Margaret Mackworth, 2nd Viscountess Rhondda

The 2nd Viscountess Rhondda
Margaret Mackworth, c. 1915
Born Margaret Haig Thomas
(1883-06-12)12 June 1883
London, England, UK
Died 20 July 1958(1958-07-20) (aged 75)
London, England, UK
Known for Suffragette and women's rights campaigner; business woman; Lusitania survivor
Spouse(s) Sir Humphrey Mackworth (1908–1922) (divorced)
Parent(s) Sybil Margaret Haig
David Alfred Thomas

Margaret Haig Mackworth, 2nd Viscountess Rhondda (12 June 1883 – 20 July 1958) was a Welsh peeress, businesswoman, and active suffragette. She was significant in the history of women's suffrage in the United Kingdom.

Biography

Margaret Haig Thomas was born on 12 June 1883 in London. Her parents were industrialist and politician David Alfred Thomas, first Viscount Rhondda, and Sybil Haig, also a suffragette. In her autobiography, Margaret wrote that her mother had 'prayed passionately that her baby daughter might become feminist'. And indeed she did become a passionate activist for women's rights.

An only child, although born in London she was raised at Llanwern House, near Newport, until the age of 13 when she went away to boarding school, first to Notting Hill High School then St Leonards School in St Andrews. In 1904, aged 19, she took up a place at Somerville College, Oxford, where she studied history. Despite her tutors providing positive feedback on her academic progress, she returned to Llanwern to live with her family after two terms.

Adult life

Working for her father at the Consolidated Cambrian company headquarters in Cardiff Docks on a salary of £1,000, she spent three years as a debutante.

Women's suffrage

In the same year that she married local Newport landowner Sir Humphrey Mackworth, in 1908 at aged 25 she joined the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU), and became secretary of its Newport branch. Between 1908 and 1914, she took the campaign for women's suffrage across South Wales, often to hostile and stormy meetings. She was involved in protest marches with the Pankhursts, and jumping onto the running board of Liberal Prime Minister H. H. Asquith's car in St Andrews.

In June 1913 she attempted to destroy a Royal Mail post-box with a chemical bomb.[1] The activities resulted in a trial at the Sessions House, Usk, and after refusing to pay a £10 fine, she was sentenced to serve a one month period in jail there. She was released after only five days after going on a hunger strike.[2]

When Emmeline Pankhurst died in June 1928, it was Kitty Marshall, Rosamund Massey and Lady Rhondda who arranged her memorials. They raised money for her gravestone in Brompton Cemetery and a statue of her outside the House of Commons (which place she had frequently been prevented from entering). Money was also raised to buy the painting that had been made by fellow suffragette Georgina Brackenbury so that it could be given to the National Portrait Gallery.[3] It was unveiled by Stanley Baldwin in 1930.

World War One and sinking of RMS Lusitania

On the outbreak of World War I, she accepted the decision by the WSPU leadership to abandon its militant campaign for suffrage. She worked with her father, who was sent by David Lloyd George to the United States of America to arrange the supply of munitions for the British armed forces.

Her father became aware of his daughters depressive state, and although Margaret brushed her father's concern aside, he became aware of tensions within her marriage. On 7th May 1915, she was returning from the United States on the RMS Lusitania with her father and his secretary Arnold Rhys-Evans, when it was torpedoed at 14:10 by German submarine U-20. Whilst her father and his secretary made it onto a lifeboat, having been blown overboard Margaret spent a long period clinging to a piece of board before being rescued by the Irish trawler "Bluebell", recalled in her 1933 autobiography This Was My World. By the time she was rescued and taken to Queenstown, Margaret had fallen unconscious from hypothermia. After a period in hospital, she then spent several months recuperating at her parents home.

Peerage

On 3 July 1918, after his hard work on his business interests, politics and latterly his ware works, her father died. While the Rhondda Barony died with him, the title of Viscount Rhondda passed to Margaret by special remainder, something Thomas had insisted on from King George V when he was offered the honour.[4]

After her father's death, Lady Rhondda subsequently tried to take his seat in the House of Lords, citing the Sex Disqualification (Removal) Act 1919 which allowed women to exercise "any public office". After initially being accepted, the Committee of Privileges membership was altered and her request was rejected.[5][6][7] She was supported for many years by Lord Astor, whose wife Nancy had been the first woman to take her seat in the House of Commons.

Less than a month after Lady Rhondda's death in 1958, women entered the Lords for the first time thanks to the Life Peerages Act 1958; five years later, with the passage of the Peerage Act 1963, hereditary peeresses were also allowed to enter the Lords.

