During 2018 (and just before) Running Past has looked at the activities of the Lewisham Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU) branch and many of its activists. In this last post on the Lewisham’s militant suffragettes, which coincides with the centenary of the first General Election that women were able to vote in on 14 December 1918, we look at the first electoral registers that they appeared in and those early elections that women were able to vote in.
The Electoral Registers
Sadly, Lewisham’s electoral registers for 1918 and 1919 seem to not have been retained – annual electoral registers were introduced in the Representation of the People Act of 1918); the earliest post-women’s suffrage records that Lewisham’s Archives possess are an addendum to the 1919 Electoral Register and the full Register of 1920. The previous Lewisham Register had been collected in 1915. As part of the research for this post, the Electoral Registers of the addresses of all the key activists were reviewed to see who was there, and who was entitled to vote in 1920.
In virtually all of the properties where the suffragette activists had lived before the war the WSPU member and their household have moved on. It had been thirteen years since Eugenia ‘Jeannie’ Bouvier had set up the Lewisham WSPU branch, and at least 6 years since most of the women had been actively involved in the WSPU. The exodus was not surprising, as around three quarters of housing nationally was privately rented in 1918, and it was a sector with relatively little security of tenure, so moving home was relatively common.
7 Oakfield Road (above) had been the home of May Billinghurst – it was the address given at her various arrests and that used when May was secretary of the Greenwich WSPU branch. Her father had died in 1912 (the top Register in the group above was for that year) and the family had moved on by the end of World War 1. The Marsdens were living there with Henrietta’s name appearing on the 1920 Electoral Register, in part, at least due to a previous occupant’s sacrifices.
At 62 Manor Park (above), the Leighs had been replaced by the Coates. Even had the Leigh’s still be there the Miss Leigh in charge of selling ‘Votes for Women’ (it was never clear which of the sisters it was) would not have appeared in 1920 as Cornelia would have been 29 and Gladys 27 – both younger than the 30 year old qualifying age for women voting. The differences in the two registers is clear though with the large number of women appearing in the 1920 variant.
Perhaps the most militant of Lewisham’s suffragettes, or at least the one with the most brushes with the law, was Clara Lambert. The Lamberts had moved on from the family home at 174 Glenfarg Road by 1916 (they weren’t there in the 1916 Kelly’s Directory) where they have moved in around 1906. The beneficiary of suffragette activities there in 1920 was Kathleen Tidy.
The Berlin Road that Christina Campbell had lived in was no more, it had been renamed Canadian Avenue after the War. The occupants in 1920 were the Cowells; Alice Cowell was to appear on the Electoral Register there in 1920, along with several male household members.
114 Burnt Ash Hill (below) had been home to the Llewhellin’s, they had moved on although what was, perhaps, more interesting in terms of social history was that the extent to which houses had been subdivided since 1911 into flats. In 1911 the Llewhellins had been the only house split, this seems to have happened after Arthur’s early death in 1906. By 1920, virtually all the houses in that part of Burnt Ash Hill had been divided into flats.
32 Mount Pleasant Road, had been home to the founder and stalwart of the Lewisham branch, Eugenia (Jeannie) Bouvier. Jeannie was still just at Mount Pleasant Road in 1920, there were adverts offering Russian tuition there in the Workers’ Dreadnought in early 1921. However, the only name on the Electoral Register for 32 in 1920 was George Lapman; it is quite possible that despite her years devoted to the struggle she never became a British Citizen. In any case, she returned to Russia late in 1921, and, as we will cover later, she would never have had the opportunity to vote in a Parliamentary election anyway.
The only active Lewisham WSPU member that remained in the home she was active from was Caroline Townsend. Caroline and her sisters, Annie and Hannah, had been living at 188 Malpass Road, but had moved to 27 Murillo Road (pictured below) ahead of the 1911 census. They had presumably bought the house as Annie and Hannah were on the elector register for County and Local Council elections in 1915 – the 1894 Local Government Act had given the small number of women who were homeowners non-Parliamentary voting rights. But the 1920 Register saw the former Branch Secretary on the Elector Register too.
The Elections
The first election under the new rules brought in by the Representation of the Peoples Act that meant women over 30 (and all men over the age of 21, plus all soldiers of 19 or over) could vote was held on Saturday 14 December 1918. The election had been due in 1916 but had been postponed due to the war. There was subsequent legislation, which received Royal Assent in November 1918, which allowed women to stand for election – the age limit was to make little sense in that women over 21 were able to stand for Parliament but couldn’t vote until they were 30.
