Emily Davison

Emily Davison
Born Emily Wilding Davison
11 October 1872
Blackheath, London, England
Died 8 June 1913 (aged 40)
Epsom, Surrey, England
Cause of death
Skull fracture, internal injuries
Resting place
St. Mary the Virgin, Morpeth
Monuments Plaque at Epsom Downs Racecourse
Nationality British
Education Kensington High School
Alma mater Royal Holloway, University of London
University of London
Occupation Teacher, suffragette

Emily Wilding Davison (11 October 1872 – 8 June 1913) was a militant activist who fought for women's suffrage in Britain. She was jailed on nine occasions and force-fed 49 times.[1] She is best known for stepping in front of King George V's horse Anmer at the Epsom Derby on 4 June 1913. There is evidence to suggest that she didn't intentionally kill herself, for example, she had a return ticket home found in her belongings and on the footage of what happened she is standing a bit to the side and attempts to grab the reigns of the horse. She had sustaining injuries that resulted in her death four days later. Emily Davison's funeral on 14 June 1913 was organised by the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU). Thousands of suffragettes accompanied the coffin and tens of thousands of people lined the streets of London. After a service in Bloomsbury her coffin was taken by train to the family grave in Morpeth, Northumberland.[2]

Modern historians agree that Davison was trying to disturb the Derby in order to draw attention to her cause, rather than to commit suicide,[3][4] and 2013 analysis of newsreel has supported the idea that Davison was reaching up to attach a scarf to the bridle of the King's horse. Analysis of newsreel also indicated that her position before she stepped out onto the track would have given her a clear view of the oncoming race, further countering the belief that she ran out in a haphazard way to kill herself.[5]

Early life and education

Commemorative plaque in the Palace of Westminster

Davison was born in Blackheath, London, the daughter of Charles Davison (of Morpeth, Northumberland) and Margaret Davison (of Longhorsley, Northumberland). She had two sisters and a brother; also various half-siblings from her father's first marriage including a half-brother, retired naval captain Henry Jocelyn Davison, who gave evidence at her inquest.[6]

She later attended Kensington High School and won a bursary to Royal Holloway College in 1891 to study literature and modern foreign languages.[7] However, she was forced to drop out in January 1892 because her father died and her mother could not afford the fees of £30 a term.[8] She then became a private governess before becoming a teacher in Edgbaston and Worthing, raising enough money to study Biology, Chemistry, English Language and Literature at St Hugh's College, Oxford.[7][9] She obtained first-class honours in her final exams, though women were not at that time admitted to degrees at Oxford. Davison then began teaching the daughters of the Moorhouse family in Spratton, Northamptonshire.[10]

Activism

In 1906, Davison joined the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU). Formed in 1903 by Emmeline Pankhurst, the WSPU brought together those who felt strongly that militant, confrontational tactics were needed in order to achieve women's suffrage.[7] In 1908, Davison left her teaching post to dedicate herself completely to the movement. In the same year she entered the University of London examinations as an external candidate for a degree in Modern Foreign Languages.[11]

She gained a reputation as a militant and violent campaigner. On her own initiative and without the approval of the WSPU, her actions developed from disrupting meetings to stone throwing and arson.[7] She was arrested and imprisoned for various offences nine times, including a violent attack on a man she mistook for the Chancellor of the Exchequer, David Lloyd George. During many of these prison terms she went on hunger strike and was force-fed.

On 2 April 1911, the night of the 1911 census, Davison hid in a cupboard in St Mary Undercroft, the chapel of the Palace of Westminster, overnight so that on the census form she could legitimately give her place of residence that night as the "House of Commons".[12] Census documents from the year 1911 state that Emily Wilding Davison was found "hiding in the crypt" in the Houses of Parliament.[13] In 1999 a plaque to commemorate the event was set in place by Tony Benn MP.[14]

In June 1912, near the end of a six-month sentence in Holloway Prison for arson, along with dozens of fellow suffragettes who objected to being force-fed, she threw herself down a 10-metre iron staircase. Her intention, as she wrote afterwards, was to stop the suffering of everyone else by carrying out this action. As a result she suffered severe head and spinal damage, causing discomfort for the remaining twelve months of her life.[7]

Injury at Epsom Derby

Davison falling to the ground after being struck by the King's horse

On 4 June 1913, Davison attended the Epsom Derby. As the race was underway, she ran on to the track and attempted to grab the bridle of Anmer, the horse owned by King George V. The horse collided with her and she fell to the ground, where she was trampled by its hoofs as it too fell. Meanwhile, the jockey, Herbert Jones, was thrown but had his foot caught in the stirrup. The horse did a somersault, got up, and resumed running the race, dragging the unconscious Jones before his foot came loose. Bystanders unsuccessfully attempted to revive both Davison and Jones, before they were carried off by ambulances.[15]

Davison's purpose in attending the Derby is not clear. She had purchased a return rail ticket and a ticket to a suffragette dance later that day, both of which are now in the collection of the Women's Library in London, which suggests that martyrdom was not her intention. Although it later became clear it was the only type of rail ticket available for purchase,[3] it is noted that she carefully kept the return half in her purse.[16] Further evidence is a postcard she wrote to her sister Laetitia, who lived in France and to whom she was very close, which suggests she was going on holiday a few days after the Derby to visit her sister and her niece.

