Birmingham Daily Mail: Tuesday 28th November 1911

Greater Birmingham Elections: Candidates’ Expenses: the following returns of expenses by candidates at the recent municipal elections on November 1st have been filed, in addition to those given yesterday: … (includes) … Edgbaston: councillors Mrs. Hume Pinsent, Todd and Charles, £195 9s 10d …


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Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Birmingham Mail: Monday 27th November 1911

Mrs. Pinsent and Woman Suffrage: Sir, — Surely it cannot be correct, as reported by the “Mail,” that Councillor Mrs. Hume-Pinsent is presiding at an anti-suffrage meeting, and that she is opposed to votes for women. Where is the consistency? Is it possible that in her opinion women may vote for councillors but are not able use the Parliamentary vote properly? Though most progressive women know her valuable work in regard to the care of the feeble-minded (she is acknowledged expert), it will be a terrible shock to know that she is a reactionary on woman suffrage. That she will be bitterly opposed at her next election should this be true is a certainty. How could she deny that the woman’s point of view is as badly wanted in making laws as in administering them? — Yours, etc., J. F. D.—-

Sir, reference the announcement of the above in your columns Saturday, I beg to inform you that Mrs. Hume Pinsent has reconsidered her decision to take the chair, she thinks that in doing so at our request might mislead the public as to her attitude upon the controversial question of women’s suffrage. I should, however, like make it clear that my committee approached Mrs. Hume Pinsent in the first place because her public position and abilities clearly indicate her as best fitted to preside, and in the second place because we knew that she had always consistently refused to take either side upon the suffrage question and had absolutely declined repeated invitations from both parties join their ranks. In justice to my committee, may I finally add that we are simply taking the initiative summoning the conference, and we naturally wished to secure a chairman before the preliminary announcement of the meeting, but the arrangements, the resolutions be submitted to the meeting, and the whole of the details are to be left to the committee which will be formed by each society taking part the conference nominating a delegate for that purpose. Had our circular to the various societies which have the interests of women at heart been published in full, no possible misunderstanding could have arisen. — Yours, etc., Maria Laxin-Smith, Chairman: … …

(Also) … … Birmingham Education Committee: Election of Chairman: … … In regard to the appointment of the various subcommittees, the Chairman moved the appointment of a special sub-committee, to consider the number of seats for each sub-committee and recommend the names of members who would serve thereon. This was agreed to, the following were appointed to serve on the special committee Alderman H. J. Sayer, Mrs. Pinsent, Mr. Norman Chamberlain, Mr. Bethune Baker, Mr. Cary Gilson. Professor Heath, Alderman A. H. James, Mr. T. 0. Sayer, Mr. Freeland, Mr. Shann, Alderman Blackham.


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Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Erdington News: Saturday 25th November 1911

Birmingham City Council: Appointment of Committees: … (continues)… Against Mr. Clavering it was urged that he was rejected at the polls, and the Council having already endorsed by its votes the principle of the Selection Committee of not choosing any such for committee membership, they ought not now to go back upon themselves. This provoked Mrs. Pinsent to make her first speech in the Council Chamber. She was given the encouragement of a most hearty round of applause. Mrs. Pinsent protested against the acceptance of a principle which meant that the whole city should be robbed of the services of an expert because one war had rejected him on grounds which never raised his fitness for the particular office. The vote resulted in Mr. Best getting 44 votes, Mr. Clavering 34, and Mr. Southhall, 17. … … 


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Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Birmingham Daily Gazette: Friday 24th November 1911

Museum and School of Art: Mr. J. A. Cossins withdrew from the Museum and School of Art Committee, and some discussion took place as to the addition of the names of Mr. Joseph Southall (Royal Society of Artists), Mr. C. Napier Clavering, and Mr. E. H. Best, each of whom was nominated. Mr. James said an attempt was made on the Selection Committee to introduce the name of Mr. Clavering. It was defeated on the grounds that the principle should apply that defeated candidates at the recent election were ineligible for co-option. … Mrs. Pinsent, who was received with hearty applause upon rising to address the Council, declared her intention of voting for Mr. Napier Clavering because he was “one of the best men in Birmingham to fill that particular vacancy”. She thought it was a wrong principle to adopt that the votes of one ward should deprive the city of the services of an expert. …. Best, 44; Clavering, 34; Southall, 17: Mr. Best was thereupon elected in place of Mr. J. A. Cossins, and the committee, with that alteration, approved.


