fbpx
Wikipedia

Clara Rackham

'Clara Dorothea Tabor (3 December 1875 – 11 March 1966) was an English feminist and politician active in the women's suffrage movement, the Women's Co-operative Guild, the peace movement, adult education, the family planning movement, and the labour movement.[1] She was a pioneering magistrate, Poor Law Guardian, educator, anti-poverty campaigner and penal reformer in the city of Cambridge where she was a long-serving city and county councillor. Clara Rackham was vice-chairman of Cambridge County Council from 1956 to 1958 and chairman of the Cambridge County Council Education Committee from 1945 to 1957. She first came to prominence through her leading role in the National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies and later became a significant national figure in the labour movement, acquiring a formidable national reputation for her expertise on factory conditions, workers' rights, equal pay, and national insurance.

Clara (centre front), with her father Henry and mother Emma, sister Margaret and brother Francis

Family and early life edit

Clara Rackham (known as Dorothea to her family) was born in Notting Hill, the daughter of Henry Tabor, a gentleman farmer from a non-conformist family based in Bocking in Essex and Emma Tabor (née Woodcock) who came from Wigan, Lancashire.[1] She was educated at Notting Hill High School, St Leonards School (1892–93), Bedford College in 1894, and like her older sister, Margaret, attended Newnham College, Cambridge.[1]

At Newnham College (1895–98) Clara studied Classics but much of her time was taken up with outdoor pursuits and with politics. She was a prominent supporter of the Liberal Party in the Newnham College Political Society, a proficient long-distance cyclist, swam regularly in the river Cam, and was captain of the hockey team. Clara left with the equivalent of a third-class degree (women were not officially allowed to graduate from Cambridge University until 1948). However, she had made a lifelong friend in another Newnham College student, Susan Lawrence, one of the first three women to be elected to parliament as Labour MPs, and had also met her future husband, Harris Rackham, a lecturer in Classics at Newnham college from 1893.[2] Harris, a brother of the illustrator Arthur Rackham, became a Senior Fellow at Christ's College in 1899. The couple married in 1901 and lived at 4 Grange Terrace before moving to 18 Hobson Street, the Senior Tutor's House at Christ's College in 1911, and then setting up home in a Georgian house at 9 Park Terrace with a pleasant view overlooking Parker's Piece in 1924.The marriage was a happy one and lasted until Harris's death in 1944. Clara remained in the house until 1957.

Clara established the Cambridge branch of the Women's Co-operative Guild in 1902 and became its President, remaining active in her local group for over twenty years and writing on the value of co-operative ideals in Cambridge: A Brief Study in Social Questions (1906) edited by Eglantyne Jebb. Jebb founded the Save the Children Fund in 1919 to raise money for German and Austrian children. In 1923 Clara served on the birth control subcommittee of the Standing Joint Committee of Industrial Women's Organizations (SJCIWO) and by 1930 had become chairman of the organisation.[3] Clara chaired the National Conference of Labour Women at the Kingsway Hall in London where SJCIWO put forward two reports for discussion; on abolition of the marriage bar, and on equal pay for equal work.[4] In Cambridge she worked closely with her good friend, the Homerton College-trained Leah Manning[5] (President of the National Union of Teachers in 1930, elected as the Labour MP for Islington East in 1928 and then for Epping in 1945). Both women were associated with the ragged school set up in a building in Young Street which is now the site of Anglia Ruskin University Music Therapy Department. In the 1930s Clara supported Manning's initiatives in parliament to welcome Basque children to Britain who were seeking refuge during the Spanish Civil War and some of these children were given homes in Cambridge.

The Liberal Party edit

The youthful Clara was an admirer of William Gladstone. She was the leader of the Liberal group at Newnham College and spoke persuasively in student debates. When Gladstone died in 1898 on the day before she was due to begin part one of the Classical Tripos she was not told the news in case she were to do badly.[6] Clara is first listed as a host of a public meeting in an advertisement that appeared on 24 October 1902 in The Cambridge Independent Press.[7] Her attendance is reported at the public meeting on 29 October 1902 held at the old Sturton Hall. The Liberal Party were protesting against the Education Bill which would have excluded women from their role on school boards.[8] Clara's objection to the legislation was that it removed the right of women to be elected by local voters to their existing roles and made them reliant on the consent of other members of boards rather than a direct mandate from the people.[9]

Leading suffragist edit

Like other suffragists from a privileged background, Clara was brought into direct contact with the plight of the poor and disadvantaged through her work as a Poor Law Guardian and was deeply shocked by what she saw. Her experiences with poor relief for the Castle End ward of Cambridge (1904–15) reinforced her conviction that it was essential for women to have the vote if things were to change.[10] Adela Adam, a classicist at Girton College and mother of Barbara Wootton (later Baroness Wootton of Abinger), persuaded Clara to join the Cambridge Women's Suffrage Association.[9] This was a branch of the constitutional, non-militant National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies (NUWSS), the President of which was the veteran suffragist, Millicent Garrett Fawcett.