Suffragette, Emily Wilding Davison memorial issue of the newspaper edited by Christabel Pankhurst

It is a possibility that she entered the race track in order to attach a flag to Anmer, so that when the horse crossed the finishing line, it would be flying the WSPU flag. According to police reports, two flags were found in her possession. Pathé News captured the incident on film.[17] Film, taken at Tattenham Corner, shows Davison stepping out onto the racecourse just as the leading horses swept by. She was then seen standing in the middle of the racecourse as two more horses passed on the inside of her, and was then knocked to the ground by one of the last few trailing horses, the King's horse Anmer. The film is unclear, but it is possible that by this point she had taken the banner of the WSPU out from where it was concealed in her clothing, with the intention of attaching it to the horse. Eyewitnesses at the time were divided as to her motivation, with many feeling that she had simply intended to cross the track, believing that all horses had passed. Others reported that she had attempted to pull down the King's horse. It is sometimes suggested that a few weeks beforehand Emily Davison and other suffragettes were "practising" grabbing horses in the park near her mother's house in Morpeth and that they drew straws to decide who should be the one to go to Epsom.[5]

Horse racing historian Michael Tanner, in a 2011 TV interview at Epsom, pointed out that, as Emily Davison was standing on the inside of the bend at Tattenham Corner amidst heaving crowds, and with no racetrack commentary as there is today, it would not have been possible to know whether the King's horse had already gone past. In addition, considering the speeds the horses were going, it would not have been possible for her to identify any particular horse even if she had meant to. This suggests that the fact it was the King's horse that she collided with was just a coincidence. Tanner later described the story of her "practising" with galloping horses and "drawing straws" as "folklore at best, pure hokum at worst," emphasising that "by 1913 Davison's modus operandi was acting alone – no one knew of her plans, in Morpeth or elsewhere."

The most recent theory is that she intended to throw a Votes for Women sash around the neck of the King's horse to gain publicity for her cause. A sash apparently found at the scene immediately after the collision was recently purchased at auction by author Barbara Gorna, the closest losing bidder being the Jockey Club, and now hangs in the Houses of Parliament. This theory received support from a 2013 examination of the incident, in which forensic experts examined and correlated footage captured by three different newsreel cameras, and determined that Davison was much closer to the start of the bend than had been previously assumed, and so would have had a much clearer view of the oncoming horses than previously thought.[5] It concluded that Davison, who clearly carried in her hand something that could have been the folded Votes for Women sash as she ducked under a barrier and onto the course, did intend to attach it to the king's horse, and that there was no question of her deliberately throwing herself under the horse.[2]

However, in his 2013 book The Suffragette Derby, Tanner examined the provenance of this "sash", which is in fact a scarf, and found it wanting: its original owner, Richard Pittway Burton, was not Epsom's Clerk of the Course, as claimed, but an East End docker with no racing connection whatsoever. Nor, he argued, could the article in Davison's hand be safely identified as a scarf in the first place: the evidence was skewed to suit. In a letter to the Racing Post Tanner went on to deplore the reiteration of "several myths" attached to Davison that he had debunked in his book, and expressed deep reservations about the film footage analysis, stressing once more that "from her position wedged tight against the rail, Davison would need to have been on a 20-foot ladder to have seen over the heads of the people to her right and then the leading bunch of nine horses to single out the figure of Anmer hidden behind... she was already ducking under the rail as the first horses passed and had missed two-thirds of the field altogether – which for all she knew may have included Anmer. It was pure chance that she stumbled upon Anmer."

Death

Davison died four days later in Epsom Cottage Hospital due to a fractured skull and internal injuries caused by the incident. Jones suffered a mild concussion, but allegedly was "haunted by that poor woman's face" for much longer. In 1928, at the funeral of Emmeline Pankhurst, Jones laid a wreath "to do honour to the memory of Mrs Pankhurst and Miss Emily Davison". However, Tanner rejects both this and the inference that the Epsom incident contributed to the jockey's suicide in 1951, having interviewed both of Jones's children for his book: "Their father killed himself 38 years later following the death of his wife and a loneliness brought on by deafness."

