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Conceptually similar
Mary Eleanor Gawthorpe, c1908.
AR915587 
AR9404574 
Suffragettes on a 'poster parade' selling the Suffragette, 31st July, 1914.
AR915632 
Sylvia Pankhurst leaving the East End of London in a bath-chair, June 1914.
AR915757 
Edith Ruth Mansell-Moullin, 17th June 1911.
AR915599 
'The Cat and Mouse Act', 1914.
AR914914 
Nellie Alma Martel, c1908.
AR915593 
Jessie Kenney, Brighton, c1909.
AR915590 
AR9404576 
Miss Kelly selling Votes for Women in central London, July 1911.
AR915620 
Suffragettes making banners for the procession to Hyde Park on 23rd July 1910.
AR913975 
AR9404594 
Three suffragettes prepare to chain themselves to the railings, 1909.
AR915726 
Suffragette being arrested, 19th November 1910.
AR914840 
AR9404569 
Suffragettes in prison clothing after their release, 1908. Artist: V Davis
AR914837 
A 'poster parade' of suffragettes advertising a meeting to be held on Ealing Common, June 1912.
AR915653 
The first window-smashers, Mary Leigh and Edith New in the dock at Bow Street Magistrates, 1908.
AR915720 
Rose Lamartine Yates wearing the suffragette uniform, with her son Paul, Surrey, c1910.
AR915531 
Suffragettes on their way to Women's Sunday, 21st June 1908.
AR915635 
Grace Roe, 23rd May 1914. 
Grace Roe, 23rd May 1914. Organizer and deputy-leader, being arrested at WSPU headquarters. She is being escorted from Lincoln's Inn House, charged with conspiracy, after a police raid on a flat in Maida Vale found an arsenal of suffragette window-smashing equipment. No evidence to incriminate her was found and she refused to submit to the trial. She had to be lifted into the dock and shouted throughout the proceedings. While on remand she went on hunger strike and was force-fed. Appearing at Marylebone Police Court six days later, drugged to reduce her resistance to force-feeding, she struggled to describe the torture of her force-feeding experiences. The case was adjourned because of a lack of witnesses. In 1912 she was responsible for organizing the suffragettes' presence at the North West Norfolk by-election, and the Dublin campaign on behalf of three of their members in Mountjoy Prison, charged with 'firing' the Theatre Royal. She ensured that people were made aware of the suffering of the hunger-striking women. During 1913 she organized Emily Wilding Davison's funeral procession in London while she was Annie Kenney's understudy, becoming deputy-leader in the autumn when Kenney was arrested and sent to prison. © London Museum/Heritage Images 
Unique Identifier AR915602 
Type Image 
Purpose Public 
Size 3475px × 5431px 
Photo Credit HIP / Art Resource, NY 
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Tags
1910s
20th century
Arrest
B&W
B/W
Black & White
Black and white
building
BUILDINGS
concept
escorting
Female
Feminism
GRACE
Grace Roe
JOB
LADY
Lincoln's Inn House
London Museum
Male
Man
Men
Monochrome
OCCUPATION
People
Photograph
POLICEMAN
Politics
Portrait
PROFESSION
RIGHTS
Roe
Suffrage
Suffragette
Woman
Women
women's liberation
women's movement
WOMEN'S RIGHTS
Women's Social and Political Union
WSPU