Clara proved to be a first-class organiser, giving rousing speeches, and touring the surrounding villages to drum up support for women's suffrage. She was faced with a very hostile crowd in Newmarket. Clara was elected to the executive committee of the Eastern Federation of the NUWSS and then to the national executive committee which she chaired from 1909 to 1915 when she resigned to take up a position as a government factory inspector. Cambridge sent a sizeable contingent to the 'Great Pilgrimage' of law-abiding suffragists that converged on Hyde Park from routes all over the country in 1913. Clara joined the procession at Burwell and gave a stirring address to the marchers in the market square in Cambridge before the procession set off for Royston. In London Clara was seated on the podium next to Millicent Fawcett and formed part of the delegation to visit Asquith.

Clara steered the national organisation through its most turbulent period in 1915 with considerable tact and skill when Millicent Fawcett's qualified support for women's involvement in the war effort was opposed by a majority of the NUWSS committee who tendered their resignations and by large sections of the membership who were either pacifists or primarily interested in ending the war by securing a negotiated peace with Germany. Clara managed to combine her deep personal loyalty to Fawcett with her own principled opposition to the war by the advocacy of a compromise whereby the NUWSS would agree to support women's war work in principle but individual members would be permitted to pursue whatever activities they wished either in war work, for example, working in hospitals, or supporting initiatives to bring about peace. Clara's proposal was accepted as NUWSS policy thereby averting the very real danger of the organisation falling apart. After women over 30 were enfranchised under the 1918 Representation of the People Act, the NUWSS dissolved itself and was succeeded by the National Union of Societies for Equal Citizenship in 1919. Clara had no formal legal training but from 1923 to 1931 she edited, and often wrote, a legal column for The Women's Leader, the journal of the new organisation.

Factory inspector edit

During The First World War Clara worked as a factory inspector for the Home Office and was one of four women appointed to temporary positions on 25 October 1915 working alongside Jeanette Tawney, wife of the philosopher R. H. Tawney.[11] She was deployed initially in Lancashire and then in the London area. The post meant that she had to turn down the offer of an academic position at Bedford College in the University of London, which was founded as a women's college, because she could not be spared from work of national importance.[12] She also worked voluntarily in the University of Liverpool Settlement.[13]

From 1930 to 1932 Clara served on the Royal Commission on Unemployment Insurance where she clashed with the cotton industry administrator Raymond Streat who thought unemployment benefits (the dole) too high, and wrongly assumed this was the consensus on the Commission.[14] Clara was a signatory to a Minority Report by the Labour Party members on the Commission in 1933. She later published a short book in which she demonstrated her own expertise on factory conditions, Factory Law in 1938. She was a lifelong advocate of workers' rights and an early advocate of the 40-hour work week.

Labour Party politician in Cambridge edit

At the end of the First World War Clara joined the Labour Party though she stood as an Independent representing the National Union of Societies for Equal Citizenship (NUSEC) in the Cambridge town council election of March 1919.[15] Clara developed a close relationship with Hugh Dalton, who was to become Chancellor of the Exchequer in the Attlee ministry of 1945, and campaigned for Dalton when he contested the 1922 Cambridge by-election.[16] Leah Manning remembered that, during the General Strike of 1926, the Cambridge strike headquarters was in the Rackhams' basement kitchen.[17]

Clara held numerous elected positions in Cambridge and was made an Alderman by both the City and the County Council. She was first elected as a councillor for West Chesterton in north Cambridge (1919–22) and was later returned for Romsey, a solidly working-class area of the city on the unfashionable side of the railway bridge in which many of the families of local railway workers lived in 1929. Clara was returned unopposed to represent Romsey for the last time in 1946.

Clara stood for Parliament twice with no success: she was defeated in Chelmsford (1922) and lost heavily to a rising star in the Conservative Party, the sitting MP, R. A. Butler, in Saffron Walden (1935).[10][12] With the exception of the few years in which she worked as a factory inspector she never left Cambridge. She fought innumerable battles to improve living conditions for the working-class communities in the north and east of the city, lobbying hard for the indoor heated swimming pool on the corner of Parker's Piece and Mill Road. Today's light and airy glass pool remains as one of her lasting achievements. She opened the Rock Road Public Library and also helped to finance the construction of the Labour Club on Mill Road which was built by voluntary labour in the 1920s. Ramsay MacDonald, the first Labour Party Prime Minister, laid the foundation stone in 1926 and Clara spoke at the opening ceremony in 1928.

Magistrate and penal reformer edit

Clara became a magistrate in 1920, and, with Florence Ada Keynes (mother of economist John Maynard Keynes) and Edith Bethune Baker, was one of the first women in Cambridge to serve on the bench. The work of the criminal justice system and, in particular, the inhumane way in which the law dealt with juvenile offenders became a central concern for her throughout her life. Margery Fry, director of the Howard League for Penal Reform from its inception in 1921, and another JP, was a good friend.[10] Clara joined the Howard League and worked with Clara Martineau of Birmingham City Council as part of a group reporting on child sexual abuse to Parliament in 1925.[18] Clara was also a founder-member of the Magistrates' Association in 1927 and an advocate of probation, and opponent of corporal punishment.[10] In 1933 she wrote to The Manchester Guardian regarding the recent Children and Young Persons Act and drew attention to the range of options made available to magistrates when dealing with children in need of care or protection while criticising aspects of the legislation for not going far enough.[19] In 1933 she argued that no young person under the age of 17 should be sent to prison. At the time the age limit was 14.[19] She resigned as a magistrate in 1950, and from her other committees when she became aware that loss of hearing had made it virtually impossible for her to carry on.[20]

