Anexo:Sufragistas y suffragettes de Reino Unido
Apariencia
Activistas sufragistas y suffragettes del Reino Unido:
- Wilhelmina Hay Abbott (1884–1957) - editora y profesora feminista, funcionaria de International Woman Suffrage Alliance
- Violet Aitken (1886-1987) - activista sufragista en WSPU, encarcelada y alimentada a la fuerza, editora de The Suffragette
- Janie Allan (1868–1968) - activista sufragista y partidaria financiera significativa de WSPU; encarcelada por actividades de sufragio
- Mary Sophia Allen (1878–1964) - activista por los derechos de las mujeres, mujer policía pionera, posteriormente involucrada en actividades políticas de extrema derecha
- Katharine Russell, vizcondesa Amberley (1844–1874): defensora temprana del control de la natalidad, presidenta de la Sociedad de Sufragio de Mujeres de Bristol y West of England
- Elizabeth Garrett Anderson (1836–1917) - médica, feminista, primera decano de una escuela de medicina británica, primera alcaldesa y magistrada en Gran Bretaña
- Louisa Garrett Anderson (1873–1943) - Cirujana Jefe del Cuerpo del Hospital de Mujeres, miembro de la Royal Society of Medicine, encarcelada por sus actividades sufragistas
- Helen Archdale (1876-1949) - sufragista y periodista
- Jane Arthur (1827–1907) - pedagoga, feminista y activista; hizo campaña por el sufragio femenino
- Margaret Ashton (1856–1937) - sufragista, político local, pacifista
- Nancy Astor, vizcondesa Astor (1879–1964) - política, primera mujer en sentarse como miembro del Parlamento en la Cámara de los Comunes británica <! - ¿era sufragista? ->
- Barbara Ayrton-Gould (1886–1950) - Política laborista y cofundadora de United Suffragists; encarcelada por sus actividades en defensa del sufragio
- Sarah Jane Baines (1866–1951) - reformadora feminista y social; encarcelada al menos quince veces
- Minnie Baldock (c. 1864 - 1954) - cofundó la primera sucursal en Londres de WSPU[1]
- Frances Balfour (1858–1931) - presidenta de la Sociedad Nacional para el Sufragio de las Mujeres
- Florence Balgarnie (1856–1928) - sufragista británica, oradora, pacifista, feminista, activista de la templanza
- Rachel Barrett (1874–1953) - miembro de WSPU; editora de La sufragista
- Janet Barrowman (1879 - 1955) - miembro escocesa de WSPU; encarcelada por sus actividades sufragistas
- Dorothea Beale (1831–1906) - reformadora educativa, escritora, directora del Cheltenham Ladies 'College
- Lydia Becker (1827–1890) - bióloga y astrónoma, fundadora y editora del Women's Suffrage Journal
- Edith Marian Begbie (1866-1932) - sufragista militante que fue alimentada a la fuerza
- Mary Bell (1885-1943) - primeras mujeres escocesas magistrada
- Sarah Benett (1850-1924) - Tesorera de la WFL y sufragista
- Ethel Bentham (1861–1931) - médica, política, miembro de la Unión Nacional de Sociedades de Sufragio de Mujeres
- Annie Besant (1847–1933) - socialista, teósofa, activista por los derechos de las mujeres, escritora, oradora y defensora del autogobierno irlandés e indio <! - ¿era sufragista? ->
- Rosa May Billinghurst (1875–1953) - miembro de WSPU; encarcelada varias veces
- Teresa Billington-Greig (1877–1964) - cofundadora de Women's Freedom League; encarcelada por sus actividades sufragistas
- Catherine Hogg Blair (1872-1946) - sufragista escocesa y fundadora del Scottish Women's Rural Institute, y miembro del WSPU
- Violet Bland (1863–1940) - miembro de WSPU, alimentado a la fuerza en prisión
- Barbara Bodichon (1827–1891) - pedagoga, artista, feminista, activista por los derechos de las mujeres
- Margaret Bondfield (1873–1953) - política, presidenta de Adult Suffrage Society, primera mujer ministra del gabinete en el Reino Unido
- Elsie Bowerman (1889–1973) - abogada, miembro de WSPU, sobreviviente del 'Titanic' de RMS
- Jane Esdon Brailsford (1876-1937) - sufragista escocesa
- Agnes Brown (1866-1943) - sufragista y escritora escocesa
- Annie Leigh Browne (1851–1936) - cofundadora de College Hall, Londres y de Sociedad de Gobierno Local de Mujeres
- Constance Bryer (1870-1952) - sufragista
- Evaline Hilda Burkitt (1876–1955) - primera sufragista alimentada a la fuerza
