# Ada Wright

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{{Short description|British suffragette (1862–1939)}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2022}}
{{Use British English|date=July 2022}}
[[File:Black Friday, attacked suffragette on the ground.jpg|thumb|A possible photograph of Ada Wright, or her fellow suffragette [Ernestine Mills](/source/Ernestine_Mills)]]
thumb|Front page of ''The Daily Mirror'', 19 November 1910
thumb|Ada Wright at right side

'''Ada Cecile Granville Wright''' (c. 1862–1939) was an English suffragette. Her photo on the front page of the ''[Daily Mirror](/source/Daily_Mirror)'' on 19 November 1910 became an iconic image of the suffrage movement.

==Biography==
thumb|left|upright=0.5|Ada Wright 1911
Ada Cecile Granville Wright was born in [Granville](/source/Granville%2C_Manche), France, around 1862.<ref name="Crawford" />

She attended the [Slade School of Fine Art](/source/Slade_School_of_Fine_Art) and [University College, London](/source/University_College%2C_London), where she followed the physics lectures by Margaret Whelpdale<ref>{{Cite web|title=Ada Wright. Ada Cecile Granville Wright was an English suffragist, her photo on the front page of the Daily Mirror on 19 November became an iconic image of the|url=https://amp.ww.en.freejournal.org/56338887/1/ada-wright.html|access-date=13 December 2021|website=ww.en.freejournal.org|language=en}}</ref> (half-sister of [Octavia Hill](/source/Octavia_Hill)) and English lectures by [Edward Aveling](/source/Edward_Aveling).<ref name="Crawford" />

For a short time she taught in [Bonn](/source/Bonn), and then back in England, she wanted to take up social work, but was prevented in doing so by her father. She noted inequality of women and "wished [she] had been born a boy".<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|title=Rise up, women! : the remarkable lives of the suffragettes|last=Atkinson|first=Diane|publisher=Bloomsbury|year=2018|isbn=9781408844045|location=London|pages=68,115, 227, 275, 295–6, 429, 488, 563, 564|oclc=1016848621}}</ref> After travelling widely with her family, she was able to follow her previous desire and take up social work in 1885, when she settled in Sidmouth. She worked in a settlement house with a niece of [Elizabeth Barrett Browning](/source/Elizabeth_Barrett_Browning). She joined the local women's suffrage society.<ref name="Crawford" />

After leaving Sidmouth, Wright worked at the [West London Mission](/source/West_London_Mission) with [Maude Stanley](/source/Maude_Stanley), running a club for working girls in [Greek Street](/source/Greek_Street), Soho. Later she was a probationer nurse at the [London Hospital](/source/London_Hospital).<ref name="Crawford" />

== Role in suffrage movement ==
After moving back home in Sidmouth to take care of her aging father, she further moved to [Bournemouth](/source/Bournemouth) and joined the local branch of the [National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies](/source/National_Union_of_Women's_Suffrage_Societies).

In March 1907 she was with the [Women's Parliament](/source/Women's_Parliament) in [Caxton Hall](/source/Caxton_Hall) and was imprisoned for two weeks. Before then she had been impressed by [Annie Kenney](/source/Annie_Kenney) and [Christabel Pankhurst](/source/Christabel_Pankhurst) and gave up NUWSS as "being ineffective for making the question of justice to women a living force" and sent her own savings (£12; £{{formatnum:{{inflation|UK|12|1907}}}} in {{Inflation-year|UK}}) to [Mrs Pankhurst](/source/Emmeline_Pankhurst). Whilst in prison she resolved to dedicate herself to engaging in a range of activism for the [WSPU](/source/Women's_Social_and_Political_Union).<ref name=":0" />

In October 1908 she was involved in the attempt to "rush" the House of Commons and was imprisoned for a month.<ref name=":0" /> In June 1909 she was a deputy to the House of Commons and was arrested for throwing two stones through the window of a government office in Whitehall and imprisoned for one month. Refusing to be treated as a criminal, she went on a six-days hunger strike and was released.<ref name="Crawford" />

On 18 November 1910, the "[Black Friday](/source/Black_Friday_(1910))", at the age of fifty, Wright took part at the Women's Suffrage demonstration in [Parliament Square](/source/Parliament_Square), and as she ran towards the Strangers' Entrance of the [House of Commons](/source/House_of_Commons_of_the_United_Kingdom), was struck by a policeman and fell to the ground. Wright is said to be the woman in the famous picture which was on the front page of the ''[Daily Mirror](/source/Daily_Mirror)'' on 19 November and became an iconic image of the suffrage movement,<ref name="Crawford" /> the reporter said she had been at seven demonstrations and "never known the police so violent" and had "pushed [her] as roughly as he would have done any man" but saying he wouldn't "give [her] the satisfaction of arresting [her]".<ref name=":0" />
thumb|Force feeding (suffragettes)
In November 1911 she was arrested for breaking Cabinet Minister ['Loulou" Harcourt's](/source/Lewis_Harcourt%2C_1st_Viscount_Harcourt) window during the protest against the [Conciliation Bill](/source/Conciliation_Bill) and imprisoned for 14 days, she remarked that the night before such activism "the suspense always tries me terribly".<ref name=":0" /> In March 1912, together with [Charlotte Marsh](/source/Charlotte_Marsh), she took part at the window-smashing campaign in the Strand and was sentenced to six months' imprisonment in [Aylesbury Prison](/source/HM_Prison_Aylesbury), because of previous convictions.<ref name=":0" />