Pioneering Broadcaster edit

Clara was a pioneering broadcaster in the early days of BBC radio in the 1920s and one of the first women to be heard on the airwaves. She gave talks on the work of a magistrate and on legal matters.[21] A series How we Manage Our Affairs in 1929 began with a talk "How we Elect our Councillors".[22]

Education edit

Clara was chairman of the Cambridge County Council Education Committee from 1945 to 1957 and took a strong interest in girls' education, nursery education, and education in the early years and campaigned for free school milk and meals for the benefit of undernourished children. She was a personal friend of Henry Morris, the innovative Director of Education for Cambridgeshire from 1922,and shared his visionary ideal of the 'village college'. Village colleges combined secondary education with community and adult education and were set up in Sawston, Bottisham, Bassingbourn, Comberton, Impington, Linton and elsewhere in the countryside surrounding Cambridge with Clara's enthusiastic support. However, she never fully embraced the Labour Party's post-war support for comprehensive education, believing that small selective grammar schools were of more benefit to working-class children.[4] She served with Lilian Mary Hart Clark on the governing body of the Cambridge School of Arts, Crafts and Technology, which was renamed the Cambridgeshire College of Arts and Technology in 1958, and Anglia Ruskin University in 2005. A large modern building containing laboratories and teaching rooms was erected on the Cambridge campus in 1972 and named Rackham in her honour. This was demolished in 2009. She had a lifelong interest in the education of working people, was a part-time lecturer in social history and local government for the Workers' Educational Association, and elected Chairman of the WEA Eastern District. She always valued and retained her links with Newnham College where she organised a summer school for working women and was on the college's governing body from 1920 to 1940 and on the Newnham College council from 1924 to 1931.

The Peace Movement edit

Like many former suffragists, Rackham placed her hopes for peace in the League of Nations between the wars and she attended meetings of the local Cambridge branch whenever she could. At the height of the Cold War, when the country was beset with fears of a nuclear war breaking out between the Soviet Union and the United States, Clara joined the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament which was founded in 1958 to call for Britain to lead the world in getting rid of nuclear weapons by disarming unilaterally. Her great-niece, Sarah Rackham, remembers being taken as a child on the annual CND march from Aldermaston to London. Clara participated in her last peace march in 1961 at the age of eighty-five. Other members of the Tabor family, including her niece, Mary Tabor, also remember being taken on the Aldermaston March by Clara when they were children.[23]

Final years edit

Clara became a well-known figure in Cambridge in her later years, riding everywhere on her bicycle, doing voluntary work in the community, enjoying her contact with young and old alike, adjusting with indomitable good humour to her own loss of hearing, and reading aloud to the partially sighted. In 1962 she delivered her last speech at the Golden Jubilee of the Cambridge Branch of the National Council of Women of Great Britain. In 1993 Joyce Bellamy and Eileen Price, who wrote the entry on Clara Rackham in The Dictionary of Labour Biography, recalled how overwhelmed they had been by the public response to a letter requesting information about Clara's life and work which they had sent to The Cambridge Evening News in 1980.[4] Although she had been brought up in the Christian faith, her outlook on life became decidedly secular over the years and she eventually joined the Humanist Association. Bellamy and Price note that Clara had come to adopt the practice of waiting outside the borough council chamber until the prayers before council meetings had finished. She also refused the Mayoralty of the borough of Cambridge because she did not wish to take part in religious observances while agreeing to chair meetings of Cambridge City Council which were not preceded by prayers (1956–1958).[4] She declined the Freedom of the City of Cambridge, requesting instead that a bench be placed outside the Meadowcroft retirement home on Trumpington Road for the use of the residents. She stated that she did not want to have a bust of herself displayed in Shire Hall during her lifetime but stipulated that the council could do whatever they thought was appropriate after her death.[24]

Clara initially moved into the Langdon House residential care home after the death of her sister, Margaret, who had lived with her at 9 Park Terrace after Harris Rackham died. She then relocated herself voluntarily to Meadowcroft to make available a place at Langdon House for an old person who was poorer than she was before returning to Langdon House when another place there became available. Clara died peacefully in Langdon House in 1966 after enjoying her 90th birthday celebrations, which were attended by friends and well-wishers representing over twenty local organisations, charities, and voluntary groups which she had supported over the years. She was cremated at the cemetery in Huntingdon Road on 15 March 1966. A tribute written in the Newnham College Roll Letter in 1967 reads:

Anyone who studies the social reforms of the century in Cambridge will see how much they owe to Mrs Rackham's devoted and unstinting championship of the under-privileged. Her aim was to give them a better way of life. Her success is her memorial.[4]

Publications edit

  • Contribution to Cambridge: A Brief Study in Social Questions (1906) by Eglantyne Jebb, on co-operation
  • Survey of Cambridge for Social Conditions in Provincial Towns (1912) by Helen Bosanquet
  • Royal Commission on Unemployment Insurance, abridged minority report (1933, Fabian Society)
  • Factory Law (1938)
  • Lawless Youth. A Challenge to the New Europe. A Policy for the Juvenile Courts prepared by the International Committee of the Howard League for Penal Reform 1942–1945 (1947), with Margery Fry, Max Grünhut, Hermann Mannheim, and Wanda Grabinska.
 
