Susanna
Inge and Mary Ann Walker were, briefly, prominent speakers on the London
Chartist lecture circuit.
Yet almost nothing is known of the "she Chartists", as they were disparagingly dubbed by The Times, beyond a few
speeches that they made over a 12-month period from July 1842 to the summer of
1843.
The
story of their rise to heady mix of popular acclaim and newspaper condemnation
– and of their equally rapid disappearance from public view – has now been
added to Chartist Ancestors.
I
personally enjoyed the newspapers' account of the previously unknown Mary Ann
Walker's unscripted demolition of a male speaker who suggested that women were
unfit for public office since they might be unduly influenced by a male suitor
of opposing views.
It
is interesting to speculate on what might have been had the Chartist movement taken
the political rights of women more seriously (and been less inclined to dismiss
women who had the audacity to challenge its leaders).
I
would also love to know more about what happened to Susanna Inge and Mary Ann
Walker when they dropped out of the Chartist movement. If you can fill in any
of the gaps, please do get in touch.
Meanwhile, I also plan to publish more about women Chartists on the website in the coming months.
Have a look at the story of Mary Ann Walker and Susanna Inge.
