The wonderful Spitalfields Life published a map on the East End Suffragette activities. And London Historians has a post 'Parliament and Votes for Women'.
This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Suffragettes
Commemorated ati
LSE buildings renamed after suffrage campaigners
The renaming, reported by The Tab, was to celebrate 100 years since women gai...
Suffragettes sculpture scroll
This is made of fibreglass finished in cold cast bronze, and the scroll form ...
Suffragettes - WC2 - new building
We first saw this plaque when it was on the building that used to occupy this...
Suffragettes - WC2 - previous building
'Lost' in this instance means moved to a different building.
Other Subjects
Mrs Mallet
Concerned for the poor of Lambeth and was a district visitor in 1864 trying to identify families in need. She organized a refuge for women and then started to prepare penny dinners. She also ran mo...
Ada Nield Chew
Working-class, factory worker, promoter of women’s trade unions. Born on a farm in North Staffordshire as Ada Nield. 1897 married George Chew (d.1940) who was also an organiser with the Independe...
Association of Women Pharmacists
The Pharmaceutical Journal has "a short history of pharmacy and women".
Margaret Haig Thomas, Viscountess Rhondda
The Women's Social and Political Union, secretary of Newport branch, founder of Time and Tide and the Six Point Group. Institute of Directors' first female president in 1926. Born as Margaret Haig...
Mary Gawthorpe
Mary Eleanor Gawthorpe was a suffragette, socialist, trade unionist and editor. Women’s Labour League then Women's Social and Political Union. Co-founder of radical newspaper The Freewoman. She was...