- Frances Buss (1827–1894) - directora, pionera de la educación de las mujeres, miembro de la Kensington Society
- Josephine Butler (1828–1906) - feminista, autora, reformadora social preocupada por el bienestar de las prostitutas
- Edward Caird (1835-1908) - miembro fundador de Glasgow and West of Scotland Association for Women's Suffrage
- Mona Caird (1854–1932) - novelista y ensayista inglesa que escribió en apoyo del sufragio femenino
- Mabel Capper (1888–1966) activista WSPU encarcelada en varias ocasiones
- Isabella Carrie (1878–1981) - maestra miembro del WSPU
- Dorothea Chalmers Smith (1874 - 1944) - médica y sufragista
- Jane Clapperton (1832-1914) - filósofa, pionera en control de natalidad, reformadora social y sufragista
- Mary Jane Clarke (1862–1910) - arrestada por romper ventanas, detenida en la prisión HM Holloway, alimentada a la fuerza
- Anne Clough (1820–1892) - profesora y promotora de educación superior para mujeres <! - ¿era sufragista? ->
- Lila Clunas (1876-1968) - sufragista escocesa y concejala del partido laborista
- Jane Cobden (1851–1947) – Política radical activa en diferentes causas. Cofundadora de Women's Franchise League
- Leonora Cohen (1873–1978) – militante de grupos británicos de suffragettes y sindicalistas. Guardaespaldas de Emmeline Pankhurst
- Florence Annie Conybeare (1872–1916) – sufragista organizadora de reuniones del National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies
- Selina Cooper (1864–1946) – trabajadora de fábrica textil, magistrada local, miembro de la Sociedad de Sufragio de Mujeres del Norte de Inglaterra
- Jessie Craigen (c.1835–1899) – sufragista que se dedicó a realizar charlas en todo el país
- Helen Crawfurd (1877-1954) - suffragette, comunista y activista.
- Maud Crofts (nacido 1889) – sufragista, autora y primera mujer aceptada como solicitor[2][3]
- Mary Crudelius (1839–1877) – Pionera en el activismo del sufragio femenino y defensora de la educación de la mujer.
- Helen Cruickshank (1886-1975) - poetisa escocesa y suffragette
- Emily Davies (1830–1921) – cofundadora de Kensington Society y de la primera Universidad Británica de mujeres Girton College, Cambridge University
- Emily Wilding Davison (1872–1913) – militante activista, miembro clave del WSPU, murió en una acción de protesta en una pista de carreras
- John McAusland Denny (1858-1922) hombre de negocios miembro del Conservative Party politician y miembro fundador de la Glasgow and West of Scotland Association for Women's Suffrage
- Charlotte Despard (1844–1939) – novelista, activista del Sinn Féin, cofundadora de Women's Freedom League
- Agnes Dollan (1887–1966) – suffragette escocesa, activista política y pacifista
- Violet Mary Doudney (1889-1952) - profesora y militante suffragette
- Katherine Douglas Smith (1878-) - militante suffragette y organizadora del WSPU
- Flora Drummond (1878–1949) – organizadora del WSPU, encarcelada nueve veces por su activismo en Women's Suffrage movement, inspiridora oradora
- Marion Wallace Dunlop (1864-1942) - artista y suffragette
- Elsie Duval (1892-1919) - miembro de WSPU y la primera mujer liberada bajo el Cat and Mouse Act
- Maude Edwards - suffragette
- Norah Elam (1878–1961) – prominente miembro del WSPU; encarcelada en tres ocasiones
- Elizabeth Clarke Wolstenholme Elmy (1833–1918) – oradora y escritora público; formó la primera sociedad sufragista británica, primera empleada remunerada del Movimiento de Mujeres Británicas
- Dorothy Evans (1888 - 1944) - activista y organizadora, trabajadora del WSPU; encarcelada en varias ocasiones
- Kate Williams Evans - (1866-1961) - suffragette
- Millicent Fawcett (1847–1929) – feminista, escritora, política y presidenta de la National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies
- Helen Fraser (1881-1979) - sufragista, portavoz y artista
- Elizabeth Fry (1780–1845) – reformadora de la prisión, reformadora social, filántropa
- Edith Margaret Garrud (1872–1971) – primera entrenadora de 'The Bodyguard', formado en respuesta a la Cat and Mouse Act
- Mary Gawthorpe (1881–1973) – socialista, sindicalista, editora, activa en el movimiento sufragista en Inglaterra y Estados Unidos.
