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  1. Edith 'Biddy' Lanchester (28 July 1871 – 26 March 1966) was an English socialist, feminist and suffragette. She became well known in 1895 when her family had her incarcerated in an asylum for planning to live with her lover, who was an Irish, working-class labourer.

  2. 30. Nov. 2020 · Edith Lanchester was a headstrong feminist and socialist. She believed in women’s suffrage and pursued it wholeheartedly. This tickled her family’s concern, but what really confirmed their distress was when Edith announced she intended to live with her lover, Shamus Sullivan, out of wedlock.

  3. 10. Okt. 2021 · In the autumn of 1895 Edith Lanchester was 24. Born into a middle-class family, she had studied at the Birkbeck Institute and worked as a City clerk. She was also already a seasoned socialist campaigner; her ringing voice, it was said, could command the attention of the most hostile of crowds.

  4. 5. Feb. 2018 · Edith Lanchester – socialist and feminist. World history. 5 February, 2018. Lewisham’s famous women: Edith Lanchester (1871-1966) Many people know of the famous Catford born actress Elsa Lanchester, but what do you know of her socialist and feminist mother, Edith? Edith ‘Biddy’ Lanchester was born in Hove, Sussex on 28 July 1871.

  5. 25. Okt. 2018 · Loading…. Yesterday & today, in London healthcare history: Hayes and Northwood & Pinner hospitals occupied, 1983. On 25 October 1895, Edith Lanchester was kidnapped by her father and brothers, sectioned, and forcibly incarcerated in a lunatic asylum - her punishment for announcing her plan to live unmarried with her lover.

  6. 16. Dez. 2021 · Tags: 19th century, British history, History Today, Protest and rebellion, Social history, Women’s history. By the autumn of 1895, Edith Lanchester was 24. Born into a prosperous middle-class family, she had studied at London University and Birkbeck and was earning her own living as a clerk at the Cardiff (New South Wales) Gold ...

  7. 28. Apr. 2014 · What theoretical contortions produced the idea of the “feeble brain” in the nineteenth century? And how did British women like Edith Lanchester manage to fight it? As we investigate these questions, we will take a different perspective on the relationships between psychiatry and (anti-)feminism, and subject to scrutiny the ...