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Dr Gillian Murphy

August 8th, 2018

Clement’s Inn – the first home of the Women’s Social and Political Union in London

1 comment | 1 shares

Estimated reading time: 6 minutes

Dr Gillian Murphy

August 8th, 2018

Clement’s Inn – the first home of the Women’s Social and Political Union in London

1 comment | 1 shares

Estimated reading time: 6 minutes

In 1906, the Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU) moved from Manchester to London, and specifically to Emmeline and Frederick Pethick-Lawrence’s apartment at Clement’s Inn, writes LSE curator Gillian Murphy. Eventually the WSPU occupied 27 rooms within the building, before a split in 1912 saw the WSPU move around the corner to Kingsway. Today, the site at Clement’s Inn is part of LSE’s campus.

Clement’s Inn was the London home of Emmeline and Frederick Pethick-Lawrence. It was near to the offices of the Echo, a newspaper edited by Frederick, and became the London headquarters of the Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU) in 1906.

This is an image of Clement’s Inn taken in the 1960s before it was replaced by what became LSE Tower 3, renamed in 2018 to Pethick-Lawrence House.

Clement's Inn, headquarters of WSPU. TWL 2004 247. LSE
Clement’s Inn, headquarters of WSPU. TWL 2004 247. LSE

1906 was a significant year for the WSPU and the nation. The General Election early in the year saw a landslide victory for the Liberal Party. Labour also did well winning 29 seats, leading to its renaming as the Labour Party with Keir Hardie as leader. Emmeline recounts the election in her autobiography My Part in a Changing World:

I shall never forget the thrill that I felt when I watched from the roof-garden of my flat in Clement’s Inn the election results as they were thrown by a lantern-slide on the elevated-whitened board in the Strand.

Emmeline’s autobiography also provides lots of detail about her involvement in the WSPU, an organisation led by Emmeline Pankhurst.

It was Keir Hardie who first encouraged Emmeline Pankhurst to call on Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence in February 1906 because she would, perhaps, find “a practical and useful colleague” who could develop in London her new society founded in Manchester three years before. Keir Hardie also sent Annie Kenney, a mill girl from Oldham, to see Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence in Clement’s Inn. There was something about Annie that changed Emmeline’s thoughts about the WSPU. She agreed to meet the WSPU committee at Park Walk where Sylvia Pankhurst was staying. Out of this meeting, the Central London Committee of the WSPU was formed and Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence was its treasurer.

Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence, 1907-1912. TWL.2002.136. LSE
Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence, 1907-1912. TWL.2002.136. LSE

However, Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence found that the WSPU had no office, no organisation, no money – no postage stamps even – and the fate of the group fell to her. She gave them a room in her residential apartment in Clement’s Inn which became the first office of the WSPU and her secretary typed the business letters for them. Before they could rent further premises, they needed to raise funds. Frederick Pethick-Lawrence gave the first donation; Keir Hardie sent £100 collected from friends. Gradually, Emmeline and Frederick were absorbed into the whirlpool of the WSPU.

After taking her law degree with first-class honours in June 1906, Christabel Pankhurst moved to London and lived with the Pethick-Lawrences in Clement’s Inn, and for the next five years, she, and the Pethick-Lawrences, managed the business and the finances of the WSPU.

Christabel Pankhurst, c1905. 7JCC/O/02/126. LSE
Christabel Pankhurst, c1905. 7JCC/O/02/126. LSE

By relocating to London, the WSPU were now at the political heart of the nation and the suffrage campaign became highly public. On 11 October 1908 a mass meeting was held in Trafalgar Square and the WSPU leaders called for the crowds to “rush the House of Commons”. This ended with a summons for the arrest of the speakers, Christabel and Emmeline Pankhurst, along with Flora Drummond. Before arrest, Christabel and Emmeline hid on the roof of Clement’s Inn.

Christabel and Emmeline Pankhurst on the roof of Clement's Inn, 13 October 1908. 7jcc 0 02 121. LSE
Christabel and Emmeline Pankhurst on the roof of Clement’s Inn, 13 October 1908. 7jcc 0 02 121. LSE

At 6pm, the women entered the WSPU office and gave themselves up to Inspector Jarvis.

The arrest of Flora Drummond, Emmeline and Christabel Pankhurst, WSPU offices at Clement's Inn, 1908. 7JCC/O/02/064. LSE
The arrest of Flora Drummond, Emmeline and Christabel Pankhurst, WSPU offices at Clement’s Inn, 1908. 7JCC/O/02/064. LSE

Clement’s Inn became the centre of the militant suffrage campaign, eventually occupying some 27 rooms in the building. Year by year new offices were added and departments were scattered over practically every floor. The Women’s Press, printing its newspaper Votes for Women, even had to be moved out. The operation was enormous and all administrated by paid employees and volunteers.

We hold a series of photographic postcards taken in 1911 which show behind-the-scenes activity. There was an information bureau, advertising department, editorial department, the general office, and the office of Jessie Kenney, for example:

WSPU offices at Clement's Inn, 1911. TWL 2002 485. LSE
WSPU offices at Clement’s Inn, 1911. TWL 2002 485. LSE
Jessie Kenney's office, WSPU offices at Clement's Inn, 1911. TWL 2002 482. LSE
Jessie Kenney’s office, WSPU offices at Clement’s Inn, 1911. TWL 2002 482. LSE
Advertising department, WSPU offices at Clement's Inn, 1911. TWL 2002 481. LSE
Advertising department, WSPU offices at Clement’s Inn, 1911. TWL 2002 481. LSE
Editorial department, WSPU offices at Clement's Inn, 1911. TWL 2002 479. LSE
Editorial department, WSPU offices at Clement’s Inn, 1911. TWL 2002 479. LSE

I particularly like this image, which must have been a shop where people could buy postcards, leaflets and other merchandise:

WSPU offices at Clement's Inn, 1911. TWL 2002 483. LSE
WSPU offices at Clement’s Inn, 1911. TWL 2002 483. LSE

In 1912, the Pethick-Lawrences and the Pankhursts differed over militant tactics of the WSPU campaign ending with the Pethick-Lawrences being ousted from the WSPU. The WSPU headquarters moved into Lincoln’s Inn House in Kingsway.

Lincoln's Inn House. Credit: LSE Library
Lincoln’s Inn House. LSE

Find out more about The Women’s Library collection

Posts about LSE Library explore the history of the Library, our archives and special collections.

Suffrage 18 is a series of posts to mark the 2018 centenary of the first votes for women, sharing stories from The Women’s Library about the campaign for women’s suffrage.

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About the author

Gillian Murphy

Dr Gillian Murphy

Gillian Murphy is Curator for Equality, Rights and Citizenship at LSE Library.

Posted In: LSE Library | Places | Suffrage 18 | Women and LSE

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