Gertrude Mary Tuckwell was born in Oxford on 25 April 1861, the second daughter of Rosa née Strong (b. 1829/30) and William Tuckwell, master of New College School and chaplain at New College, Oxford and the self-proclaimed "radical parson". Her mother was the eldest daughter of Captain Henry Strong, an Indian army officer, whose younger sister, feminist and trade unionist Emilia Dilke, would have a profound effect on Tuckwell's life. Tuckwell had one brother and two sisters.
She was home-schooled[1] in her family's Christian socialist tradition[2] and trained to be a teacher in Liverpool from 1881.
Career
Tuckwell was a teacher at Bishop Otter College in Chichester from 1882 to 1884, and then taught at a working-class infant school in Chelsea until forced to stop by ill health in 1890.[1]
From 1893, she became secretary to her maternal aunt, writer, suffragette and trade unionist Emilia Dilke (wife of Sir Charles Dilke). She published The State and Its Children in 1894, opposing child labour. She was involved with the Women's Trade Union League from 1891, and succeeded Emilia Dilke as its President in 1905. In 1908 she became president of the National Federation of Women Workers, and campaigned to protect women from industrial injuries such as lead poisoning and phossy jaw.[1]
In 1908 she was described in The Woman Worker newspaper as "the power that moves a myriad organisations. Behind a screen of plans to abolish sweating, to organize women, to prohibit poisonous glazes in pottery, to indemnify victimized workers, her alert spirit is tirelessly in motion".[3] She retired in 1918, but continued to campaigning on public health issues.[1] After Charles Dilke died in 1911, she, as his literary executor,[3] co-wrote a two-volume biography with Stephen Gwynn ("begun by Stephen Gwynn, M. P., completed and ed. by Gertrude M. Tuckwell").[1]
She was her father's executor when he died in 1919, and he had previously dedicated his 1905 book Reminiscences of a Radical Parson to her.[4]
Alongside the other six women appointed in 1919, Tuckwell was tasked with drawing up a list of women suitable for appointment as JPs from across the United Kingdom. A list of 172 new women magistrates for England was published in July 1920, with most of those connected with the labour movement suggested by Tuckwell.[5]
Her papers are lodged in the TUC Library Collections at the London Metropolitan University.[2] These consist of approximately 700 folders of reports, pamphlets, leaflets and press cuttings accumulated by Tuckwell, regarding women's political and economic struggles from 1890 to 1920.[6]
Bibliography
The State and Its Children (1894)
The Life of the Rt. Hon. Sir Charles W. Dilke, Bart., M. P. begun by Stephen Gwynn; completed and edited by Gertrude M. Tuckwell (Volume I) London: John Murray, 1917
The Life of the Rt. Hon. Sir Charles W. Dilke, Bart., M. P. begun by Stephen Gwynn; completed and edited by Gertrude M. Tuckwell (Volume II) London: John Murray, 1917
Angela V. John, 'Tuckwell, Gertrude Mary (1861–1951)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2006 Retrieved 10 Aug 2015