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Women and Suffragettes links

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How to teach ... the suffragettes. This summer marks 87 years since women in the UK won the right to vote.

How to teach ... the suffragettes

On 2 July 1928 the Representation of the People (Equal Franchise) Act was finally passed. It allowed women over the age of 21 to go to the ballot box, signifying the beginning of electoral equality in Britain. To celebrate this historic date, the Guardian Teacher Network has a selection of resources for learning about the suffragettes, who campaigned tirelessly for this cause.

Primary students Kickstart discussion by asking why we vote and who should take part? You can bring their story to life with this audio drama which follows Lady Constance Lytton as she protests for the vote. Challenge your primary class to find out more about two or three famous suffragettes as a group or homework task. Explicit cookie consent. FOR something that ended 150 years ago on April 9th, America’s civil war is strangely newsworthy.

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Last month the Supreme Court heard a case that asked whether Texas should allow the Sons of Confederate Veterans to put a Confederate flag on their car licence-plates, and two white students were expelled from the University of Oklahoma for singing a song about lynching taught to them by a fraternity founded in the antebellum South. Many Americans remain fascinated by the conflict. In 2002 the Library of Congress estimated that 70,000 books had been published about it, more than one a day since the war ended. This year at Appomattox courthouse in Virginia 1,000 volunteers will dress up to re-enact the surrender there of General Robert E. Lee. Asda faces mass legal action over equal pay for women - BBC News. Asda, the UK's second largest retailer, is facing a mass legal action by women who work in their stores.

Asda faces mass legal action over equal pay for women - BBC News

'India's Daughter,' the film banned by India: What did it show? Debate_1912. Debate on the ‘Conciliation’ Bill, to enfranchise about 1 million Women voters, 28 March 1912 [Speakers who opposed the motion are shaded blue.] 1.

Debate_1912

WOman 's suffrage cartoons. No More Page 3 - Because Boobs Aren't News. Dossier agreg interne votes for women. Vintage Anti-Suffragette Postcards. By Lisa Hix, Collectors Weekley Check out Collectors Weekly for more interesting articles!

Vintage Anti-Suffragette Postcards

“Do hormones drive women’s votes?” That headline is not from a newspaper published in 1892 or 1922, but from CNN online in 2012. Emma Watson Gender equality is your issue too. Date: Saturday, September 20, 2014 Speech by UN Women Goodwill Ambassador Emma Watson at a special event for the HeForShe campaign, United Nations Headquarters, New York, 20 September 2014 [Check against delivery.]

Emma Watson Gender equality is your issue too

Today we are launching a campaign called “HeForShe.” I am reaching out to you because I need your help. We want to end gender inequality—and to do that we need everyone to be involved. This is the first campaign of its kind at the UN: we want to try and galvanize as many men and boys as possible to be advocates for gender equality.

Margaret Thatcher: ultimate feminist icon - whether she liked it or not. The Modern Suffragettes: How Helen And Laura Pankhurst Are Bringing The Family Legacy Into 2014. The Suffragette movement may have begun more than one hundred years ago, but the bravery and selflessness of the women involved echoes to this day - and not just in history books.

The Modern Suffragettes: How Helen And Laura Pankhurst Are Bringing The Family Legacy Into 2014

Dr Helen Pankhurst and her daughter Laura - descendants of Emmeline Pankhurst, the leader and founder of the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) - are working tirelessly to keep the Pankhurst legacy alive. Activism and advocacy run through their veins and they pair are committed to tackling modern-day issues with the same spirit of their foremothers - yes, foremothers is a word. Emma Watson, Malala... ces femmes qui ont marqué 2014 pour leur combat féministe. Jane Austen to appear on £10 note. The Bank of England's design for a £10 note featuring Jane Austen.

