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.10; Allen, Pioneer Policewoman, pp.29 – 37.126.“Women Police Volunteers,” Vote, 19 February 1915, p.506.127.C.Nina Boyle, “The Hidden Scourge,” Vote, 1 September 1916, p.1162.128.As late as February 1916, the WPV was active in London; see “WPV,” Vote, 4 Feb-184n o t e s to pa g e s 13 4 – 13 8ruary 1916, p.914.The WPV was “wound up” in June 1916; Minutes of the NationalExecutive Committee, 17 June 1916, 54e, p.117, the Women’s Library.129.Homer Lawrence Morris, Parliamentary Franchise Reform in England from 1885 to1918 (New York: Columbia University Press, 1921; reprint, New York: AMS Press,1969), p.106.130.On interactions of women’s suffrage organizations and the parliamentary cam-paign, see Holton, Feminism and Democracy, pp.116 – 50; Kent, Making Peace, pp.74 –96; Martin Pugh, Electoral Reform in War and Peace, 1906 –1918 (London: Routledgeand Kegan Paul, 1978), pp.136 – 54.131.Morris, Parliamentary Franchise Reform, pp.131– 35.132.“Deputation to the Right Hon.David Lloyd George at No.10, Downing Street,S.W., on Thursday, March 29th, 1917,” Suffragette Fellowship Archive, Z6065, reel 2,group D, vol.I, pp.124 – 36.C O N C L U S I O N1.Joan Scott, Only Paradoxes to Offer: French Feminists and the Rights of Man (Cam-bridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1996), p.49.2.Adela Pankhurst to Helen Fraser Moyes, quoted in Helen Moyes, A Woman ina Man’s World (Sydney: Alpha Books, 1961), p.37.3.Laura E.Nym Mayhall, “Creating the ‘Suffragette Spirit’: British Feminism andthe Historical Imagination,” Women’s History Review 4, no.3 (1995): 319 – 44.4.Jay Winter, Sites of Memory, Sites of Mourning: The Great War in European CulturalHistory (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995).5.Brian Harrison, Prudent Revolutionaries: Portraits of British Feminists Between theWars (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1987).6.Suffragette Fellowship, Second News Letter, December 1936.7.Mayhall, “Creating the ‘Suffragette Spirit,’” p.329.8.See correspondence between former WSPU member Helen Archdale andstaff at the BBC on the occasion of the Woman Suffrage Silver Jubilee, October 1942through August 1943; in “Talks.Women’s Suffrage, 1942 – 43,” R51/647, BBCWritten Archives Center, Caversham; see also Laura E.Nym Mayhall, “DomesticatingEmmeline: Representing the Suffragette, 1930 –1993,” National Women’s Studies Association Journal 11, no.2 (1999): 1– 24.9.Emmeline Pethick Lawrence to E.Sylvia Pankhurst, 17 December 1929, inE.Sylvia Pankhurst papers, reel 1.10.See Jean Metcalfe’s introductory comments to her interview with MonicaWhately, 12 July 1951, BBC, WAC, Caversham.11.Stella Newsome to Teresa Billington Greig, 28 August 1959, in Teresa Billing-ton Greig, box 404, folder “corr suffragist and writing,” the Women’s Library.12.Marian Reeves, correspondence, Women’s Freedom League Bulletin, 5 December1958, p.2.13.Theresa Garnett, correspondence, Women’s Freedom League Bulletin, 30 January1959, p.3.14.“Suffragette Memories,” Westminster Gazette, 6 February 1928.15.Daily News, 6 February 1928.16.“‘Suffragettes’ Descend on London Again,” Evening Standard, 2 April 1928.17.For the contemporary view, see R.M.Wilson, Wife, Mother, Voter.Her Vote.WhatWill She Do with It? (London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1918), p.13.A consensus has185n o t e s to pa g e s 13 8 – 14 2emerged among historians that women’s war work had little to do with the provisionsof the bill that became law in 1918; see especially Susan R.Grayzel, Women’s Identitiesat War: Gender, Motherhood, and Politics in Britain and France During the First World War(Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1999); and Martin Pugh, Womenand the Women’s Movement in Britain (New York: Paragon House, 1993).For a challengeto this interpretation, see Nicoletta Gullace, “The Blood of Our Sons”: Men, Women, andthe Renegotiation of British Citezenship during the Great War (New York: Palgrave Macmil-lan, 2002).18.Manchester Guardian, 6 February 1928.19.E.Katharine Willoughby Marshall, “Suffragette Escapes and Adventures”(1947), Suffragette Fellowship Archive, reel 1, group B, 50.82/1132, p.96.20 [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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.10; Allen, Pioneer Policewoman, pp.29 – 37.126.