While many women up and down the country exercised their right to vote – a few stood for election including Christabel Pankhurst standing for the short-lived Women’s Party in Smethwick and one, Constance Markievicz, of Sinn Fein won a Dublin seat although like other members of the party she didn’t take her seat.
In Lewisham though, there were no elections, and women had to wait to exercise their vote for the first time in Parliamentary terms at least. In both Lewisham East and Lewisham West there were Conservative Coalition Candidates who were elected unopposed Assheton Pownall and Sir Edward Feetham Coates respectively.
The reason for the unopposed election lay within the Coalition of Conservatives and part of the Liberal Party that had emerged from World War One. Most Conservatives, some Liberals and a couple of Labour candidates were given what were referred to as ‘Coalition Coupons’ which meant that they were not opposed by other parts of the coalition. The Conservative candidates in both the Lewisham constituencies had Coalition Coupons.
The constituencies of Lewisham East and Lewisham West were not wildly different to their current counterparts; Lewisham East consisted the following wards – Blackheath (Blackheath north of the railway), Church (centred around St Margaret, Lee), Manor (much of the present Lee Green ward), South (Grove Park and south Lee), along with parts of Lewisham Park (Hither Green), and some of Catford (the largely rural area to the south of Brownhill Road). Lewisham West consisted of Brockley, Forest Hill, Sydenham, and the remaining parts of the wards of Catford and Lewisham Village.
The first election then that Lewisham’s women and poorer men would have been able to vote in were the London County Council (LCC) elections on 6 March 1919. The LCC was a forerunner of the current Great London Authority, albeit over a smaller area and having very different responsibilities. The Conservatives and Liberals didn’t stand in the LCC elections using what were effectively proxy parties, Municipal Reform and Progressive Party as surrogates. In Lewisham West the two Municipal Reform candidates narrowly defeated those put up by the Progressives. In Lewisham East, as in several other constituencies, Municipal Reform candidates were elected unopposed.
So, for the women of Lewisham East, there was an even longer wait, until the Borough Elections in November 1919 to be able to put their marked voting slips into a ballot box.
In Parliamentary terms, the first time that Lewisham women had a vote was in a by election in Lewisham West in September 1921, following the death of Sir Edward Coates. This was a slightly odd affair – with the Conservative, Phillip Dawson, then known as Unionist, candidate just holding off the Anti-Waste League, backed by the Daily Mail owner in protest against what it saw as high levels of Government spending; a Liberal candidate also stood. The National Union of Societies for Equal Citizenship, the successor of the non-militant National Union of Women’s Suffrage Societies, had held a public meeting during the campaign with all three candidates speaking. In the end the NUSEC decided not to back any candidate.
In Lewisham East, the first Parliamentary vote in the constituency was not until the General Election of 1922, but like buses, three came along quite quickly with further elections in 1923 and 1924. The Conservative/Unionist Sir Assheton Pownall was returned on each occasion, he was finally defeated by Labour’s Herbert Morrison in 1945.
Credits
- The press cutting is from The Times of Thursday, Sep 08, 1921
- Access to the Electoral Registers was via the always helpful Lewisham Archives, the help was particularly beneficial on this occasion, as I had failed to notice the early registers in a separate cupboard.
I was fascinated and delighted to read about my ‘Aunt’ (adopted not related) Auntie Olive (Llewhellin) I was 16 when she died but she stayed with us every year and I remember her well. Especially her love of the ‘Archers’! I did not know she was a suffragette until after her death as my mother was left some bits by her including the ‘gate’ badge she had for being a prisoner. I have some lovely memories, newspaper cuttings too but so wish I had talked to her a lot more and discovered her history. She was a great friend of my grandmother’s and they use to go out on day trips and to the theatre. They met as she came to the farm my grandmother and grandfather had as a ‘paying guest’ initially – I think for the ‘fresh air’. She looked such a frail person with the pain of her curvature of the spine but she was obviously made of steel.
Olive seems to have been one of the driving forces of the Lewisham WSPU branch, if nothing else she will be remembered for designing and fundraising for the branch banner. She, like, a few others in the branch is a woman whose contribution locally to the struggle for Votes for Women I am in awe of. I’ll e mail you to see if there is anything that you can share – I’d love to be able to do a specific post on Olive.
Pingback: Olive Llewhellin – A Lewisham Suffragette Activist | Running Past
Pingback: The suffragettes and the issues surrounding disability in the 20th century. – Greenwich100