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Britain in 1921
Flappers drank
alcohol, smoked
cigarettes,
partied hard –
and challenged
stereotypes
of femininity
TRAILBLAZERS OF 1921
The radical reformer
In September 1921, 30 councillors
from Poplar – including GEORGE
LANSBURY, a radical social reformer
- were imprisoned for their roles in
resisting central government taxes.
Poverty was rife in this East End
borough, and Poplar’s councillors
argued that rates should be spread
equally across the London boroughs.
From prison, Lansbury wrote to the
home secretary, Edward Shortt: “I am
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treated as such.”
After almost six weeks, the
councillors were released and
parliament passed a new bill to alter
the rates. Lansbury went on to serve
as leader of the Labour party between
1932 and 193 5.
Edwardian period, these young
women came of age during the
postwar period.
The stereotypical flapper wore
her hair bobbed, her hemline short
and her waistline dropped. She
drank alcohol, smoked cigarettes,
attended outrageous parties and
danced to jazz. In short, she
challenged accepted norms of
femininity. As a result, she was
soon perceived as a threat,
arousing fears of sexual immorali-
ty and the Americanisation of
British culture.
Thanks, in part, to the rise of
the flappers, the 1920s will always
be remembered as a party decade.
Modern popular culture has
certainly bought into this image,
with TV series such as Peaky Blinders glam-
ourising a golden age in which Britain
apparently “roared”. Countless column
inches have been dedicated to the Bright
Young Things – a set of young socialites who
partied hard, and became a media obsession
in the process.
The 1920s was indeed a decade when
nightclubs boomed and jazz culture, import-
ed from the USA, swept British cities. A key
moment in the birth of Britain’s jazz age
arrived on 27 August 1921, when the govern-
ment relaxed the wartime Defence of the
Realm Act restrictions, loosening regulations
on the sale of alcohol. The early 1920s saw
Night on the tiles
Young Britons, eager to let their
hair down following the
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Palais de Danse, shown in an
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Licence to party
Nightclub owner Kate Meyrick
(seated, centre) at a welcome
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Slipper Club to mark her release
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jailed a number of times for
serving alcohol without a licence