Margaret Hewitt (suffragette)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Margaret Hewitt
in 1909 at the "Suffragette's Rest"
Born
Margaret J Hewitt
NationalityBritish
Occupationactivist
EmployerWSPU
Known fororganising suffragette protests fl. 1909

Margaret Hewitt (1800s–1900s) was a British suffragette employed by the Women's Social and Political Union. She was involved in protests in 1909 and arrested. She was chosen to visit the Eagle House aka "Suffragette's Rest" where a plaque commemorated her planting holly bush in the arboretum for leading suffragettes.

Life[edit]

Hewitt's early life is unknown. In 1908 she came to notice when she interrupted Lord Carrington as he arrived in Manchester to give him a copy of the newspaper Votes for Women. Carrington told her to send it to him by post. She was also campaigning that month in Greater Manchester at Altringham and organising the collecting stewards for a suffragist meeting in Heaton Park.[1]

Mary Blathwayt, Annie Kenney, Margaret Hewitt and Bodo (the car)

In 1909 suffragettes were arrested for obstruction during a visit by Winston Churchill because they refused to leave the meeting place. Those taken to court were Edith Rigby, Grace Alderman, Catherine Worthington and Beth Hesmondhalgh. They all chose prison for seven days, in preference to a fine, except for Edith Rigby. Her father, annoyingly, paid the fine claiming that his daughter (a later proven arsonist) was just in the bad company of "hired women". Edith's brother, Arthur, was reported to have pointed at Hewitt, saying that it was all due to "that painted jezebel". Hewitt was wearing a hat at a jaunty angle and lipstick.[2]

In 1909, Hewitt was arrested in Preston and she was invited to Eagle House aka "Suffragette's Rest" near Bath.[3] Key activists from the suffragette movement were invited to stay at the Blathwayt's house and to plant a tree to celebrate their work, a prison sentence or to mark having been on hunger strike.[4] The trees were known as "Annie's Arboretum" after Annie Kenney.[5][6] Hewitt planted an Ilex aquifolium albo marginata Holly on 3 October 1909 in Annie's Arboretum.[1] She had her photo taken by Linley Blathwayt, a lead plaque was mounted and she was photographed with Annie, Mary Blathwayt and Bodo (Linley Blathwayt's Oldsmobile car).

In 1909, she was the WSPU's lead on Dorset in Weymouth. She is also mentioned in an unclaimed diarist's belongings which includes a letter addressed to her. The diarists profile is like Mary Blathwayt of Batheaston who had a younger brother named William who worked in Germany.[7]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "Margaret Hewitt · Suffragette Stories". suffragettestories.omeka.net. Retrieved 1 January 2023.
  2. ^ Atkinson, Diane (2019). Rise Up, Women!: The Remarkable Lives of the Suffragettes. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 183. ISBN 978-1-4088-4405-2.
  3. ^ "Suffragette Margaret Hewitt c.1909". Bath in Time. Retrieved 1 January 2023.
  4. ^ Simkin, John (September 1997). "Mary Blathwayt". Spartacus Educational. Retrieved 24 October 2017.
  5. ^ Hammond, Cynthia Imogen (2017). Architects, Angels, Activists and the City of Bath, 1765–1965 ": Engaging with Women's Spatial Interventions in Buildings and Landscape. Routledge. ISBN 9781351576123.
  6. ^ Hannam, June (Winter 2002). "Suffragette Photographs" (PDF). Regional Historian (8).
  7. ^ Detailed diarist's notes of a trip from Batheaston to Germany with her brother William,... 1906–1914.