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. Sophia was part of the Women’s Tax ...
Google When Ms Ryland wrote in The Suffragette Newspaper, she gave her address as Hermitage Road in Edgbaston When she appeared before magistrates following her arrest at the Birmingham gallery ...
(The Suffragette newspaper published a photograph of the princess selling copies of the paper at the gates of Hampton Court Palace. The placard advertising that week’s issue had just one ...
The board game was first advertised in the Votes for Women newspaper on 22 October 1909 ... a-Squith was made to entertain supporters of the suffragette movement while raising funds for them ...
Writer Anita Anand speaking at the unveiling of the blue plaque (Christopher Ison/English Heritage/PA) Sophia would sell copies of The Suffragette newspaper at her pitch outside Hampton Court Palace, ...
The Princess donated large sums of money to further fight for the vote, and could often be seen outside the gates of Hampton Court Palace selling the suffragette newspaper. This promotion of a ...
Inside the case were, among other things, newspaper reports of Grace's arrests and court appearances and a suffragette medal awarded to women activists who had been imprisoned for the cause. Tomorrow ...
The suffragettes deliberately chose conventional and classically feminine styles. Why? Propaganda, explains Cally Blackman, author and lecturer at Central Saint Martins. Hiding in plain sight is a ...
Welcome to just another day in the suffragette movement ... was the left-wing Forward newspaper, edited by the estimable Tom Johnston. Dr Esther Breitenbach, a historian at the University of ...
This day became later known as Black Friday. Writing in a newspaper two years later, Emmeline Pankhurst reflected on the events of Black Friday and the impact it had on future campaigns ...
They wrote letters, they spoke at political rallies, they sold copies of their own newspaper - The Suffragette - and they scrawled messages on pavements in chalk. When these methods failed to see ...
[Editor's note: This is an article from Century Ireland, a fortnightly online newspaper, written from the perspective of a journalist 100 years ago, based on news reports of the time.] ...