- Ellison Scotland Gibb (1879–1970) - suffragette and chess player
- Margaret Skirving Gibb (1877-1954) - suffragette and chess player
- Marion Gilchrist (1864-1952) - doctor and suffragist
- Frances Gordon (born c. 1874) – prominent in the militant wing of the Scottish women's suffrage movement; imprisoned and force-fed
- Gerald Gould (1885–1936) – writer, known as a journalist, reviewer, essayist, and poet; co-founder of United Suffragists
- Mary Pollock Grant (1876-1957) - Scottish suffragette, Liberal Party politician, missionary and policewoman.
- Elsa Gye (1881 – 1943) - Scottish suffragette, imprisoned for the cause, led WSPU branches in Nottingham and Newcastle
- Joan Lavender Bailie Guthrie (Laura Grey) (1888-1914) - suffragette and actress, imprisoned for window smashing
- Beatrice Forbes-Robertson Hale (1883–1967) – actress, lectured and wrote on women's rights
- Cicely Hale (1884–1981) – health visitor and author; worked for the WSPU and The Suffragette
- Nellie Hall (1895–1929) – god-daughter of Emmeline Pankhurst, member of the WSPU; imprisoned twice
- Hazel Hunkins Hallinan (1890-1982)
- Cicely Hamilton (1872–1952) – actress, writer, journalist, feminist
- Ishbel Hamilton-Gordon (1857-1939) - author, philanthropist, and an advocate of woman's interests
- Marion Coates Hansen (1870–1947) – early member of the WSPU, co-founder of the Women's Freedom League
- Keir Hardie (1856 -1915) - Scottish founder of the Labour Party, later a campaigner for women's suffrage
- Emily J. Harding (1850-1940) - British artist, illustrator and suffragette
- Jane Ellen Harrison (1850–1928) – linguist, feminist, co-founder of modern studies in Greek mythology, supporter of women's suffrage
- Evelina Haverfield (1867–1920) – aid worker and nurse in WWI, member of the WSPU, arrested several times
- Margaret Hills (1882–1967) – teacher, public speaker, feminist and socialist; organizer of the NUWSS Election Fighting Fund
- Reverend Claude Hinscliff (fl. 1896–1913) – founder of the [Anglican] Church League for Women's Suffrage[4][5]
- Emily Hobhouse (1860–1926) – exposed the squalid conditions in concentration camps in South Africa during the Second Boer War; active in the People's Suffrage Federation
- Olive Hockin (1881–1936) – artist and author; imprisoned after arson attacks suspected to be suffragette-related
- Winifred Holtby (1898–1935) – feminist, socialist, and writer, including a new voters guide for women in 1929
- Edith Sophia Hooper (1868-1926)- suffragist and biographer of Josephine Butler
- Winifred Horrabin (1887–1971) – socialist activist, journalist, member of the WSPU
- Clemence Housman (1861–1955) – author, illustrator, co-founder of the Suffrage Atelier
- Laurence Housman (1865–1959) – playwright, writer, illustrator, co-founder of the Suffrage Atelier
- Elizabeth How-Martyn (1875–1954) – member of the WSPU and co-founder of the Women's Freedom League
- Ellen Hughes (1867–1927) – Welsh writer, poet, suffragist
- Florence Hull (b.1878) - suffragette, member of WSPU, imprisoned in January 1913
- Agnes Husband (1852–1929) – Scottish politician and suffragette
- Elsie Inglis (1864–1917) – Scottish doctor, secretary of the Edinburgh National Society for Women's Suffrage
- Margaret Irwin (1858-1940) - trade unionist, suffragist and founder member of the Glasgow and West of Scotland Association for Women's Suffrage
- Christina Jamieson (1864–1942) - writer and suffragette
- Maud Joachim (1869–1947) - suffragette
- Ellen Isabel Jones (d.1948) – suffragette and close associate of the Pankhursts
