Votes for Women - A Monster Demonstration

£5.00
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SKU
POS01.06

Votes for Women - A Monster Demonstration 1910

Poster advertising the suffragette demonstration in Hyde Park on 23 July 1910.

Badges were made to mark the occasion. This one belonged to working-class suffragette Annie Kenney.

These photos show the West Procession and Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence, Christabel Pankhurst, Sylvia Pankhurst and Emily Wilding Davidson on the day.

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Campaigns for suffrage in the UK, including the Chartist movement of the first half of the 19th Century, included calls to include women, but often these calls were swept aside, either temporarily as something to achieve once men’s suffrage had been achieved, or permanently as it was considered undesirable.

A Woman’s Suffrage Committee was formed in 1867 and from 1893 worked within the Independent Labour Party (ILP), aimed at securing votes for women. The NUWSS, formed in 1897.

The NUWSS was dedicated to winning women's suffrage through peaceful means, and focused on trying to get sympathetic MPs elected to Parliament. The Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU), split from the NUWSS in 1903 (when patience with the ILP had run out) and became known as the suffragettes, employing more militant tactics.

In the UK, before the start of the First World War, many Suffragettes were involved in a campaign of direct action, including bombing and arson, disruption and mass demonstrations. Suffragettes were often attacked and sexually assaulted by the police and special constables conscripted specifically for the purpose. Imprisoned Suffragettes who went on hunger strike were barbarically force fed. As their health deteriorated, they could be released and re-arrested when they were considered to have recovered enough.

At the outbreak of the war, the WSPU split as the majority decided to support the war effort. A significant group, including Sylvia Pankhurst, broke away, took a strong stance against the war and formed the East London Federation of Suffragettes. They published The Woman’s Dreadnought, which later became The Workers Dreadnought and was adopted as the official newspaper of the Communist Party of Great Britain.

The Radical Poster Collective is dedicated to making good quality classic radical posters available at an affordable price.

Our posters are either digitally cleaned up to remove tears or stains etc, or completely recreated to be as close as possible to the original.

This is a complete recreation of an original poster.

Printed on good quality 170gm poster paper.

The size is A3 (approximately 297mm by 420mm).

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All posters are dispatched securely in cardboard poster tubes to protect them.

Postage is only charged once for 1-4 posters (postage is free for 5 posters or more within the UK).

For non-UK orders, any customs duties are to be paid by the buyer.  

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