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“A Star Chamber of the Twentieth Century”: Suffragettes, Liberals, and the 1908 “Rush the Commons” Case

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 January 2014

Extract

The suffragette in the dock at Bow Street police court is one of the emblematic scenes of the “votes for women” agitation. She usually stood alone in the prisoners' box, facing the magistrate, flanked by tables lined with lawyers and police officials and backed by benches full of friends and supporters, newspaper reporters, and ordinary spectators. Notwithstanding the state's claims of legal equality and judicial impartiality, she seemed to be engaged in an unequal contest speaking truth to unbending masculine authority. She was powerless to alter the outcome, a guilty verdict and a spell of imprisonment. This scene, like those of the protester arrested in the streets and the hunger striker being forcibly fed in prison, underlines the spectacular nature of suffrage militancy. Yet its very power to seize and hold our attention can obscure the complex interactions and effects that made militancy such a profoundly ambiguous moment in the intertwined histories of the women's suffrage movement and the Liberal-ruled Edwardian state.

Recent research has displaced the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) from its once central place in suffrage history. Jill Liddington, Jill Norris, and Jo Vellacott have recovered the very important contributions of radical and democratic feminists to the movement. In recounting the efforts of moderate women's suffragists, Claire Hirshfield, Leslie Parker Hume, and others have helped to paint a much more complex picture of the high politics of franchise reform. Historians have also begun to examine the distinct experiences of the movement in Ireland and Scotland.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © North American Conference of British Studies 1996

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References

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21 Under the Justices of the Peace Act of 1361, better known as the Statute of Edward III, and the even older commission of the peace, magistrates were empowered to order a person to enter into recognizances in a specified amount of money and to find sureties in a specified amount among his or her friends, for keeping the peace and good behavior for a certain period of time. Although preventive rather than punitive in nature, magistrates could impose such orders as an alternative to criminal conviction or, on conviction of a defendant, as an alternative to a fine or sentence of imprisonment. Binding orders were difficult to evade. Under the Summary Jurisdiction Act of 1879, a person in England and Wales could call witnesses but not appeal the magistrate's decision. In Ireland, a person was still not allowed to call witnesses. For the person who refused to accept binding orders and was consequently imprisoned, release could be secured by agreeing to comply. See Supperstone, Michael, ed., Brownlie's Law of Public Order and National Security, 2d ed. (London: Butterworths, 1981), pp. 312–15Google Scholar; Giffard, H. S., earl of Halsbury, and other lawyers, The Laws of England (London: Butterworth, 1909), 9:412–14Google Scholar; Bodkin, A. H. and Kearshaw, Leonard W., eds., The Law Relating to Riots and Unlawful Assemblies, 4th ed. (London: Butterworth, 1907), pp. 182–90Google Scholar.

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26 See Porter (n. 8 above), p. 72.

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29 H. Gladstone, unpublished memoir, British Library (BL), Gladstone papers, Additional (Add.) MS 46118, fols. 161–63.

30 See Bailey, Victor, “The Metropolitan Police, the Home Office and the Threat of Outcast London,” in Policing and Punishment in Nineteenth Century Britain, ed. Bailey, Victor (New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 1981), pp. 94125Google Scholar. For continuing frictions within an increasingly interventionist state, see Petrow, Stefan, Policing Morals: The Metropolitan Police and the Home Office, 1870–1914 (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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32 Historically specific gender analysis of the connection between Edwardian masculinities, politics, and the state is preliminary and uneven, but, in addition to the work of Frank Mort (n. 23 above), see Harrison, Brian, Separate Spheres: The Opposition to Women's Suffrage in Britain (New York: Holmes & Meier, 1978), esp. pp. 27107Google Scholar, and Bertrand Russell: The False Consciousness of a Feminist,” in Intellect and Social Conscience: Essays on Bertrand Russell's Early Work, ed. Moran, Margaret and Spadoni, Carl (Hamilton, Ontario: McMaster University Library Press, 1984), pp. 157205Google Scholar; Jalland, Pat, Women, Marriage and Politics, 1860–1914 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1986), esp. pp. 241–49Google Scholar; Koven, Seth, “From Rough Lads to Hooligans: Boy Life, National Culture and Social Reform,” in Nationalisms and Sexualities, ed. Parker, Andrew, Russo, Mary, Sommer, Doris, and Yaeger, Patricia (New York: Routledge, 1992), pp. 365–91Google Scholar.

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37 The Times (October 9, 1908).

