In 2012-13 I worked on an exciting project called Fight for the Right: the Birmingham Suffragettes.
Funded by the Heritage Lottery Fund, the project gave an opportunity for young
women living in Birmingham to explore the activities of both sides of the
suffrage campaign, militant and non-militant, that took place in the city in
the early 1900s. A group of young women from two local schools, Kings
Norton Girls’ School and Waverley School, who were
aged 12-15 during the project, investigated social and political change by
looking at different ways of campaigning and protesting by women who wanted the
right to vote. The young women involved in the project believed that the
Birmingham suffrage campaigners were an important part of their heritage. While
some of those involved had some prior knowledge of the suffragettes, often
little is known or understood by young women about the histories of women
involved in the campaign that lived and acted locally. Fight for the Right aimed to re-dress the balance by
exploring women’s voting history from a local perspective, focusing
specifically on the activities of the Birmingham suffrage movement between 1909
and 1914. While primarily a local history project, participants also considered
social and cultural change within women’s rights today and explored ideas about
voting and politics.
The
project took place over a period of twelve months and was supported by the
Heritage Lottery Fund’s Young Roots programme. A series of workshops were
delivered by a small team of facilitators, including a project manager, local
historians, a film maker, a drama practitioner and Education staff from
Birmingham Archives & Heritage. The initial project plan was to use the
knowledge gained through workshops and archival research to lead to the
students scripting and filming a historical re-enactment film that interpreted
the Birmingham story by focusing on the activities of both the suffragettes and
the suffragists. What took place in Birmingham was not especially different to
other major cities across the rest of the country but the project allowed the
participants to research those events through local women and local actions,
increasing a sense of connection between them and the past. The project aimed
to explore the hidden stories that were not part of the students’ everyday
learning, where the stories told often focus on a London-centric viewpoint
concentrating on a limited number of personalities, for example, the Pankhursts
and Emily Wilding Davison. While clearly important figures, the participants wanted
to know more about what happened in their own local area.
You can
read entries written during the project on the blog: http://birminghamsuffragettes.wordpress.com/
We recently
published a resource guide based around the project, aimed at Key Stage 3 pupils,
which can be downloaded here: http://www.connectinghistories.org.uk/birmingham-stories/birmingham-stories-faces-places/
The
film, Fight for the Right, directed
by Sima Gonsai, can be viewed on Vimeo: https://vimeo.com/86719388
Heritage Lottery Fund is doing a great job supporting the suffragettes' movement in this way promoting the social equilibrium so much needed nowadays.
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