Today is the anniversary of the death of the socialist suffragette Emily Wilding Davison whose bravery helped achieve Votes for Women which  would not have been won in 1918 without
 the struggles and sacrifices of hundreds of brave Suffragettes.like her.  
Emily Wildling Davison was born in Blackheath in southeast
 London, on 11th Otober, 1872.In November 1906 the Women's Social and Political Union enrolled 
Emily Davison. She was thirty-four years old and employed as governess 
to the four children of Sir Francis Layland-Barratt, the Liberal MP for 
Torquay and High Sheriff for Cornwall. 
While her involvement with the 
WSPU remained low-key she continued working for the family until, 
eighteen months later, her urge to 'come out' as a militant would lead 
her to resign and join the campaign. Emily was soon involved in Suffragette militant demonstrations.
In
 the afternoon of 30 March 1909, Dora Marsden, carrying a tricolour 
flag, led a deputation of twenty-nine women, Emily among them, to see 
Herbert Asquith at the House of Commons, although he had refused to meet
 them. Accompanied by a brass band and singing 'The Marseillaise', the 
women reached St Stephen's Entrance, but Dora Marsden, less than five 
feet tall, became tangled up with three police horses and the staff of 
her umbrella was broken. One Suffragette hit a constable on the head 
with her umbrella, other policemen had their helmets knocked off.
Ten
 women were charged with obstruction and assaulting the police, and 
sentenced to between one and three months. For Emily Davison, this was 
her first time in gaol; it would not be her last.
On 2 August, Emily Davison, whose prison file describes her as 'bad',
 wrote to Herbert Gladstone, the Home Secretary, from Holloway 
describing her treatment. Emily said she was 'forced' into a cell and 
broke seventeen panes of glass to let in some air. She was transferred 
to a cell where the glass was thicker but still managed to break seven 
panes, also cutting her hand. They stripped her and put her into a 
prison chemise; when the doctor tried to 'sound' her heart she resisted 
and was taken to a punishment cell.
'Ours is a bloodless 
revolution but a determined one' she wrote to Gladstone. Emily said that
 she and others were 'ready to suffer, to die if need be, but we demand 
justice!'
 Emily Davison joined the dozens of Suffragette prisoners who were 
officially on hunger strike. In a manuscript prepared for the WSPU she 
provided a vivid account of the protest made by Suffragettes who were 
being kept in solitary confinement and force-fed in their cells. On 22 
June 1912, near the end of a new six-month sentence in Holloway, she 
threw herself over the handrail and wire netting outside her 
second-floor cell and landed at the bottom of the steps of the floor 
below.
 Earlier in the day she and others had barricaded themselves into their 
cells, 'a regular siege took place... on all sides we heard crowbars, 
blocks, wedges being used, joiners battering on doors with all their 
might. The barricading was followed by sounds of human struggle, the 
chair of torture [used for force-feeding] being pushed about, suppressed
 cries of the victims, groans and other horrible sounds.' She decided 
that she had to make a 'desperate protest' to end the 'hideous torture'.
Ten days before the end of her six-month sentence, on 28 June 1912, 
Emily Davison was released in a run-down state, two stone lighter, with 
two scalp wounds. She had been force-fed forty-nine times. 
Emily
 continued her campaign of militancy by breaking windows, setting fire 
to postboxes, and attempting to assault Lloyd George. Despite her 
constant support for the Suffragette cause, she was never employed as a 
paid Organiser by the Women's Social and Political Union, and not all 
the articles that she submitted were published in suffrage newspapers. 
At
 a time when it was almost impossible for women to take a degree, she  still managed to earn a First Class honours, from London University via St Hughs College,
 Oxford. On another occasion she hid overnight in Parliament so she could
 claim it as her address on census night, an exploit marked with a 
plaque by Tony Benn in 1999.
The Daily Sketch published Emily’s last article on 28 May 1913. The 
language of ‘The Price of Liberty’ is apocalyptic. ‘The perfect Amazon 
is she who will sacrifice all … to win the Pearl of Freedom [the vote] 
for her sex. Some of the bounteous pearls that women sell to obtain 
freedom… are the pearls of friendship, love and even life itself.’ Emily
 refers to the ‘terrible suffering’ she has endured, the loss of ‘old 
friends, recently- made friends, and they all go one by one into the 
Limbo of the burning fiery furnace, a grim holocaust to liberty’. She 
argues in favour of making ‘the ultimate sacrifice’, happy to pay the 
‘highest price for liberty’. 
Emily had agreed to be a helper at the Suffragette Fair and Festival at 
the Empress Rooms, Kensington, on Derby Day, but she decided to visit 
the fair the night before, and discussed with Kitty Marion and others 
‘the possibility of making a protest on the race course, without 
apparently coming to any decision’. As the women strolled into the 
festival, they were faced by a statue of Joan of Arc, bare- headed and 
holding her sword pointing to heaven. On the plinth were emblazoned 
Joan’s reputed last words: ‘Fight On and God Will Give the Victory.’
