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Sylvia Pankhurst

Estelle Sylvia Pankhurst (5 May 1882 – 27 September 1960) was a campaigning English feminist and socialist. Committed to organising working-class women in London's East End, and unwilling in 1914 to enter into a wartime political truce with the government, she broke with the suffragette leadership of her mother and sister, Emmeline and Christabel Pankhurst. She was inspired by the Russian Revolution and consulted Lenin, but defied Moscow in endorsing a syndicalist programme of workers' control and by criticising the emerging Soviet dictatorship.

Pankhurst was vocal in her support for Irish independence; for anti-colonial struggle throughout the British Empire; and for anti-fascist solidarity in Europe. Following its invasion by Italy in 1935, she was devoted to the cause of Ethiopia where, after the Second World War, she spent her remaining years as a guest of the restored emperor Haile Selassie. The international circulation of her pan-Africanist weekly The New Times and Ethiopia News was regarded by the British authorities as a factor in the development of nationalist sentiment in west Africa, and in the West Indies of Ras Tafari.

Early life

Estelle Sylvia Pankhurst (she later dropped her first forename) was born at Drayton Terrace, Old Trafford, Manchester, to Emmeline Pankhurst (née Goulden) and Dr. Richard Pankhurst.

Dr Pankhurst had been a founding member in 1872 of the National Society for Women's Suffrage, and played a role in drafting legislation that gave unmarried women householders a vote in local elections, and married women control over their property and earnings.[1] According to his daughter, he was also distinguished by his support for Irish Home Rule, being "the first English Parliamentary candidate to pledge himself to Irish self-government when he stood at a by-election in Manchester in 1883".[2]

The family home, for a period in Russell Square in London, hosted radical intelligentsia from both Britain and abroad. These included the Russian anarchist Peter Kropotkin, the Communard Louise Michel, and the Fabian Annie Besant.[3]

In 1893, Pankhurst's parents joined the Scottish miner Keir Hardie, a family friend, as founding members of the Independent Labour Party (ILP).[4][5]

Pankhurst and her sisters, Christabel and Adela, attended Manchester High School for Girls. In 1903, Pankhurst went on to train as an artist at the Manchester School of Art.[6] While completing an ILP commission to paint murals in a social hall the party had built in Salford, Pankhurst discovered that the hall, named after her father, would not admit women. It was an episode that helped convince her elder sister, Christabel, of the need for women to organise independently.[7]

In 1904, Pankhurst won a scholarship to the Royal College of Art (RCA) in London,[6] but she was incensed to learn that of 16 scholarships awarded by the college each year, 13 were reserved for men, and that, in response to a parliamentary question, Keir Hardie should be told that the authorities "did not contemplate any change".[7][8]

Suffragette

 
Sylvia Pankhurst carried by supporters, London, June 1914

The Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) was founded as an independent women's movement on 10 October 1903 in the family's Nelson Street home in Manchester.[9] Pankhurst's sister Christabel had persuaded a group of ILP women that women had to do the work of emancipation themselves, and that they needed a movement free of party affiliation.[10][4]

In 1906, Sylvia Pankhurst started to work full-time for WSPU, with Christabel and their mother. She devised the WSPU logo and various leaflets, banners, and posters as well as the decoration of its meeting halls.[11] In 1907 she toured industrial towns in England and Scotland, painting portraits of working-class women in their working environments.[12] She was later to write that she witnessed "so much distress", that she felt unable to return to her " beloved profession".[7] She became a full-time organiser, with Alice Hawkins and Mary Gawthorpe, helping establish the WSPU in Leicester.[13]

Pankhurst contributed articles to the WSPU's newspaper, Votes for Women and, in 1911, she published a propagandist history of the WSPU's campaign, The Suffragette: The History of the Women's Militant Suffrage Movement.[14] It included her witness account of Black Friday 18 November 1910, in which 300 women marched to the Houses of Parliament as part of their campaign to press for voting rights under the Conciliation Bill, and were met with violence, some of it sexual, from the Metropolitan Police and male bystanders.[15]

Between February 1913 and August 1914 Sylvia was arrested eight times for protest actions in London. After the passing of the so-called Cat and Mouse Act, she would be released for short periods to recuperate from hunger striking. Supporters would carry her back to her home and offices in Old Ford Street, Bow, where, when the police came to re-arrest her, street battles would ensue.[16]

In June 1914, supporters carried her to the entrance to the Strangers’ Gallery of the House of Commons where she announced that she would continue her hunger strike until the Prime Minister, H. H. Asquith, agreed to receive a deputation of East London women.[3] Less than two years before, Pankhurst had led a march on Mountjoy Prison in Dublin in solidarity with two English WPSU militants who, on his visit to the Irish capital, had thrown a hatchet, to which a suffrage message was attached, into the carriage in which Asquith was travelling with John Redmond and had attempted to set fire to the theatre in which the Prime Minister was to speak.[17][18] Asquith met the deputation of six working mothers.[19] After listening to them pay tribute to the work Pankhurst had done "in arousing the women of the East End to the importance of the vote in their daily lives", and describe their hardships,[20] the Prime Minister re-iterated the government's position: votes for women would have to await a general democratic reform of the franchise.[3] That did not occur until 1918, with votes extended to married, property owning women over thirty. Full voting equality took another ten years.

Women-led labour organising in America

Pankhurst undertook two speaking tours in the United States: in the first three months of 1911 and again at the beginning of 1912.[21] Writing letters home, mostly to Keir Hardie, she described herself as having to persuade her largely middle-class hosts that sweated female labour and mother-child poverty were as much a feature of the New World as the Old. She related her experience of going into factories, workshops, workhouses and prisons, of observing the application of Taylorist principles (rendering workers "part of the machinery"),[22] and of witnessing in the South the virtual criminalisation of African Americans.[21]

In January 1911 she was in Chicago. A strike wave, which had begun in 1909 with "the uprising of the 20,000" mostly immigrant, Jewish women workers in the sweatshops of New York, had spread to the city's clothing workers. Union pickets had been beaten and arrested. Two had been shot dead. Pankhurst visited strikers in their police cells, and observed that their conditions were as bad anything suffragettes had been subject to in Britain.[23]

That same month, in New York City, she met the pioneer socialist feminist Margaret Sanger, together with a twenty-year-old Elizabeth Gurley Flynn. A year later Flynn was to be the "Bread and Roses" strategist for the Industrial Workers of the World in the Lawrence textile strike.[24] Back in New York City at the beginning of 1912, Pankhurst observed in laundry workers the same ability to overcome through collective action the racial, ethnic and sexual divisions systematically exploited by employers .[25]

In Chicago, Pankhurst had been in the company of Zelie Passavant Emerson. Emerson had come to the Women's Trade Union League from the settlement house movement. Pankhurst had encountered settlement houses in England: as a child she had visited the first of these, Ancoats Brotherhood in Manchester. But in their outreach to women as both domestic and wage workers, in America she saw a potentially potent form of women-led activism.[25] Returning to London with Emerson, it was an example she sought to replicate in London's East End.[23]

Before being followed back to England by Emerson, in April 1912 Pankhurst joined the funeral procession in New York City for the 146 garment workers killed in the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire. Speaking beside labour organiser Rose Schneiderman, she said that their deaths were the result of working-class people being denied the right to represent themselves.[26]

East London socialist

In a first show of independence, and with the support of Keir Hardie, Julia Scurr, Eveline Haverfield, Nellie Cressall, and George Lansbury,[27] Pankhurst renamed the East London Federation of the WPSU, the East London Federation of Suffragettes. Although it was to remain a women's—and women-led—emancipatory movement, it was opened to trade unionists and to men.[3]

Pankhurst noted that "the East End was the greatest homogeneous working-class area accessible to the House of Commons by popular demonstrations" and proposed that the "creation of a woman’s movement in that great abyss of poverty would be a call and a rallying cry to the rise of similar movements in all parts of the country".[28] In this spirit, in November 1913, Pankhurst spoke at the Albert Hall, alongside James Connolly, in support of the men and women of the Irish Transport and General Workers' Union locked-out by Dublin employers.[29]

In January 1914, accompanied by Nora Smyth, Pankhurst visited her sister Christabel in Paris (were she was taking refuge from the Cat and Mouse Act) to discuss the future of the ELFS.[30] Christabel was insistent upon an independent, women-only WPSU, and was incredulous at her sister's unwillingness to attack socialists unpledged to women's suffrage.[31] Pankhurst was equally insistent on supporting popular and labour struggles, and critical of what she considered to the WPSU's social elitism. The sisters agreed that they and their organisations should go their separate ways.[30]

From the East London Federation of Suffragettes, in 1914 Pankhurst formed the Workers' Suffrage Federation.[27] At the suggestion of Emerson, Pankhurst started a WSF paper.[32] Provisionally titled Workers' Mate, the newspaper first appeared as The Woman's Dreadnought.[33] Nora Smyth (who helped pay the bills) and Mary Phillips were the principal contributors, with Smyth illustrating the paper with her photographs of domestic East End poverty.[34]

In the first edition of the paper (8 March 1914), Pankhurst's editorial defended their insistence on building a working-class suffragette campaign:[35]

Those Suffragists who say that it is the duty of the richer and more fortunate women to win the Vote, and that their poorer sisters need not feel themselves called upon to aid in the struggle appear, in using such arguments, to forget that it is the Vote for which we are fighting. The essential principle of the vote is that each one of us shall have a share of power to help himself or herself and us all. It is in direct opposition to the idea that some few, who are more favoured, shall help and teach and patronize the others.

This "struck a strong chord with many women socialists of an earlier generation who had serious reservations about the WSPU". Amy Hicks, a veteran of the Social Democratic Federation, supported the ELFS from its start;[36] as did Dora Montefiore who had left the WSPU in 1906,[37] and had also spoken on behalf of the Dublin workers at the Albert Hall.[38][39] The ELFS supported labour struggles and organised rent strikes.[23]

War-time organiser and dissident

 
WSF toy factory, London East End, 1915

The United Kingdom declaration of war upon Germany on 4 August 1914 found Pankhurst in Dublin investigating the Bachelor's Walk massacre. After allowing the initial popular enthusiasm for the war to pass, Pankhurst (who on 8 August decried the "heedless" rush to war of "men-made governments") and the WSF campaigned against conscription and in solidarity with conscientious objectors. These were positions for which she was attacked in the WSPU newspaper, patriotically renamed Britannia.[40]

Pankhurst retained the confidence of some WSPU veterans. She was invited by Elizabeth McCracken to Belfast, where Christabel's wartime directive had put a halt to particularly militant campaign,[41] to speak in support equal pay for women doing war work.[42] It was a demand Pankhurst championed along with universal food rationing, debt relief and improved allowances for soldiers wives. By helping to shift some the costs of the war off the back of women and poor, she believed that these were measures that might hasten its end.[43]

At same time, in the East End docks community, the ELFS/WSF sought to offer women practical assistance. They organised "cost-price" canteens, employment in a toy-making cooperative (whose product was in high demand in West-End shops),[44] and (in what had been a pub converted from the Gunmakers’ Arms to the Mothers ’ Arms) childcare offered on Montessori principles, a home visiting center, and free medical care and advice.[23] Not wishing to be diverted by actions that might be interpreted as charity (and for which wealthy patrons had to be solicited), Pankhurst had misgivings. She feared that "organised relief, even the kindliest and most understanding, might introduce some savour of patronage or condescension, and mar our affectionate comradeship, in which we were all equals". Mitigation was sought in a policy of paying women not less than the minimum wage paid to men in the area and by creating the separate League of Rights for Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Wives and Relatives, in which women who wished to challenge government benefit decisions were encouraged to act collectively.[43] Pankhurst later wrote:

