All Thinkers

Millicent Fawcett

Dame Millicent Garrett Fawcett was an English political activist and writer. She led the largest peaceful campaign for British women's right to vote for over twenty years. She was born on 11 June 1847 in Aldeburgh, a small town on the coast of Suffolk, England. Her father, Newson Garrett, was a successful businessman and political radical. He believed strongly in education for his daughters, which was unusual at the time. The Garrett family produced several remarkable women. Millicent's older sister Elizabeth Garrett Anderson became Britain's first qualified woman doctor. Their cousin Rhoda Garrett was a pioneer interior designer. Millicent herself married Henry Fawcett in 1867, when she was 19. He was a politician, professor of political economy at Cambridge, and blind from a shooting accident. They were intellectual partners. Their daughter Philippa later became one of the first women to score top marks in mathematics at Cambridge. Millicent's interest in women's right to vote (called 'suffrage') began very early. She attended her first suffrage meeting at age 19 in 1866, after hearing the philosopher John Stuart Mill speak on women's equality. She became active in campaigns at once. When her husband died in 1884, Millicent was 38. She turned her grief into political work. In 1897 she became leader of the National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies (NUWSS), Britain's largest peaceful suffrage organisation. She led it for 22 years. In 1918, when British women over 30 finally won the vote, she was 71. In 1928, full equal voting rights for women were achieved. She died the next year, on 5 August 1929, aged 82.

Origin
United Kingdom
Lifespan
1847-1929
Era
Victorian / Early 20th Century
Subjects
Women's Suffrage British Politics Feminism Education Reform Civil Rights
Why They Matter

Fawcett matters for three reasons. First, she led the long, patient campaign that eventually won British women the vote. The story is often told through the more famous Suffragettes, like Emmeline Pankhurst, who broke windows and went on hunger strikes. Fawcett led the larger, peaceful Suffragists, who used petitions, marches, lobbying, and pamphlets. Her organisation, the NUWSS, had about 100,000 members by 1914, fifty times the size of Pankhurst's WSPU. The peaceful approach has been less celebrated in films and stories, but most historians agree it built the wider public support needed to actually change the law in 1918 and 1928.

Second, she insisted on peaceful methods even when they seemed to be failing. After 1905, the Suffragettes turned to direct action: smashing windows, setting fires, and being force-fed in prison. Many sympathisers thought peaceful methods were too slow.

Fawcett kept her course

She believed violent methods would lose moderate supporters, especially the male MPs who actually had to vote for change. Public sympathy in Britain shifted toward the Suffragists during and after the war years.

Third, her campaign was about more than voting. From early in her career, she worked for women's education, women's right to keep their own property after marriage, women's right to enter professions, and the protection of vulnerable women. She helped found Newnham College, Cambridge, in 1871, one of the first British colleges for women.

She wrote textbooks

She campaigned for international peace. Her vision was of full equal citizenship for women across every part of life, not just at the ballot box.

Key Ideas
1
Suffragists vs. Suffragettes
2
I Was Always a Suffragist
3
Education for Women
Key Quotations
"Courage calls to courage everywhere, and its voice cannot be denied."
— Speech after the death of suffragette Emily Davison, 1913
Emily Davison was a Suffragette who threw herself in front of the King's horse at the Derby in 1913. She died of her injuries. Fawcett, who disagreed with Suffragette violence, nevertheless honoured the courage that led to Davison's death. She made a speech with this famous line. Brave actions, even when she disagreed with their methods, called other people to be brave too. Courage spreads. The line is now carved on her statue in Parliament Square in London. For students, it captures something important about Fawcett's character. She was firm in her own commitments but generous in recognising the courage of those who chose other paths. Strong principles do not require dismissing those who disagree. They allow you to honour their bravery while keeping your own course.
"I cannot say I became a suffragist. I always was one, from the time I was old enough to think at all about the principles of representative government."
— Reminiscence, NUWSS papers, undated
Fawcett wrote this looking back over her long career. She did not have a sudden conversion to women's suffrage. From the moment she was old enough to think about how democracy worked, the case for women's votes had seemed obvious. If governments derived their authority from the consent of the governed, women were among the governed. They should vote. The reasoning is simple. Most of her contemporaries did not see it. Fawcett spent sixty years patiently making the case to people who took convincing. For students, the line shows that some political insights are clear early and just need patient repetition until others catch up. Genius is often less about new ideas than about staying with right ideas long enough to be heard.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Cultural Heritage and Identity When introducing students to the British women's suffrage movement
How to introduce
Many students learn about the suffrage movement through the famous Suffragettes who broke windows and went on hunger strikes. Tell them there was also a much larger group, the Suffragists, who used peaceful methods. Their leader was Millicent Fawcett. The Suffragists had 100,000 members; the Suffragettes had 2,000. Both were important. Both contributed. But the patient peaceful campaign is often left out of the popular story. Knowing about Fawcett gives students a fuller picture of how the vote was actually won.
Ethical Thinking When discussing peaceful and violent protest
How to introduce
Fawcett refused to use violence even when others said peaceful methods were too slow. She believed violent methods would lose support, alienate moderate allies, and give MPs excuses to vote against the cause. The Suffragettes disagreed. They thought direct action was necessary. Discuss with students: when each is right? Are there situations where only direct action works? Are there situations where it is counterproductive? This is one of the central debates in any political movement. Fawcett gave one of the most thoughtful peaceful answers.
Problem Solving When teaching students about long-term goals
How to introduce
Fawcett began campaigning for women's suffrage at age 19. She was 71 when British women first won the right to vote. That was 52 years of work. Ask students: how do people stay committed to a goal across decades? Fawcett's answer was that change comes 'like a glacier, slow moving but unstoppable'. Daily progress can be invisible. Across years, the cumulative effect is huge. Many goals worth pursuing in life require the same kind of patience. Her example is useful preparation for any long-term commitment.
Further Reading

