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A woman talking to a crowd at Trafalgar Square in London.

Women's suffrage

"The first humble beginnings of an agitation..." Helen Taylor, 1866.

Background

Our collections contain primary source material relating to the campaign for women’s suffrage. The majority of this collection forms part of the Women’s Library, whose roots are founded in the suffrage movement. This collection includes personal papers of suffragists and suffragettes, records of suffrage organisations and the newspapers, journals and pamphlets published by these organisations. There are also badges, postcards, posters, banners and other 3D objects on this subject.

Pankhurst Fawcett and Pethick Lawrence collage image
Emmeline Pankhurst, Millicent Garrett Fawcett and Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence.

LSE and the suffrage movement

LSE was at the heart of suffrage activity between 1906 and 1914. To mark the historical link between LSE and suffrage, the Towers on campus have been renamed Pankhurst House, Fawcett House and Pethick-Lawrence House after three important suffrage campaigners and their specific connections to LSE.

The offices of the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU), the suffragette organisation led by Emmeline Pankhurst, were on the site now occupied by the former Tower 3. This was the London home of Emmeline and Frederick Pethick-Lawrence who also financed and edited Votes for Women, the newspaper of the WSPU.

LSE is the custodian of the Women's Library, which has its roots in the suffrage movement. The Women's Library also holds the papers of Millicent Garrett Fawcett and of the Fawcett Society. Millicent Garrett Fawcett was a suffragist and women's rights campaigner who made it her lifetime's work to secure for women the right to vote.

Votes for Women: a history of the women’s suffrage campaign & its legacy at LSE


Find out more about LSE and suffrage in these blogs: 

Millicent Garrett Fawcett and the early suffrage movement

  •  contains correspondence between John Stuart Mill and Helen Taylor with the main suffrage campaigners of the time.
  •  was a suffragist who campaigned for women’s suffrage from 1866 until the passing of the Equal Franchise Act in 1928 when women over 21 gained equal voting rights with men. Find out more about the  held at The Women's Library.
  •  was founded in 1867, and it is from this, that the Fawcett Society, renamed in 1953, traces its descent.
  • Read , the journal of the , and discover insights into the suffrage campaign. You can also access physical copies of at The Women's Library.
  • Oral histories on the suffragette and suffragist movement carried out in the 1970s. 
  • The organised by the NUWSS.
Emily Wilding Davison portrait
Emily Wilding Davison, c.1905.

The Pankhursts and Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU)

Material relating to Emmeline Pankhurst and her daughters, Christabel and Sylvia, is dispersed throughout the collection. Papers relating to the WSPU can be found in the personal papers of suffragettes.

  •  collection contains correspondence between Emmeline Pankhurst and Keir Hardie, along with the letters of many other women’s suffrage campaigners.
  • The  online exhibit features photographs, papers and objects from the collection relating to her role in the campaign for Women's Suffrage and her death at Epsom race course. The collection contains  personal papers relating to her work with the WSPU as well as papers and objects relating to her death.
  •   carried out in the 1970s.  about the organising of Emily Wilding Davison's funeral.
  •  was formed in 1907 following a split within the Women’s Social and Political Union.
  • Read  and the  which provide insights into the campaign. You can also access physical copies of and the at the Women's Library.

Some other characters of the WSPU

Rosa May Billinghurst sitting in her tricycle surrounded by people
Rosa May Billinghurst, known as May, founded the Greenwich branch of the WSPU.

May fearlessly took part in suffrage demonstrations in her tricycle. 

Princess Sophia Duleep Singh selling the Suffragette newspaper
Princess Sophia Duleep Singh, a member of the WSPU and the Tax Resistance League. She was often seen selling The Suffragette newspaper outside Hampton Court Palace.

Women's Tax Resistance League - Sophia Duleep Singh's sale of goods in lieu of taxSophia was part of the Women’s Tax Resistance League and this card shows the auction of her goods instead of paying taxes as part of the ‘No Vote, No Tax’ campaign

Vera 'Jack' Holme driving a car smiling
Vera 'Jack' Holme, a cross-dressing actress, suffragette and one of the first women chauffeurs.

During the First World War, Vera 'Jack' Holme was an ambulance driver for the Scottish Women's Hospital in Serbia. . 

Group photo of a Church League for Women's Suffrage meeting in Brighton 1913Susila Bonnerjee and Nolini Bonnerjee were active in the Church League for Women’s Suffrage seen in the the bottom right of this photograph from 1913

Pro-suffrage men

  •  was founded in 1907 and supported the work of the WSPU and Women’s Freedom League. Records of the are dispersed throughout the collection.
  • George Lansbury was a Labour MP who became borough councillor in Poplar in 1903 and Leader of the Labour Party in 1931 to 1935. He was a supporter of the women’s suffrage campaign. His archive contains letters from Emmeline, Christabel and Sylvia Pankhurst. .
An anti-suffrage movement badge
Badge from the Women's National Anti-Suffrage League 1908-1910.

Anti-suffrage societies

  •  was founded in 1908 at a time when support for the women’s suffrage movement was rising again. Records of other anti-suffrage societies are dispersed throughout the collection.

Women's suffrage collection on the Digital Library

Explore the women’s rights collection on . It contains two sets of , and the , covering the campaign from the late 19th century to 1928 when women achieved equal voting rights with men. Here are the three main suffrage newspapers:

  • was the newspaper of the National Union of Women’s Suffrage Societies published from 1909 until 1920. Helena Swanwick was its first editor.
  • was co-edited by Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence and her husband, Frederick. This was the newspaper for the Women’s Social and Political Union, published between 1907 and 1918.
  • was the newspaper of the Women’s Freedom League. Its first editor was Charlotte Despard and it was published from 1909 to 1933.

Online resources

  • The Suffrage Interviews - see our .
  •  A blog post with tips for researching suffrage history.
  • . High resolution images are ready for download from Flickr.
  • An iconic Artists' Suffrage League album, containing over 212 designs for suffrage banners, badges, posters etc. .
A suffrage parade in the 1900s
A suffrage parade, c.1908.

How to search 

You can find more material on this topic using a person’s name, by organisation, by event eg 'Black Friday', or by keyword such as anti-suffrage, emancipation, franchise, suffrage, suffragette, suffragist, in these catalogues.

View lists of further resources covering:

How to access

Most of the material highlighted here is stored in closed access and must be consulted in The Women’s Library Reading Room. Find out how to book your place and order material on our access archives and special collections  page.

Further information 

If you need specific help with any of the collections mentioned here get in touch with our Curator for Equality, Rights and Citizenship, Gillian Murphy.

Find out more