Commemoration

Emily Wilding Davison's funeral, June 1913

Davison is buried in the church yard of St. Mary the Virgin, Morpeth, Northumberland, in a family plot where her father was buried (he died 1893). The cemetery is about 7 miles south of Longhorsley, where she had lived with her mother and family. A memorial service, which attracted a great crowd, was held at St. George's church in London on 14 June 1913. Her coffin was brought by train to Morpeth for burial on 15 June.[18] Her gravestone bears the WSPU slogan, "Deeds not words."

On 18 April 2013 a plaque was unveiled at Epsom racecourse to mark the centenary of the death.[19] An Emily Wilding Davison Memorial Campaign was also established ahead of the centenary to campaign for a minute's silence at the 2013 Epsom Derby.[20] However, the campaign failed after the racecourse said that this would be "logistically impossible".[19]

Legacy

Like other acts of suffragette militancy, Davison’s actions divided public opinion, some admiring her courage, others decrying the disruption of sport, the injury to jockey Herbert Jones, and the slight to the King.[21] But the direct consequence was to galvanise male political support for suffrage, in the form of the Northern Men's Federation for Women's Suffrage.[22] This initially took the form of a deputation to the Prime Minister Asquith; when this was rebuffed, it became a standing organisation. Its president was the former actress Maud Arncliffe-Sennett. It was mainly composed of town councillors, ministers, lawyers and similar civic figures from Glasgow and Edinburgh, and had little following beyond central Scotland, even in Davison’s Northumberland.

Beyond the Federation it is difficult to distinguish Davison's effect from that of the broader militant tradition in Britain, which continued until the political landscape was changed by the outbreak of World War I.

Emily Davison is the subject of an opera, Emily (2013), by the British composer Tim Benjamin.[23] She is also the subject of a song by American rock singer Greg Kihn, whose elegy "Emily Davison" is included on his first album, 1976's Greg Kihn.

In 2014, English folk singer, Maz O'Connor, released a track "Derby Day" viewing events as if she were a young boy watching the race while sitting on his father's shoulders. The track is included on her album, "This Willowed Light"

See also

References

  1. Jonathan Brown (24 May 2013). "Suffragette Emily Davison: The woman who would not be silenced - Home News - UK". London: The Independent. Retrieved 3 June 2013.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Clare Balding's Secrets of a Suffragette, Channel Four, first broadcast 26 May 2013
  3. 3.0 3.1 Atkinson, Diane. "Deeds not Words". New Statesman. Retrieved 25 May 2013.
  4. Gullickson, Gay L. (Summer 2008). "Martyrdom, Self-Sacrifice, and Self-Denial". Social Research (The New School) 75 (2): pp. 461–484. Retrieved 25 May 2013.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Vanessa Thorpe (26 May 2013). "Truth behind the death of suffragette Emily Davison is finally revealed | Society | The Observer". London: Guardian. Retrieved 3 June 2013.
  6. The Times, Wednesday, 11 June 1913; p.15; Issue 40235; column F.
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 Higher Magazine, Royal Holloway College, Issue 15, 2011 pp18-19
  8. Royal Holloway, University of London Archives student register
  9. http://www.aim25.ac.uk/cgi-bin/search2?coll_id=6687&inst_id=65
  10. See 1901 Census for Spratton, Northamptonshire
  11. http://www.ulrls.lon.ac.uk/resources/graduates2ocr.pdf
  12. "Women in Parliament". Explore-Parliament.net. Retrieved 3 June 2013.
  13. "Astonishing 1911 census find – Emily Davison in Parliament’s crypt". findmypast.co.uk blog. 30 April 2010.
  14. "Benn's secret tribute to suffragette martyr". BBC News. 17 March 1999. Retrieved 7 August 2008.
  15. "MILITANT THROWS KING'S DERBY COLT" (PDF). The New York Times. 5 June 1913. Retrieved 4 June 2013.
  16. Tanner, Michael. "The violent zealot of women's lib". The Week, 8 June 2013: p.53
  17. Pathé News. "Suffragette, Emily Davison, Killed by King's Horse, 1913 Derby". YouTube. Retrieved 4 June 2013.
  18. Pankhurst, Emmeline (1914). My own story. New York: Hearst's international library co. p. 314.
  19. 19.0 19.1 Emma Barnett (18 April 2013). "Centenary of Emily Wilding Davison's death marked with plaque at Epsom". London: The Telegraph. Retrieved 15 June 2013.
  20. "Emily Wilding Davison Memorial Campaign". Retrieved 15 June 2013.
  21. "Emily Wilding Davison". Historylearningsite.co.uk. Retrieved 3 June 2013.
  22. Leah Leneman. A Guid Cause. The Women’s Suffrage Movement in Scotland. Mercat Press 1995
  23. Emily

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Emily Davison.

Archives