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The long march to votes from women

  • First women´s suffrage petition

    First women´s suffrage petition
    Mary Smith presents the first women’s suffrage petition to Parliament. In the same year, the Great Reform Act confirms the exclusion of women from the vote.
  • First mass petition

    First mass petition
    John Stuart Mill MP presents the first mass women’s suffrage petition to the House of Commons. It contains over 1500 signatures.
  • NSWS is formed..

    NSWS is formed..
    The National Society for Women’s Suffrage is formed.
  • Suffrage first public meeting

    Suffrage first public meeting
    The MNSWS holds the first ever public meeting about women’s suffrage at the Manchester Free Trade Hall.
  • Female suffrage granted

    Female suffrage granted
    The Isle of Man grants female suffrage.
  • At last!

    At last!
    The Local Government Act is passed, which allows married and single women to vote in elections for county and borough councils.
  • NUWSS empowers itself.

    NUWSS empowers itself.
    The National Union of Women’s Suffrage Societies forms with more than 20 national societies in support. Its leader is Millicent Garrett Fawcett, based in Gower Street, central London.
  • WSPU

    WSPU
    The Women’s Social and Political Union is formed in Manchester at the home of Emmeline Pankhurst.
  • 1905

    1905
    Militant campaign begins. Christabel Pankhurst and Annie Kenney are arrested and imprisoned. “Deeds, not words” and “Votes for women” are adopted as campaign slogans.
  • WSPU members arrested

    WSPU members arrested
    WSPU members are arrested and imprisoned. A daily newspaper coins the term “suffragette”.
  • 400000 protester activists in Hyde Park

    400000 protester activists in Hyde Park
    At a mass rally in Hyde Park, 300,000 to 500,000 activists attend. The Liberal Prime Minister Herbert Asquith does not respond. To get his attention, suffragettes smash windows in Downing Street, using stones with written pleas tied to them. Some protesters chain themselves to railings.
  • Black Friday

    Black Friday
    The WSPU starts protests, including those called “Black Friday” in which many women are injured, some permanently and later fatally, and are sexually abused by police.
  • Emily Wilking Davison death

    Emily Wilking Davison death
    Emily Wilding Davison, arrested nine times and force-fed 49 times, decides to draw attention to the suffrage cause and disrupt the Derby. With a return train ticket and another to a dance that evening in her bag, she steps in front of the King’s speeding horse Anmer, possibly to attach a WSPU banner of suffragette colours to its bridle. She dies four days later of a skull fracture and internal injuries. Her funeral is attended by thousands of women.
  • Electoral Reform Bill

    Electoral Reform Bill
    The Electoral Reform Bill passes in the Commons. It gives votes only to certain women: those over the age of 30, those over 21 who own their own house or those married to householders.
  • Nancy Astor enters the Commons

    Nancy Astor enters the Commons
    The first female MP, Nancy Astor, enters the Commons.
  • Yes, they could!!!

    Yes, they could!!!
    Amendment of the Representation of the People Act entitles everyone over the age of 21 to vote.