Business interests

She succeeded her father as chair of the Sanatogen Company in February 1917.[8] In total, she was a director of 33 companies throughout her life, having inherited 28 directorships from her father. The majority of her business interests were in coal, steel and shipping via Consolidated Cambrian Ltd. Passionate about increasing the number of women in the corporate world, Margaret was involved in creating and chairing the Efficiency Club, a networking organisation for British businesswomen.

However, with the slump in coal prices during the late 1920s, the colliery's of Consolidated Cambrian fell into receivership, and its assets later sold to GKN. Aside from inheriting her father's publishing interests, in 1920 she had founded Time and Tide magazine, a left-wing feminist weekly magazine. But after the collapse of Consolidated Cambrian, her personal accounts show that her outgoings always exceeded her income.

Lady Rhondda was elected as the Institute of Directors' first female president in 1926, and in 2015, the annual Mackworth Lecture was launched by the IoD in her honour.[9]

Six Point group

In 1921 she set up the Six Point Group, an action group that focused heavily on the equality between men and women and the rights of the child.[10]

The group's manifesto of equal rights for women within the workplace, and for mothers and children, sought the following:

  • Satisfactory legislation on Child Assault
  • Satisfactory legislation for the Widowed Mother
  • Satisfactory legislation for the Unmarried Mother and her Child
  • Equal rights for Guardianship for Married Parents
  • Equal pay for Teachers
  • Equal Opportunities for men and women in the Civil Service

A Canadian steamship, the Lady Mackworth, was named after her.[11]

Personal life

In 1908 she married Sir Humphrey Mackworth, Bt (see Mackworth Baronets). They divorced in 1923 and she never remarried. She did have some significant relationships over the course of her life. She lived with Time and Tide magazine editor Helen Archdale in the late 1920s. She later had a close relationship with Winifred Holtby, the author of South Riding, who was in a "friendship" with the writer Vera Brittain. [12] She subsequently spent 25 years living with writer and editor Theodora Bosanquet,[13] amanuensis to Henry James 1907-1916.

Posthumous recognition

In 2015, the annual Mackworth Lecture was launched by the Institute of Directors in her honour.[14]

Her name and picture (and those of 58 other women's suffrage supporters) are on the plinth of the statue of Millicent Fawcett in Parliament Square, London, unveiled in 2018.[15][16][17]

See also

References

  1. "Suffragette Viscountess Rhondda's Newport bomb attack remembered". BBC Wales News.
  2. "2nd Viscountess Rhondda, Politician and businesswoman" at bbc.co.uk
  3. Carolyn Christensen Nelson (25 June 2004). Literature of the Women's Suffrage Campaign in England. Broadview Press. pp. 145–. ISBN 978-1-55111-511-5.
  4. Viscountess Rhondda's Claim [1922] 2 AC 339.
  5. Rath, Kayte (2013-02-06). "The Downton dilemma: Is it time for gender equality on peerages?". BBC News. Retrieved 2017-08-13.
  6. D'Arcy, Mark (2011-11-03). "A portrait of the late Viscountess Rhondda is displayed". BBC News. Retrieved 2017-08-13.
  7. "Lady Mackworth" (PDF). British Journal of Nursing. 58: 125. 17 February 1917.
  8. "Institute of Directors launch annual Mackworth Lecture"
    • Wallace, Ryland (2009). The Women's Suffrage Movement in Wales, 1866–1928. Cardiff: University of Wales Press. p. 255. ISBN 978-0-708-32173-7.
  9. "2nd Viscountess Rhondda Politician and businesswoman". BBC South East Wales.
  10. Shopland, Norena 'A purpose in life’ from Forbidden Lives: LGBT stories from Wales, Seren Books, 2017
  11. "A Bird in a Cage - A Bird In A Cage". www.abirdinacage.org. Retrieved 2016-12-08.
  12. "Institute of Directors launch annual Mackworth Lecture"
  13. "Historic statue of suffragist leader Millicent Fawcett unveiled in Parliament Square". Gov.uk. 24 April 2018. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
  14. Topping, Alexandra (24 April 2018). "First statue of a woman in Parliament Square unveiled". The Guardian. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
  15. "Millicent Fawcett statue unveiling: the women and men whose names will be on the plinth". iNews. Retrieved 2018-04-25.

Further reading

  • Eoff, Shirley Marie (1991). Viscountess Rhondda: Equalitarian Feminist. Ohio State University Press. ISBN 978-0-814-2053-96.
  • John, Angela V. (2014). Turning the Tide: the life of Lady Rhondda. Cardigan: Parthian Press. ISBN 978-1-908-9461-02.
Peerage of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
David Alfred Thomas
Viscountess Rhondda
1919–1958
Succeeded by
Title extinct
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