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              <text>Rev. Newman Hall was Chairman at the formation committee of the Solihull and District branch of the NUWSS in 1911. He attended numerous meetings that year and in the following years, together with his wife Alice. The NUWSS was the largest women's suffrage society in the country and believed in attaining the vote for women by peaceable and constitutional methods. Contributor/researcher: Tara Morton.</text>
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              <text>Alice Newman Hall attended several local meetings with her husband the Rev. W A Newman Hall, Chairman of the 1911 committee of the Solihull and District NUWSS. The NUWSS was the largest women's suffrage society in the country and believed in attaining the vote for women by peaceable and constitutional methods. Contributor/researcher: Tara Morton.</text>
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              <text>Ladbroke House, Ladbroke, Southam</text>
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              <text>Alan Heywood Fell and his wife attended several meetings of the Warwickshire CUWFA together in 1911. The CUWFA formed in 1908 to work peacefully and constitutionally for ‘the removal of the sex disqualification from the franchise’ by bringing Conservative and Unionist’s together. Allan gives his occupation as private means and as an employer so it is not clear from the census how he earned his living. However, with two children and four servants at home, the Heywood Fell's lived a comfortable lifestyle. Contributor/researcher: Tara Morton.</text>
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              <text>Florence Heywood Fell and her husband attended several meetings of the Warwickshire CUWFA together in 1911.The CUWFA formed in 1908 to work peacefully and constitutionally for ‘the removal of the sex disqualification from the franchise’ by bringing Conservative and Unionist’s together. Living at home with two children and four servants, the Heywood Fell's lived a comfortable lifestyle. Contributor/researcher: Tara Morton.</text>
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                    <text>Source: Windows on Warwickshire, Heritage and Culture, WCC.</text>
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                    <text>Dewar family at Mayfield, c. 1894. Esther is second on the left, seated on her father William’s knee.&#13;
Source: Windows on Warwickshire, Heritage and Culture, WCC.</text>
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              <text>Miss Dewar was likely Evelyn Esther Dewar (BA) Assistant school mistress at Rugby school who appears at several combined NUWSS and Warwickshire CUWFA meetings in 1911. She lived in Mayfield House, Horton Crescent, near to Rugby School and was one of many teachers that campaigned for the vote. The NUWSS was the largest women's suffrage society in the country and believed in attaining the vote for women by peaceable and constitutional methods. Contributor/researcher: Tara Morton.</text>
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                    <text>Photo: Elizabeth Crawford, womanandhersphere.com</text>
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          <description>The age of this person at the time of the 1911 UK Census</description>
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              <text>Eileen Casey was born in Australia, the daughter of a doctor, and moved to England as a child. All the members of the Casey family became involved in the suffrage movement. Eileen had joined the WSPU by 1911 and on census night only Dr Casey was at home – his wife and daughters evaded. In March 1912 Eileen was imprisoned after taking part in a WSPU-organised window-smashing campaign in Oxford Street. She went on hunger strike and was forcibly fed. She was arrested again on several occasions, charged with setting fire to pillar boxes and imprisoned. After being released under the Cat and Mouse Act in late 1913 she evaded the police for eight months until she was arrested on a charge of possessing explosives in Nottingham in June 1914 at a time when a visit was due to be made to the city by the King and Queen. On 28 July she was sentenced to 15 months’ imprisonment but was released a few days later under the general amnesty granted to suffragette prisoners on the outbreak of the First World War. Eileen’s mother and sister were also arrested as a result of their suffrage activities, her mother spending some time in prison. Dr Casey fully supported their commitment to the suffrage campaign and in June 1913 allowed the family home to be used by Kitty Marion and Clara Giveen immediately after they had set fire to the stadium at Hurst Park. For more information see the entry for Eileen Casey in Elizabeth Crawford: The Women’s Suffrage Movement: A reference guide,1866-1928 (London: Routledge, 2001).</text>
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              <text>The whole Clayton family was deeply involved in the suffrage movement. Edwy Clayton’s wife, Clara, and daughter, Hilda, were very active members of the WSPU and the Church League for Women’s suffrage. In 1913 Clayton was suspected of providing materials to make explosives used in suffragette attacks on property. He was sentenced to 21 months in prison, went on hunger strike, and was eventually released under the Cat and Mouse Act. As a result of the prosecution his business was, apparently, ruined. Clayton belonged to the Men's League for Women's Suffrage and also the Men's Politcal Union (MPU). The Men's League was founded in 1907, 'with the object of bringing to bear upon the movement the electoral power of men... to obtain for women the vote on the same terms as which it is now, or may be in the future, be granted to men'. The MPU founded in 1910 was a militant society - the male equivalent of the WSPU. For more information see the entry for Edwy Clayton in Elizabeth Crawford: The Women’s Suffrage Movement: a reference guide, 1866-1928 (London: Routledge, 2001). &#13;
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              <text>Margery Corbett Ashby (1882-1981) was the elder daughter of leading Liberal suffrage campaigners (see) Marie and Charles Corbett of Woodgate, Danehill, Sussex. In 1904 she and sister Cicely accompanied Marie to Berlin for the first International Women’s Suffrage Congress. With a BA from Newnham, Cambridge, Margery became secretary of the NUWSS, then joined the executive committee and was soon addressing public meetings in London and in Sussex: at Brighton Dome in October 1910 she was the principal speaker at the biggest event yet organised by the Brighton and Hove Women’s Franchise Society. While their father was briefly Liberal MP for East Grinstead and had a flat in London, she and Cicely formed the ‘Younger Suffragists’ there. This non-party, non-militant society’s inaugural meeting in December 1909 was chaired by Margery and addressed by Lady Betty Balfour of the Conservative Women’s Franchise Society.&#13;
