Alice Acland

Alice Acland
Born Alice Sophia Cunningham
3 February 1849
Heath Lodge, Petersfield, Hampshire
Died 5 July 1935(1935-07-05) (aged 86)
London
Nationality British
Occupation Activist in Women's Rights and the Cooperative Movement , General Secretary and President of Co-operative Women's Guild
Known for Founder of the Co-operative Women's Guild
Partner(s) Arthur Dyke Acland (m. 1873)

Lady Alice Sophia Acland née Cunningham (1849–1935) was the founder, the first General Secretary and the first president of the Co-operative Women's Guild.

Personal life

Alice Acland was born on 3 February 1849 to Reverend Francis Macaulay Cunningham and Alice Charlotte Poore. She grew up in Hampshire and Oxford, and received a church education. She married Sir Arthur Dyke Acland, 13th Baronet on 14 June 1873, with whom she later had two sons and a daughter.[1]

Role in the Co-operative Women's Guild

Alice's husband was an advocate for educational opportunities for working-class men. She traveled with him on speaking tours which led to her own involvement in providing more opportunities for working-class women. She noted the value of The Cooperative Movement and its potential to provide opportunities for women, as women held purchasing power for their households.[2][3]

Acland began writing articles about women's lives for Cooperative News. On 6 January 1883, Cooperative News editor Samuel Bamford created the column Women's Corner and appointed Acland as editor. Her first appeal set in motion women's role in the Cooperative movement, stating:

Her column's popularity led to coordination of the Women's League for the Spread of Co-operation, soon after renamed the Co-operative Women's Guild.[5] Formation of a central board and meeting space for women was proposed in a letter to Women's Corner from "M.L. Woolwich", a pseudonym of Mary Lawrenson who became a co-founder of the Guild.[4] The Guild was formally inaugurated in June 1883. Acland served as General Secretary of the guild in 1883, but resigned from the position due to ill-health. She served as President from 1884–1886, again resigning due to further health problems.[2]

References

  1. Purvis, Martin. "Acland [née Cunningham], Alice Sophia, Lady Acland (1849–1935), co-operative movement activist and advocate of women's advancement". Retrieved 6 April 2013.
  2. 1 2 3 Webb, Catherine (1927). The Woman with the Basket: The History of the Women's Co-operative Guild 1883-1927. Manchester: Cooperative Wholesale Society's Printing Works.
  3. "Women at the Heart of the Cooperative Movement: Alice Acland". Archived from the original on 2013-06-26. Retrieved 6 April 2013.
  4. 1 2 Davies, Margaret Llewelyn. The Women's Co-operative Guild. 1883-1904. ISBN 1278025766.
  5. Blaszack, Barbara. "The gendered geography of the english co-operative movement at the turn of the nineteenth century". Women's History Review. doi:10.1080/09612020000200252.
Non-profit organization positions
Preceded by
New position
Secretary of the Women's Co-operative Guild
18831884
Succeeded by
Mary Lawrenson
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