vox Posted September 15, 2011 Share Posted September 15, 2011 I took these photos of 45, Marlborough Road. Empty, boarded up, and in a sorry state. Not clear in the photos, but most of the windows are smashed. Anyway I had a look at who used to live there and this is what I found. Archdale, Helen Alexander (Mrs, hon. treasurer The Women's Social & Political Union) 45 Marlborough Road, Whites - 1911. Pankhurst, Adela. (Miss, organiser (The Women's Social & Political Union) 45 Marlborough Road, Whites - 1911. ---------------------------------------------------- The women's suffrage movement: a reference guide, 1866-1928 The women's suffrage movement in Britain and Ireland Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
HughW Posted September 16, 2011 Share Posted September 16, 2011 David Price, in his Sheffield Troublemakers mentions this house. He describes how some likely lads decided to tar and feather it, but managed to attack the house next door instead. I would like to discover the date that happened so I can find it in the newspapers. Hugh Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dunsbyowl1867 Posted September 17, 2011 Share Posted September 17, 2011 http://www.sheffieldtelegraph.co.uk/lifestyle/drive_to_save_historic_houses_1_458032 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dunsbyowl1867 Posted March 20, 2012 Share Posted March 20, 2012 http://www.sheffield...houses_1_458032 Appeared recently so I am told! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RichardB Posted March 20, 2012 Share Posted March 20, 2012 Miss Adela Pankhurst, organiser (The Women's Social & Political Union), 26 & 28 Chapel Walk; h. 45 Marlborough Road White's 1911 Not noticed this topic before ... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
peterwarr Posted March 21, 2012 Share Posted March 21, 2012 It look as thought they refused to fill in the 1911 census. I planned to attach the page, but can't discover how to do that. Could someone else add it. please? (Or perhaps advise me?) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ukelele lady Posted March 21, 2012 Share Posted March 21, 2012 It look as thought they refused to fill in the 1911 census. I planned to attach the page, but can't discover how to do that. Could someone else add it. please? (Or perhaps advise me?) Congratulations petewarr it looks like you have suceeded. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest suzy Posted March 22, 2012 Share Posted March 22, 2012 Appeared recently so I am told! What a fascinating topic and a beautiful old house - I do hope it can be restored to its former glory. I am very glad that someone bothered to put up a plaque in memory of Adela - bet she was quite a woman! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RichardB Posted March 22, 2012 Share Posted March 22, 2012 That was me. Hoping Steve had some preprepared instructions as to how to do it. Congratulations petewarr it looks like you have suceeded. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
vox Posted December 12, 2013 Author Share Posted December 12, 2013 Someone started working on number 45 not long ago. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tozzin Posted December 12, 2013 Share Posted December 12, 2013 So sad to see such a building with an interesting history in such a state. The millions that's been ploughed into certain council estates which are still being ruined and a building like this one cries out for just a couple of hundred thousand to bring it back to life. Turn it into flats but keep the house. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lysander Posted December 12, 2013 Share Posted December 12, 2013 Thanks for this. Despite a life long interest in my birthplace I never knew of Sheffield's connection with the Pankhurst's. I decided to have a look at the rest of Adela's, what I found was an "interesting" life. After her involvement with the Suffragette Movement, and what appears to have been a family fall-out, she emigrated in 1914 to Australia where she was a founding member of the Communist Party of Australia ( from which she was later expelled). In 1917 she married an Australian union leader, Tom Walsh but, in 1928, disillusioned with Communism , she founded the anti-communist Australian Women's Guild of Empire....she also founded the right wing, nationalist Australia First Movement. Pleading the need for peace with Japan she visited the country and, in 1942, she was interned for the duration. She died in 1961. Perhaps her involvement in right wing movements may explain why her association with the City was never publicised in Sheffield. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RichardB Posted December 12, 2013 Share Posted December 12, 2013 http://sheffieldcivictrust.wordpress.com/tag/adela-pankhurst/ Appeared recently so I am told! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RichardB Posted December 12, 2013 Share Posted December 12, 2013 Jungle Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RichardB Posted December 12, 2013 Share Posted December 12, 2013 Pankhurst Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
duckweed Posted December 12, 2013 Share Posted December 12, 2013 What I found was that no one has looked at the earlier women, the former Chartist women. I found that Eliza Rooke was from Lincolnshire and married a York confectioner. She is buried in the General Cemetery. None of the early women were from the middle classes. Abiah Higgingbotham was the daughter of a miller in Leeds. He became the first chartist councillor in Leeds. She lived in Pond Street and her husband worked in Brown Street. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lysander Posted December 13, 2013 Share Posted December 13, 2013 Yet another revelation for me....I knew of the Chartist and Syndicalist movements and of the importance of Sheffield to the movements but hadn't realised local women had played such an important role. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RichardB Posted December 13, 2013 Share Posted December 13, 2013 SFPA What I found was that no one has looked at the earlier women, the former Chartist women. I found that Eliza Rooke was from Lincolnshire and married a York confectioner. She is buried in the General Cemetery. None of the early women were from the middle classes. Abiah Higgingbotham was the daughter of a miller in Leeds. He became the first chartist councillor in Leeds. She lived in Pond Street and her husband worked in Brown Street. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RichardB Posted December 13, 2013 Share Posted December 13, 2013 84 Pond Street, 1851. What I found was that no one has looked at the earlier women, the former Chartist women. I found that Eliza Rooke was from Lincolnshire and married a York confectioner. She is buried in the General Cemetery. None of the early women were from the middle classes. Abiah Higgingbotham was the daughter of a miller in Leeds. He became the first chartist councillor in Leeds. She lived in Pond Street and her husband worked in Brown Street. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RichardB Posted December 13, 2013 Share Posted December 13, 2013 Another mention Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
duckweed Posted December 14, 2013 Share Posted December 14, 2013 What I haven't been able to work out exactly is the woman who made a speech for Chartist women Ann Harrison. My educated guess is that she is the same woman who is mentioned in the papers and was a midwife but there is only this one speech and no other references to her. National history has overlooked or even written out the Sheffield women & often given the impression that Ann Knight set up the Political women's association. Not exactly true as there was already a strong chartist women's group which she was introduced to. It is true that she pushed them to be National but they had already formed a constitution and made speeches before Ann Knight became a member. All the women that I could trace had husbands or other close relatives who were chartists. Womens part in radical politics seems to have been overlooked. A lot of the signatures on the Charter were women. The Peterloo demonstration that became known as the Peterloo massacre was led by Oldham women. Ann Knight came from the Anti-Slavery movement and there again Sheffield women were strong supporters of the Abolition movement. Sheffield Quaker women led the boycott on sugar from slave estates. It is thought by many that it was actually Winifred Gales who wrote the editorials in the Iris. She was after all a writer which Joseph was not. She did definitely carry on writing the editorials after Joseph fled the country. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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