The Kerryman (North Kerry)

VALENTIA’S CHAMPION OF WOMEN’S RIGHTS

CELEBRATIN­G INTERNATIO­NAL WOMEN’S DAY ON MARCH 8, FREELANCE WRITER PAULINE MURPHY HIGHLIGHTS THE STORY OF VALENTIAS HELEN BLACKBURN, A KEY FIGURE IN THE SUFFRAGETT­E STRUGGLE IN THE LATE 19TH CENTURY

-

INTERNATIO­NAL Women’s Day falls on March 8th and this little island of ours has produced a wealth of ladies who have made their mark on history. Here in the kingdom there was a lady born on Valentia island who made her own mark on history through the suffragett­e struggle.

Helen Blackburn was born into an Anglo-Irish family on May 25th 1842 at Knights Town Valentia. She was the only daughter of Isabelle Lamb from Durham and Bewicke Blackburn, she had one other sibling, a brother.

Helen’s father Bewicke was a noted civil engineer who patented early automobile­s such as the Blackburn Steam Car and three wheeler bicycles but in 1837 he was tasked with the managerial position at the Knight of Kerry’s slate quarry in Valentia.

The Blackburns lived a comfortabl­e and charmed life in such a stunning location on the south west coast of Ireland. Although her family were of a unionist persuasion on the political spectrum, Helen did not look down her nose on the native Irish and forever held a warm affection for the land of her birth.

In 1859 when Helen was 17 years old, she and her family moved to London where she enrolled in University College London and studied law before carrying on her studies to the University of Bristol. Helen was a talented artist but she had severely poor eyesight and had to give up art by the time she was 21. Poor eyesight would dogg her for the rest of life, ending her days totally blind.

In 1872 Helen joined the National Women’s Suffragett­e Society. In 1874 she became it’s secretary and it was a role she held until 1895.

Helen would join other women’s rights campaigner­s at rallies and speaking events throughout England and more often than not Helen and her fellow activists would find themselves on the recieving end of a hostile crowd and would have to take cover from stones and foul words hurled upon them. Yet, Helen remained resilient and would not let hostile attitudes prevent her in her strive for womens rights.

Helen befriended Suffragett­e campaigner Jessie Boucherett and they would forge a strong working relationsh­ip which would result in the setting up of the Women’s Employment Defence League in 1891. Its purpose was to defend the working rights of women which were being massively ignored by many employers in factories across England. Women were paid less than men for the same industrial output and in many cases, they worked longer hours in dire conditions.

Blackburn would use her pen to fight for womens rights and became editor of the Englishwom­ans Review from 1890 to 1903. She was the author of many pamphlets and works advocating womens rights, especially those who worked in the industrial realms of Victorian England.

In 1896 she wrote ‘Conditions of Working Women and the Factory Act.’ It was a book which condemned those who used the fairer sex for cheap labour and those who favoured restrictin­g women working at all! She also wrote what many academics consider the definite study of the English Suffragett­e movement in the 19th century, ‘Women’s Suffrage: A Record of the Movement in the British Isles’ in 1902.

In 1885 Helen organised an exhibition of women’s industries in Bristol in the hope of pushing an emphasis of profession­alism in women’s occupation­s.

In 1895 Helen’s activities were put on hold while she cared for her elderly ill father and for two years she diligently took care of him until his death in 1897. All the while, Helen’s own health and eyesight had been deteriorat­ing and just six years after her father’s death she would follow him into the next world.

On January 11, 1903, Helen Blackburn died at the age of 60 at her home in Greycoal Gardens Westminste­r and was laid to rest in Brompton cemetery. The Suffragett­e movement had lost a pioneering and invaluable campaigner.

Helen, who did not have a family of her own, left her large library to Girton College Cambridge and her money was left for the establishm­ent of a fund to train and educate women. Helen was the first to recognise and champion women’s contributi­on to industrial­isation and although blighted by bad eyesight, ill health and an oftime hostile society, she carried on with her conviction­s due to a stubborn resilience, a trait gained from the land of her birth.

 ??  ?? ‘Helen Blackburn’ from Girton College Blackburn Collection
‘Helen Blackburn’ from Girton College Blackburn Collection

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland