Accrington Web
   

Home Gallery Arcade Blogs Members List Today's Posts
Go Back   Accrington Web > Old Accrington > Heritage and History
Donate! Join Today

Heritage and History A place to discuss the history of our local area.


Welcome to Accrington Web!

We are a discussion forum dedicated to the towns of Accrington, Oswaldtwistle and the surrounding areas, sometimes referred to as Hyndburn! We are a friendly bunch please feel free to browse or read on for more info.
You are currently viewing our site as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, photos, play in the community arcade and use our blog section. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free, so please, join our community today!



Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools
Old 15-03-2010, 12:08   #1
Give, give, give member
 
garinda's Avatar
 

Accrington's Women's Suffrage.

You can't cut and paste Google books, but hopefully this link will take you to the part of the book dealing with the very active movement in this part of the world.

Feminism and Democracy: Women's ... - Google Books
__________________
'If you're going to be a Kant, be the very best Kant there is my son.'
Johann Georg Kant, father of Immanuel Kant, philosopher.






garinda is offline   Reply With Quote
Accrington Web
Old 15-03-2010, 12:23   #2
Give, give, give member
 
garinda's Avatar
 

Re: Accrington's Women's Suffrage.

Sir David James Shackleton M.P. (1863 – 1938)

Although born in Cloughfold, he walked to evening classes in Accrington, and as a M.P. was a staunch supporter of the Women's Suffrage movement.

Sir David Shackleton

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Shackleton
__________________
'If you're going to be a Kant, be the very best Kant there is my son.'
Johann Georg Kant, father of Immanuel Kant, philosopher.






garinda is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 15-03-2010, 12:42   #3
Give, give, give member
 
garinda's Avatar
 

Re: Accrington's Women's Suffrage.

Another local link to the Women's Suffrage movement, was that Jane (Jenny) Kenney, of the influential Kenney clan, and close allies of the Pankhursts, taught in Accrington.

'Caroline Kenney (1880-1952) and Jane (Jenny) Kenney (1884-1961) were the sixth and eighth children of Horatio Nelson Kenney and Ann Wood, and younger sisters of Annie Kenney. They too were suffragettes, and appear to have played a supporting role, providing a refuge for women 'on the run' or temporarily released from prison under the 'Cat and Mouse' Act at their Tower Cressy premises.
Caroline, like her older sisters, began her working life as a child operative in the cotton mills. Subsequently she followed the example of her younger sister Jane and became a Montessori teacher. Jane began her teaching career in Accrington, then studied in Rome with Maria Montessori in 1914, and subsequently became Madame Montessori's appointed 'demonstrator' in England. She and Caroline established their own Montessori school at Tower Cressy, Campden Hill, circa 1915. In 1916 they left England for the United States and were appointed joint teachers in charge of the newly established Lenox School, New York. They retired as joint principals in 1929, and after a period teaching in Philadelphia they settled in California.'
http://www.uea.ac.uk/polopoly_fs/1.7...y%20papers.pdf
__________________
'If you're going to be a Kant, be the very best Kant there is my son.'
Johann Georg Kant, father of Immanuel Kant, philosopher.






garinda is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 17-03-2010, 08:05   #4
Give, give, give member
 
garinda's Avatar
 

Re: Accrington's Women's Suffrage.

ACCRINGTON (NUWSS) In 1913 the society was a member of the Manchester and District Federation of the National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies. Secretary (1913) Miss Florence Hoare, 5 Christ Church Terrace, Accrington, Lancashire.
The women's suffrage movement: a ... - Google Books
__________________
'If you're going to be a Kant, be the very best Kant there is my son.'
Johann Georg Kant, father of Immanuel Kant, philosopher.






garinda is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 17-03-2010, 08:28   #5
Give, give, give member
 
garinda's Avatar
 

Re: Accrington's Women's Suffrage.

'Amid considerable laughter the Clerk announced that he had received a communication from the National Association of Women's Suffrage, wanting the board to adopt a petition in favour of female enfranchisement. Mr Bell: You must get Miss Becker to come. Mr John Haworth: I move that all women stop at home and mind their own business (laughter). The Chairman: Can you manage to keep your own at home? (laughter). No reply was given and the subject dropped.
- Accrington Times, 13 April, 1872.
Political ideas in modern Britain ... - Google Books

http://www.accringtonweb.com/forum/f...ker-51371.html
__________________
'If you're going to be a Kant, be the very best Kant there is my son.'
Johann Georg Kant, father of Immanuel Kant, philosopher.






garinda is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 17-03-2010, 08:41   #6
God Member

 
Tealeaf's Avatar
 

Re: Accrington's Women's Suffrage.

So Accy was at the forefront of Womens suffrage? I supposed the next thing will Rindy will uncover will be Accy trailblazing the vegetarian movement or some other piece of social loonacy.
Tealeaf is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 17-03-2010, 08:51   #7
Grand Wizard Of The Inner Clique
 
Less's Avatar
Re: Accrington's Women's Suffrage.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Tealeaf View Post
So Accy was at the forefront of Womens suffrage? I supposed the next thing will Rindy will uncover will be Accy trailblazing the vegetarian movement or some other piece of social loonacy.
The founder of the Vegetarian movement is buried in Church Kirk graveyard, I think Mick has put a piccy on somewhere.
__________________
“I am a Bear of Very Little Brain, and long words bother me.”
Winnie the Pooh
Quotes & quoting
Less is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 17-03-2010, 09:02   #8
Give, give, give member
 
garinda's Avatar
 

Re: Accrington's Women's Suffrage.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Less View Post
The founder of the Vegetarian movement is buried in Church Kirk graveyard, I think Mick has put a piccy on somewhere.
'The society’s first president was James Simpson, a Lancashire industrialist.'
History of Vegetarianism - Transatlantic vegetarians

Church Kirk, near Accrington was established by Oswald, King of Northumbria as a temporary place of worship....In the churchyard of what was once St. James lies the grave of James Simpson, the 19th century president of the Vegetarian Society.
http://www.btinternet.com/~johnhglen...ll_country.htm

__________________
'If you're going to be a Kant, be the very best Kant there is my son.'
Johann Georg Kant, father of Immanuel Kant, philosopher.