Unveiling of the blue plaque for Clara Rackham

Legacy edit

In 1944 Clara presented the Central Library in Cambridge with a unique collection of, for the most part, signed and numbered editions of Arthur Rackham's illustrated books. Rackham Close, in Arbury, Cambridge, is named after her[25] as was a room in the Alex Wood Hall in Norfolk Street, the headquarters of the Cambridge City Labour Party. A bust was commissioned and manufactured but its whereabouts today are unknown. In 2018, the centenary of some women obtaining the vote, Clara and Leah Manning were selected by the Women's Local Government Society to be included in their list of pioneers whose lives had inspired a younger generation to engage in service to their local communities.

A celebration of Clara Rackham's life and work in words, music and theatre organised by Mary Joannou took place in the presence of members of the Rackham family at Anglia Ruskin University on 2 November 2018. The event included a specially commissioned play entitled 'Clara Rackham and the General Strike' written by local author Ros Connelly, young dancers from the Bodyworks Studio, and presentations by Sarah Rackham, Dr Deborah Thom and Councillor Anna Smith. The official civic ceremony in which the blue plaque was unveiled by Dame Stella Manzie, who spoke about Clara's pioneering achievements in local government, took place at Newnham College on 20 November 2018 by kind permission of the Principal, Dame Carol Black and the Fellows. Dr Gillian Sutherland, Fellow Emerita at Newnham College, spoke about Clara in her historical context. Both events were filmed by Antony Carpen and may be seen on YouTube. The blue plaque was put up at 9 Park Terrace, a property belonging to Emmanuel College, on 25 January 2019 and a reception was held in Emmanuel College by kind permission of the Master, Dame Fiona Reynolds, and the Fellows. The blue plaque may be seen on the website of Cambridge, Past, Present and Future, a Cambridge charity which administers the blue plaque scheme. In 2019 The Friends of the Milton Road Library have named one of the two community rooms in the re-opened Milton Road Library after Clara Rackham. Mary Joannou's biography of Clara Rackham, The Life and Times of Clara Rackham: Socialist, Suffragist and Social Reformer was published by Routledge in 2022.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Harrison, Brian. "Rackham, Clara Dorothea". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/48589. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  2. ^ "Rackham, Harris (RKN887H)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  3. ^ Diana Palmer, "Women, Health and Politics, 1919– 1939: Professional and lay involvement in the Women's Health Campaign" (PDF), at p. 125
  4. ^ a b c d e Joyce Bellamy and Eileen Price, Rackham, Clara Dorothea (1875–1966), Labour Alderman, Social Reformer and Educationalist, in Joyce Bellamy and John Saville (eds), Dictionary of Labour Biography (Macmillan: Basingstoke, 1993), pp. 323–238.
  5. ^ Law (2000). Women: A Modern Political Dictionary. Bloomsbury Academic. p. 103. ISBN 9781860645020.
  6. ^ Harrison, Brian. New Dictionary of National Biography.
  7. ^ "Cambridge Independent Press". 24 October 1902. Retrieved 15 April 2017.
  8. ^ "Cambridge Independent Press". 30 October 1902. Retrieved 15 April 2017.
  9. ^ a b Ann Oakley (15 August 2011). A Critical Woman: Barbara Wootton, Social Science and Public Policy in the Twentieth Century. Bloomsbury Academic. p. 33. ISBN 978-1-84966-468-4.
  10. ^ a b c d Jean Spence; Sarah Aiston; Maureen M. Meikle (10 September 2009). Women, Education, and Agency, 1600–2000. Routledge. pp. 211–3. ISBN 978-1-135-85584-0.
  11. ^ "Factory and Workshop Acts, 1901 to 1911" (PDF). The London Gazette. 29 October 1915. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
  12. ^ a b Cathy Hartley (15 April 2013). A Historical Dictionary of British Women. Routledge. p. 364. ISBN 978-1-135-35533-3.
  13. ^ Information provided by Sarah Rackham, Clara's great-niece, 23 April 2018.
  14. ^ Sir Raymond Streat (1987). Lancashire and Whitehall: The Diary of Sir Raymond Streat. Manchester University Press. p. 45 and note. ISBN 978-0-7190-2390-3.
  15. ^ Cheryl Law (22 April 2000). Suffrage and Power: The Women's Movement 1918–1928. I.B. Tauris. pp. 123–4. ISBN 978-1-86064-478-8.
  16. ^ Pimlott, Ben (1986). Hugh Dalton (Papermac ed.). London: Macmillan. pp. 116–9 and 159. ISBN 0333412516.
  17. ^ Logan (2002), "Making women magistrates" 30 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine, p. 207.
  18. ^ Louise A. Jackson (11 January 2013). Child Sexual Abuse in Victorian England. Routledge. p. 64. ISBN 978-1-134-73665-2.
  19. ^ a b "The Manchester Guardian". Letters to the Editor. 3 November 1933 – via ProQuest.
  20. ^ Law (2000). Women: A Modern Political Dictionary. Bloomsbury Academic. pp. 127–8. ISBN 9781860645020.
  21. ^ Logan (2002), "Making women magistrates" 30 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine, p. 235.
  22. ^ "Mrs. C. D. Rackham: 'How we Manage Our Affairs-I, How we Elect our Councillors' – 5XX Daventry – 6 November 1929 – BBC Genome". BBC. Retrieved 28 June 2015.
  23. ^ Mary Tabor, Interview with Brian Harrison (1975, The Women's Library at the LSE)
  24. ^ Bellamy and Price, 1993, p.236
  25. ^ Wimhurst, Tamsin. "Cambridge Women and Work.pdf" (PDF). Cambridge and County Folk Museum. Retrieved 28 July 2018.