It was my great joy that we were stimulating working women to speak up for themselves and their sort, and to master, despite their busy lives, the intricacies of Royal warrants and Army regulations, so as to secure the promised allowances, such as they were, for themselves and their neighbours.[45]

In 1915, Pankhurst supported the International Women's Peace Congress, held at The Hague. Her sister Christabel, meanwhile, seconded British diplomatic efforts, travelling to Russia after the February 1917 Revolution to rally support for the country's continued participation in the war.[46]

The 28 July 1917 edition of her paper appeared under a new title Worker's Dreadnought—WSF members "realised that solidarity between men and women was essential if they were going to win their fight"— and with a new strapline, "Socialism. Internationalism, Votes for All". It printed, three days in advance of The Times, Siegfried Sassoon’s "wilful defiance of military authority":[47] his statement that having become "a War of aggression and conquest", the conflict was being "deliberately prolonged by those who have the power to end it". It led to a police raid on the paper's offices. The issue of 6 October 1917 advocating a peace referendum among the troops, was destroyed and the type broken up.[28]

In May 1918, the WSF, in line with the paper, was renamed the Workers' Socialist Federation.[48] Reflecting her growing belief, in the wake of the October Revolution in Russia, that only Soviets could form the "guiding and co-ordinating machinery" for a socialist transformation, Pankhurst refused an invitation to stand for the Sheffield Hallam constituency in the December 1918 "Coupon election". The WSF did go on to support other socialist candidates,[49] but claimed to do so merely to "make propaganda ... for "the Soviet system [in which] those who make the laws are delegates chosen from amongst the workers themselves".[50]

Revolutionary

Left communist

By March 1919, Pankhurst was insisting that the choice was clear: socialists had to build "an industrial republic on Soviet lines," and abandon the Parliamentary system.[49] Lenin, who in his 1920 thesis Left-Wing Communism: An Infantile Disorder profiled the WSF,[51] advised Pankhurst that, tactically, the blanket rejection of parliamentarianism is a "mistake".[52][49]

In June 1920, the WSF co-hosted the inaugural meeting conference of the Communist Party (BSTI). In preparation for the meeting, Pankhurst published a manifesto in the Workers' Dreadnought. Rather than the developing Leninist model of the party-state and centrally planned economy, it embraced ideas closer to the councilism of the Dutch revolutionary Marxist Antonie Pannekoek and to the anarcho-syndicalism of her partner Silvio Corio.[20] Her contribution was to highlight the potential for extending their models of collective decision-making from the workplace into the domestic sphere. What she called Household Soviets would ensure that "mothers and those who are organisers of the family life of the community" are "adequately represented, and may take their due part in the management of society"[53][54]

In the event it was the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB), formed by the British Socialist Party in August 1920 (with Montefiore on its provisional council),[55] that gained Moscow's approval. In July, Pankhurst had smuggled herself into Soviet Russia to attend the Second Congress of the Comintern. There Lenin personally persuaded her that her objections were less important than unity, and that it would be possible for her to maintain a platform within the CPGB.[54]

On her return, Pankhurst was sufficiently enthused to offer a paean to the new Soviet society:[56]

From Russia... I brought away with me a prevailing memory of beautiful, well-grown children and healthy people. It appears that a happy contentment and buoyant, confident enthusiasm is radiating from the active makers of the revolution and builders of the proletarian state, to wider and wider sections of people...[57]

In September, with Willie Gallacher Pankhurst called a conference, inviting representatives of the Shop Stewards Movement, the CPGB, the Scottish Worker's Committee and the Glasgow Communist Group. All the groups at the conference bar Guy Aldred's Glasgow Communist Group agreed to merge with the Communist Party of Great Britain in January 1921.[49]

In the interim, in October 1920, she had been arrested in the offices of the Dreadnought and sentenced to six months for calling on dockers not to load arms for shipment to the anti-Bolshevik forces in Russia. Pankhurst said she considered a hunger strike but was afraid the weapon was no longer available as the government had just allowed Terence MacSwiney, Sinn Féin mayor of Cork, to die in Brixton Prison.[58]

While in Holloway, Pankhurst wrote poems published in 1922 as Writ on Cold Slate.[59] "Above all" they are the stories of her cellmates – "the young and the old, the homeless and the hungry, mothers, pregnant women and babies born in captivity – ‘dregs from the ancient system’s wheel of waste’".[60]

Break with Moscow

In September 1921, arguing that there had to be "free expression and circulation of opinion within the Party" and "an independent Communist voice, free to express its mind unhampered by Party discipline",[61] Pankhurst refused to hand over control of the Workers Dreadnought to the CPGB, and was expelled.[49]

In an "Open Letter to Lenin" in November, Pankhurst warned that the Bolsheviks had begun to "desert communism" and, by default, were opening Europe to path taken in Italy by the Fascisti.[62] She had serialised Rosa Luxemburg's 1918 critique of Bolshevik policy,[63] and had herself repeated Luxemburg's charge that in sanctioning the division of the land into small peasant holdings, the Bolsheviks had betrayed the revolution.[64] She had also opened the Dreadnought to Alexandra Kollontai’s "The Workers’ Opposition", a critique of the developing Soviet bureaucracy,[65][66] and to appeals from anarchists in Bolshevik prisons.[67][68]

By July 1923 Pankhurst concluded that "the term 'dictatorship of the proletariat' has been used to justify the dictatorship of a party clique of officials over their own party members and over the people at large". Socialism, as interpreted by the Bolsheviks, had been stripped of its emancipatory promise. In one of her last contributions to Dreadnought on the subject of Soviet regime she wrote:[69]

The Bolsheviks pose now as the prophets of centralised efficiency, trustification, State control and the discipline of the proletariat in the name of increased production... Russian workers remain wage slaves, and very poor ones, working, not from free will, but under compulsion of economic need, and kept in their subordinate position by ... State coercion.

Stirred by the example in Germany of the General Workers' Union (AAUD), and on the principle, advanced by Antonie Pannekoek,[70] that Communism can be achieved only by workers "acting where the stand in the process of production", the Dreadnought group called for an "All-Workers Revolutionary Union" (AWRU). This was to organise on industrial unionist lines, with recallable delegates elected, in rising succession, from workshops, factories, districts, and regions to national councils. With this One Big Union programme, in February 1922 they formed themselves as the Communist Workers' Party (CWP).[49]

When in July 1923 the CWP announced its campaign to build the AWRU, it was with the admission that they had no funds and very few people. It had managed to established just three branches outside London, in Sheffield, Plymouth and Portsmouth. Despite optimism concerning a rise in revolutionary sentiment, by the end of 1923 the CWP had dissolved.[49]

On 14 June 1924, Workers' Dreadnought itself ceased publication.[49] This was not before raising the alarm at the triumph fascism in Italy, condemning the then-Communist condoned white labourism in South Africa's Rand Rebellion,[71] and employing its first black correspondent, the Jamaican writer Claude McKay. With McKay, Pankhurst shared outrage at the Daily Herald's campaign against the French employment of black colonial troops in Germany.[72][73]

Writer

With her partner, the Italian libertarian socialist Silvio Erasmus Corio, Pankhurst retired to a cottage in then rural Woodford Green, Essex (now in the London Borough of Redbridge).[74]

While Corio ran a tearoom, Pankhurst researched and wrote an eclectic series of books: an anti-colonial historical-cultural treatise. India and the Earthly Paradise (1926);[75] a promotion of the international auxiliary language Interlingua, Delphos, or the future of International Language (1928);[76] Save the Mothers: A plea for measures to prevent the annual loss of about 3000 child-bearing mothers and 20,000 infant lives in England and Wales and a similar grievous wastage in other countries (1930); her largely autobiographical accounts,The Suffragette Movement (1931) and The Home Front (1932); and a biography of her mother, The Life of Emmeline Pankhurst (1935), who, since the birth of Pankhurst's son Richard in 1927, had broken off all contact.[77]

Anti-imperialist, anti-Fascist

 
Pankhurst protesting in Trafalgar Square, London, against British policies in India, 1932

While the Dreadnought did not have a consistent line on the 1916 Easter Rising in Dublin,[3] an editorial written by Pankhurst began: "Justice can make but one reply to the Irish rebellion and that is the demand that Ireland should be allowed to govern itself". She put the Rising in the context of the resistance of Unionists to Irish Home Rule, and noted that it was they "who first armed". She lauded the rebels' "high ideals", not least their promise of equal opportunities and equal rights for all the citizens of the Republic.[78]

Coinciding with highpoint of her revolutionary zeal, the Irish War of Independence occasioned the suggestion in the Dreadnought that "with their industries being destroyed by English capitalists, and with their lives always in danger from the military . . . Irish men and women are compelled to become Communists in word and deed". The paper was open to assertions of James Connolly's daughter Nora that "the awakening of a revolutionary spirit (caused by the insurrection of 1916) has come an intensive growth of revolutionary thought". In the event, Pankhurst was disappointed by the outcome: the Anglo-Irish Treaty of 1921 described in the Dreadnought as "a sad, humiliating compromise of the stand for a completely independent Irish Republic".[78]

In India and the Earthly Paradise, published in Bombay in 1926,[75] Pankhurst proposed that the social and family life in ancient India had the essential features of communism: equality, fraternity and mutuality. These were corrupted and overridden by priests, rulers and foreign invaders, up to, and including, the British, who introduced, or reinforced, racial and caste distinctions. The work has been described as a "romantic Communist’ contribution to Indian nationalism" which may have been the "result of [Pankhurst's] contacts with fringe elements of that movement".[79]

There was no publisher for the book in Britain, but it was background to Pankhurst's outspoken interventions on British policy in India. She addressed protests against the failure to grant India meaningful self-government and against the use of British air power against insurgent villages in Burma and the North-West Frontier (a stand she memorialised by working with the sculptor Eric Benfield to create, in 1936, the "Stone Bomb" anti-war monument in Woodford Green).[80]

In 1934, the French feminist Gabrielle Duchêne organized the World Assembly of Women, and chaired its World Committee of Women against War and Fascism (CMF: Comité mondial des femmes contre la guerre et le fascisme).[81] Pankhurst was among the non-Communist British sponsors of the Committee along with Charlotte Despard, Ellen Wilkinson, Vera Brittain and Storm Jameson,[82] the Six Point Group and the National Union of Women Teachers.[83] In 1935 the Committee pooled resources with the League against Imperialism and the West-African Union des Travailleurs Nègres to promote freedom of speech and to protest repression throughout the European colonial empires.[84] The Women's World Committee was active in support of the International Committee for the Defense of the Ethiopian People, which held its first meeting on 2 September 1935 before the Italian invasion of Ethiopia was launched in October 1935.[84]

Having already in her Open Letter to Lenin (1922) identified Fascism as a gathering threat in Europe, Pankhurst acted in support of Italian exiles (her partner Silvio Corio among them). She was a founding member of the anti-fascist Friends of Italian Freedom, the Italian Information Bureau and the Women's International Matteotti Committee.[77] Later, in the 1930s, she became a vice-president of the League for the Boycott of Aggressor Nations and the Anti-Nazi Council which sought trade embargoes against Mussolini's Italy and Hitler's Germany.[85]

Correspondence with George Bernard Shaw (who professed to be unmoved by the murder of Giacomo Matteotti) suggest that her alarm at the advance fascism moderated a once doctrinaire dismissal of capitalist democracy. To Shaw she wrote (9 July 1935):[86]

You have said that "liberty, as understood by the upholders of capitalism, is a putrefying corpse". To a large extent you are right, for if people are slaves of economic stress, as so many are everywhere today, they often find themselves unable to exercise the liberty of standing up for their convictions as they would desire, but at least in the non-Fascist countries, most of us are able to do propaganda for our convictions, as you and I do.

