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- Suffragette - Wikipedia
Suffragettes faced anger from large parts of the British public, and ridicule in the media When imprisoned they went on hunger strike, not eating for days or even a week, to which the government responded by force-feeding them The first suffragette to be force fed was Evaline Hilda Burkitt
- Women’s suffrage | Definition, History, Causes, Effects, Leaders . . .
As a consequence, many suffragists became involved in increasingly violent actions as time went on These women militants, or suffragettes, as they were known, were sent to prison and continued their protests there by engaging in hunger strikes
- The Suffragettes - London Museum
Between 1903 and 1914, the Suffragette movement used radical protest tactics and a creative publicity campaign to demand women’s right to vote in the UK “Deeds not words” was their motto, and over 1,300 women went to prison for the cause
- The Suffragette Movement - BBC Bitesize
Only just over a hundred years ago, men and women were not considered to be equal This angered some women so much that they took matters into their own hands By the start of the 20th century
- The Suffragettes - History Learning
The word suffrage refers to the right to vote and the Suffragettes refers to the movement to enable women to get the right vote It began in 1897 when the National Union of Women's Suffrage was founded by Millicent Fawcett
- Women’s Suffrage: U. S. Movement, Leaders 19th Amendment | HISTORY
Learn about the movement for women's equality that precipitated the Seneca Falls Convention in 1848, and what its attendees - including Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott - hoped to achieve
- In History: Suffragettes speak about direct action and their brutal . . .
In exclusive archive BBC interviews, two activists look back at their turbulent time fighting for women's rights – from window-smashing and arson to hunger strikes and force feeding Lilian Lenton
- 20 Suffragists To Know - U. S. National Park Service
These individuals fought for women's suffrage They lived across the United States, and came from around the world Some were active in the battle for women's right to vote in the early 1800s; others worked to educate and enroll voters and for voting rights into the late 1900s and beyond
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