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  • 2018-10-21 (xsd:date)
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  • Is This a Photograph of Susan B. Anthony Being Beaten on the Street? (en)
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  • In October 2018, many social media users encountered a meme spread online apparently aimed an generating interest in voting in the upcoming midterm elections. The meme featured a photograph of a woman being attacked on a street, along with a caption identifying the victim as Susan B. Anthony, the American women's rights activist who played a key role in the women's suffrage movement, being beaten and arrested for trying to vote: This photograph was snapped at the scene of a voting rights protest, but it's not a picture of Susan B. Anthony, its setting is not the United States, and it was not taken in 1872. The picture was originally published in the English newspaper The Daily Mirror on 19 November 1910 as part of their coverage of the Black Friday suffragette protest a day earlier in which 300 women marched to the Houses of Parliament as part of an effort to secure voting rights for women. The woman being attacked was not identified by the the newspaper, and the Mirror downplayed the incident, demeaningly captioning the photograph as follows: The attacked woman was later identified as Ada Wright, who had already been part of the suffragette movement for years when she and other activists marched to the House of Commons on Black Friday to protest the blocking of a bill that would have granted around a million women the right to vote. In an August 2004 historical study published by the European Journal of Women's Studies, researcher Katherine E. Kelly reported that Wright and her comrades were beaten, punched and groped with unusual ferocity. But the publication of the photograph taken by Victor ConsolĂ© of London News Agency, Kelly wrote, led to a turnaround in public perception despite officials' best efforts: Churchill would later reject calls for a public inquiry into the protest, which led to the arrests of 115 women and four men, as well as statements from 29 protesters saying that they had been sexually assaulted during the violence. The charges against all 116 arrestees were quickly dropped. A year later, Wright was arrested and imprisoned for 14 days after she broke a window during another suffragette demonstration. The right to vote in England was not expanded until 1918, when women over the age of 30 were allowed at the polls provided they were college graduates, householders, married to householders, or occupied property and paid at least five pounds in rent per month. Ten years later, the passing of the Representation of the People Act (also known as the Equal Franchise Act) provided women electoral equality with men and extended the vote to all women of age 21 or older (regardless of property ownership). An updated version of the law enacted in 1969 set the minimum voting age at 18 for both men and women. (en)
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