#emmeline tbt
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heavvnsiighs · 2 years ago
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suchadorcas · 3 years ago
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WHO: EMMELINE VANCE WHERE: LATER ON; EAST INDIA HOUSE BALL
✩•̩̩͙*˚*˚*•̩̩͙✩•̩̩͙*˚**•̩̩͙✩ @emmelinevancx ✩•̩̩͙*˚**•̩̩͙✩•̩̩͙*˚*˚*•̩̩͙✩
An empty glass in hand ,   and a little pep talk from Ted   ( @badgepuff )   and Marlene   ( @starryeyxdmckinnon​ )  and Doe had committed to making at least one bad decision tonight.   She bit her lip ,   a soft smirk on her lips.   “Look who’s icecube just melted. Can I bet on the fact it’s because you are looking hot tonight.”   Her flirt game was off ,   as was her target ,   a fellow colleague.   “I ain’t never seens like that before, there’s always parchment hiding that pretty face.”
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photos-ok81 · 3 years ago
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Emmeline Pankhurst (14 Temmuz 1858 - 14 Haziran 1928) İngiliz siyasi aktivistti. Bu fotoğraflarda oy kullanma hakkını kazanıkması konusunda mücadele ediyor. #activist #emmelinepankhurst #tarih #history #renklitarih #colorhistory #tbt #eskiler #foto #fotoğraf #fotografia #picture #colorhistory #historyinpictures #historyhd https://www.instagram.com/p/CSPfpLvoUbA/?utm_medium=tumblr
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unkindnessofone · 7 years ago
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Aw I can so see Penny getting sad over Emmeline and Molly’s newfound connection. Maybe even purposefully hanging out with Daphne and doing projects with her that she posts EVERYWHERE to try and give them a taste of their own medicine- even if they don’t give a shit
Since she's In Paris, she might start posting pictures with her new friends or like TBT with Daphne. Molly wouldn't care at all but Emme might be a little pouty in return. Probably get drunk and cry that she misses her mermaid friend.
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otc-dramaturgy · 7 years ago
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tbt: When women had to fight for rights
Because obviously that was a long, long time ago. Nothing we have to do now.
At the risk of spoiling everything, our production of MY FAIR LADY is being bumped up a decade (because you really didn’t want to read about the Edwardian period again, did you?). So instead of 1912, it’s 1921, which means women are in quite a different place than they were, because WWI came in between and shook some things up. Still, the women’s rights movement stretched on a good deal before that and a while after. To give you an idea of where our MY FAIR LADY fits in, here’s a selected timeline of relevant events in London.
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Timeline of Women’s Rights (from Manchester Metropolitan University)
1867
The London Society for Women’s Suffrage is formed to campaign for female suffrage.
1870
The Married Women’s Property Act allows married women to own their own property. Previously, when women married, their property transferred to their husbands. Divorce heavily favoured men, allowing property to remain in their possession.
1883
The Cooperative Women’s Guild is founded by Alice Acland and Mary Lawrenson. Its aim was to spread the knowledge of the benefits of cooperation and improve the conditions of women with the slogan “cooperation in poor neighbourhoods.”
1901
Census reveals there were a million more women than men in England and Wales. Birth rate dropped to 28.6 per 1,000, from 36 per 1,000 in 1876
1902
A delegation of women’s textile workers from Northern England present a 37,000 signatory petition to Parliament demanding votes for women.
1903
Emmeline Pankhurst formed Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU) with daughters Christabel and Sylvia. Motto: Deeds not Words.
1905
First militant acts in support of women’s suffrage. Christabel Pankhurst and Annie Kearney serve a prison sentence rather than pay a fine after being found guilty of disrupting an election rally. Their prison sentence brought the campaign for votes for women a great deal of publicity.
1906
Daily Mail coins term ‘suffragette’ for militant suffragists.
The National Federation of Women Workers is set up by Mary MacArthur.
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1907
3,000 people march in heavy rain from Hyde Park to Strand in a protest dubbed ‘The Mud March.’
