Catalogue description Records of the Women's Freedom League

This record is held by London University: London School of Economics, The Women's Library

Details of 2/WFL
Reference: 2/WFL
Title: Records of the Women's Freedom League
Description:

Minutes: National Executive Committee including loose financial statements and Committee reports (1908-1961), Political and militant department (1910-1935) Finance sub-committee (1907-1909), press sub-committee (1908-1910) social committee (1908-1909) Parliamentary committee (1908), organising committee (1908-1909), fair committee (1925-1930), Vote Brigade committee (1913-1914); Annual Conference reports including some agendas, resolutions, nominations, attendance at National Executive meetings reports, standing orders, secretarial reports, organising secretary's reports, etc (1908-1940); Annual reports 1907-1929; constitutions (c1907, c1910, 1929, 1931); pamphlets; programmes of events.

Date: 1907-1961
Related material:

Letters and a diary for 1930 belonging to Charlotte Despard are held by the Women's Library (ref. GB 0106 7/CFD).

Held by: London University: London School of Economics, The Women's Library, not available at The National Archives
Language: English
Creator:

Women's Freedom League

Physical description: 6 boxes
Access conditions:

This collection is open for consultation. Intending readers are advised to contact The Women's library in advance of their first visit.

Subjects:
  • Women's suffrage
  • Women's organisations
Unpublished finding aids:

Handlist

Administrative / biographical background:

The Women's Freedom League was formed in 1907 by dissenting members of the Women's Social and Political Union. The cause was the WSPU's lack of constitutional democracy, an issue which had come to a head on the 10th September 1907 when Mrs Pankhurst announced the cancellation of the annual conference due on the 12th October and the future governance of the party by a central committee appointed by herself, effectively overturning its original constitution. Several members, including Charlotte Despard, Edith How Martyn, Teresa Billington-Greig, Octavia Lewin, Anna Munro, Alice Schofield and Caroline Hodgeson, broke away and continued with the conference. Here, the new constitution was written which encoded a system of party democracy. Its first committee consisted of Despard as president and honorary treasurer, Billington-Greig as honorary organising secretary, honorary secretary Mrs How Martyn, and Mrs Coates Hanson, Miss Hodgeson, Irene Miller, Miss Fitzherbert, Mrs Drysdale, Miss Abadam, Mrs Winton-Evans, Mrs Dick, Mrs Cobden Sanderson, Mrs Bell, Mrs Holmes and Miss Mansell as members. The following month, They renamed themselves the WFL, having used the title of the WSPU until that time: this had prompted Mrs Pankhurst to add 'National' to the name of her own organisation for this brief spell. They classed themselves as a militant organisation, but refused to attack persons or property other than ballot papers, unlike the WSPU. Their actions included protests in and around the House of Commons and other acts of passive civil disobedience. Their activities in 1908 included attempts to present petitions to the king and have deputations received by cabinet ministers while further protests were held in the House of Commons such as Muriel Matters, Violet Tillard and Helen Fox chaining themselves to the grille in the Ladies gallery. That same year, they were the only militant group to be invited by the National Union of Women's suffrage Societies to take part in the Hyde Park procession on 13 June. Despard was the first woman to refuse to pay taxes as a protest, an action which quickly inspired others to form the Women's Tax Resistance League. These activities were expanded upon in April 1911 when women householders either spoilt or failed to complete their census forms. This escalation of action did not prevent them joining a Conciliation Bill committee with other suffrage groups in 1910 in response to Prime Minister Asquith's offer on a free vote on extensions to the franchise. A truce was called with the government until the failure of such a bill for the third time, but by 1912 the organisation had already announced that it would support Labour Party candidates against any of the government's Liberal candidates at elections. This practice of working with other groups was one which the WFL supported, having ongoing links with the International Women's ranchise Club, the International Women Suffrage Alliance and the Suffrage Atelier. During the early part of the First World War, like most of the other suffrage organisations, the League suspended its practical militant political action and began voluntary work, though not the 'war work' of the type advocated by other suffrage groups. The group formed a number of women's police services and a Woman Suffrage National Aid Corps that provided some help to women in financial difficulties and limited day care for children. Furthermore, in 1915, the WFL founded a National Service Organisation to place women in jobs. However, the following year, political activity began again when they joined the WSPU in a picket of the Electoral Reform Conference. When women were granted suffrage after the war, they continued their activities with a change of emphasis. The organisation now called for equality of suffrage between the sexes, women as commissioners of prisons, the opening of all professions to women, equal pay, right of a woman to retain her own nationality on marriage, equal moral standards and representation of female peers in the House of Lords and they continued with this programme of social equality until the dissolution of the group in 1961.

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