Last edited by garinda; 17-03-2010 at 09:04.
garinda is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 17-03-2010, 09:17   #9
God Member

 
Tealeaf's Avatar
 

Re: Accrington's Women's Suffrage.

If I recall correctly, his is the big grave on the right hand side as you enter the churchyard. Engraved on there is his age at death - 44 years. So eating his greens didn't exactly do him much good, did it?
Tealeaf is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 17-03-2010, 09:25   #10
Give, give, give member
 
garinda's Avatar
 

Re: Accrington's Women's Suffrage.

Just cross-referencing 'Red' Ethel Carnie, along with a new link re: her association with this movement.

http://www.accringtonweb.com/forum/f...ter-51376.html

Finding her voice: the development of a working-class feminist vision in Ethel Carnie's poetry | Victorian Poetry | Find Articles at BNET
__________________
'If you're going to be a Kant, be the very best Kant there is my son.'
Johann Georg Kant, father of Immanuel Kant, philosopher.






garinda is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 17-03-2010, 09:38   #11
Grand Wizard Of The Inner Clique
 
Less's Avatar
Re: Accrington's Women's Suffrage.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Tealeaf View Post
If I recall correctly, his is the big grave on the right hand side as you enter the churchyard. Engraved on there is his age at death - 44 years. So eating his greens didn't exactly do him much good, did it?
Quote:
'The society’s first president was James Simpson, a Lancashire industrialist.'
No he probably died at the hands of his workers when he tried to put a stop to the morning bacon buttie break!


Good God Man, call yourself a purveyor of bacon sarnies?
A bacon butt' must never, ever, be cut into triangles,
it should always be in the form of a darned good doorstop!

__________________
“I am a Bear of Very Little Brain, and long words bother me.”
Winnie the Pooh
Quotes & quoting

Last edited by Less; 17-03-2010 at 09:42.
Less is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 17-03-2010, 09:56   #12
Give, give, give member
 
garinda's Avatar
 

Re: Accrington's Women's Suffrage.

'Accrington Branch of the National Union of Women's Sufferage Societies held a Public Meeting on the 4th inst., in the Council Chamber of the Town Hall Accrington. Mrs. Conway was the speaker, and Mrs. Belsey, the oldest local supporter, took the chair. Mrs. Conway was supported by the Rev. Moffat Logan (), Rev. Humphreys, and Mr. Whitehead, representing the local Labout Party.'
'The address was on the 'The Political Situation of Women's Sufferage'. Mrs. Conway outlined the work done by the women during the war, emphasising the industrial side. She thought that the problem that would arise after the war could only be satisfactorily dealt with by giving women the vote. The meeting was well reported by the press. The collection covered all expenses, and forty-two copies of The Common Cause were sold.'
- The Common Cause, October 27, 1916.
The Common Cause - Google News Archive Search
__________________
'If you're going to be a Kant, be the very best Kant there is my son.'
Johann Georg Kant, father of Immanuel Kant, philosopher.






garinda is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 17-03-2010, 13:00   #13
Full Member
 
ossylass's Avatar
 

Re: Accrington's Women's Suffrage.

Re. #4, Rindy - 5, Christ Church Terrace(Street) was our family home for nearly twenty years - loved it there, but we all thought it was haunted - do you know what happened to Miss Florence Hoare?
ossylass is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 17-03-2010, 13:19   #14
Give, give, give member
 
garinda's Avatar
 

Re: Accrington's Women's Suffrage.

Quote:
Originally Posted by ossylass View Post
Re. #4, Rindy - 5, Christ Church Terrace(Street) was our family home for nearly twenty years - loved it there, but we all thought it was haunted - do you know what happened to Miss Florence Hoare?
As we know, Accy Web proves yet again, we live in a small world.

I'm sorry, no more information about Florence Hoare...as yet.

I was hoping that by naming some of the people involved, someone might know them, or have some connection.

Hopefully someone might know.

__________________
'If you're going to be a Kant, be the very best Kant there is my son.'
Johann Georg Kant, father of Immanuel Kant, philosopher.






garinda is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 17-03-2010, 13:34   #15
Grand Wizard Of The Inner Clique
 
Less's Avatar
Re: Accrington's Women's Suffrage.

Quote:
Originally Posted by garinda View Post
As we know, Accy Web proves yet again, we live in a small world.

I'm sorry, no more information about Florence Hoare...as yet.

I was hoping that by naming some of the people involved, someone might know them, or have some connection.

Hopefully someone might know.

See this thread, http://www.accringtonweb.com/forum/f...tml#post798019

I'm sure there is someone mentioned in it that is desperate enough to claim a spirit as a relative after all, a ghost of a chance is all we have of her naming her relatives on here, (please God, if she does find family members don't let her be related to me, I couldn't stand the thought of it).
__________________
“I am a Bear of Very Little Brain, and long words bother me.”
Winnie the Pooh
Quotes & quoting
Less is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply




Other sites of interest.. More town sites..




All times are GMT. The time now is 06:06.


© 2003-2013 AccringtonWeb.com



Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.6.1