Suffrage - When, Where, and
Obstacles to Overcome
Suffrage (the right to vote)
Womens Rights
Now the issue of gender equality is
openly discussed in Britain and laws have been passed which help to maintain
equality. This has not always been the case.
During the whole of the nineteenth
century, women had no political rights though there had been some movement in
other areas to advance the rights of women.
In 1839, a law was passed which
stated that if a marriage broke down and the parents separated, children under
seven years of age should stay with their mother.
In 1857, women could divorce
husbands who were cruel to them or husbands who had left them.
In 1870, women were allowed to keep
money they had earned.
In 1891, women could not be forced
to live with husbands unless they wished to.
These were very important laws which
advanced the rights of women. However, they were good laws on paper. If a woman
left her husband for whatever reason, it would have been very difficult for her
to keep herself and children simply because the attitude of Victorian Britain
was that women should stay at home and look after their husbands. The culture of
the time meant that very few women were skilled in any obvious profession and,
therefore, there were few jobs that paid well for women during the nineteenth
century.
This view was supported by Queen
Victoria - she hardly did anything to advance the cause of women. In 1870, Queen
Victoria had written "let women be what God intended, a helpmate for man,
but with totally different duties and vocations."
As an example of the difficulties
women faced,
one lady called Elizabeth Garrett Anderson against all the odds qualified as a
doctor. However, she got very few people on her books in London as men would not
be treated by a woman and women tended to remain with their male GP's as that
was the way it was done. It took a long time before Anderson got a decent
reputation among Londoners - and she faced much hostility along the way.
A table of employment gives an
example of where women worked in 1900 :
Type of employment | Number of women employed |
Domestic Servants | 1,740,800 |
Teachers | 124,000 |
Nurses | 68,000 |
Doctors | 212 |
Architects | 2 |
The original movement for women's political rights was a non-violent one lead by Millicent Fawcett. Her movement was called the National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies. Fawcett believed in the power of change through persuasion. She argued that those women who had money and employed men as gardeners, cooks etc., were in the absurd position of note being able to vote yet those men employed in their employment did !! Another of Fawcett's arguments was that those women that worked paid the same level of tax as men who were employed, but the men could vote and the women could not.
However, Fawcett's arguments were not listened to and some men were less than polite when giving reasons as to why women should not vote :
"Political power in many large cities would chiefly be in the hands of young, ill-educated, giddy, and often ill-conducted (badly behaved) girls." Frederick Rylands (1896)
Such a reaction lead to some women taking a more hard-line attitude and in 1903, the Women's Social and Political Union was created by Emmeline Pankhurst. They became known as the Suffragettes.
She believed that if men would not listen to reasonable ideas, then women should use force to push for what they wanted - the right to vote. Their polices included the burning of churches, attacks on politicians, disrupting the day-to-day work of Parliament and, if arrested, going on hunger strike. Their campaign took them into the twentieth century - a century that gave women over 30 years of age the right to vote in 1918 and allowed them to stand for Parliament as MP's in the same year. In 1928, women were given the same political rights as men.
from :http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/womensrights.htm
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