- Helena Jones (b.1870) - Welsh doctor and member of the WSPU, later critical of Emmeline Pankhurst
- Mabel Jones (1865 -1923) - doctor and suffragette
- Annie Kenney (1879–1953) – leading figure in the WSPU
- Jessie Kenney (1887 – 1985) - leading suffragette, assaulted the British prime minister and the Home Secretary at golf course
- Nell Kenney (1876-1953) - suffragette
- Jessie Keppie (1868-1951) - artist and subscriber to Glasgow and West of Scotland Association for Women's Suffrage
- Alice Stewart Ker (1853-1943) - doctor, health educator and suffragette
- Edith Key (1872–1937) – secretary-organiser of the WSPU, Huddersfield branch, and author of the only surviving regional WSPU minute book
- Mary Stewart Kilgour (1851–1955) – educationalist and writer, co-founder of the Union of Practical Suffragists
- Adelaide Knight, (1871–1950) – secretary for the WSPU in Canning Town[6][7]
- Anne Knight (1786–1862) – social reformer, pioneer of feminism, early suffragette and pamphleteer
- Annie Knight (1895–2006) – suffragette in Aberdeen Scotland
- Aeta Adelaide Lamb (1886–1928) – longest serving organiser in the WSPU
- George Lansbury (1859–1940) – social reformer and politician who allied himself with the WSPU
- Jennie Lee (1904–1988) – Scottish politician, elected MP aged 24 in 1929 by-election before suffrage was extended to women under 30
- Lilian Lenton (1891–1972) – active member of the WSPU, winner of a French Red Cross for her service in WWI
- Victoria Lidiard (1889-1992) – WPSU member and reputed to be the longest surviving British Suffragette.[8]
- Thomas Martin Lindsay (1843–1914) – Scottish historian, professor and founder member of the Glasgow and West of Scotland Association for Women's Suffrage
- Kathleen Lyttelton (1856-1907) – women's activist, editor and writer
- Lady Constance Lytton (1869–1923) – speaker and campaigner for prison reform, votes for women, and birth control
- Florence Macfarlane (1867-1947), nurse and militant member of the WSPU
- Margaret Mackworth (1883–1958) – activist and director of more than thirty companies
- Sarah Mair (1846–1941) – campaigner and founder
- Lavinia Malcolm (1847-1920) - Scottish suffragist and local Liberal Movement politician, the first Scottish woman to be elected to a local council (1907) and the first woman Lord Provost of a Scottish burgh town, in Dollar, Clackmannanshire
- Edith Mansell Moullin (1859–1941) – suffragist, settlement worker, and Welsh feminist organisation founder
- Kitty Marion (1871–1944) – actress and political activist
- Dora Marsden (1882–1960) – anarcho-feminist, editor of literary journals, and philosopher of language
- Charlotte Marsh (1842–1909) – joined the WSPU in March 1907. In March 1916 she set up the Independent WSPU
- Selina Martin (1882–1972) – activist
- Harriet Martineau (1802–1876) – social theorist and writer
- Eleanor Marx (1855–1898) – activist and translator
- Flora Masson (1856–1937) – nurse, editor and writer
- Helen Matthews - Scottish suffragette and women's footballer
- Isabella Fyvie Mayo (1843-1914) - poet, novelist, suffragist, and reformer
- Mary Macarthur (1880-1921) - general secretary of the Women's Trade Union League and was involved in the formation of the National Federation of Women Workers and National Anti-Sweating League
- Ann Macbeth (1875-1948) - artist and suffragist
- Lilly Maxwell (1800–1876) suffragist
- Janet McCallum (1881-1946) - trade unionist and suffragist
- Agnes Syme Macdonald (1882-1966) - was a Scottish suffragette who served as the secretary of the Edinburgh branch of the WSPU before setting up the Edinburgh Women Citizens Association (WCA) in 1918.