Under the Qualification of Women Act, women can be elected onto borough and county councils and can also be elected mayor.
Henry Nevinson and Henry Brailsford found the Men’s League for Women’s Suffrage.
1908
First woman mayor: Elizabeth Garrett Anderson elected at Aldeburgh.
Two hundred and fifty thousand people gather in Hyde Park, London, in support of women’s suffrage.
Women’s National Anti Suffrage League founded. Petition against women having the vote draws 337,018 signatures.
1909.
Women���s National Anti Suffrage League has 10,000 members in 235 branches.
Suffrage organisations use increasingly violent and drastic measures to further the cause.
First case of hunger strikes and force-feeding (Winson Green prison, Birmingham).
1910
Men’s Federation for Women’s Enfranchisement founded.
November ‘Black Friday’ - suffragettes march to Parliament Square and are brutally treated by police; several then die from injuries.
1912
Harold Owen publishes Women Adrfit: The Menace of Suffragism.
1913
E. Belfont Bax publishes The Fraud of Feminism.
The Cat and Mouse Act is passed. The Act permits the release of hunger striking suffragettes from prison when they are on the point of death and their re-arrest when they are partially recovered.
1914
War is declared. WSPU suspends militancy and suffrage work; all imprisoned suffragettes are released.
1915
The first Women’s Institute in Britain is founded in North Wales at Llanfairpwll.
Thousands of women march in Glasgow in response to the greedy rent increases faced by women whose husbands were at war. Out of this came the Rent Restriction Act which changed the housing system and benefited poor people across the country.
1918
The Representation of the People Act gives the vote to women over 30 who owned property.
Bill to enable women to stand for parliament is rushed through both Houses. Eleven women stand for parliament; only one is elected and she declines her seat.
1919
First sportswoman to wear shorts: Elaine Burton, at the English Northern Counties’ Athletics Championships.
1920
Oxford University admits women to membership and degrees, but the statute limited the numbers of women to 1 for every 6 men.
The Sex Discrimination Removal Act allows women access to the legal profession and accountancy.
1921
Unemployment benefits are extended to include allowances for wives.
An amendment is proposed to the 1885 Criminal Law Amendment Act to make lesbianism an act of ‘gross indecency,’ with the same punishments metered out to gay men. The proposal is defeated, the reason being that it was believed that few women could even comprehend that such acts existed and accepting the proposal would only draw attention to such acts and therefore open them up to a new ‘audience.’
1922
The Law of Property Act allows both husband and wife to inherit property equally.
Criminal Law Amendment Act protected both sexes from seduction up to the age of 16
1923
The Matrimonial Causes Act makes grounds for divorce the same for women and men. Influential acts of 1857 paved the way for this act, which charted the advances of women to gain parity with men and contributed to the broader process of granting civil rights to women.
1924
First woman government minister: Margaret Bondfield became Minister of Labour.
1925
Guardianship of Infants Act. Mothers given equality in custody of children.
1928
Representation of the People Act is amended and allows everyone over the age of 21 to vote.
1929
Age of marriage raised from 12 to 16 for girls and from 14 to 16 for boys.
The first general election in which women are allowed to vote occurs. The election is sometimes referred to as the ‘Flapper Election’ due to the thousands of women turning out to vote.
Women become ‘persons’ in their own right, by order of the Privy Council.
#abouttime
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frockflicksfeed · 6 years ago
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TBT: Mapp & Lucia (1985) – 1930s Comedy of Manners
Perhaps I should say, Mapp & Lucia the first, because this is the 1985 adaption of the E. F. Benson novels produced for British TV. Both this and the 2014 edition are easily found on streaming services in the U.S., so it can get confusing. This first one stars Geraldine McEwan as Emmeline Lucas aka... Read more →
The post TBT: Mapp & Lucia (1985) – 1930s Comedy of Manners appeared first on Frock Flicks.
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heavvnsiighs · 2 years ago
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