In prison she went on [hunger strike](/source/hunger_strike) and described "trembling from head to foot and weak and dizzy", being [forcibly fed](/source/Force-feeding) with a feeding tube "rammed down her throat by clumsy and unskilled fingers", thinking she would suffocate, and being left partly conscious on the floor the first time, a torture that was repeated twice daily for 10 days.  Wright remembered the wardresses were distressed at helping the doctor in this "gruesome task".<ref name=":0" />  After calling off the hunger strike when suffragettes were going to be treated as political prisoners, she stopped eating again in protest at the length of sentence. [Maud Arncliffe-Sennett](/source/Maud_Arncliffe_Sennett) wrote during Wright's force-feeding that it was a national disgrace.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://blog.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/2018/02/21/maud-arncliff-sennett-a-militant-suffragette/|title=Maud Arncliff-Sennett – A militant suffragette|last=McKee|first=Mary|website=blog.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk|date=21 February 2018 |language=en-US|access-date=5 March 2020}}</ref> Due to the effect on her health, Wright was released after serving four of the six months sentence and went to recuperate in Switzerland with [Charlie Marsh](/source/Charlotte_Marsh).<ref name=":0" /> In 1914 she helped [Emmeline Pankhurst](/source/Emmeline_Pankhurst) to escape [Mouse Castle](/source/Mouse_Castle) and was arrested and imprisoned for 14 days. In May 1914 she went with Pankhurst to the King at Buckingham Palace, she was arrested with sixty-one others "after much buffeting and rough handling", spent a night in prison, and was sentenced to one month in prison or a fine, which was paid without her consent by her sister, fearing for her health.<ref name="Crawford" /><ref name=":0" />

Wright was given a [Hunger Strike Medal](/source/Hunger_Strike_Medal) by the WSPU.{{cn|date=July 2023}}

In 1914, together with Alice Green, [Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence](/source/Emmeline_Pethick-Lawrence), [Constance Lytton](/source/Lady_Constance_Bulwer-Lytton), [Rose Lamartine Yates](/source/Rose_Lamartine_Yates), she raised the money necessary to pay the fare for [Kitty Marion](/source/Kitty_Marion) to emigrate to the United States, to avoid the anti-German sentiment rising in the United Kingdom.<ref name="Crawford" />  Wright volunteered in the war effort for the Post Office, grooming horses, working in canteens, and driving ambulances.<ref name=":0" />

Ada Wright was a pallbearer at [Pankhurst](/source/Emmeline_Pankhurst)'s funeral and worked in social work in the 1920s and was involved in [the Suffragette Fellowship](/source/the_Suffragette_Fellowship).<ref name="Crawford" /><ref name=":0" /><ref>{{Cite web|title=Suffragette Fellowship – Museum of London {{!}} Free museum in London|url=https://collections.museumoflondon.org.uk/online/agent/3592.html|url-status=live|access-date=13 December 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211213144146/https://collections.museumoflondon.org.uk/online/agent/3592.html|archive-date=13 December 2021|website=collections.museumoflondon.org.uk}}</ref>

== Death and legacy ==
In the year before the Second World War she served as an Air Raid Patrol Warden. She died in [Finchley](/source/Finchley) in 1939, and was described as "one of those quiet women whose gently and calm manner hides a courageous and indomitable nature of unexpected depths".<ref name=":0" />

In her will Wright left a picture to her friend, the actress [Adeline Bourne](/source/Adeline_Bourne) (1873–1965), £100 (equivalent to £{{formatnum:{{inflation|UK|100|1939}}}} in {{Inflation-year|UK}}) to [Evie Hamill](/source/Evie_Hamill) (sister of [Cicely Hamilton](/source/Cicely_Hamilton)), £150 (£{{formatnum:{{inflation|UK|150|1939}}}} in {{Inflation-year|UK}}) to [Nina Boyle](/source/Nina_Boyle), £200 (£{{formatnum:{{inflation|UK|200|1939}}}} in {{Inflation-year|UK}}) to [Flora Drummond](/source/Flora_Drummond) to carry on with the welfare of animals campaign, £500 (£{{formatnum:{{inflation|UK|500|1939}}}} in {{Inflation-year|UK}}) to [Rosamund Massy](/source/Rosamund_Massy), £1,600 to [Christabel Pankhurst](/source/Christabel_Pankhurst) (£{{formatnum:{{inflation|UK|1600|1939}}}} in {{Inflation-year|UK}}).<ref name="Crawford">{{cite book |last1=Crawford |first1=Elizabeth |author-link=Elizabeth Crawford (historian) |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=a2EK9P7-ZMsC&pg=PA760 |title=The Women's Suffrage Movement: A Reference Guide 1866–1928 |date=2003 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=1135434026 |page=760 |accessdate=18 January 2018}}</ref>

==References==
{{reflist}}

{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Wright, Ada}}
Category:1860s births
Category:1939 deaths
Category:Alumni of the Slade School of Fine Art
Category:Alumni of University College London
Category:English suffragists
Category:Women's Social and Political Union

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Adapted from the Wikipedia article [Ada Wright](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ada_Wright) by Wikipedia contributors ([contributor history](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ada_Wright?action=history)). Available under [Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/). Changes may have been made.