Pankhurst wrote to Winston Churchill, her constituency MP, concurring with him on the need for a more resolute foreign policy, but was unable to persuade him of the need for immediate action against the Italian invasion of Ethiopia.[87]

Friend of Ethiopia

Opponent of British colonial ambition

From 1936, MI5 monitored Pankhurst's correspondence. In 1940 she wrote to Viscount Swinton, then chairing a committee investigating Fifth Columnists, and enclosed lists of active Fascists still at large and of anti-Fascists who had been interned. A copy of this letter on MI5's file carries a note in Swinton's hand reading: "I should think a most doubtful source of information."[88] Meanwhile, the authorities took an increasingly grim view of her anti-colonial agitation, heightened from 1935 as she became "the main protagonist of the ‘print activism’" in the cause of Ethiopia.[89]

In July 1935, representing the Women's Committee against War and Fascism, Pankhurst together with George Brown[90] (League of Coloured Peoples), Reginald Reynolds (No More War movement) and Reginald Bridgeman (League against Imperialism) organised a public protest in support of Ethiopia at Essex Hall in London.[91] After the Italian invasion commenced in October, she began publication of The New Times and Ethiopia News. As well as reporting Italian atrocities in Ethiopia (and from July 1936, Francoist atrocities in Spain), it provided an outlet for anti-colonialist writers elsewhere in Africa.[92] Nancy Cunard, for whom it was no accident that the Spanish fascist rebellion first broke out in an African colony (Spanish Morocco), also wrote for the paper, as did Jawaharlal Nehru.[93]

Pankhurst visited Ethiopia in 1944 and observed that, although "liberated" by the British, it was still under effective colonial occupation. Returning from a second visit to Ethiopia in 1950-51 through former Italian Eritrea she learned that the British administration had been dismantling many port installations – a policy she denounced in a pamphlet "Why are we destroying the Ethiopian ports?" She unsettled the British authorities by insisting that Eritrea (Ethiopia's "lost" Red Sea province), Djibouti and Somaliland be "united" with Ethiopia—this at a time when at least some within these territories saw union as the surest guarantee against the return of colonial rule.[94] Already in 1947, a Foreign Office official had been moved to comment: "we agree with you in your evident wish that this horrible old harridan should be choked to death with her own pamphlets".[95]

The New Times and Ethiopia News remained in circulation for 20 years and at its height sold 40,000 copies weekly. This included an extensive circulation throughout West Africa and the West Indies.[96] In 1956, the Governor of Jamaica, Sir Hugh Foot, was informed that Pankhurst's paper was radicalising a "sect" who called themselves the "Rastafari". At the same time, he was cautioned that she could be relied upon to "react violently to any suggestion that her paper should not be made available to all and sundry".[97] In some Crown colonies, such as Sierra Leone from where the nationalist I. T. A. Wallace Johnson contributed pieces, the paper had, indeed, been banned.[89]

Friendship with Haile Selassie

Pankhurst did have political contact with T. Ras Makonnen, the West Indian pan-Africanist (a Guyanese of Ethiopian descent),[98] but there is no indication that she was engaged with the new spiritual movement in Jamaica. Such, nonetheless, was her seeming hagiography of Haile Selassie that she has since been proposed as the "first white Rastafarian".[99]

Her biographer Patricia Romero suggests that Pankhurst was overwhelmed by Haile Selassie so that "her republicanism departed from Waterloo station in June 1936, when the emperor’s train rolled in" and she encountered him for the first time.[100] Others explain the devotional relationship, at least in part, by reference to her strong anti-imperialist, anti-fascist and anti-racist sympathies:[101] "Pankhurst loved to defend the underdog and she saw in Selassie much more a defeated victim of fascism than a reactionary monarch".[99] According to her son, Richard, her mother did not hestitate to tell Haile Selassie that, as a life-long republican, she supported him only because of the cause he represented, and that while she was cautious about involving herself in Ethiopia's domestic politics, she did voice support for trade unions and for universal suffrage.[102]

In 1956, encouraged by Haile Selassie to aid with women's development, Pankhurst and her son Richard moved into an imperial guest house in the Ethiopian capital to Addis Ababa (Corio had died in 1954).[103] She raised funds for Ethiopia's first teaching hospital, and wrote extensively on Ethiopian art and culture. She dedicated Ethiopia: A Cultural History (1955)[92] to Haile Selassie: "Guardian of Education, Pioneer of Progress, Leader and Defender of his People in Peace and War".[104]

Death and commemoration

 
Pankhurst's grave

Pankhurst died in Addis Ababa in 1960, aged 78, and received a full state funeral at which Haile Selassie named her "an honorary Ethiopian". She is the only foreigner buried in front of Holy Trinity Cathedral in Addis Ababa, in a section reserved for patriots of the Italian war.[105]

Pankhurst's name and picture (and those of 58 other women's suffrage supporters) are on the plinth of the statue of Millicent Fawcett in Parliament Square.[106][107][108] There is a two-dimensional silhouette constructed of Corten steel representing Pankhurst as a campaigning suffragette in Mile End Park, Bethnal Green, London, England.[109][110] She is also the subject of a mural, completed 2018 by Jerome Davenport, on the gable-end of the Lord Morpeth pub on Old Ford Road in Bow, London. It is next door to the house in which she lived between 1914 and 1924 while working with the ELFS and WSF.[111]

In October 2022, the Old Vic Theatre announced for 25 January 2023 the world premiere of Sylvia, a hip hop musical about Pankhurst. Directed and choreographed by Kate Prince, it seek to tell her story to "younger and more diverse audiences".[112]

Family

Pankhurst objected in principle to entering into a marriage and to taking a husband's name. Near the end of the First World War, she began living with Italian anarchist Silvio Corio[113] and moved to Woodford Green, where she lived for over 30 years — a blue plaque and Pankhurst Green opposite Woodford tube station commemorate her ties to the area. In Woodford Green, England, 1927, at the age of 45, she gave birth to a son, Richard.[114] As she refused to marry the child's father, her mother broke ties with her and did not speak to her again.[115] Richard became a leading student of Ethiopian history and the first director of the Institute of Ethiopian Studies at Addis Ababa University.[116] His son, Pankhurst's grandson, Alula Pankhurst is an Ethiopian scholar and social development consultant in Addis Ababa, and has been a contributor to the Ethiopia Observer which continues to publish.[117]

Art

From an early age Pankhurst had an ambition to become a "painter and draughtsman in the service of the great movements for social betterment".[118] She trained at Manchester School of Art (1900–02) and then the Royal College of Art in London (1904–06). As part of her work campaigning for the WSPU, for which she created designs for a range of banners, jewellery and graphic logos. Her motif of the 'angel of freedom', a trumpeting emblem had wider appeal across the campaign for women's suffrage, appearing on banners, political pamphlets, cups and saucers.[119]

An exhibition of her artistic works took place at Tate Modern in 2013–14. Information about the exhibition, together with photographs of the artwork itself, is part of the Sheffield Hallam University Research Archive.[120]

Pankhurst found it difficult to reconcile her artistic vocation with her political activities, eventually deciding that they were incompatible. She said: "Mothers came to me with their wasted little ones. I saw starvation look at me from patient eyes. I knew that I should never return to my art".[121] By 1912, she had all but abandoned her artistic career in order to concentrate on her political activism.[122]

Writings (selection)

  • 1911: The Suffragette: The History of the Women's Militant Suffrage Movement, London: Gay & Hancock
  • 1913: "Forcibly Fed: The Story of My Four Weeks in Holloway Gaol", McClure's Magazine, August, pp. 87–92.
  • 1918: Education of the Masses. London: Worker's Dreadnought Publications.
  • 1920: "A constitution for British soviets. Points for a communist programme". Workers' Dreadnought, 19 June.
  • 1921: "Soviet Russia as I saw it", Workers' Dreadnought, 16 April.
  • 1921: Soviet Russia as I Saw It. London: Worker's Dreadnought Publications.
  • 1922: Writ on Cold Slate. Prison Poems by Sylvia Pankhurst. London: Worker's Dreadnought Publications. Reissued 2021 by Smokestack Books.
  • 1921: "Free discussion", Workers' Dreadnought, 17 September.
  • 1921-1923: "Communism and its Tactics", Workers' Dreadnought (serialisation).
  • 1922: "Open Letter to Lenin". Workers Dreadnaught. 4 November.
  • 1926: India and the Earthly Paradise. Bombay: Sunshine Publishing House.
  • 1927: Delphos or the Future of International Language, London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co
  • 1930: Save the Mothers: A plea for measures to prevent the annual loss of about 3000 child-bearing mothers and 20,000 infant lives in England and Wales. London: A.A. Knopf
  • 1931: The Suffragette Movement: An Intimate Account of Persons and Ideals. Reissued 1984 by Chatto & Windus.
  • 1932 The Home Front: A Mirror to Life in England During the First World War. Reissued 1987 by The Cresset Library.
  • 1935: The Life of Emmeline Pankhurst, Boston: Houghton Mifflin
  • 1951: Ex-Italian Somaliland. Digitized 2006 by the Philosophical Library.
  • 1953: with Richard Pankhust, Ethiopia and Eritrea. the last phase of the reunion struggle 1941-52. Woodford Green: Lalibela House.
  • 1955: Ethiopia: A Cultural History. Woodford Green: Lalibela House.
  • 1987: E. Sylvia Pankhurst - Portrait of a Radical, London: Yale University Press.
  • 1993: A Sylvia Pankhurst Reader, ed. by Kathryn Dodd, Manchester University Press.
  • 2019: A Suffragette in America, Reflections on Prisoners, Pickets and Political Change, Ed. Katherine Connelly. London: Pluto Press.

Newspapers, Journals

  • Womens' Dreadnought. 1914–1917.
  • Workers' Dreadnought. 1917–1924.
  • Germinal. 1923.[103]
  • The New Times and Ethiopia News 1935–1956.
  • Ethiopia Observer. 1956–present.

