
Minnie, Adelaide and Melvina
07/24/20 • 23 min
Rebel Women is a podcast about history's troublemakers.
These women chained themselves to railings, poured ink in postboxes and sometimes worse. One woman even followed Churchill on his public speaking tour, ringing a bell every time he tried to speak.
They defy everything we know about Victorian ladies. They were loud and angry; and they weren't afraid to show it. We feel that same anger today.
These women inspire us to keep fighting.
Today's show comes to you in three parts. Three parts for three stories about three women. Women who would risk everything for what they believed in.
For show notes, reading lists and further stories about East London women, visit our website eastlondonwomen.org.uk. Or find us on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, Instagram or Pinterest.
Rebel Women is part of the Women Activists of East London project, which has been developed by Share UK, a non-profit community group based in London.
Special thanks to the National Heritage Lottery Fund for their support of today's episode.
Main theme by DanoSongs. Incidental music by DanoSongs and Purple Planet Music.
Produced and edited by Steve Woodward at PodcastingEditor.com.
Further reading
Minnie Lansbury: suffragette, socialist and rebel councillor by Janine Booth
Adelaide Knight, leader of the first east London suffragettes (East End Women's Museum)
Adelaide Knight: the forgotten working class suffragette (The Telegraph)
Adelaide Knight (Wikipedia)
Jolly George, 1920: when British workers stood up for revolutionary Russia (Counterfire)
The suffragettes weren’t just white, middle-class women throwing stones (Sarah Jackson, The Guardian, 12 October 2015)
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Rebel Women is a podcast about history's troublemakers.
These women chained themselves to railings, poured ink in postboxes and sometimes worse. One woman even followed Churchill on his public speaking tour, ringing a bell every time he tried to speak.
They defy everything we know about Victorian ladies. They were loud and angry; and they weren't afraid to show it. We feel that same anger today.
These women inspire us to keep fighting.
Today's show comes to you in three parts. Three parts for three stories about three women. Women who would risk everything for what they believed in.
For show notes, reading lists and further stories about East London women, visit our website eastlondonwomen.org.uk. Or find us on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, Instagram or Pinterest.
Rebel Women is part of the Women Activists of East London project, which has been developed by Share UK, a non-profit community group based in London.
Special thanks to the National Heritage Lottery Fund for their support of today's episode.
Main theme by DanoSongs. Incidental music by DanoSongs and Purple Planet Music.
Produced and edited by Steve Woodward at PodcastingEditor.com.
Further reading
Minnie Lansbury: suffragette, socialist and rebel councillor by Janine Booth
Adelaide Knight, leader of the first east London suffragettes (East End Women's Museum)
Adelaide Knight: the forgotten working class suffragette (The Telegraph)
Adelaide Knight (Wikipedia)
Jolly George, 1920: when British workers stood up for revolutionary Russia (Counterfire)
The suffragettes weren’t just white, middle-class women throwing stones (Sarah Jackson, The Guardian, 12 October 2015)
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Previous Episode

Rebel Women trailer
Rebel Women is a podcast about the history of troublemakers in East London. This corner of Britain's capital has seen multiple waves of migration, poverty and persecution. Sometimes feared, always looked down upon, the residents have struggled.
But out of these struggles rose up some of history's greatest radicals leaders - leaders of movements that have changed both the local landscape, and wider society too. Many of them were women. And most you will have never heard about, despite their huge achievements.
Esther Freeman has spent five years poking around in archives and conducting oral history interviews, pulling together a collection of East London's hidden histories. These women shaped our society, they fought on when nobody thought they could win. There is so much we can achieve by honouring their memories and learning their lessons.
Our first series features nine stories. We will introduce you to lesbian suffragettes; the socialist socialite Daisy Greville; and the Dagenham Ford Machinists, a group of working class women who ushered in the 1970 Equal Pay Act.
Subscribe to our weekly podcast and discover more at eastlondonwomen.org.uk.
Music by DanoSongs
Produced and edited by Steve Woodward at podcastingeditor.com.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Next Episode

Women of the Gay Liberation Front and Lesbian Suffragettes
Rebel Women is a podcast about history's troublemakers.
Today's episode features the formation of the Gay Liberation Front, which was inspired by the 1969 Stonewall Riots in New York.
Although the GLF was dominated by men, there were women involved, including several who helped write the manifesto.
While Stonewall and the Gay Liberation Front launched the sexual revolution, they were by no means the first queer activists.
For show notes, reading lists and further stories about East London women, visit our website eastlondonwomen.org.uk. Or find us on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, Instagram or Pinterest.
Rebel Women is part of the Women Activists of East London project, which has been developed by Share UK, a non-profit community group based in London.
Special thanks to the National Heritage Lottery Fund for their support of today's episode.
Main theme by DanoSongs. Incidental music by Purple Planet Music.
Produced and edited by Steve Woodward at PodcastingEditor.com.
Further reading
Stonewall Riots (Wikipedia)
Stonewall Uprising: 50 years of LGBT history (Stonewall website) https://www.stonewall.org.uk/about-us/news/stonewall-uprising-50-years-lgbt-history
The Gay Liberation Front's Sexual Revolution (Peter Tatchell, The Guardian, 12 October 2010)
Gay Liberation front Manifesto (British Library)
Dear Girl: The diaries and letters of two working women 1897 – 1917, edited by Tierl Thompson (currently out of print, available used through Amazon)
100 years after giving women the vote, it's time to recognise lesbian, bi and queer suffragists (Jasmine Andersson, Pink News, 6 February 2018)
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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