“Women Police Volunteers,” Vote, 19 February 1915, p.506.127.C.Nina Boyle, “The Hidden Scourge,” Vote, 1 September 1916, p.1162.128.As late as February 1916, the WPV was active in London; see “WPV,” Vote, 4 Feb-184n o t e s to pa g e s 13 4 – 13 8ruary 1916, p.914.The WPV was “wound up” in June 1916; Minutes of the NationalExecutive Committee, 17 June 1916, 54e, p.117, the Women’s Library.129.Homer Lawrence Morris, Parliamentary Franchise Reform in England from 1885 to1918 (New York: Columbia University Press, 1921; reprint, New York: AMS Press,1969), p.106.130.On interactions of women’s suffrage organizations and the parliamentary cam-paign, see Holton, Feminism and Democracy, pp.116 – 50; Kent, Making Peace, pp.74 –96; Martin Pugh, Electoral Reform in War and Peace, 1906 –1918 (London: Routledgeand Kegan Paul, 1978), pp.136 – 54.131.Morris, Parliamentary Franchise Reform, pp.131– 35.132.“Deputation to the Right Hon.David Lloyd George at No.10, Downing Street,S.W., on Thursday, March 29th, 1917,” Suffragette Fellowship Archive, Z6065, reel 2,group D, vol.I, pp.124 – 36.C O N C L U S I O N1.Joan Scott, Only Paradoxes to Offer: French Feminists and the Rights of Man (Cam-bridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1996), p.49.2.Adela Pankhurst to Helen Fraser Moyes, quoted in Helen Moyes, A Woman ina Man’s World (Sydney: Alpha Books, 1961), p.37.3.Laura E.Nym Mayhall, “Creating the ‘Suffragette Spirit’: British Feminism andthe Historical Imagination,” Women’s History Review 4, no.3 (1995): 319 – 44.4.Jay Winter, Sites of Memory, Sites of Mourning: The Great War in European CulturalHistory (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995).5.Brian Harrison, Prudent Revolutionaries: Portraits of British Feminists Between theWars (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1987).6.Suffragette Fellowship, Second News Letter, December 1936.7.Mayhall, “Creating the ‘Suffragette Spirit,’” p.329.8.See correspondence between former WSPU member Helen Archdale andstaff at the BBC on the occasion of the Woman Suffrage Silver Jubilee, October 1942through August 1943; in “Talks.Women’s Suffrage, 1942 – 43,” R51/647, BBCWritten Archives Center, Caversham; see also Laura E.Nym Mayhall, “DomesticatingEmmeline: Representing the Suffragette, 1930 –1993,” National Women’s Studies Association Journal 11, no.2 (1999): 1– 24.9.Emmeline Pethick Lawrence to E.Sylvia Pankhurst, 17 December 1929, inE.Sylvia Pankhurst papers, reel 1.10.See Jean Metcalfe’s introductory comments to her interview with MonicaWhately, 12 July 1951, BBC, WAC, Caversham.11.Stella Newsome to Teresa Billington Greig, 28 August 1959, in Teresa Billing-ton Greig, box 404, folder “corr suffragist and writing,” the Women’s Library.12.Marian Reeves, correspondence, Women’s Freedom League Bulletin, 5 December1958, p.2.13.Theresa Garnett, correspondence, Women’s Freedom League Bulletin, 30 January1959, p.3.14.“Suffragette Memories,” Westminster Gazette, 6 February 1928.15.Daily News, 6 February 1928.16.“‘Suffragettes’ Descend on London Again,” Evening Standard, 2 April 1928.17.For the contemporary view, see R.M.Wilson, Wife, Mother, Voter.Her Vote.WhatWill She Do with It? (London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1918), p.13.A consensus has185n o t e s to pa g e s 13 8 – 14 2emerged among historians that women’s war work had little to do with the provisionsof the bill that became law in 1918; see especially Susan R.Grayzel, Women’s Identitiesat War: Gender, Motherhood, and Politics in Britain and France During the First World War(Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1999); and Martin Pugh, Womenand the Women’s Movement in Britain (New York: Paragon House, 1993).For a challengeto this interpretation, see Nicoletta Gullace, “The Blood of Our Sons”: Men, Women, andthe Renegotiation of British Citezenship during the Great War (New York: Palgrave Macmil-lan, 2002).18.Manchester Guardian, 6 February 1928.19.E.Katharine Willoughby Marshall, “Suffragette Escapes and Adventures”(1947), Suffragette Fellowship Archive, reel 1, group B, 50.82/1132, p.96.20 [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]