Girton College<\/a>, Cambridge.<\/p>\n
As an aside, her family is related by marriage to the Bonham
Carter family<\/a> which contains both Florence Nightingale and,
eventually, Helena Bonham Carter, a BadRep Towers favourite, so
there’s clearly something going on in this family and they
deserve watching.<\/p>\n
Muriel Matters, meanwhile, was born in Australia, moving to the UK to
participate in the suffrage movement, where she became known for being
somewhat militant and outrageous in her attempts to gain publicity for
the cause (including hiring a dirigible<\/a>).<\/p>\n
She was also a campaigner against slums and poverty and an early
teacher of the Montessori
Method<\/a>. She stood as a candidate for the Labour Party in
1924.<\/p>\n
Matters lived in the house on Pelham Street, which was a nursing home,
until her death, the later part of her life focusing on what is coyly
described by Wikipedia as “the local community”, and
spending time being a pretty great lady of letters.<\/p>\n
I can only imagine what it must have been like to campaign so ardently
for change and to see it realised in your lifetime, then to go on and
survive through the war, all the way to to the revolutions of the
1960s. It’s only when presented with those dates that I can
begin to appreciate the scale and speed of the feminist project, that
so much happened within these two overlapping lifetimes. It’s
inspirational to think about what could be achieved within
our<\/em> lifetimes.<\/p>\n
The two didn’t overlap when they lived at Pelham Place,
sadly, and my Google-fu doesn’t reveal any evidence they
actually ever met, but that’s certainly a Fantasy Dinner
party guest list to think about.<\/p>\n
I like the Blue
Plaque project<\/a>. I like any kind of history you can pick up
just by looking up whilst you’re walking along. It’s
nice to be able to put things in context and to see the past as
places with real people rather than objects in a museum.<\/p>\n
But this combination in particular strikes a chord with me,
possibly because it is so unusual. And it’s the standout
element here that makes this a Found Feminism.<\/p>\n
Let’s face it, most commemorative plaques are about men
– English
Heritage is working to tackle this issue<\/a> – and the
coverage of women’s rights is often a late addition to the
table. The Pankhursts didn’t get their plaque intil 2006,
for example, so to have two together is impressive.<\/p>\n
So here’s to Pelham Place, and to Hastings!<\/p>\n