clara, rackham, clara, dorothea, tabor, december, 1875, march, 1966, english, feminist, politician, active, women, suffrage, movement, women, operative, guild, peace, movement, adult, education, family, planning, movement, labour, movement, pioneering, magistr. Clara Dorothea Tabor 3 December 1875 11 March 1966 was an English feminist and politician active in the women s suffrage movement the Women s Co operative Guild the peace movement adult education the family planning movement and the labour movement 1 She was a pioneering magistrate Poor Law Guardian educator anti poverty campaigner and penal reformer in the city of Cambridge where she was a long serving city and county councillor Clara Rackham was vice chairman of Cambridge County Council from 1956 to 1958 and chairman of the Cambridge County Council Education Committee from 1945 to 1957 She first came to prominence through her leading role in the National Union of Women s Suffrage Societies and later became a significant national figure in the labour movement acquiring a formidable national reputation for her expertise on factory conditions workers rights equal pay and national insurance Clara centre front with her father Henry and mother Emma sister Margaret and brother Francis Contents 1 Family and early life 2 The Liberal Party 3 Leading suffragist 4 Factory inspector 5 Labour Party politician in Cambridge 6 Magistrate and penal reformer 7 Pioneering Broadcaster 8 Education 9 The Peace Movement 10 Final years 11 Publications 12 Legacy 13 ReferencesFamily and early life editClara Rackham known as Dorothea to her family was born in Notting Hill the daughter of Henry Tabor a gentleman farmer from a non conformist family based in Bocking in Essex and Emma Tabor nee Woodcock who came from Wigan Lancashire 1 She was educated at Notting Hill High School St Leonards School 1892 93 Bedford College in 1894 and like her older sister Margaret attended Newnham College Cambridge 1 At Newnham College 1895 98 Clara studied Classics but much of her time was taken up with outdoor pursuits and with politics She was a prominent supporter of the Liberal Party in the Newnham College Political Society a proficient long distance cyclist swam regularly in the river Cam and was captain of the hockey team Clara left with the equivalent of a third class degree women were not officially allowed to graduate from Cambridge University until 1948 However she had made a lifelong friend in another Newnham College student Susan Lawrence one of the first three women to be elected to parliament as Labour MPs and had also met her future husband Harris Rackham a lecturer in Classics at Newnham college from 1893 2 Harris a brother of the illustrator Arthur Rackham became a Senior Fellow at Christ s College in 1899 The couple married in 1901 and lived at 4 Grange Terrace before moving to 18 Hobson Street the Senior Tutor s House at Christ s College in 1911 and then setting up home in a Georgian house at 9 Park Terrace with a pleasant view overlooking Parker s Piece in 1924 The marriage was a happy one and lasted until Harris s death in 1944 Clara remained in the house until 1957 Clara established the Cambridge branch of the Women s Co operative Guild in 1902 and became its President remaining active in her local group for over twenty years and writing on the value of co operative ideals in Cambridge A Brief Study in Social Questions 1906 edited by Eglantyne Jebb Jebb founded the Save the Children Fund in 1919 to raise money for German and Austrian children In 1923 Clara served on the birth control subcommittee of the Standing Joint Committee of Industrial Women s Organizations SJCIWO and by 1930 had become chairman of the organisation 3 Clara chaired the National Conference of Labour Women at the Kingsway Hall in London where SJCIWO put forward two reports for discussion on abolition of the marriage bar and on equal pay for equal work 4 In Cambridge she worked closely with her good friend the Homerton College trained Leah Manning 5 President of the National Union of Teachers in 1930 elected as the Labour MP for Islington East in 1928 and then for Epping in 1945 Both women were associated with the ragged school set up in a building in Young Street which is now the site of Anglia Ruskin University Music Therapy Department In the 1930s Clara supported Manning s initiatives in parliament to welcome Basque children to Britain who were seeking refuge during the Spanish Civil War and some of these children were given homes in Cambridge The Liberal Party editThe youthful Clara was an admirer of William Gladstone She was the leader of the Liberal group at Newnham College and spoke persuasively in student debates When Gladstone died in 1898 on the day before she was due to begin part one of the Classical Tripos she was not told the news in case she were to do badly 6 Clara is first listed as a host of a public meeting in an advertisement that appeared on 24 October 1902 in The Cambridge Independent Press 7 Her attendance is reported at the public meeting on 29 October 1902 held at the old Sturton Hall The Liberal Party were protesting against the Education Bill which would have excluded women from their role on school boards 8 Clara s objection to the legislation was that it removed the right of women to be elected by local voters to their existing roles and made them reliant on the consent of other members of boards rather than a direct mandate from the people 9 Leading suffragist editLike other suffragists from a privileged background Clara was brought into direct contact with the plight of the poor and disadvantaged through her work as a Poor Law Guardian and was deeply shocked by what she saw Her experiences with poor relief for the Castle End ward of Cambridge 1904 15 reinforced her conviction that it was essential for women to have the vote if things were to change 10 Adela Adam a classicist at Girton College and mother of Barbara Wootton later Baroness Wootton of Abinger persuaded Clara to join the Cambridge Women s Suffrage Association 9 This was a branch of