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Patricia Woodlock

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Patricia Woodlock
Born
Mary Winifred Patricia Woodlock

1873
DiedNot known, alive 1930
Occupation(s)Artist and suffragette
Known forSuffragette activism and hunger strike
MovementWomen's Social and Political Union, Catholic Women's Suffrage Society
AwardsHunger Strike Medal for Valour

Patricia Woodlock (1873 – alive in 1930), British artist and suffragette who was imprisoned seven times, including serving the longest suffragette prison sentence in 1908 (solitary confinement for three months); she was awarded a Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) Hunger Strike Medal 'for Valour'. Woodlock's harsh sentence caused outrage among supporters and inspired others to join the protests, her release was celebrated in Liverpool and London and drawn as a dreadnaught warship, on the cover of the WSPU Votes for Women newsletter.

Early life

Woodlock as a Dreadnought

Born Mary Winifred Patricia Woodlock (known as Patricia) in or near 1873[1] [citation needed] to an Irish socialist father David Woodlock, originally from Tipperary, who was also an artist.[2] and mother Marion. Woodlock had a sister Evangeline, born when she was ten joining a brother Charles Stuart, eight years Patricia's junior.[1] Charles became a Jesuit priest. Patricia Woodlock was educated at Mount Vernon Convent.[3]

Woodlock became a member of the Independent Labour Party.[2]

Her family home was 46 Nicander Road, Sefton Park, then at the time of her arrest in 1907 she lived at 2 South John Street[4] and later at 27 South Humber Street, Liverpool.[5]

Suffragette activism

Woodlock was a founder member with Alice Morrissey, of the first Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) branch in Liverpool, from 1906 [6][5] and became a Liverpool WSPU organiser in 1909.[1]

Woodlock was also associated with a Catholic Women's Suffrage Society, and with local women's church suffrage groups were able to cross the religious divide of the time,[7] although the local press prioritised news on women engaging in violent sectarian protests.[7] Woodlock held meetings for women of all classes and organised street meetings for working women near factories where large numbers of women worked, like Cope's tobacco and Crawford's biscuits. Annie Kenney a working-class suffragette leader came to speak as well. Open-air meetings after working hours were held more than once a week eventually, and one event in 1908 had over 1,000 attending.[8] Some spontaneous support from the working-class men arose, for example, when Woodlock and others were being arrested, protesting at Lloyd-George's event in Sun Hall, Liverpool, an 'obvious foreigner' according to Liverpool Weekly Mercury, Mr Salinger was in court, arrested for intervening with the police on behalf of the women, but he was then released.[8]

Woodlock was arrested and imprisoned twice, once serving 14 days, before being sentenced to a longer one month imprisonment for protesting in Parliament Square, London in 1907, with Aeta Lamb and Emily Sproson. The event was reported widely, including the Evening Express listing names [9] of up to 62 [10] women who were arrested. At her trial, Woodlock said it was 'an honour for me to got to prison on behalf of my sisters.[11] Woodlock was described as 'diehard' and one of 'the most unruly and turbulent of spirits'.[6] A WSPU celebration meal for Woodcock and others released was held at the Holborn Restaurant with a menu of seven courses.[12]

Woodlock (left) and Mabel Capper advertising WSPU event

Woodlock took part in women's suffrage publicity and protest events, such as advertising for rallies in Heaton Park, Manchester on 11 and 19 July 1908 by dressing as human advertising boards with Mabel Capper and attempting to enter the male-dominated Manchester Royal Exchange. The July park events were well supported and altogether attracted 60,000 attendees.[13] These gatherings got favourable or neutral treatment in the press news pages but no mention in the more specific 'women's' pages at the time.[13]

In February 1909, Woodlock was a 'group captain' of those who organised a large suffrage event in the Sun Hall, when Christabel Pankhurst spoke.[8] In March 1909, Woodlock, with Alice Burton, Bessie Morris, Ada Broughton and Cecilia Hilton, was one of the Liverpool delegates to the Women's Parliament in London, volunteering after hearing Emmeline Pankhurst speaking to the branch in Liverpool.[7]

Woodlock's prison sentences that year included the longest given to a suffragette (three months solitary) at the time, as a persistent offender,[14] for obstruction offences at the protest on the visit of the Prime Minister, H.H. Asquith to Birmingham in September 1909.[15]

Woodlock with Mary Leigh, Charlie Marsh were force-fed on hunger strike in the Winson Green prison.[6] Woodlock was visited by Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence, after some weeks of solitary confinement, and Pethick-Lawrence wrote in Votes for Women, that she found Woodlock smiling and at peace. Comparing Woodlock's demeanour to a lively women's gathering at an ice-rink, Pethick-Lawrence stated that Woodlock was 'the heart of our Movement,... the centre, the pivot upon which every part of it turns.[16] Woodlock was visited and encouraged by Christabel Pankhurst.[17]

Support for Woodlock and outrage at her sentence locally in Liverpool, pushed the sales of Votes for Women up to 700 copies in one week.[8]

