Two Annies and the Preston WSPU

Last year a group of volunteers set up the Friends of Edith Rigby group with the twin aims of saving the former home of the Preston suffragette, Edith Rigby, in Winckley Square, and ‘uncovering and sharing the hidden histories of the WSPU Preston Branch, ensuring that the achievements of its members are fully recognised’.

The second aim of researching the history of the Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU) is already bearing fruit, as this post that Margaret Keane wrote for the Preston History Facebook group demonstrates.


Annie Kenney from Oldham had been working half time in the mills from the age of 10. At aged 13 she began full-time work doing 12-hour shifts. Annie was a trade unionist and became interested in Women’s Suffrage when she attended a meeting with her sister Jessie, and heard Preston-born Suffragist Teresa Billington (Greig) speak. When she met Christabel Pankhurst she joined the WSPU (Women’s Social and Political Union), and the Pankhursts saw her potential as an organiser and speaker. She spoke in Lancashire dialect and worked in a cotton mill and the ordinary working-class women could identify with her. After she was arrested in 1905 with Christabel Pankhurst, for obstruction during a meeting where Winston Churchill and Sir Edward Grey were in attendance, she left the mill and became a full-time organiser for the WSPU.

Annie Kenney. London Museum
Annie Kenney. London Museum

Annie Evelyn Armstrong from Blackpool worked in a Preston mill. Her father was an invalid and her mother was taken up with caring for him and looking after the home which meant Annie had to work full time from age of 13. In 1907 when she was 17 she attended a meeting in Preston where Annie Kenney was speaking and was so inspired by what she heard that she was motivated to join the WSPU and accompany them to Westminster to the House of Commons to protest. There was a large contingent of operatives from the Lancashire mills and many were dressd in clogs and shawls. She was taken under the wing of Jane (Jennie) Jackson and Mary Burrows both members of Preston WSPU. All three were arrested on the 21st March 1907.

1907 newspaper report of the court case involving Annie Armstrong and Dora Thewlis
1907 newspaper report of the court case involving Annie Armstrong and Dora Thewlis

Another 17-year-old arrested that same day was Dora Thewliss from Huddersfield and a photograph of her in the Daily Mirror and headline ‘Baby Suffragette’ caused quite a lot of attention.

Dora Thewliss arrested 21st March 1907 Daily Mirror
Dora Thewliss arrested 21st March 1907: Daily Mirror

Annie Kenney spoke many times in Preston, often alongside Edith Rigby. She also shared a platform with Jane Jackson and Mary Burrows. The meetings were held all over Preston, at work place dinner times, at the end of the working day and in the evenings. The venues were out in the open, as on vacant land on Roebuck street Ashton, and near the Rosebud Hotel and at venues such as the Weavers Hall, The Assembley Rooms and the Covered Market.

July 1907 in Women’s Franchise, Edith Rigby said:

‘At 3.30 pm as the largest mills in the town unloosed and at the busiest corner, and surrounded by a great crowd of hundreds and hundreds that pressed round to listen, jeering until sobered by remarks thst touched tender places. Miss Kenney spoke for near an hour there, and was listened to with great attention by those tired men and women past their teatime hour. And various citizens drove by on their own business but compelled to notice ours.

‘At 7.30 pm in the Covered Market once more (the banner being the only advertisement) a meeting was got together and stayed glad and proud to hear her. The greatest good will was evident in the crowd to deal with any sign of interruption . Yes, they know well all over the town that there is a ‘Votes For Women’ campaign on in this town, and that Miss Annie Kenney is conducting it, as bravely as ever.’

In the Lancashire Evening Post July 1907 it was reported that

‘Miss Kenney dealing with injustices under which women laboured, said all the blame for the high infantile death rate was laid upon the mothers, but they had no method of saying how undesirable the conditions under which so many of the poor lived could be improved, though it was an undoubted fact that these conditions were largely responsible for the high infantile death.’

Suffragette Amnesty of Arrests 1906 - 1914.
Suffragette Amnesty of Arrests 1906 – 1914.

The Suffragettes Amnesty of 1914 lists arrests between 1906 and 1914. The official watchlist contains details of over 1,300 arrests of Suffragettes and their supporters (men and women). In 2015 it became available online.

Sadly whilst Annie Armstrong was being arrested and imprisoned, her father died. She was released under the circumstances.

Jane Jackson from Preston lost her job at the mill on release from Holloway Prison, as her employers didn’t approve. And it seems neither did her work mates who spat on her outside the work place.

At a meeting in in Frenchwood the Preston ladies were pelted with missiles and Mary Burrow’s house got the same treatment. She had not long been out of Holloway Prison.

Another photograph of Annie Kenney: London Museum
Another photograph of Annie Kenney: London Museum

Annie Kenney was arrested and imprisoned many times during the campaign for Women’s Suffrage and participated in hunger strikes and was force fed.

Margaret Keane


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