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=== Conciliation, force-feeding attempt, and arson === {{See also|Suffragette bombing and arson campaign}} After the Liberal losses in the 1910 elections, ILP member and journalist [[Henry Brailsford]] helped organise a Conciliation Committee for Women's Suffrage, which gathered 54 MPs from various parties. The group's [[Conciliation Bills|Conciliation Bill]] looked to be a narrowly defined but still significant possibility to achieve the vote for some women. Thus the WSPU agreed to suspend its support for window-breaking and hunger strikes while it was being negotiated. When it became clear that the bill would not pass, Pankhurst declared: "If the Bill, in spite of our efforts, is killed by the Government, then ... I have to say there is an end to the truce."<ref>Quoted in Purvis 2002, p. 150.</ref> When it was defeated, Pankhurst led a [[Demonstration (people)|protest march]] of 300 women to Parliament Square on 18 November. They were met with aggressive police response, directed by [[Home Secretary]] Winston Churchill: officers punched the marchers, twisted arms, and pulled on women's breasts.<ref name="bf"/> Although Pankhurst was allowed to enter Parliament, Prime Minister Asquith refused to meet her. The incident became known as [[Black Friday (1910)|Black Friday]].<ref name="bf">Purvis 2002, pp. 143β151.</ref> Her sister Mary Jane, who had attended the protest, too, was arrested for the third time, a few days later. She was sentenced to a month of imprisonment. On Christmas Day she died at the home of their brother Herbert Goulden, two days after her release.<ref name="wsm"/> [[File:Forcefeeding.jpg|thumb|left|upright|Pankhurst was horrified by the screams of women being [[Force-feeding|force-fed]] during hunger strikes. In her autobiography, she wrote: "I shall never while I live forget the suffering I experienced during the days when those cries were ringing in my ears."<ref>E. Pankhurst 1915, p. 252.</ref>]] [[File:Mrs Emmeline Pankhurst, Leader of the Women's Suffragette movement, is arrested outside Buckingham Palace while trying to present a petition to King George V in May 1914. Q81486.jpg|thumbnail|right|Pankhurst is arrested by police outside [[Buckingham Palace]] while trying to present a petition to George V in May 1914]] As subsequent Conciliation Bills were introduced, WSPU leaders advocated a halt to militant tactics. [[Aileen Preston]] was appointed as Pankhurst's driver in April 1911, to drive her around the country to help spread the suffrage message.<ref>{{Cite web|date=16 March 2021|title=Suffrage Stories: Aileen Preston: Mrs Pankhurst's first 'lady chauffeuse'|url=https://womanandhersphere.com/2021/03/16/suffrage-stories-aileen-preston-mrs-pankhursts-first-lady-chauffeuse/|access-date=16 March 2021|website=Woman and her Sphere|language=en|archive-date=16 March 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210316114039/https://womanandhersphere.com/2021/03/16/suffrage-stories-aileen-preston-mrs-pankhursts-first-lady-chauffeuse/|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|title=Woman's Hour β Aileen Graham-Jones β BBC Sounds|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/p01ngy65|access-date=16 March 2021|website=www.bbc.co.uk|language=en-GB}}</ref> In March 1912, the second bill was in jeopardy and Pankhurst joined a fresh outbreak of window-smashing. Extensive property damage led police to raid the WSPU offices. Pankhurst and Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence were tried at the [[Old Bailey]] and convicted of conspiracy to commit [[property damage]]. Christabel, who by 1912 was the chief coordinator for the organisation, was also wanted by police. She fled to Paris, where she directed WSPU strategy in exile. Inside [[Holloway (HM Prison)|Holloway Prison]], Emmeline Pankhurst staged her first hunger strike to improve conditions for other suffragettes in nearby cells; she was quickly joined by Pethick-Lawrence and other WSPU members. She described in her autobiography the trauma caused by [[force-feeding]] during the strike: "Holloway became a place of horror and torment. Sickening scenes of violence took place almost every hour of the day, as the doctors went from cell to cell performing their hideous office."<ref>E. Pankhurst, pp. 251β252.</ref> When prison officials tried to enter her cell, Pankhurst raised a clay jug over her head and announced: "If any of you dares so much as to take one step inside this cell I shall defend myself."<ref>E. Pankhurst 1914, p. 255; Purvis 2002, pp. 179β189, 128β132.</ref> Pankhurst was spared further force-feeding attempts after this incident, but she continued to violate the law and β when imprisoned β starve herself in protest. During the following two years she was arrested numerous times but was frequently released after several days because of her [[Disease|ill health]]. Later, the Asquith government enacted the [[Cat and Mouse Act]], which allowed similar releases for other suffragettes facing ill-health due to hunger strikes. Prison officials recognised the potential [[public relations]] disaster that would erupt if the popular WSPU leader were force-fed or allowed to suffer extensively in jail. Still, police officers arrested her during talks and as she marched. She tried to evade police harassment by wearing disguises and eventually the WSPU established a [[jujutsu]]-trained female bodyguard squad to physically protect her against the police. She and other escorts were targeted by police, resulting in violent scuffles as officers tried to detain Pankhurst.<ref>Bartley, pp. 152β156.</ref> In 1912, WSPU members [[Suffragette bombing and arson campaign|adopted arson as another tactic to win the vote]]. After Prime Minister Asquith had visited the [[Theatre Royal, Dublin|Theatre Royal]] in Dublin, suffragette activists Gladys Evans, Lizzie Baker, [[Mary Leigh]], and [[Mabel Capper]] [[Suffragette bombing and arson campaign#The campaign|attempted to cause an explosion using gunpowder and benzine]], which resulted in minimal damage. During the same evening, Mary Leigh threw an axe at the carriage containing [[John Redmond]] (leader of the [[Irish Parliamentary Party]]), the Lord Mayor, and Asquith.<ref>Manchester Guardian 20 July 1912, "The Dublin Outrages by Women"</ref> Over the next two years women set fire to a refreshments building in [[Regent's Park]], an orchid house at [[Kew Gardens]], [[pillar box]]es, and a [[Railroad car|railway carriage]]. [[Emily Davison]] threw herself under [[George V|the King]]'s horse [[Anmer]] at the [[Epsom Derby]] in 1913. Her funeral drew 55,000 attendees along the streets and at the funeral. This gave significant publicity to the movement. Although Pankhurst confirmed that these women had not been commanded by her or Christabel, they both assured the public that they supported the arsonist suffragettes. There were similar incidents around the country. One WSPU member, for example, put a small [[hatchet]] into the Prime Minister's carriage inscribed with the words: "Votes for Women,"<ref>Purvis 2002, p. 193.</ref> and other suffragettes used acid to burn the same slogan into [[Golf|golf courses]] used by MPs.<ref>E. Pankhurst 1914, pp. 270β271; Purvis 2002, p. 209; Bartley, p. 146.</ref> In 1914, [[Mary Richardson]] slashed the [[Diego VelΓ‘zquez|Velasquez]] painting ''[[Rokeby Venus]]'' to protest against Pankhurst's imprisonment.<ref>Davies, Christie. "Velazquez in London." ''New Criterion.'' Volume: 25. Issue: 5, January 2007. p. 53.</ref>
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