- Agnes McLaren (1837-1913) - doctor and secretary of the Edinburgh National Society for Women's Suffrage alongside her stepmother, Priscilla Bright McLaren
- Alice McLaren (1860-1945) - doctor, Gynecologist, suffragist and advocate for women's health and women's rights
- Eva McLaren (1852–1921) – suffragist, writer, and political campaigner
- Priscilla Bright McLaren (1815-1906) – anti-slavery activist, Scottish suffragist, founder and president of Edinburgh National Society for Women's Suffrage
- Chrystal Macmillan (1872-1937) - politician, barrister, feminist and pacifist
- Frances McPhun (1880-1940) - suffragette who served two months in Holloway prison, sister of Margaret McPhun
- Margaret McPhun (1876–1960) - suffragette who served two months in Holloway prison, sister of Frances McPhun
- Frances Melville (1873-1962) - suffragist, advocate for higher education for women in Scotland, and one of the first women to matriculate at the University of Edinburgh
- Jessie C. Methven (1854-1917) – Scottish suffragist, suffragette, honorary secretary of Edinburgh National Society for Women's Suffrage, joined WSPU 1906
- Alice Meynell (1847–1922) – editor, writer, and poet
- Harriet Taylor Mill (1807–1858) – philosopher and women's rights advocate
- John Stuart Mill (1806–1873) – philosopher, political economist, and civil servant
- Hannah Mitchell (1872–1956) – activist
- Dora Montefiore (1851–1933) – activist and writer
- Ethel Moorhead (1869–1955) – painter
- Graham Moffat (1866-1951) - actor, director, playwright and spiritualist. Husband of Maggie Moffat and founder of the Men's League for Women's Suffrage
- Maggie Moffat (1873–1943) - British actor and suffragette, wife of Graham Moffat
- Ethel Moorhead (1869-1955) - suffragette and painter
- Anna Munro (1881–1962) – activist
- Eunice Murray (1878-1960) – only Scottish woman who stood for election when UK elections were opened to women in 1918.
- Flora Murray (1869–1923) – medical pioneer and activist
- Frances Murray (1843-1919) - a suffragist raised in Scotland, an advocate of women's education, a lecturer in Scottish music and a writer.
- Sylvia Murray (1875–1955) – suffragette and author, the sister of suffragette Eunice Guthrie Murray.
- Margaret Mylne (1806-1892) - Scottish suffragette and writer
- Mary Neal (1860–1944) – social worker and collector of English folk dances
- Alison Roberta Noble Neilans (1884–1942) – activist, member of the executive committee of the Women's Freedom League
- Margaret Nevinson (1858-1932) – JP, Poor Law guardian, playwright, member of the Church League for Women's Suffrage
- Jessie Newbery (1864-1948) - artist and suffragist
- Elizabeth Pease Nicholl (1807-1897) - abolitionist, anti-segregationist, suffragist, chartist and anti-vivisectionist
- Helen Ogston - suffragette
- Ada Nield Chew (1870–1945) – organiser
- Florence Nightingale (1820–1910) – celebrated social reformer and statistician, and the founder of modern nursing
- Emily Rosaline Orme (1835-1915) - member of the Edinburgh National Society for Women's Suffrage
- Elizabeth Margaret Pace (1866-1957) - Scottish doctor, suffragist and advocate for women's health and women's rights
- Adela Pankhurst (1885–1961) – political organizer, co-founder of the Communist Party of Australia and the Australia First Movement
- Christabel Pankhurst (1880–1958) – co-founder and leader of the WSPU
- Emmeline Pankhurst (1858–1928) – a main founder and the leader of the British Suffragette Movement
- Sylvia Pankhurst (1882–1960) – campaigner and anti-fascism activist
- Frances Mary "Fanny" Parker OBE (1875–1924) – New Zealand-born suffragette prominent in the militant wing of the Scottish women's suffrage movement and repeatedly imprisoned for her actions
- Grace Paterson (1843-1925) School board member, temperance activist, suffragist, and founder of the Glasgow School of Cookery
- Isabella Bream Pearce (1859–1929) Scottish socialist propagandist and suffrage campaigner.
