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Slightly off on a tangent, as a Records Manager, this is a problem I
have even with recent legislation. Often professionals quote acts as
rationales behind retention periods. Its only when you pore over them
that you tend to find these are based on secondary interpretations or
are non existent. 



I think for archivists/researchers/historians, pointing to an often quoted piece of
legislation is a short cut for centuries of overlapping precedent, both in legal cases and staute. Not a terrible crime, but a detailed framework (if one doesn't already exist) for both sides would be useful. 

-Ian
Date: Fri, 12 Mar 2010 16:10:23 +0000
From: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Friday afternoon question - the female franchise!
To: [log in to unmask]











Friday afternoon question - the female franchise!
















Dredging up my O-level history I think
women first voted in local government elections, specifically elections to
School Boards, following the 1870 Education Act. Elizabeth Garrett Anderson was
elected as one of the first female members of a school board.

 

Cheers

 

Martin

 



Martin Taylor

City Archivist

Hull History Centre

Worship Street

Hull

HU2 8BG

 

(01482) 317501

[log in to unmask]











From:
Archivists, conservators and records managers. [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
On Behalf Of Vivienne Aldous

Sent: 12 March 2010 15:39

To: [log in to unmask]

Subject: Re: Friday afternoon
question - the female franchise!



 



Sorry I can't cite chapter and verse, but I seem to remember
one of our academic researchers at the Corporation of London Records Office
some years ago finding some 17th century women voting at Wardmotes in the City
of London. I seem to remember that there might even have been a legal case
about it in one of the Royal Courts at Westminster,
which I think upheld a particular woman's right to vote, but it didn't seem to
catch on. If so, it almost certainly would have been a "custom and
practice" issue, rather than a statute which authorised it.





 





Any other ex-CLRO archivists or academics out there
remember this one? 





 





Vivienne Aldous





 





former archivist CLRO





 





Freelance Archivist and Archive Researcher







----- Original Message ----- 







From: Gilliam, Chris - Social &
Community Services 





To: [log in to unmask]






Sent: Friday, March 12,
2010 2:52 PM





Subject: Friday afternoon
question - the female franchise!





 



In
order to answer a question that has been brought up by one of our researchers,
I would be grateful if anyone can provide a specific date and preferably a
statute when women - married or otherwise - were first elegible to be
registered as voters in local government elections. The 1894 Local Government
Act is commonly cited however I can find no reference to the matter other than
section 43 which provides for the removal of the disqualification on married
women. Presumably spinsters and widows were already elegible and indeed section
63 of the Municipal Corporations Act 1882 (45 & 46 Vict c 50) specifically
states that women are included in the qualifications. The Municipal
Corporations Act 1835 (5 & 6 Will IV c 76) s 9 excludes women by
restricting burgess qualifications to male persons. So, somewhere between 1835
and 1882 some women must have become elegible to vote in local elections.


I
suggest replies could be on-list as others may be interested. 


Many
thanks 

Chris 


Mr C Gilliam, Archivist

Oxfordshire Record Office, Heritage & Arts

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