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Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Hucknall Morning Star and Advertiser: Friday 24th November 1911

Permanent Care of Feeble Minded: Duke of Portland and Duty of the State: There was a large attendance in the Nottingham Exchange on Monday afternoon at a meeting of the Nottingham and Notts. Association for the Permanent Care of the Feeble Minded: … Mrs. Hume Pinsent of Birmingham gave an address: … (continues)


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Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Birmingham Daily Gazette: Tuesday 21st November 1911

Greater Birmingham: The New City Council Committees: Proposed Constitution: The special committee appointed at the last meeting of the Birmingham City council for the purpose of considering the formation of the ordinary committees met at the Council House yesterday, under the chairmanship of the Lord Mayor (Alderman W. H. Bowater). The whole of the members attended … Education (twenty-nine): Aldermen Berry, Bird, the Right Hon. William Kenrick … … includes Mrs. Pinsent … Lunatic Asylums (eleven): Messrs. David Davis, Herrick, Wilson, Poppleton and Mrs. Pinsent … … 

(see also: Birmingham Daily Gazette: Wednesday 22nd November 1911)


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Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Daily Gazette for Middlesbrough: Tuesday 21th November 1911

Nations Growing Madder: The Duke of Portland has prophesied that, at our current rate of mental deterioration, three centuries hence there will be more insane persons than those who have their faculties unimpaired. Moving a resolution at Nottingham last night urging the need of immediate legislation for the control of the feeble-minded, the duke declared that every charity was being hampered by the great number of mentally defective people. … (continues) … Mrs. Pinsent of Birmingham stated that thirteen feeble-minded women produced over a hundred illegitimate children … (continues) … The Bishop of Southwell said that the present condition was the result of Christianity. In many races the feeble-minded were allowed to die, but Christianity preserved life wherever possible.  


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Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

The Queen: Saturday 18th November 1911

Although Mrs. Dixon did not follow up her own successful effort to get on the register by offering herself as a candidate for the Birmingham City Council, she has opened up the way for others in the Midland city, and we now have the satisfaction of noting that Mrs. Hume Pinsent has been returned for the Edgbaston ward. Mrs. Pinsent’s name and work are widely known. She first made her name by a short and striking story entitled “Jenny’s Case.” Now for many years she has been one of the moving spirits among the band of reformers who desired to amend the law with regard to the treatment of the mentally defective. It will be remembered that she was a member of the Royal Commission the Care of the Feeble-Minded and she has delivered speeches on the subject before many assemblies, including the Church Congress.


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Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Dudley Chronicle: Saturday 18th November 1911

Care of the Feeble-Minded: Mr. Bund asks for Legislation: … (continues) … The Time for Action: If they were taken as children and – dealt with at once they would be able to do some work or even earn their livelihood. He would emphasise that the children should be taken in hand early. The generality of them were suffering simply from lack of willpower; they had no restraint, and the longer they lived without restraint the more difficult it was to deal with them afterwards, so difficult that when admitted to the special institutions provided, they often had to be dismissed as hopeless. As an instance there were, Mrs. Hume Pinsent told them, some 80 children of this class running loose about the streets of Birmingham. This to his mind was a terrible thing to allow. Both for their own sake and for the sake of the public he felt that unfortunate people of that kind should be kept under some restraint; for their own sake, because if they were behaving like decent people, they were happier; and for the sake of the public, because such persons were a danger to it, both as regards property, women and men. It was an unfortunate fact that feeble-minded persons very generally had large families, and that feeble-mindedness was strongly hereditary. … (continues) …


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Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Birmingham Daily Gazette: Friday 10th November 1911

The Lord Mayor’s Speech: … … The Education Committee had been able to go forward with their scheme for looking after the children when they left the elementary schools, and through the assiduity of Mrs. Pinsent, whom he congratulated on joining the Council the Special Schools Committee had steadily gone on with their work and completed their census of the crippled children. With this definite data before them, the Council would be able to assist these poor children to something approaching useful employment …


Transcribed in whole or part from scanned originals: Presented with or without modified text and punctuation. For absolute accuracy refer to the original newspapers. Source: The British Newspaper Archive.


Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949