County Liberals and eminent suffrage campaigners gathered for Margery’s wedding to Brian Ashby in Danehill Church in December 1910. The couple subsequently lived in Langside Avenue in Putney, where we find them on the 1911 census and where Margery is described as a lecturer on suffrage and politics. Margery became a Poor Law Guardian in Wandsworth and chair of the Barnes, Mortlake and East Sheen branch of the London Society for Women’s Suffrage in 1914, the year her son was born. Yet she continued to speak for women’s suffrage in Danehill as well as in London: at a ‘drawing room’ meeting hosted by Mrs Firebrace of Danehurst in November 1912, as well as on a platform at the Hyde Park mass rally at the culmination of the Great Suffrage Pilgrimage in July 1913. When 1918 Representation of the People Act allowed women to stand for Parliament, Margery stood for the Liberals at several General Elections just to further the cause. At Ladywood, Birmingham, in December 1918, she was, as the sympathetic Mid Sussex Times reported, ‘snowed under’ by votes for Neville Chamberlain who then entered the House of Commons for the first time. Three years later she ‘made a splendid fight for Liberalism at Richmond’, supported by fellow Sussex Liberal, Lord Denman of Balcombe Place. The Mid Sussex Times took pride in announcing the achievements of ‘Charles Corbett’s clever daughter’ (sic), repeatedly reminding readers of her election in 1923 as President of the International Women’s Suffrage Alliance, and in 1927 as President of the Women’s National Liberal Federation. In 1929, as President of the National Union of Societies for Equal Citizenship, the successor to the NUWSS, Margery attended a meeting at Balcombe Place to promote the formation of Townswomen’s Guilds in Sussex. Women having been granted equal voting rights with men in 1928, the NUSEC was, in 1933, succeeded by the National Union of Townswomen’s Guilds, with Margery as President. As a member of the British delegation to the disappointing 1932-4 League of Nations World Disarmament Conference in Geneva, Margery worked with Lord Robert Cecil, of nearby Chelwood Gate, a founder member, with her father, of the Men’s League for Women’s Suffrage in 1907. In February 1935, these two luminaries of the women’s rights and peace movements emphasized to a packed audience in Danehill Memorial Hall the need to persevere with League of Nations peace efforts. Margery referring to having worked in 30 countries, spoke of ‘the feeling of the world for peace’. ‘It is our business to let the Government know what we want.’ She continued to live in the Putney area of London during much of her working life, later moving to back to Sussex. Margery Corbett Ashby was made a DBE in 1967. For more information see Margery Corbett Ashby in Elizabeth Crawford: The Women’s Suffrage Movement: a reference guide,1866-1928 (London: Routledge, 2001) and her entry in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. The original entry has been added to and updated by independent researcher and writer Frances Stenlake using sources: Common Cause; Mid Sussex Times; Brighton Gazette; Danehill Parish Historical Society, Woodgate July 2010; Margery Corbett Ashby reminiscences recorded by J Bakewell 1972, Women' Library, LSE. &#13;
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                    <text>Sophia's WTRL sale of goods card to raise funds for tax resistance. Source: courtesy The Women's Library, LSE.</text>
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                    <text>Letter to Lord Crewe mooting the possible removal of Sophia from her 'Grace and Favour' home at Hampton Court to stop her antics of selling the Suffragette newspaper outside. Source: Letter to Lord Crewe, The British Library.</text>
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          <name>Age</name>
          <description>The age of this person at the time of the 1911 UK Census</description>
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              <text>Faraday House, Hampton Court Road, East Molesey, KT8 9BW</text>
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          <name>Suffrage Society</name>
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              <text>WSPU</text>
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          <description>This person's response to the 1911 UK Census</description>
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              <text>Sophia Duleep Singh, daughter of Maharajah Duleep Singh, was a god-daughter to Queen Victoria; her mother was German. Sophia was born a princess, but her father’s abandonment of his family meant that she was no stranger to suffering as a child. Her father left his family destitute and Sophia’s mother died soon after from alcoholism and depression. Sophia was a committed member of the WSPU, taking part in one of the deputations to Parliament on ‘Black Friday’ (18 November 1910) that resulted in violent scenes in Parliament Square. At another time, she threw herself onto the Prime Minister’s car pressing a ‘Votes for Women’ pamphlet against the windshield. She was arrested during the suffrage campaign, but was never sent to prison perhaps because of her high social status. She was a regular speaker at meetings of the Richmond branch of the WSPU and, as a member of the Women’s Tax Resistance League too, on several occasions had goods seized after she had refused to pay taxes (see images). In 1911, Sophia took part in the suffragette boycott of the government census survey writing 'No Vote No Census' across her census return. She also took to selling the Suffragette newspaper outside Hampton Court Palace where she lived, standing next to an advertising board (see image). This prompted calls for her removal from her ‘grace and favour’ home at the palace to try and stop such antics (see images, letter to Lord Crewe attached). For more information see, Elizabeth Crawford: The Women’s Suffrage Movement: A reference guide, 1866-1928 (London: Routledge, 2001) and Anita Anand, Sophia: Princess, Suffragette, Revolutionary.&#13;
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                <text>Sophia Duleep Singh (Princess)</text>
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                <text>POINT(-38196.20729440058 6693352.550764525)</text>
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