Suffragette Activity Book

Page 38

DEEDS NOT WORDS By 1912 women had been demanding the vote for nearly 50 years and were becoming increasingly frustrated. Hopes rose when Liberal Prime Minister Asquith agreed a Conciliation Bill that would have given some women the vote but were dashed again when he refused to honour the Bill. In response the WSPU, following their motto “Deeds not Words”, stepped up militancy. They smashed windows in London’s Regent Street and elsewhere, and, led by Christabel Pankhurst, began an arson campaign. The aim was to torch property belonging to MPs who opposed votes for women. On 15 April 1915 arson arrived in Hastings when Levetleigh, a stately house in St Leonards belonging to Tory MP, a well-known opponent of votes for women, went up in flames. The house was empty and no one was hurt though the house was seriously damaged. Police soon realised it was the work of suffragettes, not least because a postcard was left at the scene saying militancy would end when women got the vote. Local activists were suspected but denied involvement. It soon transpired that a well-known suffragette Kitty Marion was responsible. The attack caused a sensation locally and nationally with the press describing it as an “outrage” and criticising the suffragettes for their

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