Emmeline Pankhurst: A Biography

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

VfW, 5 November 1908. She claimed that when Annie first arrived in London she came
to her house in Hammersmith and that she took Annie to Minnie Baldock, where she
lodged for the first weeks of her stay in London. Years afterwards, when Dora asked Sylvia
why she had ‘so wilfully distorted facts’, Sylvia replied ‘that she was very young at the
time and entirely under the influence of her mother, who wished my name to be
suppressed ... I did not consider Sylvia’s excuse satisfactory and I told her so.’
2 E. Sylvia Pankhurst, The inheritance, a typed synopsis, ESPA, pp. 13–14.
3 Kenney, Memories, p. 67.
4 Daily Mirror, 20 February 1906.
5 E. Pankhurst, My own story, p. 56.
6 E. S. Pankhurst, Emmeline Pankhurst, p. 57.
7 E. Pethick-Lawrence, My part in a changing world, p. 146.
8 Ibid., p. 147; Kenney, Memories of a militant, pp. 71–2.
9 E. Pethick-Lawrence, My part in a changing world, Preface.
10 See J. Balshaw, Sharing the burden: the Pethick Lawrences and women’s suffrage, in The
men’s share? Masculinities, male support and women’s suffrage in Britain, 1890–1920(London
and New York, Routledge, 1997), pp. 135–7, and the entries on Emmeline and Fred
Pethick Lawrence in Crawford, The women’s suffrage movement, pp. 534–43.
11 Women’s Social & Political Union, Manifesto, leaflet, nd, reprinted in Labour Record,
March 1906.
12 Daily Mirror, 10 March 1906; CP to Dora Montefiore, 22 March 1906, in Montefiore,
From a Victorian to a modern, p. 116.
13 Crawford, The women’s suffrage movement, p. 504.
14 LL, 6 April 1906.
15 LL, 4 May 1906; Rosen, Rise up women!, pp. 65–6.
16 Hannam, Isabella Ford, p. 116.
17 E. Pankhurst, My own story, p. 62.
18 Ibid., p. 64.
19 E. S. Pankhurst, TSM, p. 211.
20 Helen Moyes, A woman in a man’s world(Sydney, Alpha Books, 1971), p. 301.
21 A. Pankhurst Walsh, My mother, p. 32.
22 E. S. Pankhurst, Emmeline Pankhurst, p. 60.
23 Manchester Guardian, 21 May 1906.
24 LL, 18 May 1906; Rosen, Rise up women!, p. 67.
25 E. Pankhurst, My own story, p. 65.
26 Ibid., pp. 68–9.
27 E. S. Pankhurst, Emmeline Pankhurst, p. 61.
28 Daily Graphic, 28 June 1906.
29 LL, 29 June 1906; Mitchell,The hard way up, p. 142; Coleman,Adela Pankhurst,p.36.
30 A. Pankhurst Walsh, My mother, p. 33; Coleman, Adela Pankhurst, p. 37.
31 LL, 13 and 27 July 1906; Labour Record, August, 1906.
32 Entry 21 July 1906, Bruce Glasier Diaries.
33 E. S. Pankhurst, TSM, p. 215; Sylvia Pankhurst to CP, 10 July 1957, Craigie Collection.
34 E. S. Pankhurst, TSM, p. 216.
35 C. Pankhurst, Unshackled, p. 66; Manchester Guardian, 2 July 1906.
36 E. S. Pankhurst, TSM, pp. 215–16.
37 See Holton, Suffrage days, p. 123. I am grateful to Sandra Holton for discussion of this
point.
38 Letter from Marion Coates Hansen, LL, 10 August 1906.
39 C. Pankhurst, Unshackled, p. 69.
40 Gawthorpe, Up hill to Holloway, pp. 222–5.
41 Letter from EP, LL, 24 August 1906.


NOTES
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