the constitutional non militant National Union of Women s Suffrage Societies NUWSS the President of which was the veteran suffragist Millicent Garrett Fawcett Clara proved to be a first class organiser giving rousing speeches and touring the surrounding villages to drum up support for women s suffrage She was faced with a very hostile crowd in Newmarket Clara was elected to the executive committee of the Eastern Federation of the NUWSS and then to the national executive committee which she chaired from 1909 to 1915 when she resigned to take up a position as a government factory inspector Cambridge sent a sizeable contingent to the Great Pilgrimage of law abiding suffragists that converged on Hyde Park from routes all over the country in 1913 Clara joined the procession at Burwell and gave a stirring address to the marchers in the market square in Cambridge before the procession set off for Royston In London Clara was seated on the podium next to Millicent Fawcett and formed part of the delegation to visit Asquith Clara steered the national organisation through its most turbulent period in 1915 with considerable tact and skill when Millicent Fawcett s qualified support for women s involvement in the war effort was opposed by a majority of the NUWSS committee who tendered their resignations and by large sections of the membership who were either pacifists or primarily interested in ending the war by securing a negotiated peace with Germany Clara managed to combine her deep personal loyalty to Fawcett with her own principled opposition to the war by the advocacy of a compromise whereby the NUWSS would agree to support women s war work in principle but individual members would be permitted to pursue whatever activities they wished either in war work for example working in hospitals or supporting initiatives to bring about peace Clara s proposal was accepted as NUWSS policy thereby averting the very real danger of the organisation falling apart After women over 30 were enfranchised under the 1918 Representation of the People Act the NUWSS dissolved itself and was succeeded by the National Union of Societies for Equal Citizenship in 1919 Clara had no formal legal training but from 1923 to 1931 she edited and often wrote a legal column for The Women s Leader the journal of the new organisation Factory inspector editDuring The First World War Clara worked as a factory inspector for the Home Office and was one of four women appointed to temporary positions on 25 October 1915 working alongside Jeanette Tawney wife of the philosopher R H Tawney 11 She was deployed initially in Lancashire and then in the London area The post meant that she had to turn down the offer of an academic position at Bedford College in the University of London which was founded as a women s college because she could not be spared from work of national importance 12 She also worked voluntarily in the University of Liverpool Settlement 13 From 1930 to 1932 Clara served on the Royal Commission on Unemployment Insurance where she clashed with the cotton industry administrator Raymond Streat who thought unemployment benefits the dole too high and wrongly assumed this was the consensus on the Commission 14 Clara was a signatory to a Minority Report by the Labour Party members on the Commission in 1933 She later published a short book in which she demonstrated her own expertise on factory conditions Factory Law in 1938 She was a lifelong advocate of workers rights and an early advocate of the 40 hour work week Labour Party politician in Cambridge editAt the end of the First World War Clara joined the Labour Party though she stood as an Independent representing the National Union of Societies for Equal Citizenship NUSEC in the Cambridge town council election of March 1919 15 Clara developed a close relationship with Hugh Dalton who was to become Chancellor of the Exchequer in the Attlee ministry of 1945 and campaigned for Dalton when he contested the 1922 Cambridge by election 16 Leah Manning remembered that during the General Strike of 1926 the Cambridge strike headquarters was in the Rackhams basement kitchen 17 Clara held numerous elected positions in Cambridge and was made an Alderman by both the City and the County Council She was first elected as a councillor for West Chesterton in north Cambridge 1919 22 and was later returned for Romsey a solidly working class area of the city on the unfashionable side of the railway bridge in which many of the families of local railway workers lived in 1929 Clara was returned unopposed to represent Romsey for the last time in 1946 Clara stood for Parliament twice with no success she was defeated in Chelmsford 1922 and lost heavily to a rising star in the Conservative Party the sitting MP R A Butler in Saffron Walden 1935 10 12 With the exception of the few years in which she worked as a factory inspector she never left Cambridge She fought innumerable battles to improve living conditions for the working class communities in the north and east of the city lobbying hard for the indoor heated swimming pool on the corner of Parker s Piece and Mill Road Today s light and airy glass pool remains as one of her lasting achievements She opened the Rock Road Public Library and also helped to finance the construction of the Labour Club on Mill Road which was built by voluntary labour in the 1920s Ramsay MacDonald the first Labour Party Prime Minister laid the foundation stone in 1926 and Clara spoke at the opening ceremony in 1928 Magistrate and penal reformer editClara became a magistrate in 1920 and with Florence Ada Keynes mother of economist John Maynard Keynes and Edith Bethune Baker was one of the first women in Cambridge to serve on the bench The work of the criminal justice system and in particular the inhumane way in which the law dealt with juvenile offenders became a central concern for her throughout her life Margery Fry director of the Howard League for Penal Reform from its inception in 1921 and another JP was a good friend 10 Clara joined the Howard League and worked with