Free Zoom Event:

Deeds Not Words : the Nurse Suffragettes Arrested 1906-1914

Catherine Pine with a group of nurses, 1905. Courtesy of Barts Health NHS Trust Archives

Between 1906 and 1914 over 1000 women were arrested for acts in support of the campaign for female suffrage in the United Kingdom (UK).i

We know nurses were involved in supporting the Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU) campaign for Votes for Women for example: by their presence in uniform in the demonstration processions organised by the WSPU; by Sister Townsend’s testimony for nurses as part of the WSPU Working Women’s Suffrage Deputation to prime minister Lloyd George in 1913; and by Nurse Catherine Pine’s provision of a convalescence home to temporarily released hunger-striking WSPU suffragettes and also her frequent presence beside Mrs Pankhurst, who referred to her as her ‘devoted Nurse Pine.’  But were there also nurses who took up the challenge of the motto of the WSPU – ‘Deeds, not Words’ – and undertook militant acts that led to their arrest? Vari M Drennan MBE will discuss her research. This presentation reports on research that explored this question, providing both an overview of these nurses and some detailed descriptions of their lives and nursing careers.

When: Wednesday 20th May at 4:00pm BST (London Time) 

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Key facts

Free Online Zoom

Deeds Not Words : the Nurse Suffragettes Arrested 1906-1914

When:

Wednesday 20th May

4:00pm BST (London Time) 

Admission:
Free Zoom Event (But donations are strongly encouraged)

Booking Details:
Book your space online by following the link.

Museum Information:

Florence Nightingale Museum

St Thomas’ Hospital, Lambeth Palace Road,

London, SE1 7EP

The opening ceremony of Emmeline Pankhurst’s statue, 1930. ©London Museum. CC BY_NC 4.0.

About the Speaker:

Vari M Drennan MBE is a Professor of Health Care & Policy Research at Kingston University, London and Chair of the Royal College of Nursing ‘s History of Nursing Forum (RCN-HONF) .  Professor Drennan has been undertaking research into nurses and the suffragette movement and has published in the UK Association of History of Nursing Bulletin on the subject.  She is also a member of the RCN-HONF project group  of Wikipedia editors, ‘Nurses in Red’, who are  writing nurses and nursing history back into the public domain.