Kitty Marshall – Emily Pankhurst’s bodyguard

Katherine ‘Kitty’ Marshall (1870-1947) was a suffragette who became Emmeline Pankhurst’s bodyguard after training in jujitsu. She was a member of a Lancashire family who had links to the towns and villages around Preston. She married the youngest son of the vicar of Penwortham.

Her mother, Caroline, the daughter of a vicar of Leyland, lived in Lytham with her brother, Thomas Rigbye Baldwin, before her marriage. When Thomas became vicar of Leyland following his father’s death in 1852, he appointed Kinton Jacques as his curate.

Caroline worked alongside Kinton during the 1860s Cotton Famine, and in 1863 they were married in Lytham. Kinton became vicar of Westhoughton in 1869 and Kitty was born there in 1870. Kinton became rector of the parish church of St James in Brindle, and it was at the church that Kitty was married in 1896.

Hugh Finch at Oxford
Hugh Finch pictured at Oxford. He is in the middle row with the dog. (Keble College Archives, KC/JCR 1 C1/1/3

Her bridegroom was Hugh Finch, the youngest son of the Rev T. Ross Finch, the vicar of Penwortham. Hugh’s mother had inherited Penwortham Hall on the death of her brother, Frederick Marshall.

The Preston Herald carried a lengthy report of the wedding, including a list of the principal guests, including the de Hoghtons and the Blackburn MP William Hornby. It was very much a society occasion. [1]

Emelyne Godfrey, in her biography of Kitty, Mrs Pankhurst’s Bodyguard: On the Trail of ‘Kitty’ Marshall and the Met Police ‘Cats’, [2] comments:

‘Reverend Finch, now Kitty’s father-in-law, addressed the church on the duties of a husband, who should offer his spouse protection and comfort, while a wife was expected to be a helpmeet, ready to submit to her husband … But he unwittingly added a loophole. They would be destined to be together forever, he said, provided that their love proved to be true.’

Hugh was a medical student when he married. He seemed, as Godfrey notes, ‘an excellent catch’:

‘… the marriage appears to have been professionally and socially beneficial to both families … the dapper 25-year-old Hugh appeared to have been an excellent catch. As was typical in his social class, he had been sent to boarding school, which in his case was Winchester College. Not only had he been a keen gymnast and rower, cross-country runner and athlete, he played polo whilst studying at Keble College Oxford and was a member of the 1st VIII in Oxford’s Eighth Week, an annual rowing event.’

There were early signs of unhappiness in the marriage by 1900 when Kitty’s mother died:

‘But when Kitty attended her mother’s funeral in the very church in which she and the man standing beside her had been wed, she knew by that point that her own marriage was failing. Something went wrong very early on in the marriage and for whatever reason, Hugh had begun to distance himself from her.’

The previous year, Hugh had begun an affair, and in 1901, Kitty began divorce proceedings, an unusual step at that date. She was granted the divorce, the court deciding:

‘Hugh had treated Kitty with cruelty. In April 1899, Hugh had contracted a venereal disease, which he then “wilfully and recklessly” communicated to Kitty and “was thereby guilty of cruelty towards her”.’

Hugh emigrated to Australia soon after. Godfrey adds:

‘Kitty’s husband may well have suspected that he was suffering from a venereal complaint. At some point, Kitty deduced the nature of her physical complaints and was appalled enough to seek medical advice.’

In 1904, Kitty remarried. Her second husband was Arthur Marshall, a 33-year-old solicitor. The couple set up home in Epping, before moving into London, where Arthur had his law firm. Both became involved the suffragist campaign: Kitty as an activist, Arthur as a defender of the suffragettes in court.

Kitty was featured in the Museum of London’s ‘Votes for Women’ exhibition in 2018.

‘When the famed suffragette Emmeline Pankhurst appeared in public to campaign for women’s right to vote, she was flanked by an army of club-wielding female bodyguards.

‘Among their ranks was Kitty Marshall, who, like other members of Pankhurst’s entourage, was trained in jujitsu so she would be able to fight off detractors who came to hassle, heckle or manhandle the suffragettes’ magnetic leader.

‘Throughout her time as an activist, Marshall was actually sent to prison six times—the first after hurling a potato through the window of Winston Churchill’s residence.’ [3]

Suffragette Jujitsu cartoon
Arthur Wallis Mills’ cartonn published in Punch Magazine in 1910. File source: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Suffragette-that-knew-jiujitsu.jpg

As a blog post comments:

‘Kitty was very much the typical suffragette “who knew ju-jitsu” as publicised in the cartoon by Arthur Wallis Mills … Kitty established the 30 strong Pankhurst Bodyguard, to protect the leading suffragettes and in particular Mrs Pankhurst.’ [4]


[1] ‘Preston Herald, ,08 April 1896, Page ,5’, n.d., https://www.findmypast.co.uk/image-viewer?issue=BL/0001667/18960408&page=0005&article=112&stringtohighlight=brindle.

[2] Emelyne Godfrey, Mrs Pankhurst’s Bodyguard: On the Trail of ‘Kitty’ Marshall and the Met Police ‘Cats’ (United Kingdom: History Press, 2023).

[3] Smithsonian Magazine and Brigit Katz, ‘Stories of Forgotten Suffragettes Come Alive in New Exhibition’, Smithsonian Magazine, accessed 27 October 2024, https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/london-exhibit-reveals-stories-forgotten-suffragettes-180968050/.

[4] ‘Mrs Arthur E.W. Marshall’, The Dinner Puzzle (blog), 26 April 2018, https://thedinnerpuzzle.com/portfolio/mrs-arthur-e-w-marshall/.

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