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The biography of an insurgent woman
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Elizabeth Wolstenholme Elmy (1833–1918) was one of the most significant pioneers of the British women's emancipation movement, though her importance is little recognised. Wolstenholme Elmy referred to herself as an ‘initiator’ of movements, and she was at the heart of every campaign Victorian feminists conducted — her most well-known position being that of secretary of the Married Women's Property Committee from 1867–82. A fierce advocate of human rights, as the secretary of the Vigilance Association for the Defence of Personal Rights, Wolstenholme Elmy earned the nickname of the ‘parliamentary watch-dog’ from Members of Parliament anxious to escape her persistent lobbying. Also a feminist theorist, she believed wholeheartedly in the rights of women to freedom of their person, and was the first woman ever to speak from a British stage on the sensitive topic of conjugal rape. Wolstenholme Elmy engaged theoretically with the rights of the disenfranchised to exert force in pursuit of the vote, and Emmeline Pankhurst lauded her as ‘first’ among the infamous suffragettes of the Women's Social and Political Union. As a lifelong pacifist, however, she resigned from the WSPU Executive in the wake of increasingly violent activity from 1912. A prolific correspondent, journalist, speaker and political critic, Wolstenholme Elmy left significant resources, believing they ‘might be of value’ to historians. This book draws on a great deal of this documentation to produce a portrait that does justice to her achievements as a lifelong ‘Insurgent woman’.

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Maureen Wright

corpus of correspondence remains, together with quantities of published commentary, articles, reports and other artefacts. These were not all written with a specific ‘feminist’ focus, but all are directed, in some measure, to the ‘social condition’ of humanity. Such was Wolstenholme Elmy’s grasp of the British legal and judicial system she acquired a formidable reputation as ‘the parliamentary watch-dog’ and few state officials escaped being drawn into the circle of her correspondence.15 This numbered well in excess of 7,000 individuals worldwide and the mailings of

in Elizabeth Wolstenholme Elmy and the Victorian Feminist Movement