Secondary literature

  • Richard Pankhurst, Sylvia Pankhurst: Artist and Crusader, An Intimate Portrait (Virago Ltd, 1979), ISBN 0-448-22840-8
  • Richard Pankhurst, Sylvia Pankhurst: Counsel for Ethiopia (Hollywood, CA: Tsehai, 2003) London: Global Publishing ISBN 0972317228
  • Ian Bullock and Richard Pankhurst (eds) Sylvia Pankhurst. From Artist to Anti-Fascist (Macmillan, 1992) ISBN 0-333-54618-0
  • Shirley Harrison, Sylvia Pankhurst, A Crusading Life 1882–1960 (Aurum Press, 2003) ISBN 1854109057
  • Sylvia Pankhurst, The Rebellious Suffragette (Golden Guides Press Ltd, 2012) ISBN 1780950187
  • Shirley Harrison, Sylvia Pankhurst, Citizen of the World (Hornbeam Publishing Ltd, 2009), ISBN 978-0-9553963-2-8
  • Barbara Castle, Sylvia and Christabel Pankhurst (Penguin Books, 1987), ISBN 0-14-008761-3
  • Martin Pugh, The Pankhursts: The History of One Radical Family (Penguin Books, 2002) ISBN 0099520435
  • Patricia W. Romero, E. Sylvia Pankhurst. Portrait of a Radical (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1987) ISBN 0300036914
  • Barbara Winslow, Sylvia Pankhurst: Sexual Politics and Political Activism (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1996); ISBN 0-312-16268-5
  • Katherine Connolly, Sylvia Pankhurst. Suffragette, Socialist and Scourge of Empire (Pluto Press, 2013); ISBN 9780745333229
  • Katy Norris, Sylvia Pankhurst (Eiderdown Books, 2019); ISBN 978-1-9160416-0-8
  • Rachel Holmes, Sylvia Pankhurst. Natural Born Rebel (Francis Boutle Publishers, 2020); ISBN 978-1-4088804-1-8

See also

References

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  9. ^ Purvis, June (2002). Emmeline Pankhurst: A Biography. London: Routledge. p. 67. ISBN 978-0-415-23978-3.
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External links

  • Sylviapankhurst.com, a comprehensive information resource about Sylvia Pankhurst from Hornbeam Publishing Limited, sponsored by the UK Heritage Lottery Fund
  • Sylvia Pankhurst biography, spartacus-educational.com; accessed 4 April 2014
  • Sylvia Pankhurst Archive, libcom.org; accessed 4 April 2014
  • "Archival material relating to Sylvia Pankhurst". UK National Archives.  
  • Estelle Sylvia Pankhurst papers archived at the International Institute of Social History in Amsterdam
  • Application for naturalisation of Mrs Margarethe Morgenstern and her husband Erwin, including written plea from Pankhurst
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived 27 October 2009), two articles by Pankhurst and Anton Pannekoek, first published in the Workers Dreadnought in 1922; first published as a pamphlet in 1974 by Workers Voice, a Liverpudlian Communist group.
  • Three pamphlets detailing the work of Sylvia Pankhurst as an anti-Bolshevik Communist, "Anti-Parliamentarism and Communism in Britain, 1917–1921" by R.F. Jones, Anti-Parliamentary Communism: The Movement for Workers Councils in Britain, Class War on the Home Front
  • Sylvia Pankhurst: Everything is Possible – A documentary that chronicles the life and political campaigns of Sylvia Pankhurst and includes an exclusive interview with her son Richard Pankhurst and his wife Rita. The accompanying website includes images of a large number of security files held on Pankhurst, from the collection at the National Archives.
  • Profile, nrs.harvard.edu; accessed 4 April 2014
  • Profile, radcliffe.harvard.edu (Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University)
  • by Sylvia Pankhurst, McClure's (August 1913)
  • Works by Sylvia Pankhurst at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  

