Close
Logo
Cart (0)
Login
Register
0
Selected 
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
 Click here to refresh results
 Click here to refresh results
Go to Login page
 Hide details
play button
Conceptually similar
AR9404555 
Annie Kenney, 1908.
AR915566 
Emmeline Pankhurst and Christabel Pankhurst after a party at the Inns of Court Hotel, 1908.
AR915094 
Emmeline & Christabel Pankhurst released from Holloway Gaol, London, 1908.
AR914355 
Emmeline Pankhurst, c1909.
AR915545 
Frederick Pethick-Lawrence, c1909.
AR915560 
Suffragettes determined to 'Keep the Liberal Out', 1909.
AR915650 
AR921335 
Christabel Pankhurst at a suffragette demonstration, c1910.
AR914890 
'General' Flora Drummond, 1907.
AR915787 
Emmeline Pankhurst, Langham Place, London, 14th January 1909.
AR915608 
AR9404559 
Christabel Pankhurst with a group of suffragettes, London, 1909.
AR913966 
Teresa Billington-Greig, c1909.
AR915575 
Adela Constantia Mary Pankhurst, c1908.
AR915557 
Daisy Dugdale leading the procession to welcome Emmeline and Christabel Pankhurst, London, 1908.
AR915534 
Jessie Kenney, Brighton, c1909.
AR915590 
Estelle Sylvia Pankhurst, c1909.
AR915551 
AR9404580 
Emmeline, Christabel and Sylvia Pankhurst, Waterloo Station, London, 1911.
AR915519 
Christabel Harriette Pankhurst, c1909. 
Christabel Harriette Pankhurst, Organizing Secretary of the Women's Social and Political Union and editor of The Suffragette, c1909. The eldest Pankhurst daughter, Christabel had a first class degree in Law from Owen's College, Victoria University, Manchester, and a prize for international law. However, because she was a woman she was not allowed to practice as a lawyer. She devoted her considerable talent to the WSPU; she was a brilliant and popular speaker who could inspire great loyalty. Frequent parallels were drawn between her and Joan of Arc. She and Annie Kenney started militant tactics in 1905 when they continually interrupted a Liberal meeting at the Free Trade Hall, Manchester, asking when the Liberal Party would give women the vote. They were thrown out, arrested, refused to pay a fine to avoid prison and were sentenced to seven days. Christabel went to prison twice more in 1907 and 1908 and finally fled the country, exiling herself in Paris in March 1912 to avoid the conspiracy charges her mother Emmeline faced. She led the WSPU, and edited the Suffragette newspaper from Paris and did not return to England until after the outbreak of the First World War. Her pamphlets and handbills include: What Women Get, and What They Need; The Militant Methods of the WSPU; and Broken Windows. © London Museum/Heritage Images 
Unique Identifier AR915548 
Type Image 
Purpose Public 
Size 3365px × 5591px 
Photo Credit HIP / Art Resource, NY 
 Add to lightbox
 Add to cart
Tags
1900s
20th century
ACTIVISM
ACTIVIST
Annie
Annie Kenney
B&W
B/W
Black & White
Black and white
BODY
CAMPAIGNER
Christabel
Christabel Harriette Pankhurst
Christabel Pankhurst
concept
Dame Christabel Harriette Pankhurst
editor
Emmeline
Emmeline Goulden
Emmeline Pankhurst
Face
FAMOUS PEOPLE
Female
Feminism
JOB
Kenney
LADY
London Museum
Monochrome
OCCUPATION
Pankhurst
People
Photograph
Politics
Portrait
PROFESSION
RIGHTS
SECRETARY
Suffrage
Suffragette
Woman
Women
WOMEN'S RIGHTS
Women's Social and Political Union
WSPU