The Church League for Women's Suffrage (CLWS) was an organisation campaigning for women's suffrage in the United Kingdom.
The league was started in London, but by 1913 it had branches across England, in Wales and Scotland and Ireland.[1]
Aims and achievements
This organisation aimed to 'Secure the Vote in Church and State as it is, or may be granted to men'. It was over a century later that females were permitted to be ordained as bishops within the Church of England. The Church League in 1914 allowed individuals to participate in other movements for the cause of women's equality but their own organisation's 'only methods.. are those of Prayer and Education". A benefit of the League was to refute the charge that the Church was indifferent to the matter of women's right to vote.[2]
The League was founded by the Reverend Claude Hinscliff in 1909, who was its secretary for a long time.[4] Other founding members included Margaret Nevinson and Olive Wharry,[5] and Joan Cather, whose husband Lt. John Leonard Cather was chair of its finance committee.[6]
The Irish Church had resisted the League because it refused to denounce the behaviour of militant suffragettes. By 1913 Florence Canning led the executive committee and she was one of six of the thirteen members identified for their militancy.[1]
^Robinson, Jane (2016). Hearts and Minds: the Untold Story of the Great Pilgrimage and How Women Won the Vote. Transworld, London. p. 151. ISBN978-1-4735-4086-6.
White, Susan J. (2014). "'The Church Militant': A. Maude Royden and the Quest for Women's Equality in the Inter-War Years". In Bailey, Warner M.; Barrett, Lee C. III; Duke, James O. (eds.). The Theologically Formed Heart: Essays in Honor of David J. Gouwens. Eugene, Oregon: Pickwick Publications. pp. 47–71. ISBN978-1-62564-191-5.