- Edith Pechey (1845–1908) – campaigner for women's rights, involved in a range of social causes
- Pleasance Pendred (1864–1948) - suffragette
- Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence (1867–1954) – member Suffrage Society, secretary WSPU
- Caroline Philips (1874-1956) - feminist, suffragette and journalist
- Catherine Pine (1864–1941) - nurse, suffragette
- Clara Rackham (1875-1966) – magistrate, prison reformer, factory inspector, long-serving alderman and city councillor in Cambridge
- Jane Rae (1872-1959) - political activist, suffragette, councillor and Justice of the peace
- Eleanor Rathbone (1872–1946) – campaigner for women's rights
- Marion Kirkland Reid (1815-1902) - feminist and writer
- Mary Reid (1880–1921) – Scottish trades unionist
- Margaret Mackworth, 2nd Viscountess Rhondda (1883-1955) – WSPU member, journalist, business woman, founder of the feminist periodical Time and Tide.
- Mary Richardson (1882–1961) – Canadian suffragette, arsonist, head of the women's section of the British Union of Fascists
- Edith Rigby (1872–1948) – founder of St. Peter's School, prominent activist
- Margaret Robertson (1892–1967) – campaigner; organiser of the Election Fighting Fund
- Elizabeth Robins (1862–1952) – Ibsen actress, playwright, public speaker, novelist
- Annot Robinson (1874–1925) – née Wilkie, nicknamed Annie, pacifist and suffragette[9][10]
- Rona Robinson (1881–1973) – suffragette and in 1905 the first woman in the United Kingdom to gain a first-class degree in chemistry
- Esther Roper (1868–1938) – social justice campaigner
- Arnold Stephenson Rowntree (1872–1951) – MP, philanthropist, and suffragist
- Lolita Roy – believed to have been an important organizer of the Women's Coronation Procession (a suffrage march in London) in 1911, and marched as part of it with either her sisters or her daughters[11][12]
- Agnes Royden (1876–1956) – preacher
- Bertha Ryland (1882-1977), militant suffragette
- Myra Sadd Brown (1872-1938) - suffragette activist in the WSPU, imprisoned and force-fed
- Margaret Sandhurst (1828–1892) – one of the first women elected to a city council in the United Kingdom
- Arabella Scott (1886–1980) – Scottish suffragette who endured five weeks of solitary confinement in Perth prison and force feeding twice a day
- Evelyn Sharp (suffragist) (1869–1955) – journalist on The Manchester Guardian, short story writer, tax resister, founder of the United Suffragists
- Alice Maud Shipley (1869-1951), suffragist who went on hunger strike in Holloway Prison and who was force fed
- Frances Simson (1854–1938) - suffragist, campaigner for women's higher education and one of the first of eight women graduates from the University of Edinburgh
- Sophia Duleep Singh (1876–1948) – had leading roles in the Women's Tax Resistance League, and the WSPU
- Margaret Skinnider (1892-1971) -
- Ethel Smyth (1858–1944) – composer, writer
- Mary Anderson Snodgrass (1862-1945) - politician, suffragist and advocate for women's rights, member of the Glasgow and West of Scotland Association for Women's Suffrage
- Ethel Snowden (1881–1951) – socialist, human rights activist, feminist politician
- Georgiana Solomon (1844-1933) - member of the WSPU
- Mary Somerville (1780-1872) - science writer and polymath
- Emma Sproson (1867–1936)- women's rights activist
- Emily Spender (1841–1922) - novelist and suffragette
- Lady Barbara Steel (1857-1943) - Scottish suffragist and tax resister
- Jessie Stephen - (1893-1979) - working class suffragette and trade union activist
- Flora Stevenson (1839–1905) – Scottish social reformer with interest in education for poor or neglected children
- Louisa Stevenson (1835–1908) – Scottish campaigner for women's university education, effective, well-organised nursing
- Charlotte Carmichael Stopes (1840-1929) - scholar, author, and campaigner for women's rights
- Una Harriet Ella Stratford Duval (née Dugdale) (1879–1975) – suffragette and marriage reformer
- Lucy Deane Streatfeild (1865–1950) – civil servant, social worker, one of the first female factory inspectors in UK
- Annie S. Swan (1859-1943) - journalist, novelist and story writer