Clara Martineau of Birmingham City Council as part of a group reporting on child sexual abuse to Parliament in 1925 18 Clara was also a founder member of the Magistrates Association in 1927 and an advocate of probation and opponent of corporal punishment 10 In 1933 she wrote to The Manchester Guardian regarding the recent Children and Young Persons Act and drew attention to the range of options made available to magistrates when dealing with children in need of care or protection while criticising aspects of the legislation for not going far enough 19 In 1933 she argued that no young person under the age of 17 should be sent to prison At the time the age limit was 14 19 She resigned as a magistrate in 1950 and from her other committees when she became aware that loss of hearing had made it virtually impossible for her to carry on 20 Pioneering Broadcaster editClara was a pioneering broadcaster in the early days of BBC radio in the 1920s and one of the first women to be heard on the airwaves She gave talks on the work of a magistrate and on legal matters 21 A series How we Manage Our Affairs in 1929 began with a talk How we Elect our Councillors 22 Education editClara was chairman of the Cambridge County Council Education Committee from 1945 to 1957 and took a strong interest in girls education nursery education and education in the early years and campaigned for free school milk and meals for the benefit of undernourished children She was a personal friend of Henry Morris the innovative Director of Education for Cambridgeshire from 1922 and shared his visionary ideal of the village college Village colleges combined secondary education with community and adult education and were set up in Sawston Bottisham Bassingbourn Comberton Impington Linton and elsewhere in the countryside surrounding Cambridge with Clara s enthusiastic support However she never fully embraced the Labour Party s post war support for comprehensive education believing that small selective grammar schools were of more benefit to working class children 4 She served with Lilian Mary Hart Clark on the governing body of the Cambridge School of Arts Crafts and Technology which was renamed the Cambridgeshire College of Arts and Technology in 1958 and Anglia Ruskin University in 2005 A large modern building containing laboratories and teaching rooms was erected on the Cambridge campus in 1972 and named Rackham in her honour This was demolished in 2009 She had a lifelong interest in the education of working people was a part time lecturer in social history and local government for the Workers Educational Association and elected Chairman of the WEA Eastern District She always valued and retained her links with Newnham College where she organised a summer school for working women and was on the college s governing body from 1920 to 1940 and on the Newnham College council from 1924 to 1931 The Peace Movement editLike many former suffragists Rackham placed her hopes for peace in the League of Nations between the wars and she attended meetings of the local Cambridge branch whenever she could At the height of the Cold War when the country was beset with fears of a nuclear war breaking out between the Soviet Union and the United States Clara joined the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament which was founded in 1958 to call for Britain to lead the world in getting rid of nuclear weapons by disarming unilaterally Her great niece Sarah Rackham remembers being taken as a child on the annual CND march from Aldermaston to London Clara participated in her last peace march in 1961 at the age of eighty five Other members of the Tabor family including her niece Mary Tabor also remember being taken on the Aldermaston March by Clara when they were children 23 Final years editClara became a well known figure in Cambridge in her later years riding everywhere on her bicycle doing voluntary work in the community enjoying her contact with young and old alike adjusting with indomitable good humour to her own loss of hearing and reading aloud to the partially sighted In 1962 she delivered her last speech at the Golden Jubilee of the Cambridge Branch of the National Council of Women of Great Britain In 1993 Joyce Bellamy and Eileen Price who wrote the entry on Clara Rackham in The Dictionary of Labour Biography recalled how overwhelmed they had been by the public response to a letter requesting information about Clara s life and work which they had sent to The Cambridge Evening News in 1980 4 Although she had been brought up in the Christian faith her outlook on life became decidedly secular over the years and she eventually joined the Humanist Association Bellamy and Price note that Clara had come to adopt the practice of waiting outside the borough council chamber until the prayers before council meetings had finished She also refused the Mayoralty of the borough of Cambridge because she did not wish to take part in religious observances while agreeing to chair meetings of Cambridge City Council which were not preceded by prayers 1956 1958 4 She declined the Freedom of the City of Cambridge requesting instead that a bench be placed outside the Meadowcroft retirement home on Trumpington Road for the use of the residents She stated that she did not want to have a bust of herself displayed in Shire Hall during her lifetime but stipulated that the council could do whatever they thought was appropriate after her death 24 Clara initially moved into the Langdon House residential care home after the death of her sister Margaret who had lived with her at 9 Park Terrace after Harris Rackham died She then relocated herself voluntarily to Meadowcroft to make available a place at Langdon House for an old person who was poorer than she was before returning to Langdon House when another place there became available Clara died peacefully in Langdon House in 1966 after enjoying her 90th birthday celebrations which were attended by friends and well wishers representing over twenty local organisations charities and voluntary groups which