sylvia, pankhurst, estelle, 1882, september, 1960, campaigning, english, feminist, socialist, committed, organising, working, class, women, london, east, unwilling, 1914, enter, into, wartime, political, truce, with, government, broke, with, suffragette, leade. Estelle Sylvia Pankhurst 5 May 1882 27 September 1960 was a campaigning English feminist and socialist Committed to organising working class women in London s East End and unwilling in 1914 to enter into a wartime political truce with the government she broke with the suffragette leadership of her mother and sister Emmeline and Christabel Pankhurst She was inspired by the Russian Revolution and consulted Lenin but defied Moscow in endorsing a syndicalist programme of workers control and by criticising the emerging Soviet dictatorship Sylvia PankhurstBornEstelle Sylvia Pankhurst 1882 05 05 5 May 1882Old Trafford Manchester EnglandDied27 September 1960 1960 09 27 aged 78 Addis Ababa Federation of Ethiopia and EritreaBurial placeHoly Trinity Cathedral Addis AbabaAlma materManchester School of Art Royal College of ArtOccupation s Political activist writer artistOrganisation s Women s Social and Political Union East London Federation of Suffragettes Women s International League for Peace and Freedom World Committee Against War and FascismPolitical partyIndependent Labour Party Workers Socialist Federation Communist Workers PartyPankhurst was vocal in her support for Irish independence for anti colonial struggle throughout the British Empire and for anti fascist solidarity in Europe Following its invasion by Italy in 1935 she was devoted to the cause of Ethiopia where after the Second World War she spent her remaining years as a guest of the restored emperor Haile Selassie The international circulation of her pan Africanist weekly The New Times and Ethiopia News was regarded by the British authorities as a factor in the development of nationalist sentiment in west Africa and in the West Indies of Ras Tafari Contents 1 Early life 2 Suffragette 3 Women led labour organising in America 4 East London socialist 5 War time organiser and dissident 6 Revolutionary 6 1 Left communist 6 2 Break with Moscow 7 Writer 8 Anti imperialist anti Fascist 9 Friend of Ethiopia 9 1 Opponent of British colonial ambition 9 2 Friendship with Haile Selassie 10 Death and commemoration 11 Family 12 Art 13 Writings selection 14 Newspapers Journals 15 Secondary literature 16 See also 17 References 18 External linksEarly life EditEstelle Sylvia Pankhurst she later dropped her first forename was born at Drayton Terrace Old Trafford Manchester to Emmeline Pankhurst nee Goulden and Dr Richard Pankhurst Dr Pankhurst had been a founding member in 1872 of the National Society for Women s Suffrage and played a role in drafting legislation that gave unmarried women householders a vote in local elections and married women control over their property and earnings 1 According to his daughter he was also distinguished by his support for Irish Home Rule being the first English Parliamentary candidate to pledge himself to Irish self government when he stood at a by election in Manchester in 1883 2 The family home for a period in Russell Square in London hosted radical intelligentsia from both Britain and abroad These included the Russian anarchist Peter Kropotkin the Communard Louise Michel and the Fabian Annie Besant 3 In 1893 Pankhurst s parents joined the Scottish miner Keir Hardie a family friend as founding members of the Independent Labour Party ILP 4 5 Pankhurst and her sisters Christabel and Adela attended Manchester High School for Girls In 1903 Pankhurst went on to train as an artist at the Manchester School of Art 6 While completing an ILP commission to paint murals in a social hall the party had built in Salford Pankhurst discovered that the hall named after her father would not admit women It was an episode that helped convince her elder sister Christabel of the need for women to organise independently 7 In 1904 Pankhurst won a scholarship to the Royal College of Art RCA in London 6 but she was incensed to learn that of 16 scholarships awarded by the college each year 13 were reserved for men and that in response to a parliamentary question Keir Hardie should be told that the authorities did not contemplate any change 7 8 Suffragette Edit Sylvia Pankhurst carried by supporters London June 1914 The Women s Social and Political Union WSPU was founded as an independent women s movement on 10 October 1903 in the family s Nelson Street home in Manchester 9 Pankhurst s sister Christabel had persuaded a group of ILP women that women had to do the work of emancipation themselves and that they needed a movement free of party affiliation 10 4 In 1906 Sylvia Pankhurst started to work full time for WSPU with Christabel and their mother She devised the WSPU logo and various leaflets banners and posters as well as the decoration of its meeting halls 11 In 1907 she toured industrial towns in England and Scotland painting portraits of working class women in their working environments 12 She was later to write that she witnessed so much distress that she felt unable to return to her beloved profession 7 She became a full time organiser with Alice Hawkins and Mary Gawthorpe helping establish the WSPU in Leicester 13 Pankhurst contributed articles to the WSPU s newspaper Votes for Women and in 1911 she published a propagandist history of the WSPU s campaign The Suffragette The History of the Women s Militant Suffrage Movement 14 It included her witness account of Black Friday 18 November 1910 in which 300 women marched to the Houses of Parliament as part of their campaign to press for voting rights under the Conciliation Bill and were met with violence some of it sexual from the Metropolitan Police and male bystanders 15 Between February 1913 and August 1914 Sylvia was arrested eight times for protest actions in London After the passing of the so called Cat and Mouse Act she would be released for short periods to recuperate from hunger striking Supporters would carry her back to her home and offices in Old Ford Street Bow where when the police came to re arrest her street battles would ensue 16 In June 1914 supporters carried her to the entrance to the Strangers Gallery of the House of Commons where she announced that she would continue her hunger strike until the Prime Minister H H Asquith agreed to receive a deputation of East London women 3 Less than two years before Pankhurst had led a march on Mountjoy Prison in Dublin in solidarity with two English WPSU militants who on his visit to the Irish capital had thrown a hatchet to which a suffrage message was attached into the carriage in which Asquith was travelling with John Redmond and had attempted to set fire to the theatre in which the Prime Minister was to speak 17 18 Asquith met the deputation of six working mothers 19 After listening to them pay tribute to the work Pankhurst had done in arousing the women of the East End to the importance of the vote in their daily lives and describe their hardships 20 the Prime Minister re iterated the government s position votes for women would have to await a general democratic reform of the franchise 3 That did not occur until 1918 with votes extended to married property owning women over thirty Full voting equality took another ten years Women led labour organising in America EditPankhurst undertook two speaking tours in the United States in the first three months of 1911 and again at the beginning of 1912 21 Writing letters home mostly to Keir Hardie she described herself as having to persuade her largely middle class hosts that sweated female labour and mother child poverty were as much a feature of the New World as the Old She related her experience of going into factories workshops workhouses and prisons of observing the application of Taylorist principles rendering workers part of the machinery 22 and of witnessing in the South the virtual criminalisation of African Americans 21 In January 1911 she was in Chicago A strike wave which had begun in 1909 with the uprising of the 20 000 mostly immigrant Jewish women workers in the sweatshops of New York had spread to the city s clothing workers Union pickets had been beaten and arrested Two had been shot dead Pankhurst visited strikers in their police cells and observed that their conditions were as bad anything suffragettes had been subject to in Britain 23 That same month in New York City she met the pioneer socialist feminist Margaret Sanger together with a twenty year old Elizabeth Gurley Flynn A year later Flynn was to be the Bread and Roses strategist for the Industrial Workers of the World in the Lawrence textile strike 24 Back in New York City at the beginning of 1912 Pankhurst observed in laundry workers the same ability to overcome through collective action the racial ethnic and sexual divisions systematically exploited by employers 25 In Chicago Pankhurst had been in the company of Zelie Passavant Emerson Emerson had come to the Women s Trade Union League from the settlement house movement Pankhurst had encountered settlement houses in England as a child she had visited the first of these Ancoats Brotherhood in Manchester But in their outreach to women as both domestic and wage workers in America she saw a potentially potent form of women led activism 25 Returning to London with Emerson it was an example she sought to replicate in London s East End 23 Before being followed back to England by Emerson in April 1912 Pankhurst joined the funeral procession in New York City for the 146 garment workers killed in the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire Speaking beside labour organiser Rose Schneiderman she said that their deaths were the result of working class people being denied the right to represent themselves 26 East London socialist EditIn a first show of independence and with the support of Keir Hardie Julia Scurr Eveline Haverfield Nellie Cressall and George Lansbury 27 Pankhurst renamed the East London Federation of the WPSU the East London Federation of Suffragettes Although it was to remain a women s and women led emancipatory movement it was opened to trade unionists and to men 3 Pankhurst noted that the East End was the greatest homogeneous working class area accessible to the House of Commons by popular demonstrations and proposed that the creation of a woman s movement in that great abyss of poverty would be a call and a rallying cry to the rise of similar movements in all parts of the country 28 In this spirit in November 1913 Pankhurst spoke at the Albert Hall alongside James Connolly in support of the men and women of the Irish Transport and General Workers Union locked out by Dublin employers 29 In January 1914 accompanied by Nora Smyth Pankhurst visited her sister Christabel in Paris were she was taking refuge from the Cat and Mouse Act to discuss the future of the ELFS 30 Christabel was insistent upon an independent women only WPSU and was incredulous at her sister s unwillingness to attack socialists unpledged to women s suffrage 31 Pankhurst was equally insistent on supporting popular and labour struggles and critical of what she considered to the WPSU s social elitism The sisters agreed that they and their organisations should go their separate ways 30 From the East London Federation of Suffragettes in 1914 Pankhurst formed the Workers Suffrage Federation 27 At the suggestion of Emerson Pankhurst started a WSF paper 32 Provisionally titled Workers Mate the newspaper first appeared as The Woman s Dreadnought 33 Nora Smyth who helped pay the bills and Mary Phillips were the principal contributors with Smyth illustrating the paper with her photographs of domestic East End poverty 34 In the first edition of the paper 8 March 1914 Pankhurst s editorial defended their insistence on building a working class suffragette campaign 35 Those Suffragists who say that it is the duty of the richer and more fortunate women to win the Vote and that their poorer sisters need not feel themselves called upon to aid in the struggle appear in using such arguments to forget that it is the Vote for which we are fighting The essential principle of the vote is that each one of us shall have a share of power to help himself or herself and us all It is in direct opposition to the idea that some few who are more favoured shall help and teach and patronize the others This struck a strong chord with many women socialists of an earlier generation who had serious reservations about the WSPU Amy Hicks a veteran of the Social Democratic Federation supported the ELFS from its start 36 as did Dora Montefiore who had left the WSPU in 1906 37 and had also spoken on behalf of the Dublin workers at the Albert Hall 38 39 The ELFS supported labour struggles and organised rent strikes 23 War time organiser and dissident Edit WSF toy factory London East End 1915 The United Kingdom declaration of war upon Germany on 4 August 1914 found Pankhurst in Dublin investigating the Bachelor s Walk massacre After allowing the initial popular enthusiasm for the war to pass Pankhurst who on 8 August decried the heedless rush to war of men made governments and the WSF campaigned against conscription and in solidarity with conscientious objectors These were positions for which she was attacked in the WSPU newspaper patriotically renamed Britannia 40 Pankhurst retained the confidence of some WSPU veterans She was invited by Elizabeth McCracken to Belfast where Christabel s wartime directive had put a halt to particularly militant campaign 41 to speak in support equal pay for women doing war work 42 It was a demand Pankhurst championed along with universal food rationing debt relief and improved allowances for soldiers wives By helping to shift some the costs of the war off the back of women and poor she believed that these were measures that might hasten its end 43 At same time in the East End docks community the ELFS WSF sought to offer women practical assistance They organised cost price canteens employment in a toy making cooperative whose product was in high demand in West End shops 44 and in what had been a pub converted from the Gunmakers Arms to the Mothers Arms childcare offered on Montessori principles a home visiting center and free medical care and advice 23 Not wishing to be diverted by actions that might be interpreted as charity and