Annot before her marriage to Sam Robinson |
I first came across her in an excellent account of her contribution to Manchester politics in the early 20th century.**
I had already been reading some of her correspondence to the Daily Citizen in 1915.
“Women” she wrote “will most certainly have to take the place of men.
There is already a shortage of men workers in Manchester but so far as I am aware no women taking on a man’s work will be receiving a man’s wage.“***
She had been born in Scotland in 1874 married and moved to Ancoats in 1908 and returned to Scotland in 1923 where she died two years later.
She had become active in Scottish politics in the 1890s and by 1895 was working for the Independent Labour Party in Dundee.
Annot Robinson speaking at a Suffragette meeting circa 1910 with her daughter |
Subsequently living as a single-parent in an unaccepting age, she struggled in support of her chosen and unpopular causes, a constant and active member of the ILP and at different times of the WSPU, the NUWSS and the Women’s Labour League (WLL), Women’s War Interests Committee, Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, an ebullient speaker and tireless traveller and twice a candidate in local elections.”****
All of which was set against the backdrop of being “at first the family bread winner and then a single parent of two young children.”*****
And at this point rather than just lift Ms Rigby’sresearch I shall point you towards the article and in the fullness of time return to Annot Robinson when I found out more myself.
Pictures; Annot before she married Sam Robinson, and Suffragette meeting in Manchester, circa 1910, Annot Robinson standing. The baby is her daughter, Cathy. From ANNOT ROBINSON: A FORGOTTEN MANCHESTER SUFFRAGETTE
*Annot Robinson, http://chorltonhistory.blogspot.co.uk/search/label/Annot%20Robinson
**ANNOT ROBINSON: A FORGOTTEN MANCHESTER SUFFRAGETTE, Kate Rigby, Manchester Regional History Review, Vol 1 Nu 1 Spring 1987,
***"no women taking on a man’s work will be receiving a man’s wage" ............stories from the Great War, https://chorltonhistory.blogspot.com/search?q=stories+from+the+Great+War
****ibid Kate Rigby
***** ibid Kate Rigby
Letters to the Daily Citizen, courtesy of the Labour History Archives & Study Centre, at the People’s History Museum, Manchester, http://www.phm.org.uk/
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