Jane Austen to appear on £10 note

Click for full picture. Photograph: Bank of England. Jane Austen has been confirmed as the next face of the £10 note in a victory for campaigners demanding female representation – aside from the Queen – on the country's cash. Sir Mervyn King, the Bank's former governor, had let slip to MPs that the author of Pride and Prejudice was "waiting in the wings" as a potential candidate to feature on a banknote, and his successor, Mark Carney, confirmed on Wednesday that she would feature, probably from 2017. "Jane Austen certainly merits a place in the select group of historical figures to appear on our banknotes. We need women on British banknotes. Mervyn King, the Governor of the Bank of England, has announced Winston Churchill will replace social reformer Elizabeth Fry as the face of £5 notes.

We need women on British banknotes

This means that, other than the Queen, there will be no women featuring on our English bank notes. An all-male line-up on our banknotes sends out the damaging message that no woman has done anything important enough to appear. This is patently untrue. Not only have numerous women emerged as leading figures in their fields, they have done so against the historic odds stacked against them which denied women a public voice and relegated them to the private sphere - making their emergence into public life all the more impressive and worthy of celebration. People will perhaps say that the Queen appears on all the notes. This matters. Currency, as its name suggests, is fundamental to our daily lives.

Nine inspiring lessons the suffragettes can teach feminists today. On 4 June 1913, Emily Wilding Davison travelled to Epsom Downs to watch the Derby, carrying two suffrage flags – one rolled tight in her hand, the other wrapped around her body, hidden beneath her coat.

Nine inspiring lessons the suffragettes can teach feminists today

She waited at Tattenham Corner as the horses streamed past, then squeezed through the railings and made an apparent grab for the reins of the king's horse, Anmer. In the Manchester Guardian the next day, an eyewitness reported: "The horse fell on the woman and kicked out furiously". News footage shows racegoers surging on to the track to find out what had happened. Davison suffered a fractured skull and internal bleeding, and as hate mail against her poured in to the hospital, she remained unconscious. She died four days later. There has always been speculation about Davison's intentions. In a movement defined by acts of daring, Davison's bravery was extraordinary. Find your voice, and use it. Stealing the suffragettes: Margaret Thatcher’s funeral and false historical parallels - Counterfire. On 2nd April 1911 women all over Britain were holding all-night parties, staying out at concerts and late-night restaurants, skating at ice rinks until the morning and generally having a very good time.

Arguments against Women's Suffrage. But not only men, but women, opposed the idea of votes for women: Against Women Suffrage Because women already have the municipal vote, and are eligible for membership of most local authorities. These bodies deal with questions of housing, education, care of children, workhouses and so forth, all of which are peculiarly within a woman's sphere. Parliament, however, has to deal mainly with the administration of a vast Empire, the maintenance of the Army and Navy, and with questions of peace and war, which lie outside the legitimate sphere of woman's influence.

Anti-Suffrage Society. William Cremer was one of the leading opponents of women's suffrage. Hansard reported a speech he made in the House of Commons on women's suffrage on 25th April, 1906, he argued: "He (William Cremer) had always contended that if we opened the door and enfranchised ever so small a number of females, they could not possibly close it, and that it ultimately meant adult suffrage. The government of the country would therefore be handed over to a majority who would not be men, but women. Women are creatures of impulse and emotion and did not decide questions on the ground of reason as men did. He was sometimes described as a woman-hater, but he had had two wives, and he thought that was the best answer he could give to those who called him a woman-hater.

He was too fond of them to drag them into the political arena and to ask them to undertake responsibilities, duties and obligations which they did not understand and did not care for. " Quotations on women's suffrage in britain. The history of the suffragettes. The votes-for-women movement exploded in popularity the UK in 1903 - hence this year's centenary celebrations - but the story of the campaign begins before the reign of Queen Victoria. In 1832, Lord Grey piloted the highly controversial Great Reform Act through Parliament. It was meant to extend the franchise - but used the word "male" instead of "people", excluding women from the vote. The first leaflet advocating votes for women appeared in 1847, and suffrage societies began to crop up throughout the country.

Twenty years later, John Stuart Mill led an unsuccessful attempt to secure votes for women in the Second Reform Act. Top 10 Nonviolent Protests. Votes for Women background.