For a first introduction, the BBC website's coverage of Millicent Fawcett and the suffrage movement is reliable and accessible. The London Museum and the National Portrait Gallery have rich online resources, including images of NUWSS marches and Fawcett herself. The 2018 Historic UK article on Fawcett by Jessica Brain is a clear short biography. Caroline Criado Perez's Do It Like a Woman (2015) covers the campaign for the statue of Fawcett.

Key Ideas
1
Patient Strategy: Why Peaceful Methods?
2
Building a Mass Movement
3
The Mud March and the Suffrage Pilgrimage
Key Quotations
"Like a glacier, slow moving but unstoppable."
— Description of the women's suffrage movement, attributed to Fawcett
Fawcett described the women's suffrage movement as a glacier. Glaciers move slowly. They look almost still. Yet they reshape mountains and carve valleys over time. They cannot be stopped by a single obstacle. Fawcett's image captures her view of how change actually happens. Day to day, the movement seemed to make little progress. Across decades, it transformed British society. The image is also a defence of patience. People who demand instant change often give up when it does not come quickly. People who understand the glacier model keep working. For intermediate students, the metaphor is useful for thinking about any long-term goal. Steady pressure over years produces effects that brief intense efforts often miss.
"We have to make people think with us, by argument and by demonstration."
— Fawcett, on the methods of the NUWSS, c. 1908
Fawcett summarised her strategy in this line. The goal was not to force change but to make people 'think with us'. Once enough people had been won over by argument, change would follow. The method had two parts: argument (writing, speaking, debating) and demonstration (marches, petitions, visible mass support). Both worked together. Arguments alone could be dismissed; demonstrations alone could be ignored. Combined, they shifted public opinion over decades. For students, the line is a useful guide to peaceful political work. It is not enough to be right. You have to make others see why you are right. This requires both clear thinking and visible action.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Critical Thinking When analysing how political movements communicate
How to introduce
The Suffragettes are more famous today partly because their dramatic actions made better newspaper stories. The Suffragists' peaceful work was less dramatic and so got less coverage, both in their time and later. Discuss with students: how does media coverage shape public memory? What gets remembered? What gets forgotten? Fawcett's slower fame is a small example of a wider pattern. People who do the patient work often get less credit than those who create spectacles. Students who understand this can read history and current news more critically.
Critical Thinking When discussing how movements include or exclude different groups
How to introduce
The early NUWSS was largely middle-class. Working-class women's voices were less prominent in the movement's leadership. The 1918 Act that gave some women the vote initially excluded younger working-class women, only including women over 30 who owned property. Discuss with students: how do social movements decide who is included? Whose voices count in the leadership? Fawcett tried to broaden her movement, especially through the Labour Party alliance from 1912. But the limits remained real. This is honest history. Movements for justice often have their own internal exclusions that need attention.
Further Reading

For deeper reading, David Rubinstein's A Different World for Women: The Life of Millicent Garrett Fawcett (1991) is a substantial scholarly biography. Fawcett's own The Women's Victory—and After (1920) is her account of the campaign written shortly after the 1918 Act. Sandra Stanley Holton's Feminism and Democracy (1986) places her in the wider Suffragist tradition. June Purvis's Women's History: Britain 1850-1945 includes important essays on the suffrage movement and its different wings.

