Preston suffragettes get their own blog

Emily Castle, a member of the Friends of Edith Rigby group set up to commemorate the Preston suffragette and her fellow activists, has started a blog to celebrate the deeds of those brave women who defied the authorities to campaign for the vote for women: https://emelyrokeren-yhgxv.wordpress.com/2025/11/14/

This is a copy of the first post on her blog:


November 14, 2025

At one of our research events, we noticed a newspaper clipping of Preston Suffragette โ€˜Catherine Worthingtonโ€™ depicted her wearing a Holloway Brooch. Despite our efforts, we hadnโ€™t found any evidence of Catherine being imprisoned or having hunger-striked up until that moment. Surely they wouldnโ€™t draw a brooch onto an image if it wasnโ€™t on the existing photograph they copied from? Surely this had to be pointing us somewhere? Well, it was.

London Daily Chronicle โ€“ Friday 10 November 1911 โ€“ โ€˜Kate Worthingtonโ€™ proudly wearing a Holloway Brooch (etching from a real photograph).

Catherine deserves her own blog post about her life, which we will certainly get to! However, in the meantime, this is the story of how we found that Catherine was awarded a Holloway Brooch, although she was still in prison at the time, along with other fellow Preston WSPU women, when Emmeline Pankhurst awarded the brooches to women who had been imprisoned and force-fed and women who were still imprisoned facing the torturous methods of force-feeding.

Catherine Worthington and Prestonโ€™s Voice at the Royal Albert Hall

On 9 December 1909, the grand Royal Albert Hall in London became the stage for one of the most significant gatherings of the Womenโ€™s Social and Political Union (WSPU). The purpose was to welcome back Emmeline Pankhurst from her American lecture tour, but the meeting was far more than a ceremonial homecoming. It was a public declaration of the movementโ€™s resilience, a showcase of its national reach, and a celebration of women who had endured imprisonment and hunger strikes for the cause of suffrage.

Among the many names and speeches celebrated that night, one local woman from Preston stands out as the last name on the list: Catherine Worthington, whose courage links the streets of Lancashire to the grand stage of London.

A suffragette meeting, with WSPU leaders including Emmeline Pankhurst, at Caxton Hall, June 1909

The Night of Ceremony and Defiance

The Royal Albert Hall glittered with the WSPUโ€™s colours of purple, white, and green, and the famous banner reading โ€œNo Surrenderโ€ loomed over the stage. Organ music filled the hall, speeches were delivered by Emmeline Pankhurst, Christabel Pankhurst (who Catherineโ€™s daughter is named after and met), and Mary Leigh, and the program culminated with the presentation of Hunger Strike Medals โ€œFor Valourโ€ to women who had suffered for the movement.

These medals were more than awards. They were public recognition and commemoration of sacrifice, signalling that imprisonment, hunger strikes, and even force-feeding were acts of courage worthy of national acknowledgment. Such an event mirrors the causes advocacy for martyrdom. For the women of Preston, this was a direct connection between their local activism and the national movement.

Dame Christabel Pankhurst, by Ethel Wright oil on canvas, exhibited 1909

Catherine Worthingtonโ€™s Place in History

Catherine Worthingtonโ€™s name appears on the official programme among the women being honoured. Other women from Preston also do, who we didnโ€™t know had underwent force-feeding before seeing this document. In Catherineโ€™s case, and her colleague Beth Hesmondhalgh, a small but telling notation โ€œstill in prisonโ€ marks her as absent from the ceremony because she was still serving a sentence for her activism in Preston. They were both arrested during protests in early December 1909.

While the London audience applauded, Catherine remained in her cell, recognised in absentia. Her inclusion demonstrates the WSPUโ€™s commitment to acknowledging every woman who had sacrificed for the cause, not only the most famous leaders.

Though little is known of many of the women from Preston included, their presence on the medal list places them directly on the national stage. The programme immortalises their courage and links Preston to one of the movementโ€™s most symbolic moments.

Why Catherineโ€™s Story Matters

Catherineโ€™s story reminds us that the suffrage movement was not just about the leaders or the London rallies; it was sustained by local women, often working-class, whose bravery went largely unrecorded in daily newspapers. Her recognition at the Royal Albert Hall highlights:

  • The local-national connection:ย Activism in towns (or cities, whichever way you prefer) like Preston directly fed into national campaigns.
  • Recognition of sacrifice:ย Even while imprisoned, Catherineโ€™s actions were publicly celebrated.
  • The courage of ordinary women:ย Her story tells of the risks countless women took to demand political equality.

By focusing on Catherine Worthington, we see the Royal Albert Hall meeting not just as a ceremonial event, but as a tangible link between a grand national stage and the small towns whose women fuelled the movement!

This find has led us to our next chapter โ€“ we are visiting London to find out more about Catherineโ€™s time in prison, along with other members of the Preston WSPU mentioned on that night. Stay tuned, we will post something on the 9th December to commemorate ALL of the Preston women involved.

Deeds not Words

Friends of Edith Rigby.

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