Posts Tagged hunger-strike medal

Suffrage Stories/Collecting Suffrage: The Evolution Of The Hunger-Strike Medal

Here we see Emily Wilding Davison, one of the most famous suffragettes, wearing her Hunger Strike Medal c. 1912. Now, well over a century later, these medals are a familiar sight, appearing surprisingly often at auction, as the price they attract tempts descendants to sell. But the history of the WSPU Hunger-Strike Medal is not uncomplicated.

My research would indicate that the first WSPU members to be awarded medals as a reward for hunger striking stood in the dock at Bow Street Police Court on 30 June 1909, 114 years ago today. The previous evening they had been arrested when taking part in a deputation to the Houses of Parliament, led by Mrs Pankhurst, who was carrying a petition from a large WSPU meeting in Caxton Hall.

WSPU flyer advertising the 29 June deputation (from my collection)

The case was adjourned and on 12 July thirteen women were found guilty of stone-throwing – breaking windows in Whitehall. They duly served their sentence in Holloway and, following the example of Marion Wallace-Dunlop, who had recently been imprisoned for a a different offence, went on hunger strike. Like Wallace-Dunlop, the 13 hunger strikers were released without being forcibly fed. The authorities had not yet arrived at the solution to that particular problem.

I will now take you back to an event that took place a few weeks earlier, on 16 June 1909, when WSPU member Patricia Woodlock, who had been imprisoned for three months in Holloway – but had not been on hunger strike – was presented with a ‘For Valour’ medal at a ceremony described in Votes for Women (18 June 1909, p. 810). I think that this was the very first medal presented to a WSPU ‘foot soldier’ and, although there is now no trace of it, I assume that it took its name from ‘For Valour’ engraved on the medal’s top bar.

Although I can find no contemporary reference to the sequence of events, my thinking is that when the women who had taken part in the 29 June 1909 deputation were eventually released, after their hunger strike, the WSPU chose to honour them with medals identical to that designed for Patricia Woodlock.  

Ada Wright’s ‘Holloway’ medal (Image courtesy of Bonhams)

These medals were presented by Mrs Pankhurst at a ceremony at St James’ Hall, Great Portland Street, as reported in Votes for Women, 6 August 1909. Two of the medals have resurfaced. That awarded to Theresa Garnett is held by the Museum of London and that to Ada Wright was recently sold at auction. This batch of medals makes no mention of the hunger-strike (unlike the later, more common, more famous version); instead,  the roundel depending from the bottom bar is engraved with the word ‘Holloway’. The fact that the recipients had been on hunger strike was not yet commemorated in the medal wording.

However, in early November 1909 another medal presentation ceremony took place, held in Birmingham Town Hall (see Votes for Women 5 Nov 1909, p 84) . As far as I can discover this was only the second such medal presentation. The recipients were WSPU members who had protested at the meeting held by Asquith in Bingley Hall in September, had been arrested, sentenced and had gone on hunger strike and been forcibly fed in Winson Green Prison.

Mabel Capper’s medal, commemorating her hunger strike, presented to her in Birmingham in November 1909

Although the medal is described in Votes for Women as the ‘For Valour’ medal, I am sure this was the first occasion on which the medal with the  ‘Hunger Strike’ roundel was presented – for research reveals a photo of the medal presented on this occasion to Mabel Capper, with the ‘Hunger Strike’ inscription on the roundel.

By the way, if you wonder what happened to Emily Wilding Davison’s hunger-strike medal, you might like to read a piece I wrote about it a while ago

And be very careful to research for authenticity any hunger-strike medal offered for sale.

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