she had supported over the years She was cremated at the cemetery in Huntingdon Road on 15 March 1966 A tribute written in the Newnham College Roll Letter in 1967 reads Anyone who studies the social reforms of the century in Cambridge will see how much they owe to Mrs Rackham s devoted and unstinting championship of the under privileged Her aim was to give them a better way of life Her success is her memorial 4 Publications editContribution to Cambridge A Brief Study in Social Questions 1906 by Eglantyne Jebb on co operation Survey of Cambridge for Social Conditions in Provincial Towns 1912 by Helen Bosanquet Royal Commission on Unemployment Insurance abridged minority report 1933 Fabian Society Factory Law 1938 Lawless Youth A Challenge to the New Europe A Policy for the Juvenile Courts prepared by the International Committee of the Howard League for Penal Reform 1942 1945 1947 with Margery Fry Max Grunhut Hermann Mannheim and Wanda Grabinska nbsp Unveiling of the blue plaque for Clara RackhamLegacy editIn 1944 Clara presented the Central Library in Cambridge with a unique collection of for the most part signed and numbered editions of Arthur Rackham s illustrated books Rackham Close in Arbury Cambridge is named after her 25 as was a room in the Alex Wood Hall in Norfolk Street the headquarters of the Cambridge City Labour Party A bust was commissioned and manufactured but its whereabouts today are unknown In 2018 the centenary of some women obtaining the vote Clara and Leah Manning were selected by the Women s Local Government Society to be included in their list of pioneers whose lives had inspired a younger generation to engage in service to their local communities A celebration of Clara Rackham s life and work in words music and theatre organised by Mary Joannou took place in the presence of members of the Rackham family at Anglia Ruskin University on 2 November 2018 The event included a specially commissioned play entitled Clara Rackham and the General Strike written by local author Ros Connelly young dancers from the Bodyworks Studio and presentations by Sarah Rackham Dr Deborah Thom and Councillor Anna Smith The official civic ceremony in which the blue plaque was unveiled by Dame Stella Manzie who spoke about Clara s pioneering achievements in local government took place at Newnham College on 20 November 2018 by kind permission of the Principal Dame Carol Black and the Fellows Dr Gillian Sutherland Fellow Emerita at Newnham College spoke about Clara in her historical context Both events were filmed by Antony Carpen and may be seen on YouTube The blue plaque was put up at 9 Park Terrace a property belonging to Emmanuel College on 25 January 2019 and a reception was held in Emmanuel College by kind permission of the Master Dame Fiona Reynolds and the Fellows The blue plaque may be seen on the website of Cambridge Past Present and Future a Cambridge charity which administers the blue plaque scheme In 2019 The Friends of the Milton Road Library have named one of the two community rooms in the re opened Milton Road Library after Clara Rackham Mary Joannou s biography of Clara Rackham The Life and Times of Clara Rackham Socialist Suffragist and Social Reformer was published by Routledge in 2022 References edit a b c Harrison Brian Rackham Clara Dorothea Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 48589 Subscription or UK public library membership required Rackham Harris RKN887H A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Diana Palmer Women Health and Politics 1919 1939 Professional and lay involvement in the Women s Health Campaign PDF at p 125 a b c d e Joyce Bellamy and Eileen Price Rackham Clara Dorothea 1875 1966 Labour Alderman Social Reformer and Educationalist in Joyce Bellamy and John Saville eds Dictionary of Labour Biography Macmillan Basingstoke 1993 pp 323 238 Law 2000 Women A Modern Political Dictionary Bloomsbury Academic p 103 ISBN 9781860645020 Harrison Brian New Dictionary of National Biography Cambridge Independent Press 24 October 1902 Retrieved 15 April 2017 Cambridge Independent Press 30 October 1902 Retrieved 15 April 2017 a b Ann Oakley 15 August 2011 A Critical Woman Barbara Wootton Social Science and Public Policy in the Twentieth Century Bloomsbury Academic p 33 ISBN 978 1 84966 468 4 a b c d Jean Spence Sarah Aiston Maureen M Meikle 10 September 2009 Women Education and Agency 1600 2000 Routledge pp 211 3 ISBN 978 1 135 85584 0 Factory and Workshop Acts 1901 to 1911 PDF The London Gazette 29 October 1915 Retrieved 27 June 2015 a b Cathy Hartley 15 April 2013 A Historical Dictionary of British Women Routledge p 364 ISBN 978 1 135 35533 3 Information provided by Sarah Rackham Clara s great niece 23 April 2018 Sir Raymond Streat 1987 Lancashire and Whitehall The Diary of Sir Raymond Streat Manchester University Press p 45 and note ISBN 978 0 7190 2390 3 Cheryl Law 22 April 2000 Suffrage and Power The Women s Movement 1918 1928 I B Tauris pp 123 4 ISBN 978 1 86064 478 8 Pimlott Ben 1986 Hugh Dalton Papermac ed London Macmillan pp 116 9 and 159 ISBN 0333412516 Logan 2002 Making women magistrates Archived 30 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine p 207 Louise A Jackson 11 January 2013 Child Sexual Abuse in Victorian England Routledge p 64 ISBN 978 1 134 73665 2 a b The Manchester Guardian Letters to the Editor 3 November 1933 via ProQuest Law 2000 Women A Modern Political Dictionary Bloomsbury Academic pp 127 8 ISBN 9781860645020 Logan 2002 Making women magistrates Archived 30 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine p 235 Mrs C D Rackham How we Manage Our Affairs I How we Elect our Councillors 5XX Daventry 6 November 1929 BBC Genome BBC Retrieved 28 June 2015 Mary Tabor Interview with Brian Harrison 1975 The Women s Library at the LSE Bellamy and Price 1993 p 236 Wimhurst Tamsin Cambridge Women and Work pdf PDF Cambridge and County Folk Museum Retrieved 28 July 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Clara Rackham amp oldid 1199719646, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.