


Homes for Indian nannies

Sherlock Holmes

Christabel Pankhurst

Suffragette Sophia Duleep Singh

Captain Scott's Diary

Suffragettes protest

Indians on the Western Front

World War I

Wilfred Owen: WWI poetry

Russian Revolution

Virginia Woolf, Mrs Dalloway

The General Strike

The Great Depression

Gandhi in Britain

British Union of Fascists

Appeasement

Kristallnacht

Wanted poster for Hitler

World War II ultimatum letter

The Keys

Dunkirk evacuation

Dig for Victory

Make Do and Mend

Auschwitz survivor

The Atom Bomb

Independence and Partition

Universal Declaration of Human Rights

NHS established

Immigration from India

Windrush: post-war immigration

Chinese restaurants

Middle Eastern food

Wolfenden Report

Paul Robeson's Othello

Man lands on the moon

Cuban Missile Crisis

Assassination of Kennedy

Beatles arrive in the USA

Mods and Rockers

England win the World Cup

Robert Kennedy Assassinated

Dr. Martin Luther King

Student protests, Paris

Women's liberation

Punk fanzine

The Oz trial

The Black Panther

President Nixon resigns

The Sex Pistols

Charles and Diana marry

Tiananmen Square massacre

Fall of the Berlin Wall

Release of Nelson Mandela

Peace declared: Northern Ireland

The Belfast Agreement
In their fight for women’s voting rights, the Suffragettes were notorious for publicity-grabbing militant action, and were more than willing to break the law to raise awareness for the cause. This was one of many arrests of their figurehead Emmeline Pankhurst (1858–1928). In May 1914, her group marched to Buckingham Palace to see the King. She dodged the police and almost made it to the palace gates. There she was arrested in what the Daily Mirror called ‘distressing scenes’.
Reflecting the establishment view, the paper called them ‘militant suffragettes’ with an ‘impossible scheme’. But four years and one Great War later, women were granted the vote. The Suffragette struggle for the vote coincided with the growth of mass-circulation newspapers and the use of press photography. Just as today’s protestors harness the power of television, so the suffragettes understood the power of the press.
Image Copyright: John Frost Newspaper Archive
Shelfmark: British Library Newspaper Archive