The Case for Women's Suffrage


THE CASE

FOR

WOMEN'S SUFFRAGE



Edited by

BROUGHAM VILLIERS



With Contributions by

MABEL ATKINSON MARGARET MCMILLAN
FLORENCE BALGARNIE ROSALIND NASH
EVA GORE-BOOTH EDITH PALLISER
ROBERT F. CHOLMELEY CHRISTABEL
C. DESPARD PANKHURST 
MILLICENT GARRETT EMMELINE PANKHURST
FAWCETT CONSTANCE SMEDLEY
J. KEIR HARDIE BROUGHAM VILLIERS
NELLIE ALMA MARTEL ISRAEL ZANGWILL



LONDON

T. FISHER UNWIN

ADELPHI TERRACE

MCMVII



(All rights reserved.)



CONTENTS
page
Introduction 9
Brougham Villiers
The Women's Suffrage Movement in the Nineteenth Century 22
Florence Balgarnie
The Present Position of the Women's Suffrage Movement 42
Emmeline Pankhurst
The Women's Suffrage Movement Among Trade Unionists 50
Eva Gore-Booth
Co-operator and Citizen 66
Rosalind Nash
Women and Politics 78
J. Keir Hardie, M.P.
The Legal Disabilities of Women 84
Christabel Pankhurst, LL.B.
The Civic Rights of the Married Woman 99
Constance Smedley
Woman in the Past and Future 106
Margaret McMillan
Women and the Revival of Interest in Domestic Politics 122
Mabel Atkinson, M.A.
The International Movement for Women's Suffrage 135
Edith Palliser
Women's Votes in New Zealand and Australia 140
Nellie Alma Martel
Tactics 154
Robert F. Cholmeley
A Pioneer of the Movement 164
Millicent Garrett Fawcett
Woman in the New Era 190
C. Despard

APPENDIX
One and One are Two 200
Israel Zangwill
Talked Out 210
Israel Zangwill



THE LEADERS OF THE FOUR PARTIES ON THE SUFFRAGE QUESTION.

THE RT. HON. SIR HENRY CAMPBELL-BANNERMAN, M.P.

"… The more I come to close quarters with the social questions which affect the great mass of the people of this country, the more am I driven to the belief that women ought to have the power of expressing their opinions on those subjects and help in their solution."

THE RT. HON. A. J. BALFOUR, M.P.

"We have been told that to encourage women to take an active part in politics is degrading to the sex, and that received the assent of an hon. friend of mine below the gangway. It has received the assent of almost every speaker to-day. I should think myself grossly inconsistent and most ungrateful if I supported that argument in this House, for I have myself taken the chair at Primrose League Meetings, and urged to the best of my ability the women of this country to take a share in politics, and to do their best in their various localities to support the principles which I believe to be sound in the interests of the country. After that, to come down to the House, and say I have asked these women to do that which degrades them, appears to me to be most absurd."

MR. JOHN REDMOND, M.P.

"Is it not absurd to say that a woman in this country who may be left a widow, who may have the training of her children, the regulating of their education, the forming of their character, is to have no voice whatever in the laws to govern the state of the future citizens of which she has had the training?"

MR. J. KEIR HARDIE, M.P.

"I know of no argument in support of the grant of the franchise to men which does not equally apply to giving the franchise to women."


This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published before January 1, 1930.


This work may be in the public domain in countries and areas with longer native copyright terms that apply the rule of the shorter term to foreign works.

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