.
104 A. Pankhurst Walsh, My mother, p. 45.
105 Britannia, 6 October 1916, p. 265.
106 The Times, 23 October 1916.
107 Daily Express, 14 December 1916.
108 West, Mrs. Pankhurst, p. 497.
109 St. John, Ethel Smyth, p. 121. In an undated letter [10 December 1916?] to Lloyd
George, Emmeline asked to meet him to discuss the composition of his Cabinet, espe-
cially in regard to the Foreign Office, ‘before irrevocable decisions are made’, LG Papers.
She argued, ‘Women unfortunately cannot be directly represented in it [the Cabinet]
but I am sure you will be the first to acknowledge that they have a right to be consulted
in a matter so vital to them & to the country as a whole at a time when our very exis-
tence is at stake.’ There is no evidence to suggest that a meeting took place or that the
two discussed the matter.
110 Daily Express, 16 January 1917; EP to Hugh Franklin, 23 January 1917, WL.
111 van Wingerden, Women’s suffrage movement, p. 169.


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