for which wealthy patrons had to be solicited Pankhurst had misgivings She feared that organised relief even the kindliest and most understanding might introduce some savour of patronage or condescension and mar our affectionate comradeship in which we were all equals Mitigation was sought in a policy of paying women not less than the minimum wage paid to men in the area and by creating the separate League of Rights for Soldiers and Sailors Wives and Relatives in which women who wished to challenge government benefit decisions were encouraged to act collectively 43 Pankhurst later wrote It was my great joy that we were stimulating working women to speak up for themselves and their sort and to master despite their busy lives the intricacies of Royal warrants and Army regulations so as to secure the promised allowances such as they were for themselves and their neighbours 45 In 1915 Pankhurst supported the International Women s Peace Congress held at The Hague Her sister Christabel meanwhile seconded British diplomatic efforts travelling to Russia after the February 1917 Revolution to rally support for the country s continued participation in the war 46 The 28 July 1917 edition of her paper appeared under a new title Worker s Dreadnought WSF members realised that solidarity between men and women was essential if they were going to win their fight and with a new strapline Socialism Internationalism Votes for All It printed three days in advance of The Times Siegfried Sassoon s wilful defiance of military authority 47 his statement that having become a War of aggression and conquest the conflict was being deliberately prolonged by those who have the power to end it It led to a police raid on the paper s offices The issue of 6 October 1917 advocating a peace referendum among the troops was destroyed and the type broken up 28 In May 1918 the WSF in line with the paper was renamed the Workers Socialist Federation 48 Reflecting her growing belief in the wake of the October Revolution in Russia that only Soviets could form the guiding and co ordinating machinery for a socialist transformation Pankhurst refused an invitation to stand for the Sheffield Hallam constituency in the December 1918 Coupon election The WSF did go on to support other socialist candidates 49 but claimed to do so merely to make propaganda for the Soviet system in which those who make the laws are delegates chosen from amongst the workers themselves 50 Revolutionary EditLeft communist Edit By March 1919 Pankhurst was insisting that the choice was clear socialists had to build an industrial republic on Soviet lines and abandon the Parliamentary system 49 Lenin who in his 1920 thesis Left Wing Communism An Infantile Disorder profiled the WSF 51 advised Pankhurst that tactically the blanket rejection of parliamentarianism is a mistake 52 49 In June 1920 the WSF co hosted the inaugural meeting conference of the Communist Party BSTI In preparation for the meeting Pankhurst published a manifesto in the Workers Dreadnought Rather than the developing Leninist model of the party state and centrally planned economy it embraced ideas closer to the councilism of the Dutch revolutionary Marxist Antonie Pannekoek and to the anarcho syndicalism of her partner Silvio Corio 20 Her contribution was to highlight the potential for extending their models of collective decision making from the workplace into the domestic sphere What she called Household Soviets would ensure that mothers and those who are organisers of the family life of the community are adequately represented and may take their due part in the management of society 53 54 In the event it was the Communist Party of Great Britain CPGB formed by the British Socialist Party in August 1920 with Montefiore on its provisional council 55 that gained Moscow s approval In July Pankhurst had smuggled herself into Soviet Russia to attend the Second Congress of the Comintern There Lenin personally persuaded her that her objections were less important than unity and that it would be possible for her to maintain a platform within the CPGB 54 On her return Pankhurst was sufficiently enthused to offer a paean to the new Soviet society 56 From Russia I brought away with me a prevailing memory of beautiful well grown children and healthy people It appears that a happy contentment and buoyant confident enthusiasm is radiating from the active makers of the revolution and builders of the proletarian state to wider and wider sections of people 57 In September with Willie Gallacher Pankhurst called a conference inviting representatives of the Shop Stewards Movement the CPGB the Scottish Worker s Committee and the Glasgow Communist Group All the groups at the conference bar Guy Aldred s Glasgow Communist Group agreed to merge with the Communist Party of Great Britain in January 1921 49 In the interim in October 1920 she had been arrested in the offices of the Dreadnought and sentenced to six months for calling on dockers not to load arms for shipment to the anti Bolshevik forces in Russia Pankhurst said she considered a hunger strike but was afraid the weapon was no longer available as the government had just allowed Terence MacSwiney Sinn Fein mayor of Cork to die in Brixton Prison 58 While in Holloway Pankhurst wrote poems published in 1922 as Writ on Cold Slate 59 Above all they are the stories of her cellmates the young and the old the homeless and the hungry mothers pregnant women and babies born in captivity dregs from the ancient system s wheel of waste 60 Break with Moscow Edit In September 1921 arguing that there had to be free expression and circulation of opinion within the Party and an independent Communist voice free to express its mind unhampered by Party discipline 61 Pankhurst refused to hand over control of the Workers Dreadnought to the CPGB and was expelled 49 In an Open Letter to Lenin in November Pankhurst warned that the Bolsheviks had begun to desert communism and by default were opening Europe to path taken in Italy by the Fascisti 62 She had serialised Rosa Luxemburg s 1918 critique of Bolshevik policy 63 and had herself repeated Luxemburg s charge that in sanctioning the division of the land into small peasant holdings the Bolsheviks had betrayed the revolution 64 She had also opened the Dreadnought to Alexandra Kollontai s The Workers Opposition a critique of the developing Soviet bureaucracy 65 66 and to appeals from anarchists in Bolshevik prisons 67 68 By July 1923 Pankhurst concluded that the term dictatorship of the proletariat has been used to justify the dictatorship of a party clique of officials over their own party members and over the people at large Socialism as interpreted by the Bolsheviks had been stripped of its emancipatory promise In one of her last contributions to Dreadnought on the subject of Soviet regime she wrote 69 The Bolsheviks pose now as the prophets of centralised efficiency trustification State control and the discipline of the proletariat in the name of increased production Russian workers remain wage slaves and very poor ones working not from free will but under compulsion of economic need and kept in their subordinate position by State coercion Stirred by the example in Germany of the General Workers Union AAUD and on the principle advanced by Antonie Pannekoek 70 that Communism can be achieved only by workers acting where the stand in the process of production the Dreadnought group called for an All Workers Revolutionary Union AWRU This was to organise on industrial unionist lines with recallable delegates elected in rising succession from workshops factories districts and regions to national councils With this One Big Union programme in February 1922 they formed themselves as the Communist Workers Party CWP 49 When in July 1923 the CWP announced its campaign to build the AWRU it was with the admission that they had no funds and very few people It had managed to established just three branches outside London in Sheffield Plymouth and Portsmouth Despite optimism concerning a rise in revolutionary sentiment by the end of 1923 the CWP had dissolved 49 On 14 June 1924 Workers Dreadnought itself ceased publication 49 This was not before raising the alarm at the triumph fascism in Italy condemning the then Communist condoned white labourism in South Africa s Rand Rebellion 71 and employing its first black correspondent the Jamaican writer Claude McKay With McKay Pankhurst shared outrage at the Daily Herald s campaign against the French employment of black colonial troops in Germany 72 73 Writer EditWith her partner the Italian libertarian socialist Silvio Erasmus Corio Pankhurst retired to a cottage in then rural Woodford Green Essex now in the London Borough of Redbridge 74 While Corio ran a tearoom Pankhurst researched and wrote an eclectic series of books an anti colonial historical cultural treatise India and the Earthly Paradise 1926 75 a promotion of the international auxiliary language Interlingua Delphos or the future of International Language 1928 76 Save the Mothers A plea for measures to prevent the annual loss of about 3000 child bearing mothers and 20 000 infant lives in England and Wales and a similar grievous wastage in other countries 1930 her largely autobiographical accounts The Suffragette Movement 1931 and The Home Front 1932 and a biography of her mother The Life of Emmeline Pankhurst 1935 who since the birth of Pankhurst s son Richard in 1927 had broken off all contact 77 Anti imperialist anti Fascist Edit Pankhurst protesting in Trafalgar Square London against British policies in India 1932While the Dreadnought did not have a consistent line on the 1916 Easter Rising in Dublin 3 an editorial written by Pankhurst began Justice can make but one reply to the Irish rebellion and that is the demand that Ireland should be allowed to govern itself She put the Rising in the context of the resistance of Unionists to Irish Home Rule and noted that it was they who first armed She lauded the rebels high ideals not least their promise of equal opportunities and equal rights for all the citizens of the Republic 78 Coinciding with highpoint of her revolutionary zeal the Irish War of Independence occasioned the suggestion in the Dreadnought that with their industries being destroyed by English capitalists and with their lives always in danger from the military Irish men and women are compelled to become Communists in word and deed The paper was open to assertions of James Connolly s daughter Nora that the awakening of a revolutionary spirit caused by the insurrection of 1916 has come an intensive growth of revolutionary thought In the event Pankhurst was disappointed by the outcome the Anglo Irish Treaty of 1921 described in the Dreadnought as a sad humiliating compromise of the stand for a completely independent Irish Republic 78 In India and the Earthly Paradise published in Bombay in 1926 75 Pankhurst proposed that the social and family life in ancient India had the essential features of communism equality fraternity and mutuality These were corrupted and overridden by priests rulers and foreign invaders up to and including the British who introduced or reinforced racial and caste distinctions The work has been described as a romantic Communist contribution to Indian nationalism which may have been the result of Pankhurst s contacts with fringe elements of that movement 79 There was no publisher for the book in Britain but it was background to Pankhurst s outspoken interventions on British policy in India She addressed protests against the failure to grant India meaningful self government and against the use of British air power against insurgent villages in Burma and the North West Frontier a stand she memorialised by working with the sculptor Eric Benfield to create in 1936 the Stone Bomb anti war monument in Woodford Green 80 In 1934 the French feminist Gabrielle Duchene organized the World Assembly of Women and chaired its World Committee of Women against War and Fascism CMF Comite mondial des femmes contre la guerre et le fascisme 81 Pankhurst was among the non Communist British sponsors of the Committee along with Charlotte Despard Ellen Wilkinson Vera Brittain and Storm Jameson 82 the Six Point Group and the National Union of Women Teachers 83 In 1935 the Committee pooled resources with the League against Imperialism and the West African Union des Travailleurs Negres to promote freedom of speech and to protest repression throughout the European colonial empires 84 The Women s World Committee was active in support of the International Committee for the Defense of the Ethiopian People which held its first meeting on 2 September 1935 before the Italian invasion of Ethiopia was launched in October 1935 84 Having already in her Open Letter to Lenin 1922 identified Fascism as a gathering threat in Europe Pankhurst acted in support of Italian exiles her partner Silvio Corio among them She was a founding member of the anti fascist Friends of Italian Freedom the Italian Information Bureau and the Women s International Matteotti Committee 77 Later in the 1930s she became a vice president of the League for the Boycott of Aggressor Nations and the Anti Nazi Council which sought trade embargoes against Mussolini s Italy and Hitler s Germany 85 Correspondence with George Bernard Shaw who professed to be unmoved by the murder of Giacomo Matteotti suggest that her alarm at the advance fascism moderated a once doctrinaire dismissal of capitalist democracy To Shaw she wrote 9 July 1935 86 You have said that liberty as understood by the upholders of capitalism is a putrefying corpse To a large extent you are right for if people are slaves of economic stress as so many are everywhere today they often find themselves unable to exercise the liberty of standing up for their convictions as they would desire but at least in the non Fascist countries most of us are able to do propaganda for our convictions as you and I do Pankhurst wrote to Winston Churchill her constituency MP concurring with him on the need for a more resolute foreign policy but was unable to persuade him of the need for immediate action against the Italian invasion of Ethiopia 87 Friend of Ethiopia EditOpponent of British colonial ambition Edit From 1936 MI5 monitored Pankhurst s correspondence In 1940 she wrote to Viscount Swinton then chairing a committee investigating Fifth Columnists