The House

Edith Summerskil­l

The Life and Times of a Pioneering Feminist Labour MP

- By Mary Honeyball Publisher Bloomsbury Academic

Mary Honeyball’s biography of the remarkable and fearless Labour MP Edith Summerskil­l is a delight

Like many, I knew of Dr Edith Summerskil­l but didn’t really know about her. The very readable biography by former Labour MEP Mary Honeyball soon put a stop to that.

Born in 1901 to Dr William Summerskil­l and Edith Wilde – and elected to the House of Commons in 1938 just before the Second World War broke out – what a delight it was to read Edith’s story. Given it is such a remarkable story of such a remarkable woman, I did wonder why it is only now that the first full-length biography has been written about her.

Edith’s son, Michael Summerskil­l, is a huge source of the more personal material about her. From this, I think the reason so little has been written is that she was more interested in doing what she thought was right than popular, even with her own Labour colleagues – and this was reflected in the campaigns she pursued.

Together with Eleanor Rathbone, Edith became a doughty campaigner for women’s rights, the likes of which weren’t seen again until Harriet Harman took up the mantle in the 1980s.

There was a remarkable story about Edith in the 1935 general election, contesting the Bury constituen­cy near to me. Edith had already campaigned for a women’s right to have choice over her fertility, which was contrary to the teachings of the local Catholic priests. They demanded Edith denounce contracept­ion, but she refused. Although it is not thought she lost the election solely because of her stance, it undoubtedl­y influenced it. She is said to have learnt a valuable lesson, and refused to contest the 1938 Fulham West seat in a by-election until she had a guarantee the local clergy wouldn’t interfere.

In addition to Edith’s fight for women’s fertility rights, she also campaigned for day nurseries, better education for girls, analgesia in childbirth, equal pay for women and for women to take up paid employment during the Second World War. Edith also introduced legislatio­n to ensure women have an equal share to the matrimonia­l finances and a right to stay in the home after a marriage breaks down.

What contribute­d to Edith’s remarkable story was that before she was elected as a Member of Parliament, she was a practising GP and she continued working with her husband and partner Dr Jeffrey Samuel in their practice afterwards.

But what struck me most was why Edith was so fiercely independen­t and driven at a time when women seldom worked after marriage, let alone after having children (in addition to Michael, Edith and Jeffrey had a daughter, Shirley).

Once more, Michael’s personal documents provide some understand­ing. Edith’s father was a doctor and her love of medicine came from him, as did her desire to tackle the poverty she witnessed, but he was also a serial adulterer fathering several children. At a time before child benefit or family allowance, when having a child outside marriage would condemn the woman as a social pariah, Edith senior took responsibi­lity for supporting these children, noting down the payments in a leger when these women came to their house for money. Unsurprisi­ngly, the older Edith was very unhappy and felt trapped. Edith junior was said to be fully aware of her father’s philanderi­ng and was always publicly supportive of him, but it does make me wonder how much these circumstan­ces influenced her life choices.

I can thoroughly recommend this book on the life of the exceptiona­l

Edith Summerskil­l.

“The local priests demanded that Edith denounce the use of contracept­ion, but she refused”

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