38 The Times (October 12, 1908).

39 The Times (October 12, 13, 15, 1908).

40 M. Waller to H. Gladstone, October 10, 1908, BL, Gladstone papers, Add. MS 45994, fols. 164–65.

41 E. Troup to H. Gladstone, October 10, 1908, BL, Gladstone papers, Add. MS 45993, fols. 218–20.

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44 The Times (October 14, 1908).

45 For the sensational newspaper coverage of apparently the first woman ever to speak in the House of Commons, see the Margaret Travers Symons press cuttings album, ca. 1908, National Library of Scotland (NLS), Edinburgh, Hughes papers, Dep. 176/2(3).

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50 Punch (October 21, 1908).

51 The Times (October 15, 1908); Votes for Women (October 22, 1908).

52 Lawrence, F. W. Pethick, “The Trial of the Suffragette Leaders,” in Suffrage and the Pankhursts, ed. Marcus, Jane (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1987), p. 82Google Scholar.

53 Ibid., p. 84.

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55 E. Henry to Home Office, October 15, 1908 PRO, HO 144/1029/170854.

56 E. Troup minute, October 15, 1908, PRO, HO 144/1029/170854.

57 London metropolitan police (LMP) report, October 15, 1908, PRO, Metropolitan Police (MEPO) 2/1264.

58 The Times (October 17, 1908).

59 M. Waller to H. Gladstone, October 17, 1908, BL, Gladstone papers, Add. MS 45994, fols. 167–68; The Times (October 17, 1908).

60 The Times (October 22, 1908).

61 H. Nevinson, diary, October 21, 1908, Oxford University, Bodleian Library, Oxford, Nevinson papers, MS Eng. misc. e 615/1, fol. 87. See also Grigg, John, Lloyd George: The People's Champion, 1902–1911 (London: Eyre Methuen, 1978), pp. 167–69Google Scholar.

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63 Ibid., p. 101. For Smith's stunned response to this “absolutely wicked falsehood” and “most extraordinary mistake,” see H. Smith to A. de Rutzen, October 28, 1908, PRO, HO 45/10389/170808/44. For Herbert Samuel's official denial of the allegation, see Parl. Deb., 4th ser., vol. 195 (November 2, 1908), col. 779Google Scholar.

64 The Times (October 24, 1908); Wontner & Sons to LMP, October 24, 1908, PRO, MEPO 2/1221. For inquiries from provincial police officials about using this precedent to prosecute seditious speakers elsewhere, see Burnley chief constable to LMP, October 24, 1908, and Sheffield town clerk to LMP, November 13, 1908, both PRO, MEPO 2/1221.

65 Justice (October 31, November 7, 14, 1908).

66 The Times (October 26, 1908); Votes for Women (October 29, 1908). See also Wontner & Sons to LMP, October 27, 1908, PRO, MEPO 2/1222, fols. 16–19.

67 Joyce, Patrick, Democratic Subjects: The Self and the Social in Nineteenth-Century England (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994), p. 192CrossRefGoogle Scholar. See also Epstein, James A., Radical Expression: Political Language, Ritual, and Symbol in England, 1790–1850 (New York: Oxford University Press, 1994), esp. pp. 369Google Scholar.

68 Lawrence, F. W. Pethick, “The Trial of the Suffragette Leaders,” p. 54Google Scholar.

69 Ibid., p. 55.

70 Ibid., p. 56.

71 Ibid.

72 Ibid., p. 57.

73 Ibid.

74 Ibid., pp. 61–62.

75 Ibid., p. 65.

76 Ibid., p. 69.

77 Ibid.

78 Ibid., p. 70.

79 Ibid., p. 71.

80 But for a persuasive argument that late Victorian and Edwardian feminists like Christabel Pankhurst still based their understanding of English liberty on racialized notions of national difference and colonial subordination, see Burton (n. 6 above), pp. 41–59.

81 Labour Leader (October 23, 1908). See Corbett, Mary Jean, Representing Femininity: Middle-Class Subjectivity in Victorian and Edwardian Women's Autobiographies (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1992), pp. 155–56Google Scholar. For Georgiana Weldon, see Walkowitz, Judith R., City of Dreadful Delight: Narratives of Sexual Danger in Late-Victorian London (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1992), pp. 171–89CrossRefGoogle Scholar. For other feminists actively engaged with the law, see Bland, Lucy, “‘Purifying’ the Public World: Feminist Vigilantes in Late Victorian England,” Women's History Review 1, no. 3 (1992): 397412CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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83 The Times (October 30, 1908); K. Hardie to H. Gladstone, October 29, 1908, BL, Gladstone papers, Add. MS 46066, fols. 80–81; E. Troup minute, October 31, 1908, and A. de Rutzen to E. Troup, October 31, 1908, both PRO, HO 144/891/171454/15; M. Waller to H. Gladstone, October 31, 1908, BL, Gladstone papers, Add. MS 45994, fol. 173. Soon afterward, the jurisdictional boundaries of certain West End police courts were redrawn with the effect that any cases arising from protests around the Palace of Westminster went to Bow Street. See E. Henry to Home Office, November 9, 1908, PRO, MEPO 2/1220.

