Remembering Preston’s jailed suffragettes

Today is the date on which the sufferings of jailed suffragettes are remembered as Prisoners’ Day, as it has been since since 1926. Those remembered include several from Preston, most famously Edith Rigby.

Emily Jane Cowan, a PhD student at Liverpool University, has written an article for this website about the Prisoners’ Day commemoration. Here are a few extracts from that article:


The Suffragette Fellowship was founded in 1926 by WSPU member Edith How-Martyn, with the aim of keeping alive ‘the suffragette spirit’ by remembering the people and events that helped women gain the vote.

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Prisoners’ Day was held to ‘honour all of those women and men who between 1905-1914 braved derision, hardship and suffering in prison for the cause of Votes for Women. The significance of 13th October was that this was the date of the very first arrest in the militant fight for the women’s cause.

On that day in 1905, Christabel Pankhurst and Annie Kenney unfurled a Votes for Women banner at a public meeting in Manchester.

The banner later came into the possession of Preston Suffragette Nellie Higginson, who donated it to Manchester Museums, and it is now in the possession of the People’s History Museum. I recently discovered this archived photograph of Nellie, who at this point was herself a J.P., with Miss Mary Kenney (Annie Kenney’s niece) and the Lady Mayoress of Manchester, commemorating the donation.

Another Preston Suffragette, Grace Alderman, mentions Prisoners’ Day in a letter written in 1964, which is kept in the Lancashire Archives. She explains that less and less people are able to make it to London for the event as they age, and highlights fellow Preston Suffragette Beth Hesmondhalgh as one of those who can no longer attend.


Emily has included two British Pathe News films, the first featuring Preston suffragettes Nellie Higginson and Beth Hesmondhalgh. The second is an excellent 20-minute documentary, titled ‘The Emancipation of Women 1890-1930’.


Read more: https://prestonhistory.com/…/suffragette-prisoners-day…/

The British Pathe News films:
https://www.britishpathe.com/asset/59293/
https://www.britishpathe.com/asset/96350/

Nellie Higginson, who at this point was herself a J.P., with Miss Mary Kenney (Annie Kenney’s niece) and the Lady Mayoress of Manchester, commemorating the donation of the suffragette banner.
Beth Hesmondhalgh and Nellie Higginson featured in the British Pathe News documentary on the ‘Votes for Women’ fight.

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