FREEMASONRY TODAY

Leading Suffragette and Co-Mason, Charlotte Despard (front row, second from right), marching
through Bermondsey, South London, with the National Federation of Women Workers during a
strike, 16 May 1911. [Photo: Topical Press Agency/Getty Images]
Freemasonry and Suffrage
Ann Pilcher-Dayton Looks at the Influence of Freemasonry on the Right of Woman to Vote
Lady Freemasons – once never mentioned in polite masonic society – have recently been celebrated in a highly
successful Centenary exhibition at Freemasons’ Hall in London. Along with their heightened profile, new research
has shown that early women masons (and some men) once played a striking part in feminist history, in their support
of the fight for the vote.
Freemasonry which included both men and women in its
lodges - called Co-Masonry – was brought to this country by
Annie Besant, the social reformer and feminist, following her
initiation in France in 1902 into a new mixed Order called Le
Droit Humain (Human Right). That year, the first Co-Masonic and mixed Lodge of Le Droit Humain, Lodge
Human Duty No.6, was consecrated in London, with Annie
Besant as its Worshipful Master and feminists Ursula Bright
and her daughter Esther among the officers.
Some feminists saw the new type of mixed Freemasonry,
with its emphasis on universal brotherhood and equality of
the sexes, as a force which could be used to change society
for the better. The first part of this study will feature some
Freemasons who strongly endorsed these ideas and saw the
power of the vote as a medium of service to humanity.
Annie Besant’s support of suffrage was the most public –
in 1911 she headed a contingent of Co-Masonic ladies, under
their Lodge banners and in full regalia, in the great 40,000-strong protest march of women through London just days
before the Coronation of George V. Although Masonic
involvement in political movements was unusual, Dr. Besant
‘sanctioned wearing regalia on this occasion because she
regards the women’s movement as a matter of national
concern, not as one of party politics’.
Dr William Cobb, London clergyman, was the leader and
Grand Master of a new masonic Order which split from the
Co-Masons (Le Droit Humain) in 1908 - the Honourable
Fraternity of Antient Masonry. A significant number of upper
middle class professional men gave active support to
women’s struggle for the vote. Dr Cobb was an enthusiastic
speaker at suffrage meetings, particularly for the Women’s
Social and Political Union, the most radical of the suffrage
societies. In a speech in 1910 it was reported: ‘With the
prophetic eye of the Church of England, he said that he made
bold to declare that they would not have long to wait for the
suffrage! When they had obtained the vote, he urged them to
do their best to elevate civic life, [and] to endeavour to
eliminate party from politics …’
He felt that to give women the vote was only just, that the
duties of citizenship would be beneficial to them, and that
they would then be able to ‘help men to ideals, no longer as
unpaid servants, but as friends with equal rights and
privileges’. Suffrage was the most important political issue of
the time and, although he deplored unnecessary violence, he
admitted that at the present he could see no alternative – and
this from a High Anglican clergyman!
Annie Cobden-Sanderson, daughter of the great Liberal
reformer Richard Cobden, is one of the best-known militant
suffragettes. A member of the Women’s Freedom League, she
first joined Freemasonry in France, belonged to the Co-Masons
(Le Droit Humain) in England and then Dr Cobb’s Honourable
Fraternity. In a lodge discussion on the purpose of the Co-Masonic movement, she said that she had hoped that they
might put themselves directly
in touch with some of the great
movements – such as women’s
suffrage – outside. The Lodge
demonstrated its support for her
when, in November 1906,
whilst still a member of the Co-Masons (Le Droit Humain) she
was arrested following a
militant protest demonstration
and sentenced to two months in
prison. They sent a message to
her in Holloway – ‘This Lodge
desires to convey the assurance
of its sympathy with Sister
Cobden-Sanderson in her
present suffering and self-sacrifice
in the cause of
political equality of the sexes,
and to express its admiration
for her courage and endurance
in conditions so trying’.
Annie was involved in several
violent struggles during
demonstrations. In one of these in
Parliament Square in 1910 she
came face to face with her friend,
social equal and sometime dinner
guest Winston Churchill.
Afterwards she wrote to Churchill
at the Home Office: ‘… I had
been left on the pavement by the
police, exhausted by the struggle
… when I saw you approach. I
went forward to speak to you, for
you were not unknown to me,
when, without enquiry as to my
purpose … you ordered the police
to remove ‘that woman’. … You
are a Secretary of State, but your
office does not release even a
member of the present
Government from the obligations
of a gentleman , or authorise him
to make allegations without
foundation…’
Another notable figure in
the suffrage movement and
also a Freemason was Muriel,
Countess de la Warr. A very
wealthy woman who inherited
her fortune from her
grandfather, the railway
magnate Thomas Brassey. Her
money not only kept the Daily Herald going – a newspaper
which strongly supported the suffrage cause – but her
anonymous funding of people and causes helped to keep the
suffrage flag flying. Representative of the moderate
constitutional feminists, she was president of the Federated
Council of Suffrage Societies and was a member of Lodge
Golden Rule No.1 of Dr. Cobb’s Honourable Fraternity.
Women’s Freemasonry at the beginning of the 20th
century included many other personalities who figured in the
suffrage agitation. Charlotte Despard was a Co-Mason in Le
Droit Humain and founder of the Women’s Freedom League,
one of the main suffrage organisations. She headed the
League’s contingent in several protest marches through
London. Marion Lindsay Halsey (daughter-in-law of the
Deputy Grand Master of UGLE and herself Grand Master of
the Honourable Fraternity from 1912 to 1927), although not
recorded as playing an open part in supporting suffrage,
nevertheless was reported in Votes for Women in 1910 as
wishing ‘to thank all members of the WSPU [Women’s Social
and Political Union] who have so very kindly sympathised
with her during the illness and on the loss of her brother’.
Eustace and Hettie Miles, first Co-Masons and then members
of Dr Cobb’s Order, owned a fashionable vegetarian
restaurant at Charing Cross, which both accommodated
masonic meetings and hosted celebratory meals for
suffragettes on their release from prison.
These men and women were committed Freemasons.
They believed that the principles of Freemasonry
encompassed a true equality of the sexes, which was lacking
if one sex did not have a right – through the vote – to
influence political thought and legislation. Brotherly Love
and Relief were to be expressed as service to humanity.
The concluding part of this study in the next issue of
Freemasonry Today will describe their justification for this view.
Issue 48, Spring 2009
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