84 The Times (November 3, 1908); Parl. Deb., 4th ser., vol. 195 (November 4, 1908)Google Scholar, cols. 1211–12.

85 Parl. Deb., 4th ser., vol. 195 (November 4, 1908), cols. 1193–95Google Scholar; vol. 196 (November 11, 1908), cols. 252–53; (November 17, 1908), cols. 1040–43; (November 18, 1908), cols. 1202–3.

86 Parl. Deb., 4th ser., vol. 196 (November 18, 1908), col. 1203Google Scholar.

87 The Times (October 20, 27, 30, 31; November 4, 7, 1908); Justice (October 24, 31; November 7, 1908); Parl. Deb., 4th ser., vol. 194 (October 26, 1908), col. 1611Google Scholar. See also Brown (n. 13 above), pp. 99–102.

88 W. Dodgson to H. Gladstone, October 27, 1908; M. Waller to W. Dodgson, October 30, 1908; W. Dodgson to H. Gladstone, November 5, 1908; all in PRO, HO 45/24560.

89 M. Waller to clerk of assize, North Eastern Circuit, November 4, 1908; W. Pickford to R. Holtby, November 5, 1908; M. Waller to Holtby, November 7, 1908; all in PRO, HO 45/24560.

90 R. Holtby to M. Waller, November 12, 1908, PRO, HO 45/24560; The Times (November 13, 1908).

91 W. Robson to H. Gladstone, November 14, 1908, BL, Gladstone papers, Add. MS 46066, fols. 157–58.

92 The Times (November 19, 1908); Votes for Women (November 19, 1908).

93 The Times (November 21, 1908); Votes for Women (November 26, 1908); Lawrence, F. W. Pethick, Fate Has Been Kind (London: Hutchinson, 1943), pp. 7980Google Scholar. According to Pethick Lawrence, an attempt was made afterward to disbar him as punishment for his involvement in Baines's defense.

94 C. Ilbert, diary, October 29, 30, November 2, December 3, 8, 11, 1908, HLRO, Ilbert papers, H.C. Lib. MS 72; Parl. Deb., 4th ser., vol. 195 (November 4, 1908), col. 1238Google Scholar; “Report of the Select Committee on the Admission of Strangers to the House of Commons; Evidence,” Parliamentary Papers, 1908 (Commons 371), vol. 9. See also Ullswater, Viscount, A Speaker's Commentaries (London: Edward Arnold, 1925), 2:6466Google Scholar.

95 C. Ilbert, diary, January 19, 1909, HLRO, Ilbert papers, H.C. Lib. MS 53; H. Asquith to Edward VII, February 2, 1909, PRO, Cabinet 41/32/2. See also H. Simpson minute, February 26, 1909; E. Troup to A. Thring, March 1, 1909; F. Liddell to E. Troup, March 2, 1909; all in PRO, HO 45/10395/176079.

96 House of Commons Debates, 5th ser., vol. 1 (March 4, 1909), col. 1581Google Scholar; vol. 2 (March 15, 1909), col. 753; vol. 3 (March 30, 1909), cols. 185–86.

97 House of Commons Debates, 5th ser., vol. 3 (April 20, 1909), col. 1396Google Scholar.

98 Ibid., col. 1393.

99 Ibid., col. 1432.

100 C. Ilbert, diary, April 20, 1909, HLRO, Ilbert papers, H.C. Lib. MS 73.

101 The Times (April 28, 1909).

102 Lytton (n. 1 above), p. 30.

103 See McWilliam, Rohan, “Radicalism and Popular Culture: The Tichborne Case and the Politics of ‘Fair Play,’ 1867–1886,” in Biagini, and Reid, , eds. (n. 14 above), pp. 4464Google Scholar.

104 H. Asquith, transcript of meeting, June 20, 1914, Oxford University, Bodleian Library, MS Asquith 89, fol. 151.