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Theresa Garnett

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Black and white photography of Theresa Garnett
Theresa Garnett in 1909.

Theresa Garnett (1888, Leeds – 1966) is a british suffragette.

Biography

Theresa Garnett is born in Leeds in 1888,[1] daughter to Joshua Garnett and Frances Theresa Garnett[2] and she's raised at a convent school.[3]

She works for some time as a teacher. In 1907, she join the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) after being inspired by a speech given by Adela Pankhurst.[4] In April 1909, she spark some interest by chaining herself, along with four other activists, to a statue in the Central Lobby of the Houses of Parliament to protest against a law forbidding precisely this kind of thing - disorderly conduct within the Palace of Westminster when the Parliament was in session.

On November 14, 1909,[2] she assaulted Winston Churchill at the Bristol gare, with a horsewhip, but failed to cause any injury. Arrested, she's sentenced to a month in prison at the HM Prison Bristol for disturbing the peace (Churchill didn't press charges for the assault itself). She goes on a hunger strike, is force-fed, tries to put her cell on fire, and finish her time in hospital.[5] She received for her actions, from the WSPU, a brooch for her imprisonment, and a medal of honor for the hunger strike.[6]

In 1910, she becomes organizer for the WSPU in Camberwell, but leaves the Union after some disagreement about the WPSU's arson campaign. She stays favorable to the feminist movement,[5] becoming honorary editor for the Women's Freedom League bulletin in 1960.[3]

During the first world war, she works as a sister at the Royal London Hospital and in France.[5]

She dies in 1966,[1] almost penniless.[3]

Bibliography

  • Elizabeth Crawford, The Women's Suffrage Movement: A Reference Guide, 1866–1928, Routledge, 2001, p. 237 ISBN 978-0-415-23926-4

References

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