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© HarperCollins Publishers 2010 Significance How did different individuals help women get the vote?

© HarperCollins Publishers 2010 Significance How did different individuals help women get the vote?

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Page 1: © HarperCollins Publishers 2010 Significance How did different individuals help women get the vote?

© HarperCollins Publishers 2010

Significance

How did different individuals help women get the vote?

Page 2: © HarperCollins Publishers 2010 Significance How did different individuals help women get the vote?

© HarperCollins Publishers 2010

Significance

Objectives

In this activity you will:

Describe how different individuals contributed to women

gaining the vote in Britain.

Page 3: © HarperCollins Publishers 2010 Significance How did different individuals help women get the vote?

© HarperCollins Publishers 2010

Significance

How did different individuals help women to get the vote?

Read the following screens to help you come to a

conclusion about the role some individuals played in

helping women get the vote.

You may wish to take notes from each screen.

You may wish to carry out extra research to help you

complete the task more fully.

Page 4: © HarperCollins Publishers 2010 Significance How did different individuals help women get the vote?

© HarperCollins Publishers 2010

Significance

In 1903, Emmeline Pankhurst and her daughters,

Christable (below, with Emmeline) and Sylvia,

established the Women’s Social and Political Union

(WSPU).

They were known as suffragettes.

Their organisation had one key aim,

which was to persuade the British

government to grant women the vote

in Britain.

How did different individuals help women to get the vote?

Page 5: © HarperCollins Publishers 2010 Significance How did different individuals help women get the vote?

© HarperCollins Publishers 2010

Significance

How did different individuals help women to get the vote?

Emmeline Pankhurst used the following tactics:

MarchesRalliesMeetingsCreating posters and bannersWriting and distributing leafletsAdopting purple, white, and green campaigning colours

Page 6: © HarperCollins Publishers 2010 Significance How did different individuals help women get the vote?

© HarperCollins Publishers 2010

Significance

How did different individuals help women to get the vote?

The WSPU decided to use more public, militant tactics.

Suffragettes attacked the property of people who opposed

their campaign.

Some protestors were arrested and imprisoned.

Some of these prisoners went on hunger strike.

The government passed the ‘Cat and Mouse Act’ in 1913,

which meant hunger strikers could be released from

prison temporarily until they ended their hunger strike.

Page 7: © HarperCollins Publishers 2010 Significance How did different individuals help women get the vote?

© HarperCollins Publishers 2010

Significance

How did different individuals help women to get the vote?

In 1913, Emily Davison was killed when she threw herself under the King’s horse at an annual horse race known as the ‘Derby’.

She was attempting to raise publicity for the suffragette movement.

WSPU had many divisions, and by 1914 many members of the British public opposed their violent tactics.

Page 8: © HarperCollins Publishers 2010 Significance How did different individuals help women get the vote?

© HarperCollins Publishers 2010

Significance

How did different individuals help women to get the vote?

Many suffragettes halted their campaign for the vote

during WWI (1914-1918), which gained them more

support.

During WWI women, performed important roles.

Many women worked in factories to help the war effort.

This gained more support for granting women the vote in

Parliament and in the British newspapers.

Page 9: © HarperCollins Publishers 2010 Significance How did different individuals help women get the vote?

© HarperCollins Publishers 2010

Significance

How did different individuals help women to get the vote?

In 1916, David Lloyd George

became Prime Minister and he

supported giving women the vote.

In 1918, the Representation of the

People Act gave all women over the

age of 30 the right to vote.

In 1928, women were given the full

voting rights that men had.

Page 10: © HarperCollins Publishers 2010 Significance How did different individuals help women get the vote?

© HarperCollins Publishers 2010

Significance

From the evidence, which individuals played a key part in

helping women get the vote? (Images: Emmeline

Pankhurst, Emily Davison, David Lloyd George.)

How did different individuals help women to get the vote?

Page 11: © HarperCollins Publishers 2010 Significance How did different individuals help women get the vote?

© HarperCollins Publishers 2010

Significance

Do you think this is the whole story? What evidence

might be missing? Where might you find it?

Do you think it is possible for just one individual to cause

a great change such as this one?

How did different individuals help women to get the vote?