The weather on Wednesday 4 June 1913 was forecast to be sultry with 
thunderstorms. That morning Emily left Alice Green’s home at 133 Clapham
 Road, Lambeth, and walked to Oval to catch a tram to Victoria station, 
where she bought a return ticket for Epsom Downs. Before she left she 
told Alice what she was going to do. She pinned a purple, white and 
green flag inside her jacket and took her latch key, a small leather 
purse containing three shillings and eight pence and three farthings, 
eight halfpenny stamps and a notebook. Another suffragette flag was 
tucked up her sleeve. Emily walked to the racecourse and bought a 
Dorling’s List of Epsom Races.
Emily made her way to Tattenham Corner, a tricky place for horse
and rider in the gruelling mile and a half race. This was the biggest
day out in Edwardian England. Here at three o’clock, the apex of the
social pyramid met its base. The King and Queen and their entourage
added glamour to an occasion that welcomed both the establishment
and the working class at play. 
Emily squeezed close to the rails. As the race started the sixteen horses and riders ran straight for three furlongs before the course climbed to a gradient of one in fifteen. The King's horse, Anmer, made a good start. At seven furlongs the field took the left turn downhill for five furlongs and this is where Anmer fell away to the group at the back. The leading horses pounded towards the spot where Emily was waiting. Tons of horseflesh and men flashed past, spittle, sweat, huge eyes rolling with the effort, the noise of the crowd was bewildering. Everyone was screaming the names of their horses for that brief moment, and jumping up and urging them on. The trailing bunch, including Anmer, approached. Emily fiddled with the sleeve of her jacket, bobbed under the white railings, and made history. She stepped out in front of King George V’s racehorse, Anmer, Thrown violently to the ground upon impact, she never regained consciousness and died four days later on this day, 8/6/1913.
Emily squeezed close to the rails. As the race started the sixteen horses and riders ran straight for three furlongs before the course climbed to a gradient of one in fifteen. The King's horse, Anmer, made a good start. At seven furlongs the field took the left turn downhill for five furlongs and this is where Anmer fell away to the group at the back. The leading horses pounded towards the spot where Emily was waiting. Tons of horseflesh and men flashed past, spittle, sweat, huge eyes rolling with the effort, the noise of the crowd was bewildering. Everyone was screaming the names of their horses for that brief moment, and jumping up and urging them on. The trailing bunch, including Anmer, approached. Emily fiddled with the sleeve of her jacket, bobbed under the white railings, and made history. She stepped out in front of King George V’s racehorse, Anmer, Thrown violently to the ground upon impact, she never regained consciousness and died four days later on this day, 8/6/1913.
Sacrificing herself to the suffragette slogan, “Deeds not words” in protest against Parliament’s refusal to grant voting rights to women, Davison remains a feminist icon, viewed by many as a martyr for women’s rights.
Davison is often remembered for her final protest running onto the course of the Epsom Derby in 1912 in an attempt to  pin the sufragette colors to the Kings horse.  A final act that would cost Davison her life and acqure her the status of 'Sufragette Martyr'.  so let us remember her bravery, tenacity and passion, who used deeds as well as words to get her message out. She who  made the ultimate sacrifice for one of life's causes. but it is also worth mentioning that  she had a return ticket in her coat pocket for her train back to the North so she may never have  meant to kill herself.
On Saturday 14 June 1913, a special guard of honour of Emily’s 
closest friends brought her body from Epsom to Victoria railway station.
 Six thousand women marched from Buckingham Palace Road to Emily 
Davison’s funeral service at St George’s Church, Bloomsbury. Ten brass 
bands marched behind each section playing funereal marches.
The 
coffin was escorted by Elsie Howey on a white horse dressed as Joan of 
Arc, and two contingents of hunger strikers walked behind the hearse 
which was laden with wreaths. Banners in purple silk included Joan of Arc’s last words: ‘Fight On and God Will Give the Victory’. Central London stopped.
She had succeeded in bringing global attention to the sufragettes cause,
 triggering a fierce wave of feminist resistance and activism to the 
feminist cause, with her place in history guaranteed in an almost mythic
 way .Following a funeral service in London, her coffin was brought by train to Morpeth for burial in the family plot where her tomb is well maintained  and therefore  her history is treasured . Lest we forget her legacy to women today, a reminder of the 
strength of feeling, of the acts these brave Edwardian women were 
prepared to carry out so women could be treated as full citizens 
economically and politically.
The late Tony Benn illegally put up several plaques around the House of Commons to unrecognised heroes of democracy. Here' one he screwed to the door of a broom cupboard aided by Jeremy Corbyn in commemoration of Emily Wilding Davison.
The late Tony Benn illegally put up several plaques around the House of Commons to unrecognised heroes of democracy. Here' one he screwed to the door of a broom cupboard aided by Jeremy Corbyn in commemoration of Emily Wilding Davison.
Here's a link to Tony Benn's  speech in parliament in 2011 when he admitted to his illegal activities. http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/commons/2001/mar/22/election-of-a-speaker#S6CV0365P0_20010322_HOC_234.




 
 
Enjoyed reading this. Very interesting Had not read much about Emily Davison before, apart from how she died. The Sufragette I admire the most is Sylvia Pankhurst. She went to the East End and worked with women and men there for the vote and to improve the conditions of women and their families. And a lot more besides!
ReplyDeleteThank you very much for appreciation, I have written about Sylvia's sister Emmeline previously you have prompted me to consider writing a post about Sylvia in the future, thanks. eifidancer-teifidancer.blogspot.com/2020/06/emmeline-pankhurst-1571858-1461928.html
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