Abstract

The 1919 Sex Disqualification (Removal) Act became law only a year after the first election in which women were able to vote and stand as Members of Parliament (MPs). Among its other provisions, this legislation allowed women to become Justices of the Peace (JPs) for the first time. In December 1919, the Lord Chancellor convened a committee of advisors (the Crewe Committee) drawn from different parts of the United Kingdom and the various political parties, and in 1920 the appointment of the first large group of women to become JPs was announced. Among the early women JPs were several individuals who also feature in the list of the country’s first women MPs, and some others who stood unsuccessfully for parliament. This article concentrates on the careers of a few of these women in public and political service, with particular focus on their engagement with criminal justice reform and connections to the women’s movement. It considers examples both of women who were successful in becoming MPs, and those who were not. Among the issues considered will be the extent of these individuals’ interest in the political and judicial aspects of their work and an assessment of their extra-parliamentary careers. This paper concludes that women could and did lead important and satisfying political lives outside as well as inside the House of Commons.

Highlights

  • Logan, Anne (2020) MP and/or JP: An examination of the public work of selected women during the early years of women’s enfranchisement (c.1920-1931)

  • Unlike the four Labour women discussed above, Wintringham was not nominated for the magistracy by the Crewe Committee; she was one of the first women magistrates in the country and was already on the bench when she was victorious in a by-election to replace her deceased husband as Independent Liberal Member for Louth in September 1921

  • Like the other women featured in this article, Rackham served her time as what Mary Stocks (1970: 165) referred to as a ‘statutory woman’, being one of a group of public-spirited ladies who served on and/or gave evidence to governmentappointed committees and royal commissions – often as the sole woman

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Summary

Introduction

Logan, Anne (2020) MP and/or JP: An examination of the public work of selected women during the early years of women’s enfranchisement (c.1920-1931). Women’s organizations joined with the labour movement and penal reform groups in pressing the government to appoint women as JPs so they could hear children’s cases (Logan, 2009).

Results
Conclusion

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