In support of Woodlock, Mary Phillips hid overnight under the Liverpool St. George's Hall stage[18] where honorary degrees were to be awarded to two Cabinet Ministers. Phillips jumped out and shouted 'Votes for Women' and an objection to Woodlock's imprisonment. This action was welcomed by Christabel Pankhurst as a 'splendid protest' showing ' pluck and ingenuity'.[17] Elsie Howie, Jessie Kenney and Vera Wentworth, pursued the Prime Minister Herbert Asquith on holiday in Devon asking why he was able to be on holiday whilst Woodlock was still in prison, on a 'monstrous sentence'. The women chased him at the golf course and also decorated his Clovelly Court rhododendron bushes and garden with circular green, white and purple cards saying 'Release Patricia Woodlock' and various other suffragette materials.[6]

To mark Woodlock's eventual release, Christabel Pankhurst wrote an article for the 14 June 1909 WSPU newspaper 'Votes for Women' , showing Woodlock as a battleship dreadnought and saying she was

'..one of those who are the great strength of the women's movement, for she is fearless, loyal and unselfish, ready to do the smallest or greatest service, as a speaker and above all as a fighter.'

When the 'Liverpool Prisoners' were released there was a WSPU celebration, headed up by Emmeline Pankhurst at the Royal Albert Hall. Woodlock was praised over and over again in a speech by Pankhurst for having 'taken a place in the front line of fighting' and that she (Pankhurst) had been inspired by Woodlock's resolve in solitary confinement. Pankhurst had Woodlock beside her in an open carriage procession to and from the venue.[14]

Woodlock was given silver Holloway brooch, and a Hunger Strike Medal 'for Valour', an illuminated scroll and was called a 'brave pioneer'.[14]

There was a further reception on the prisoners' return to Liverpool,[19] led by Bertha Elam, a new WSPU member, who was said to be directly inspired to join the suffrage movement, by Woodlock.[7] Emmeline Pankhurst travelled up from London to attend that event with Woodlock and the WSPU fife and drum band [20] who were playing to welcome the released women at a public celebration event.[14]

In September 1909, Woodlock was arrested again, for hurling roof slates at Prime Minister Asquith as he attended an all-male budget event in Birmingham. Woodlock, Evaline Hilda Burkitt, Mabel Capper, Mary Leigh, Charlotte (Charlie) Marsh, Laura Ainsworth and Ellen Barnswell were all singing protests loudly in transit and on arrival at prison, refusing to undress to wear prison clothes, and were demanding to be treated as 'political' prisoners in what was known as the 'First Division'.[21]

In November 1909, after release, Woodlock and Laura Ainsworth approached the prison doctor, Dr. Ernest Helby, in the street. He had force-fed Woodlock and others and the two women demanded the immediate release of fellow suffragette Charlie Marsh. Later that day Dr. Helby's windows were found to be smashed, but no legal action was taken for the incident and Marsh was quietly released later.[6]

Force feeding of suffragettes on hunger strike

After the police aggression and brutal violence against the suffragette crowd in London in November 1910, known as 'Black Friday', Woodlock, was arrested with other protestors, who were all released without charge, and she no longer took part in further physical or militant protests.[2]

WSPU leadership

When Ada Flatman became the Liverpool WSPU paid organiser, she asked Woodlock to take responsibility for the stocking and setting up the new WSPU shop, whilst she was away. It proved a useful development with 50 new members one month and profits of £120 from sales during April–November 1909.[8] However, there were disagreements on priorities for branch activities such as street meetings for working women, or more 'At Homes' among the wealthier women, which were by invitation, but helped fundraising.[8]

Woodlock continued to speak at many suffrage events and was described as a brilliant speaker,[2] and was chosen as one of the leaders addressing the crowds at the women's Hyde Park Rally in 1910.[1] She took over as temporary organiser of the Liverpool WSPU branch, joined by Ada Broughton and Helah Criddle, after a downturn in WSPU activity and income, when the shop had closed and Alice Davies, current organiser was in prison.[8] It was to reopen in 1912. under Helen Jollie's more successful approach to organising the fundraising campaign.[8]

A postcard of Woodlock signed 21-11-1910 was produced by WSPU headquarters.[22]

In 1910, Woodlock and Ada Flatman and Jennie Baines were main speakers at a Liverpool event for 'Jane Warton' - who was WSPU leader Lady Constance Lytton in disguise - her aim was to experience arrest, hunger strike and force-feeding (as an ordinary working woman). That event was attended by 300 men and women, who processed on to the Prison Governor's house to call for 'Liverpool to be the first 'to wipe out the stain' of force-feeding.[6]

On the night of the 1911 Census, Woodlock was at her family home at 46 Nicander Road, Setton Park in Liverpool, but was not 'absent' from the census list like others who protested this way, perhaps because her father completed it.[2] In 1912, local suffragette and women's physician, Dr. Alice Ker, wrote out to her two daughters encouraging them to go to Woodlock at the WSPU offices and to offer their help to the cause.[8]

