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Vote Collection (page 3)

Background imageVote Collection: Janet M Cole and Hazel Philip campaigning for Votes for Women, Chicago, USA, 1905

Janet M Cole and Hazel Philip campaigning for Votes for Women, Chicago, USA, 1905
Mrs Janet M Cole and Miss Hazel Philip campaigning for Votes for Women, Chicago, Illinois, USA, 1905. Women finally secured the right to vote throughout the United States in 1920 with the passing of

Background imageVote Collection: Of Course He Wants to Vote the Democratic Ticket, 1876. Artist: Frost, Arthur Burdett (1851-1928)

Of Course He Wants to Vote the Democratic Ticket, 1876. Artist: Frost, Arthur Burdett (1851-1928)
Of Course He Wants to Vote the Democratic Ticket, 1876. From a private collection

Background imageVote Collection: Mrs Flora Drummond, arrested in Hyde Park, London, 1914, (1935)

Mrs Flora Drummond, arrested in Hyde Park, London, 1914, (1935). General Flora Drummond joined the suffragette campaign to obtain the vote for women

Background imageVote Collection: The Polling, Plate III from The Humours of an Election, 1757. Artist: William Hogarth

The Polling, Plate III from The Humours of an Election, 1757. Artist: William Hogarth
The Polling, Plate III from The Humours of an Election, 1757. This series of four plates depicts the Oxfordshire parliamentary election of 1754

Background imageVote Collection: Reform Leaguers at Marble Arch, London, 1866 (1906)

Reform Leaguers at Marble Arch, London, 1866 (1906). Police trying to stop campaigners for voting reform from entering Hyde Park. From Cassells History of England, Vol. VI

Background imageVote Collection: A woman recording her vote at the ballot box, c1922

A woman recording her vote at the ballot box, c1922. Women over the age of 30 were given the right to vote in Britain for the first time by the Representation of the People Act 1918

Background imageVote Collection: The international gathering of the women suffrage workers, 1914, (c1920)

The international gathering of the women suffrage workers, 1914, (c1920). Illustration from Story of the British Nation, Volume IV, by Walter Hutchinson, (London, c1920s)

Background imageVote Collection: Agricultural Labourers Union meeting in Farringdon Street, London, 1877

Agricultural Labourers Union meeting in Farringdon Street, London, 1877. Founded by Joseph Arch and inaugurated at Leaming in 1872, the National Union of Farm Labourers grew quickly, attracting 86

Background imageVote Collection: English suffragettes on being released from Holloway Prison, 1908

English suffragettes on being released from Holloway Prison, 1908
English suffragettes Edith New and Mary Leigh being carried triumphantly through London streets after being released from Holloway Prison, 22 August 1908

Background imageVote Collection: International Woman Suffrage Alliance, 1914

International Woman Suffrage Alliance, 1914. In centre of seated row is Carrie Chapman Catt (1859-47), American feminist leader

Background imageVote Collection: A Sop to Cerberus, 1872. Artist: Joseph Swain

A Sop to Cerberus, 1872. Artist: Joseph Swain
A Sop to Cerberus, 1872. This cartoon shows Louis Adolphe Thiers, the first president of the Third Republic, and Leon Gambetta, the deputy for Marseilles

Background imageVote Collection: Revised-and Corrected, 1868. Artist: John Tenniel

Revised-and Corrected, 1868. Artist: John Tenniel
Revised-and Corrected, 1868. During the General Election of 1868, the question of the enfranchisement of women came to fore

Background imageVote Collection: Waiting for the Verdict, 1865. Artist: John Tenniel

Waiting for the Verdict, 1865. Artist: John Tenniel
Waiting for the Verdict, 1865. Lord Derby (left) and Disraeli represent the Conservatives who awaited the verdict of the country following the 1865 General Election

Background imageVote Collection: Cobdens Logic, 1863. Artist: John Tenniel

Cobdens Logic, 1863. Artist: John Tenniel
Cobdens Logic, 1863. Cobden, MP for Manchester, made a speech in neighbouring Rochdale in which, on the one hand he condemned the British proletariat for their illiteracy, yet, on the other hand

Background imageVote Collection: The Old Real Reformer, 1859

The Old Real Reformer, 1859. There was No Stopping the Slave-trade until I made it Felony, and so it will be with Election Bribery



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