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  2. List of British suffragists and suffragettes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_British...

    Margaret Irwin (1858–1940) – trade unionist, suffragist and founder member of the Glasgow and West of Scotland Association for Women's Suffrage; Christina Jamieson (1864–1942) – writer and suffragette; Maud Joachim (1869–1947) – suffragette who was one of the first suffragettes to go on hunger strike

  3. Jessie M. Soga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jessie_M._Soga

    Jessie Margaret Soga, LRAM (21 August 1870 [1] [2] – 23 February 1954 [3] [4]) was a Xhosa/Scottish contralto singer, music teacher and suffragist.She was described as the only black/mixed race suffrage campaigner based in Scotland. [5]

  4. Women's suffrage in Scotland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women's_suffrage_in_Scotland

    Scottish suffragettes released from prison with Flora Drummond. Later Scotland's suffragettes were part of the British Women's Social and Political Union militant movement, and took part in campaigns locally and in London; for example when Winston Churchill arrived to stand for election as M.P. in Dundee in 1908 he was followed by 27 of the national leaders of the women's suffrage movements.

  5. Category:Scottish suffragettes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Scottish_suffragettes

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  6. Peter McLagan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_McLagan

    His father was Peter McLagan (1774–1860), and his mother was an unknown black woman. [2] His father co-owned a sugar plantation with Samuel Sandbach . When the UK Government emancipated the slaves in the 1830s, they paid over £21,000 (£2,791,310 in 2020) in compensation to the elder McLagan and Sandbach for the legal emancipation of over ...

  7. Elizabeth Thomson (suffragist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_Thomson_(suffragist)

    The following autumn, 1910, Thomson travelled to London to join the Pankhursts in their increasingly physical fight for women's right to vote. On 18th November 1910, the infamous clash between suffrage campaigners and police officers, known as Black Friday, took place on the streets of London. Thomson describes the day in her autobiography ...

  8. What Democrats Can Learn from America’s First Black Voters

    www.aol.com/democrats-learn-america-first-black...

    Yet, after Black suffrage was enshrined in the Constitution by the 15th Amendment two years later, over a thousand Black Americans, both men and women, marched into Shreveport, as one witness put ...

  9. Gude Cause 1909 and 2009 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gude_Cause_1909_and_2009

    On Saturday 10 October 2009 5000 people paraded through Edinburgh in autumn sunshine to commemorate the work of the suffrage movement, to celebrate women's achievements in the intervening 100 years, and to re-energise women's commitment to political representation and action in Scotland. [2] "The suffragettes wanted votes for women; these re ...