Annie
Kenney, the daughter of Nelson Horatio Kenney and Anne Wood, was
born in Oldham, Lancashire in 1879. Annie's mother had eleven
children and worked with her husband in the Oldham textile industry.
When Annie reached the age of ten she began work in a local cotton
mill. Soon afterwards a whirling bobbin tore off one of her fingers.
Although Annie
received very little education she did develop a strong interest in
literature. Annie was especially impressed by authors such as Robert
Blatchford (Merrie England) and Edward Carpenter (England's
Ideal). After being inspired by an article she read in Robert
Blatchford's radical journal, The Clarion, Annie joined the local
branch of the Independent Labour Party.
At an
Independent Labour Party meeting in 1905, Annie Kenney heard
Christabel Pankhurst speak on the subject of women's rights. Annie
was extremely impressed with the content of the speech and the two
women soon became close friends. Annie decided to join the recently
formed Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU).
The WSPU
was often accused of being an organisation that existed to serve the
middle and upper classes. As Annie Kenney was one of the
organizations few working class members, when the WSPU
decided to open a branch in the East End of London, she was asked to
leave the mill and become a full-time worker for the organisation.
Annie joined Sylvia Pankhurst in London and they gradually began to
persuade working-class women to join the WSPU.
On 13th
October 1905, Annie Kenney and Christabel
Pankhurst attended a meeting in London to hear Sir Edward Grey,
a minister in the British government. When Grey was talking, the two
women constantly shouted out, "Will the Liberal Government give
votes to women?" When the women refused to stop shouting, the
police were called to evict them from the meeting. Pankhurst and
Kenney refused to leave and during the struggle, a policeman claimed
the two women kicked and spat at him. Pankhurst and Kenney were
arrested and charged with assault.
Annie Kenney
and Christabel
Pankhurst were found guilty of assault and fined five shillings
each. When the women refused to pay the fine they were sent to
prison. The case shocked the nation. For the first time in Britain
women had used violence in an attempt to win the vote.
Kenney was to
go to prison several times during the next nine years. When Christabel
Pankhurst fled to Paris to avoid arrest in 1912, Annie was put
in charge of the WSPU
in London. Every week Annie travelled to Paris to receive
Christabel's latest orders.
In 1913 Annie
Kenney was sentenced to eighteen months in prison and like other
suffragettes she went on hunger and thirst strike. Released under
the provisions of the, she went into hiding
until she was caught once again and Cat and Mouse
Act returned to prison.
The outbreak
of the First World War in 1914 ended Kenney's militant campaign for
the vote. For the next four years she helped organize an
Anti-Bolshevist campaign against strikes.
After the war
Kenney lost interest in politics and for the rest of her life she
devoted her energies to Theosophy. Annie Kenney died in 1953.