Woodlock was imprisoned seven times[2] and awarded a WSPU Hunger Strike Medal for Valour and was given amnesty by the Home Secretary, at the outbreak of the First World War, along with all the other suffragette prisoners, when WSPU stood down its militancy actions.[23]

Later life

Woodlock was still living in Liverpool in 1930, but seems to have had no further involvement in leading women's rights movements, apart from maintaining a membership of the Liverpool branch of the United Suffragists, with Alice Ker and Isabel Buxton.[5] Woodlock also joined the Votes for Women Fellowship, led by the Pethick-Lawrences, and subscribed to The Catholic Suffragist [8] before and after the First World War began.[8] Catholic Women's Suffragist Societies offered relief work and philosophical and feminist speakers as a social and educational twice-weekly club with entertainment and mutual support for women affected by the war, but there is no record of Woodlock addressing these groups.[8]

She was alive in 1930, but her death is not known.[8]

Further information

In 1909, the WSPU rented a houseboat named in Woodlock's honour. The boat flew the suffragette colours and was moored near the Henley Regatta course. [24]

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Patricia Woodlock · Mapping Women's Suffrage". www.mappingwomenssuffrage.org.uk. Retrieved 2019-11-24.
  2. ^ a b c d e f "Miss Mary Winifred Patricia Woodlock". Suffragette Resources. Retrieved 24 November 2019.
  3. ^ Clark, Elaine (2004). "Catholics and the Campaign for Women's Suffrage in England". Church History. 73 (3): 635–665. doi:10.1017/S0009640700098322. ISSN 1755-2613.
  4. ^ Blake, Trevor (2018-08-01). "In Front of the Party was Miss Dora Marsden". Union Of Egoists. Retrieved 2019-11-26.
  5. ^ a b c Crawford, Elizabeth (2013-04-15). The Women's Suffrage Movement in Britain and Ireland: A Regional Survey. Routledge. p. 18. ISBN 978-1-136-01054-5.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Atkinson, Diane (2018). Rise up, women! : the remarkable lives of the suffragettes. London: Bloomsbury. p. 563. ISBN 978-1-4088-4404-5. OCLC 1016848621.
  7. ^ a b c d Eustance, Claire; Ryan, Joan; Ugolini, Laura (2000-02-01). Suffrage Reader: Charting Directions in British Suffrage History. Leicester: A&C Black. pp. 46, 52. ISBN 978-0-7185-0178-5.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Cowman, Krista (1994). "Engendering Citizenship: The Political Involvement of Women in Merseyside 1890-1920" (PDF). University of York Women's Studies. Retrieved 24 November 2019.
  9. ^ "FIGHT WITH POLICE|1907-02-14|Evening Express - Welsh Newspapers". newspapers.library.wales. Retrieved 2019-11-26.
  10. ^ "Daily Mail (22/Mar/1907) - 62 Suffragettes go to Prison - Huddersfield Exposed: Exploring the History of the Huddersfield Area". huddersfield.exposed. Retrieved 2019-11-29.
  11. ^ "Daily Mail (22/Mar/1907) - 62 Suffragettes go to Prison - Huddersfield Exposed: Exploring the History of the Huddersfield Area". huddersfield.exposed. Retrieved 2019-11-27.
  12. ^ www.bibliopolis.com. "Votes for Women Menu by WSPU, Woman Suffrage on Whitmore Rare Books". Whitmore Rare Books. Retrieved 2019-11-26.
  13. ^ a b O'Reilly, Carole (2009). Women in Manchester's Edwardian Parks 1900-1935 (PDF). University of Salford: University of Salford. pp. 7–8.
  14. ^ a b c d Purvis, June (2003-09-02). Emmeline Pankhurst: A Biography. Routledge. pp. 125, 129. ISBN 978-1-134-34191-7.
  15. ^ "Imprisonment of eight suffragettes in Winson Green Prison in Birmingham following violent protests". Archives Direct. 1909. Retrieved 26 November 2019.
  16. ^ Pethick-Lawrence, Emmeline (28 May 1909). "THE TWENTY-NINTH OF JUNE". Votes for Women. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  17. ^ a b Purvis, June (2018-01-18). Christabel Pankhurst: A Biography. Routledge. p. 187. ISBN 978-1-351-24664-4.
  18. ^ Engl, Historic (2018-06-08). "6 Sites of Suffragette Sabotage". Heritage Calling. Retrieved 2019-11-26.
  19. ^ "The Creativity of Protest | Historic England". historicengland.org.uk. Retrieved 2019-11-26.
  20. ^ "Memoir of Florence C Stevens - Archives Hub". archiveshub.jisc.ac.uk. Retrieved 2019-11-26.
  21. ^ "Miss Eveline Hilda Burkitt". Suffrage Resources.
  22. ^ "Museum of London | Free museum in London". collections.museumoflondon.org.uk. NN23184. Retrieved 2019-11-26.
  23. ^ SUFFRAGETTES: Amnesty of August 1914: index of people arrested, 1906-1914. The official... 1914–1935.
  24. ^ "A 'Votes for women' houseboat at Henley". Votes for women. 2 July 1909. p. 890.