Brighton Dome has been recognised for its suffragette history

One hundred years on from the first women in the UK being given the right to vote, Brighton Dome is now among 41 buildings recognised as being 'at the centre of suffragette action'.
Brighton DomeBrighton Dome
Brighton Dome

The sites, which include Westminster Abbey, Epsom Racecourse, and Manchester’s Free Trade Hall, have been updated on the National Heritage List for England – which previously carried no record of their links to the movement.

Brighton Dome was an important centre of activity for Brighton members of the Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU) in the early twentieth century, with suffragette leaders Emmeline and Christabel Pankhurst, Emmeline Pethick Lawrence and Lady Emily Lutyens all speaking at large public meetings there.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

The venue was also the scene of militant activity by suffragettes who interrupted several meetings by Liberal politicians. Around 20 women were violently ejected from the building during protests at a meeting by Education Minister Reginald McKenna MP in November 1907.

The now defunct Brighton Herald reported unsympathetically on their removal using ‘gentle ju-jitsu’ and mocks each woman in turn. One is described as having ‘a voice with a shrill squeak as though she were fleeing frightened from a nightmare of mice’, another ‘must have been crossed in love, or she would never have wasted her charms on the desert air of a Suffragette riot’.

By 1908 the government had resorted to barring women from Ministerial meetings, but this didn’t deter the suffragettes. In January 1910 police extricated two women from inside the organ at Brighton Dome, after they drew attention to their hiding place with a sneeze.

The pair - Brighton-local Eva Bourne and high-profile activist Mary Leigh - had planned to leap from the organ during a talk that evening by anti-suffrage Prime Minister Herbert Asquith. The discovered women were reported to have said: “’We are thinking of bringing a counter-charge about the horribly dusty condition of the organ."

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Votes for Women, the WSPU’s newspaper, printed a picture of one local suffragette, Mrs Newsome, who managed to attend the meeting disguised in her husband’s clothes, though she appears not to have carried out any protest inside the concert hall.

The suffragettes were predominantly members of the radical Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU), set up by Emmeline Pankhurst in 1903. The suffragettes’ motto was “deeds not words” and to fight for the vote they waged campaigns of sabotage and destruction on public property across the country.

In February 1912 Emmeline Pankhurst declared that “the argument of the broken pane of glass is the most valuable argument in modern politics”. The suffragettes used toffee hammers to smash windows in prominent locations, making a political statement without endangering lives. They also burned post boxes, attacked paintings in galleries and placed homemade bombs in empty buildings in a co-ordinated attack on the public realm.

Among the 41 places relisted by Historic England for the events they witnessed in the suffragettes’ campaign for the vote are Manchester’s Free Trade Hall, where the militant suffrage campaign began and Epsom racecourse, where the renowned suffragette Emily Wilding Davison was trampled by the King’s horse when she ran across the racecourse during the Derby.