and enclosed lists of active Fascists still at large and of anti Fascists who had been interned A copy of this letter on MI5 s file carries a note in Swinton s hand reading I should think a most doubtful source of information 88 Meanwhile the authorities took an increasingly grim view of her anti colonial agitation heightened from 1935 as she became the main protagonist of the print activism in the cause of Ethiopia 89 In July 1935 representing the Women s Committee against War and Fascism Pankhurst together with George Brown 90 League of Coloured Peoples Reginald Reynolds No More War movement and Reginald Bridgeman League against Imperialism organised a public protest in support of Ethiopia at Essex Hall in London 91 After the Italian invasion commenced in October she began publication of The New Times and Ethiopia News As well as reporting Italian atrocities in Ethiopia and from July 1936 Francoist atrocities in Spain it provided an outlet for anti colonialist writers elsewhere in Africa 92 Nancy Cunard for whom it was no accident that the Spanish fascist rebellion first broke out in an African colony Spanish Morocco also wrote for the paper as did Jawaharlal Nehru 93 Pankhurst visited Ethiopia in 1944 and observed that although liberated by the British it was still under effective colonial occupation Returning from a second visit to Ethiopia in 1950 51 through former Italian Eritrea she learned that the British administration had been dismantling many port installations a policy she denounced in a pamphlet Why are we destroying the Ethiopian ports She unsettled the British authorities by insisting that Eritrea Ethiopia s lost Red Sea province Djibouti and Somaliland be united with Ethiopia this at a time when at least some within these territories saw union as the surest guarantee against the return of colonial rule 94 Already in 1947 a Foreign Office official had been moved to comment we agree with you in your evident wish that this horrible old harridan should be choked to death with her own pamphlets 95 The New Times and Ethiopia News remained in circulation for 20 years and at its height sold 40 000 copies weekly This included an extensive circulation throughout West Africa and the West Indies 96 In 1956 the Governor of Jamaica Sir Hugh Foot was informed that Pankhurst s paper was radicalising a sect who called themselves the Rastafari At the same time he was cautioned that she could be relied upon to react violently to any suggestion that her paper should not be made available to all and sundry 97 In some Crown colonies such as Sierra Leone from where the nationalist I T A Wallace Johnson contributed pieces the paper had indeed been banned 89 Friendship with Haile Selassie Edit Pankhurst did have political contact with T Ras Makonnen the West Indian pan Africanist a Guyanese of Ethiopian descent 98 but there is no indication that she was engaged with the new spiritual movement in Jamaica Such nonetheless was her seeming hagiography of Haile Selassie that she has since been proposed as the first white Rastafarian 99 Her biographer Patricia Romero suggests that Pankhurst was overwhelmed by Haile Selassie so that her republicanism departed from Waterloo station in June 1936 when the emperor s train rolled in and she encountered him for the first time 100 Others explain the devotional relationship at least in part by reference to her strong anti imperialist anti fascist and anti racist sympathies 101 Pankhurst loved to defend the underdog and she saw in Selassie much more a defeated victim of fascism than a reactionary monarch 99 According to her son Richard her mother did not hestitate to tell Haile Selassie that as a life long republican she supported him only because of the cause he represented and that while she was cautious about involving herself in Ethiopia s domestic politics she did voice support for trade unions and for universal suffrage 102 In 1956 encouraged by Haile Selassie to aid with women s development Pankhurst and her son Richard moved into an imperial guest house in the Ethiopian capital to Addis Ababa Corio had died in 1954 103 She raised funds for Ethiopia s first teaching hospital and wrote extensively on Ethiopian art and culture She dedicated Ethiopia A Cultural History 1955 92 to Haile Selassie Guardian of Education Pioneer of Progress Leader and Defender of his People in Peace and War 104 Death and commemoration Edit Pankhurst s grave Pankhurst died in Addis Ababa in 1960 aged 78 and received a full state funeral at which Haile Selassie named her an honorary Ethiopian She is the only foreigner buried in front of Holy Trinity Cathedral in Addis Ababa in a section reserved for patriots of the Italian war 105 Pankhurst s name and picture and those of 58 other women s suffrage supporters are on the plinth of the statue of Millicent Fawcett in Parliament Square 106 107 108 There is a two dimensional silhouette constructed of Corten steel representing Pankhurst as a campaigning suffragette in Mile End Park Bethnal Green London England 109 110 She is also the subject of a mural completed 2018 by Jerome Davenport on the gable end of the Lord Morpeth pub on Old Ford Road in Bow London It is next door to the house in which she lived between 1914 and 1924 while working with the ELFS and WSF 111 In October 2022 the Old Vic Theatre announced for 25 January 2023 the world premiere of Sylvia a hip hop musical about Pankhurst Directed and choreographed by Kate Prince it seek to tell her story to younger and more diverse audiences 112 Family EditPankhurst objected in principle to entering into a marriage and to taking a husband s name Near the end of the First World War she began living with Italian anarchist Silvio Corio 113 and moved to Woodford Green where she lived for over 30 years a blue plaque and Pankhurst Green opposite Woodford tube station commemorate her ties to the area In Woodford Green England 1927 at the age of 45 she gave birth to a son Richard 114 As she refused to marry the child s father her mother broke ties with her and did not speak to her again 115 Richard became a leading student of Ethiopian history and the first director of the Institute of Ethiopian Studies at Addis Ababa University 116 His son Pankhurst s grandson Alula Pankhurst is an Ethiopian scholar and social development consultant in Addis Ababa and has been a contributor to the Ethiopia Observer which continues to publish 117 Art EditFrom an early age Pankhurst had an ambition to become a painter and draughtsman in the service of the great movements for social betterment 118 She trained at Manchester School of Art 1900 02 and then the Royal College of Art in London 1904 06 As part of her work campaigning for the WSPU for which she created designs for a range of banners jewellery and graphic logos Her motif of the angel of freedom a trumpeting emblem had wider appeal across the campaign for women s suffrage appearing on banners political pamphlets cups and saucers 119 An exhibition of her artistic works took place at Tate Modern in 2013 14 Information about the exhibition together with photographs of the artwork itself is part of the Sheffield Hallam University Research Archive 120 Pankhurst found it difficult to reconcile her artistic vocation with her political activities eventually deciding that they were incompatible She said Mothers came to me with their wasted little ones I saw starvation look at me from patient eyes I knew that I should never return to my art 121 By 1912 she had all but abandoned her artistic career in order to concentrate on her political activism 122 Writings selection Edit1911 The Suffragette The History of the Women s Militant Suffrage Movement London Gay amp Hancock 1913 Forcibly Fed The Story of My Four Weeks in Holloway Gaol McClure s Magazine August pp 87 92 1918 Education of the Masses London Worker s Dreadnought Publications 1920 A constitution for British soviets Points for a communist programme Workers Dreadnought 19 June 1921 Soviet Russia as I saw it Workers Dreadnought 16 April 1921 Soviet Russia as I Saw It London Worker s Dreadnought Publications 1922 Writ on Cold Slate Prison Poems by Sylvia Pankhurst London Worker s Dreadnought Publications Reissued 2021 by Smokestack Books 1921 Free discussion Workers Dreadnought 17 September 1921 1923 Communism and its Tactics Workers Dreadnought serialisation 1922 Open Letter to Lenin Workers Dreadnaught 4 November 1926 India and the Earthly Paradise Bombay Sunshine Publishing House 1927 Delphos or the Future of International Language London Kegan Paul Trench Trubner amp Co 1930 Save the Mothers A plea for measures to prevent the annual loss of about 3000 child bearing mothers and 20 000 infant lives in England and Wales London A A Knopf 1931 The Suffragette Movement An Intimate Account of Persons and Ideals Reissued 1984 by Chatto amp Windus 1932 The Home Front A Mirror to Life in England During the First World War Reissued 1987 by The Cresset Library 1935 The Life of Emmeline Pankhurst Boston Houghton Mifflin 1951 Ex Italian Somaliland Digitized 2006 by the Philosophical Library 1953 with Richard Pankhust Ethiopia and Eritrea the last phase of the reunion struggle 1941 52 Woodford Green Lalibela House 1955 Ethiopia A Cultural History Woodford Green Lalibela House 1987 E Sylvia Pankhurst Portrait of a Radical London Yale University Press 1993 A Sylvia Pankhurst Reader ed by Kathryn Dodd Manchester University Press 2019 A Suffragette in America Reflections on Prisoners Pickets and Political Change Ed Katherine Connelly London Pluto Press Newspapers Journals EditWomens Dreadnought 1914 1917 Workers Dreadnought 1917 1924 Germinal 1923 103 The New Times and Ethiopia News 1935 1956 Ethiopia Observer 1956 present Secondary literature EditRichard Pankhurst Sylvia Pankhurst Artist and Crusader An Intimate Portrait Virago Ltd 1979 ISBN 0 448 22840 8 Richard Pankhurst Sylvia Pankhurst Counsel for Ethiopia Hollywood CA Tsehai 2003 London Global Publishing ISBN 0972317228 Ian Bullock and Richard Pankhurst eds Sylvia Pankhurst From Artist to Anti Fascist Macmillan 1992 ISBN 0 333 54618 0 Shirley Harrison Sylvia Pankhurst A Crusading Life 1882 1960 Aurum Press 2003 ISBN 1854109057 Sylvia Pankhurst The Rebellious Suffragette Golden Guides Press Ltd 2012 ISBN 1780950187 Shirley Harrison Sylvia Pankhurst Citizen of the World Hornbeam Publishing Ltd 2009 ISBN 978 0 9553963 2 8 Barbara Castle Sylvia and Christabel Pankhurst Penguin Books 1987 ISBN 0 14 008761 3 Martin Pugh The Pankhursts The History of One Radical Family Penguin Books 2002 ISBN 0099520435 Patricia W Romero E Sylvia Pankhurst Portrait of a Radical New Haven and London Yale University Press 1987 ISBN 0300036914 Barbara Winslow Sylvia Pankhurst Sexual Politics and Political Activism New York St Martin s Press 1996 ISBN 0 312 16268 5 Katherine Connolly Sylvia Pankhurst Suffragette Socialist and Scourge of Empire Pluto Press 2013 ISBN 9780745333229 Katy Norris Sylvia Pankhurst Eiderdown Books 2019 ISBN 978 1 9160416 0 8 Rachel Holmes Sylvia Pankhurst Natural Born Rebel Francis Boutle Publishers 2020 ISBN 978 1 4088804 1 8See also EditAnti Air War Memorial History of feminism List of suffragists and suffragettes Pankhurst Centre in Manchester Sylvia Pankhurst artwork Women s suffrage in the United Kingdom Patricia LynchReferences Edit Burton S Relatively Famous Richard Pankhurst The Red Doctor BBC History Magazine February 2007 8 2 p 22 Suffrage Stories We Believe That The Rousing Of The Irish People Had Best Be Left To Irish Women Woman and her Sphere 29 April 2014 Retrieved 25 March 2023 a b c d e Pedersen Susan 4 March 2021 Susan Pedersen Worth the Upbringing Thirsting for the Vote London Review of Books Retrieved 6 November 2022 a b Purvis June 1996 A pair of infernal queens A reassessment of the dominant representations of Emmeline and Christabel Pankhurst first wave feminists in Edwardian Britain Women s History Review 5 2 260 doi 10 1080 09612029600200112 Simkin John Sylvia Pankhurst Spartacus Educational Retrieved 3 March 2018 a b Pankhurst Estelle Sylvia 1882 1960 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 37833 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b c Mulhallen Jacqueline 2021 Artist Sylvia Pankhurst Retrieved 19 November 2022 Bullock Ian Pankhurst Richard 1992 Sylvia Pankhurst From Artist to Anti Fascist London Palgrave Macmillan pp 1 13 Purvis June 2002 Emmeline Pankhurst A Biography London Routledge p 67 ISBN 978 0 415 23978 3 Pankhurst Christabel 1959 Unshackled The Story of How We Won the Vote London Hutchison p 43 Winslow Barbara 2008 The Oxford Encyclopedia of Women in World History Oxford Oxford University Press p 409 Chambers Emma Women Workers of England Tate Gallery Retrieved 3 March 2014 Crawford Elizabeth 2 September 2003 The Women s Suffrage Movement A Reference Guide 1866 1928 Routledge pp 281 ISBN 978 1 135 43402 1 Mercer John 2007 Writing and Re Writing Suffrage History Sylvia Pankhurst s The Suffragette Women s History Magazine Vol 56 pp 11 18 SSRN 1439723 Pankhurst Sylvia 2013 The Suffragette Movement An Intimate Account of Persons and Ideals Kindle ed London Warton Press p 6656 OCLC 1027059219 Sylvia Pankhurst Spartacus Educational Retrieved 10 November 2022 Ward Margaret 1995 Conflicting Interests The British and Irish Suffrage Movements Feminist Review 50 127 147 135 doi 10 2307 1395496 ISSN 0141 7789 JSTOR 1395496 Woman and her Sphere 2014 Suffrage Stories We Believe That The Rousing Of The Irish People Had Best Be Left To Irish Women Woman and her Sphere Retrieved 25 March 2023 Archives The National 19 June 2014 The National Archives The working women s struggle for the vote The National Archives blog Retrieved 6 November 2022 a b Carlyle Susan Matgamma Sean 2001 Sylvia Pankhurst and Democracy Workers Liberty www workersliberty org Retrieved 11 November 2022 a b Pankhurst E Sylvia 2019 Connelly Katherine ed A suffragette in America reflections on prisoners pickets and political change London ISBN 978 1 78680 454 9 OCLC 1099434698 Connelly Katherine 2021 East Side Londoners In Hughes Johnson Alexandra Jenkins Lyndsey eds East Side Londoners Sylvia Pankhurst s lecture tours of North America and the East London Federation of Suffragettes The Politics of Women s Suffrage Local National and International Dimensions University of London Press pp 263 284 268 ISBN 978 1 912702 95 4 JSTOR j ctv2321krx 17 