- Helena Swanwick (1864–1939) – feminist, pacifist
- Jane Taylour (1827-1905) - suffragist and women's movement campaigner
- Dora Thewlis (1890–1976) – activist
- Agnes Thomson (b.1846) - Scottish suffragette, member of Edinburgh WSPU, missionary in India
- Elizabeth Thomson (b.1848) - Scottish suffragette, member of Edinburgh WSPU, hunger striker, missionary in India
- Elizabeth Thompson (1846–1933) – prominent painter
- Muriel Thompson (1875-1939) - World War I ambulance driver, racing driver and suffragist
- Violet Tillard (1874–1922) – nurse, pacifist, supporter of conscientious objectors, relief worker
- Isabella Tod (1836-1896) - Scottish suffragist, women's rights campaigner and unionist politician in Ireland
- Catherine Tolson (1890-1924) - suffragette
- Helen Tolson (1888-1955) - suffragette
- Florence Tunks (1891-1985) - suffragette
- Minnie Turner (1866-1948) - ran a guest house, the "Sea View", in Brighton
- Marion Wallace Dunlop (1864–1942) – suffragette went on hunger strike after being arrested for militancy
- Olive Grace Walton - (1886-1937) - suffragette
- Elizabeth (Bessie) Watson (1900–1992) – child suffragette and piper
- Mona Chalmers Watson (1872-1936) - physician and head of the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps
- Harriet Shaw Weaver (1876–1961) – political activist, magazine editor
- Beatrice Webb (1858–1943) – sociologist, economist, socialist, labour historian, social reformer
- Vera Wentworth (1890–1957) – went to Holloway for the cause and was force fed. She door stepped and then assaulted the Prime Minister twice. She wrote "Three Months in Holloway".
- Rebecca West (1892–1983) – author, journalist, literary critic, travel writer
- Olive Wharry (1886–1947) – artist, arsonist
- Eliza Wigham (1820-1899) - suffragist and abolitionist
- Jane Wigham (1801-1888) - suffragist and abolitionist
- Ellen Wilkinson (1891–1947) – politician, Member of Parliament, served as Minister of Education
- Gertrude Wilkinson (1851–1929) - militant suffragette and member of the Women's Social and Political Union
- Celia Wray (1872–1954), suffragette and architect
- I.A.R. Wylie (1885-1959) - Australian writer, suffragette in UK, working on The Suffragette
- Alice Zimmern (1855–1939) – teacher, writer
Referencias
[editar]- ↑ Jackson, Sarah (12 de octubre de 2015). «Las sufragistas no eran solo mujeres blancas, de clase media arrojando piedras». The Guardian. Consultado el 22 de febrero de 2018.
- ↑ «UK | 75 years of women solicitors». BBC News. 19 de diciembre de 1997. Consultado el 28 de febrero de 2018.
- ↑ «Maud Crofts: "We women want not privileges but equality." – First 100 Years». first100years.org.uk.
- ↑ Krista Cowman (9 de diciembre de 2010). Women in British Politics, c.1689–1979. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 63-. ISBN 978-1-137-26801-3.
- ↑ Graham Neville (1998). Radical Churchman: Edward Lee Hicks and the New Liberalism. Clarendon Press. pp. 165-. ISBN 978-0-19-826977-9.
- ↑ Adelaide Knight, leader of the first east London suffragettes — East End Women's Museum
- ↑ Diane Atkinson (8 de febrero de 2018). Rise Up Women!: The Remarkable Lives of the Suffragettes. Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 578-. ISBN 978-1-4088-4406-9.
- ↑ Hoffman, Bella (19 de octubre de 1992). «Obituary: Victoria Lidiard». The Independent.
- ↑ Robinson [née Wilkie], Annot Erskine [Annie]. «Robinson [née Wilkie], Annot Erskine [Annie] (1874–1925), suffragist and pacifist | Oxford Dictionary of National Biography». Oxforddnb.com. Consultado el 26 de febrero de 2018.
- ↑ «Wilkie, Annot (Robinson) – Socialist, Suffragette Wilkie, Helen – Socialist, Suffragette | Dundee Women's Trail». Dundeewomenstrail.org.uk. 18 de enero de 2013. Consultado el 26 de febrero de 2018.
- ↑ «Photograph of Indian suffragettes on the Women's Coronation Procession, 17 June 1911 at Museum of London». Museumoflondonprints.com. 17 de junio de 1911. Consultado el 26 de febrero de 2018.
- ↑ Izzy Lyons. «Lolita Roy – the woman who simultaneously fought for British and Indian female suffrage». Telegraph.co.uk. Consultado el 26 de febrero de 2018.