Retrieved 12 November 2022 a b c d Connelly Catherine 2020 Sylvia Pankhurst the East London Suffragettes and the Chicago Strikers issuu Retrieved 7 November 2022 Winslow Barbara Rowbotham 1996 Sylvia Pankhurst Sexual politics and political activism University of California Press pp 19 20 ISBN 978 1857283457 a b Connolly 2021 270 Broder David 2019 A British Suffragette in America an Interview with Catherine Connelly jacobin com Retrieved 19 November 2022 a b Mary Phillips Spartacus Educational Retrieved 27 July 2019 a b Peace Pledge Union The Men Who Said No Conscientious Objectors 1915 19 Sylvia Pankhurst menwhosaidno org Retrieved 6 November 2022 Bell Geoffrey 28 December 2015 Sylvia Pankhurst and the Irish Revolution History Ireland Retrieved 21 April 2020 a b Pankhurst E Sylvia 1993 Dodd Kathryn ed Syylvia Pankurst Reader Manchseter University Press p 182 ISBN 9780719028892 Purvis June Pankhurst sisters the bitter divisions behind their fight for women s votes The Conversation Retrieved 10 November 2022 Workers Dreadnought Spartacus Educational Retrieved 29 January 2018 Date 8 March 1914 1 Newspaper Woman s Dreadnought www britishnewspaperarchive co uk accessed 29 February 2020 Rosemary Betterton An Intimate Distance Women Artists and the Body p 73 Connelly Katherine 15 January 2015 Sylvia Pankhurst the First World War and the struggle for democracy Revue Francaise de Civilisation Britannique French Journal of British Studies 20 1 doi 10 4000 rfcb 275 ISSN 0248 9015 Steven 2013 14 The Workers Socialist Federation libcom org libcom org Retrieved 10 November 2022 Awcock Hannah 19 July 2018 Turbulent Londoners Dora Montefiore 1851 1933 Turbulent Isles Retrieved 9 November 2022 Montefiore Dora 1913 Our Fight to Save the Kiddies in Dublin Smouldering Fires of the Inquisition www marxists org Retrieved 25 October 2022 Moriarty Therese 11 September 2013 Saving kids saving souls The Irish Times Retrieved 25 October 2022 Herbert Michael Frow Edmund Frow Ruth 1994 The Battle of Bexley Square Salford Unemployed Workers Demonstration 1st October 1931 Salford Working Class Movement Library ISBN 978 0 9523410 1 7 Urquhart Diane 1 June 2002 An articulate and definite cry for political freedom the ulster suffrage movement Women s History Review 11 2 273 292 281 283 doi 10 1080 09612020200200321 ISSN 0961 2025 S2CID 145344160 1910s A Century Of Women cms acenturyofwomen com Retrieved 1 December 2019 a b Connelly Katherine 2015 Sylvia Pankhurst the First World War and the struggle for democracy Revue Francaise de Civilisation Britannique French Journal of British Studies 20 1 PDF 5 7 doi 10 4000 rfcb 275 ISSN 0248 9015 Forrest Natasha 16 February 2019 Sylvia Pankhurst s WWI Toy Factory Roman Road LDN Retrieved 7 November 2022 Sylvia Pankhurst 1987 1931 The Home Front Peterborough England The Cresset Library p 132 ISBN 0 09 172911 4 Davis Mary 1999 Sylvia Pankhurst A Life in Radical Politics Pluto Press ISBN 0 7453 1518 6 S Sassoon Open Letter published in The Times newspaper 31 July 1917 THE ENGLISH CORNER Retrieved 11 November 2022 Davis Mary 20 July 1999 Sylvia Pankhurst A Life in Radical Politics Pluto Press ISBN 978 0 7453 1518 8 a b c d e f g h Shipway Mark 1988 1917 1945 Anti Parliamentary Communism The movement for workers councils in Britain Mark Shipway libcom org libcom org Retrieved 5 November 2022 Workers Socialist Federation statement on 1918 General Election Janine Booth www janinebooth com Retrieved 10 November 2022 Lenin V I 1970 Left Wing Communism an Infantile Disorder Peking Foreign Languages Press pp 77 78 Lenin V I 28 August 1919 Letter to Sylvia Pankhurst www marxists org Retrieved 14 November 2022 A constitution for British soviets Points for a communist programme Workers Dreadnought VII 13 19 June 1920 a b Shipway Mark A S 1988 Anti parliamentary communism the movement for workers councils in Britain 1917 45 Basingstoke Macmillan ISBN 0 333 43613 X OCLC 16755670 Allen J Dorothy Frances Dora 1851 1933 Australian Dictionary of Biography Volume 10 Melbourne University Press 1986 pp 556 557 Flewers Paul 2003 The New Civilisation Assessments of the Soviety Union in Britain 1929 1941 PDF School of Slavonic and East European Studies University College London PhD Thesis p 29 Pankburst Sylvia 1921 Soviet Russia as I Saw It Workers Dreadnought Publications London p 170 Punish Sylvia Pankhurst New York Times 29 October 1920 p 17 Retrieved 7 November 2022 Pankhurst Sylvia 1921 Writ on Cold Slate Prison Poems by Sylvia Pankhurst Smokestack Books ISBN 9781916312142 Writ on Cold Slate smokestack books co uk Retrieved 12 November 2022 Pankhurst Sylvia 17 September 1921 Freedom of discussion Workers Dreadnaught Pankhurst Sylvia 4 November 1922 Open Letter to Lenin Workers Dreadnaught Retrieved 6 November 2022 Rosa Luxemburg s text Die russische Revolution first appeared in the paper of the revolutionary marxist Spartacus League Berlin in September 1918 Communism vs reforms mistakes of the Communist Party of Ireland Workers Dreadnought 1922 libcom org libcom org Retrieved 15 November 2022 Annares Thelme 1968 The Workers Opposition Introduction by Workers Dreadnought www marxists org Retrieved 11 November 2022 The Workers Dreadnought 22 April 22 29 August 1921 Heath Nick 2017 The British Anarchist Movement and the Russian Revolution libcom org libcom org Retrieved 11 November 2022 Cliff Tony 1984 Class Struggle and Women s Liberation 1640 to Today Bookmarks p 131 ISBN 978 0 906224 12 0 Shipway Mark 27 July 2016 Anti Parliamentary Communism The Movement for Workers Councils in Britain 1917 45 Springer p 43 ISBN 978 1 349 19222 9 Pannekoek s Anton 1922 Letter to Sylvia Pankhurst libcom org Retrieved 15 November 2022 Beliard Yann 2016 A Labour War in South Africa the 1922 Rand Revolution in Sylvia Pankhurst s Workers Dreadnought Labor History 57 1 20 34 doi 10 1080 0023656X 2016 1140621 ISSN 0023 656X S2CID 146939070 McKay Claude 1937 Radical London amp The Workers Dreadnought in the early 1920s libcom org Retrieved 10 November 2022 James Winston 2017 In the Nest of Extreme Radicalism Radical Networks and the Bolshevization of Claude McKay in London Comparative American Studies 15 3 4 174 203 doi 10 1080 14775700 2017 1551604 ISSN 1477 5700 S2CID 165264898 Redbridge Museum and Heritage Centre Sylvia Pankhurst Sylvia Pankhurst Retrieved 8 November 2022 a b Pankhurst Estelle Sylvia 1926 India and the Earthly Paradise Bombay Sunshine Publishing House Aray Basak 22 September 2017 Sylvia Pankhurst and the International Auxiliary Language 4th Interlinguistic Symposium 4 Sympozjum Interlingwistyczne 4 a Interlingvistika Simpozio Poznan a b Introduction to Women Suffrage and Politics The Papers of Sylvia Pankhurst 1882 1960 www ampltd co uk Retrieved 8 November 2022 a b Bell Geoffrey 2016 Sylvia Pankhurst and the Irish revolution History Ireland Retrieved 6 November 2022 Romero Patricia W 1987 E Sylvia Pankhurst portrait of a radical New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 03691 4 OCLC 13394708 Wright Patrick 2003 The stone bomb openDemocracy Retrieved 8 November 2022 Carle Emmanuelle 2004 Women Antifascism and Peace in Interwar France Gabrielle Duchene s Itinerary French History 2004 vol 18 3 pp 291 314 Oxford University Press Liddington Jill 1991 The Road to Greenham Common Feminism and Anti militarism in Britain Since 1820 Syracuse University Press p 157 ISBN 978 0 8156 2539 1 Barberis Peter McHugh John Tyldesley Mike 1 January 2000 Encyclopedia of British and Irish Political Organizations Parties Groups and Movements of the 20th Century A amp C Black p 476 ISBN 978 0 8264 5814 8 a b Boittin Jennifer Anne 1 June 2010 Colonial Metropolis The Urban Grounds of Anti Imperialism and Feminism in Interwar Paris U of Nebraska Press pp 246 161 ISBN 978 0 8032 2993 8 Huckestein Erika Maria 2014 From Pacifist to Anti Fascist Sylvia Pankhurst and the Fight against War and Fascism MA Thesis University of North Carolina Pankhurst Richard 2003 Sylvia Pankhurst Counsel for Ethiopia a Biographical Essay on Ethiopian Anti fascist and Anti colonialist History 1934 1960 Tsehai Publishers p 31 ISBN 978 0 9723172 3 8 Pankhurst R 2003 pp 39 43 Communists and Suspected Communists Sylvia Pankhurst file ref KV 2 1570 mi5 gov uk Archived from the original on 16 September 2009 Retrieved 13 April 2009 a b Srivastava Neelam 2 October 2021 The intellectual as partisan Sylvia Pankhurst and the Italian invasion of Ethiopia Postcolonial Studies 24 4 448 463 450 doi 10 1080 13688790 2021 1985235 ISSN 1368 8790 S2CID 244404206 Mittman Greg 2022 Excerpt George Brown and Firestone s Liberian Empire of Rubber History News Network historynewsnetwork org Retrieved 9 November 2022 Cos Tafari Stella Headley 1 July 2014 Focus When Britain Loved RasTafari Discover Society Retrieved 8 November 2022 a b Jeffrey James 18 June 2016 Sylvia Pankhurst s Ethiopian legacy BBC News Retrieved 17 March 2018 Srivastava 2021 p 455 Pankhurst Richard 2003 Sylvia Pankhurst Counsel for Ethiopia a Biographical Essay on Ethiopian Anti fascist and Anti colonialist History 1934 1960 Tsehai Publishers ISBN 978 0 9723172 3 8 Benji Ras 2017 Soul Rebel Sylvia Pankhurst Jah Rastafari Retrieved 8 November 2022 About Sylvia Pankhurst sylviapankhurst gn apc org Retrieved 7 November 2022 Baku Ras Shango the pankhurst connection RASTAFARI IN MOTION Retrieved 8 November 2022 Amon Saba Saakana Makonnen Ras in David Dabydeen John Gilmore Cecily Jones eds The Oxford Companion to Black British History Oxford University Press 2007 p 283 a b Winslow Barbara 2009 The First White Rastafarian Sylvia Pankhurst Haile Selassie and Ethiopia In At Home and Abroad in the Empire British Women Write the 1930s edited by Robin Hackett Freda Hauser and Gay Wachman 171 186 p 189 Newark NJ University of Delaware Press Romero Patricia W 1987 E Sylvia Pankhurst Portrait of a Radical Yale University Press p 227 ISBN 978 0 300 03691 6 Marzagora Sara 2022 Refashioning the Ethiopian Monarchy in the Twentieth Century An Intellectual History Global Intellectual History 7 3 533 557 551 553 doi 10 1080 23801883 2020 1796237 ISSN 2380 1883 S2CID 197803250 Milkias Paulos 2003 Review of Sylvia Pankhurst Counsel for Ethiopia International Journal of Ethiopian Studies 1 1 229 235 ISSN 1543 4133 JSTOR 27828830 a b Corio Silvio 1875 1954 aka Crastinus Qualunque libcom org libcom org Retrieved 15 November 2022 Carnochan W B 2008 Golden Legends Images of Abyssinia Samuel Johnson to Bob Marley Stanford University Press p 87 ISBN 978 0 8047 6098 0 Fifty Years Since the Death of Sylvia Pankhurst Ethiopians Pay Tribute Owen Abroad www owen org Retrieved 29 February 2020 Historic statue of suffragist leader Millicent Fawcett unveiled in Parliament Square Gov uk 24 April 2018 Retrieved 24 April 2018 Topping Alexandra 24 April 2018 First statue of a woman in Parliament Square unveiled The Guardian Retrieved 24 April 2018 Millicent Fawcett statue unveiling the women and men whose names will be on the plinth iNews 24 April 2018 Retrieved 25 April 2018 Laser Cutting Services CNC Laser Cutting news laserprocess co uk Retrieved 12 April 2016 Creative Connections Sylvia Pankhurst www npg org uk Retrieved 12 April 2016 inspiringcity 14 March 2018 Mural of Sylvia Pankhurst on the Lord Morpeth pub in Bow Inspiring City Retrieved 8 November 2022 Heyes Katie 8 October 2022 Musical About Sylvia Pankhurst To Premiere at The Old Vic The Indiependent Retrieved 20 November 2022 Corio Silvio 1875 1954 aka Crastinus Qualunque libcom org 31 January 2013 Retrieved 28 February 2020 Milestones Apr 16 1928 Time 16 April 1928 ISSN 0040 781X Retrieved 29 January 2023 Moorhead Joanna 12 September 2015 It was like time travel It reminds you just how courageous the suffragettes were The Guardian Retrieved 17 March 2018 Pankhurst Richard Institute of Ethiopian Studies In Encyclopaedia Aethiopica He N Vol 3 edited by Siegbert Uhlig 168 69 Wiesbaden Harrassowitz 2007 Alula Pankhurst Author at Ethiopia Observer Ethiopia Observer Retrieved 15 November 2022 Pankhurst Sylvia 1931 The Suffragette Movement An Intimate Account of Persons and Ideals p 104 Norris Katy 2019 Sylvia Pankhurst London Eiderdown Books p 1 ISBN 978 1 9160416 0 8 OCLC 1108724269 Reeve Hester September 2013 Sylvia Pankhurst The Suffragette as a Militant Artist Sheffield Hallam University Research Archive Retrieved 21 September 2020 Tickner Lisa 1987 The Spectacle of Women London p 29 Norris Katy 2019 Sylvia Pankhurst London Eiderdown Books p 5 ISBN 978 1 9160416 0 8 OCLC 1108724269 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sylvia Pankhurst Sylviapankhurst com a comprehensive information resource about Sylvia Pankhurst from Hornbeam Publishing Limited sponsored by the UK Heritage Lottery Fund Sylvia Pankhurst biography spartacus educational com accessed 4 April 2014 Sylvia Pankhurst Archive libcom org accessed 4 April 2014 Archival material relating to Sylvia Pankhurst UK National Archives Estelle Sylvia Pankhurst papers archived at the International Institute of Social History in Amsterdam Application for naturalisation of Mrs Margarethe Morgenstern and her husband Erwin including written plea from Pankhurst Communism or Reforms at the Wayback Machine archived 27 October 2009 two articles by Pankhurst and Anton Pannekoek first published in the Workers Dreadnought in 1922 first published as a pamphlet in 1974 by Workers Voice a Liverpudlian Communist group Three pamphlets detailing the work of Sylvia Pankhurst as an anti Bolshevik Communist Anti Parliamentarism and Communism in Britain 1917 1921 by R F Jones Anti Parliamentary Communism The Movement for Workers Councils in Britain Class War on the Home Front Sylvia Pankhurst Everything is Possible A documentary that chronicles the life and political campaigns of Sylvia Pankhurst and includes an exclusive interview with her son Richard Pankhurst and his wife Rita The accompanying website includes images of a large number of security files held on Pankhurst from the collection at the National Archives Profile nrs harvard edu accessed 4 April 2014 Profile radcliffe harvard edu Schlesinger Library Radcliffe Institute Harvard University I Was Forcibly Fed by Sylvia Pankhurst McClure s August 1913 Works by Sylvia Pankhurst at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sylvia Pankhurst amp oldid 1149585287, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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