Key Ideas
1
Class and the Suffrage Movement
2
Empire and the Boer Inquiry
3
Recognition: The Statue
Key Quotations
"Women's suffrage will not come, when it does come, as a sudden gust of wind, but as the result of a steady, year-by-year increase of the number of those who think it right and just."
— Speech, late 1890s
Fawcett predicted accurately how the vote would actually be won. Not by a sudden moment of revelation. Not by a single dramatic action. But by a steady, year-by-year increase in the number of people who saw the rightness of the cause. She was speaking decades before the 1918 Act. The prediction proved correct. Each year, more MPs supported women's suffrage. More newspapers backed it. More working-class men's organisations endorsed it. By 1918, when the law finally changed, support had become a mainstream position. The change took longer than activists wanted. But the long, patient buildup was what made it stick. For advanced students, the line is a wise statement about how serious political change actually happens. The rare quick victories are often reversed. The slow ones tend to last.
"Justice and freedom for women are worth securing for their own sake, as much as for men."
— Paraphrased from Fawcett's writings on the philosophical case for women's suffrage
Fawcett's argument for women's suffrage rested on a simple ethical claim. Women were full human beings. Justice and freedom were valuable for them, as for men. There was no special argument needed beyond this basic equality. This was actually a controversial claim in her time. Many opponents argued that women had different natures, different needs, different roles, and therefore did not need the same rights. Fawcett refused this. She insisted that women's freedom was as important as men's, on its own terms, not because it would be useful to anyone else. The position is more radical than it now sounds. For advanced students, the line is a useful reminder that some arguments now considered obvious had to be carefully made by people who refused easier compromises. Fawcett's clarity helped move the obvious from controversial to commonplace.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Ethical Thinking When discussing the ethics of working within unjust systems
How to introduce
In 1901, Fawcett led a British inquiry into conditions in concentration camps in South Africa during the Boer War. The camps were terrible; thousands of Boer women and children were dying. Her inquiry led to reforms but worked within the British imperial system that ran the camps. Some critics argue she should have refused. Others note her engagement reduced harm. Discuss with students: when should reformers work within unjust systems? When should they refuse? There is no easy answer. Both choices have costs.
Cultural Heritage and Identity When studying who gets remembered in public memory
How to introduce
Fawcett's statue was unveiled in London's Parliament Square in 2018, almost ninety years after her death. It was the first statue of a woman in the square, which is full of statues of male statesmen. Discuss with students: who gets remembered with statues? What does the slow recognition of Fawcett tell us? The campaign for the statue was led by the journalist Caroline Criado Perez. Her work shows that public recognition is not automatic. People have to fight for it, decade after decade. The discussion is useful for thinking about whose contributions are honoured in students' own communities.
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

The Suffragettes won British women the vote.

What to teach instead

The Suffragists, led by Fawcett, were a much larger movement than the Suffragettes and worked patiently for over 50 years to build the public and parliamentary support needed for the 1918 Act. The Suffragettes' direct action made headlines but represented a smaller, later, and more controversial part of the movement. Most historians agree the actual change in law happened on Suffragist terms: through parliamentary work during and after the First World War. Reducing the story to the Suffragettes alone misrepresents the actual history of how British women won the vote.

Common misconception

Fawcett achieved her goal in 1918.

What to teach instead

The 1918 Representation of the People Act was a partial victory. It gave the vote to women over 30 who owned property or were married to property owners. About 8 million British women became eligible to vote. But many younger and working-class women were still excluded. Full equal voting rights for women, on the same terms as men, did not come until 1928, the Equal Franchise Act, just a year before Fawcett's death. The story did not end in 1918. Fawcett kept campaigning.

Common misconception

Peaceful methods are always less effective than direct action.

What to teach instead

This is a contested claim, not an obvious truth. Fawcett's NUWSS and the Suffragettes pursued the same goal with very different methods over the same years. Both contributed. Some historians argue that Suffragette violence energised the movement; others argue it delayed reform by alienating moderate MPs. What is clearer is that Fawcett's patient work built the broad support that made the 1918 and 1928 Acts politically possible. The right method depends on context. Direct action sometimes works; sometimes it backfires. Peaceful methods sometimes work; sometimes they are too slow. There is no universal answer.

Common misconception

Fawcett was just a Victorian lady.

What to teach instead

She was a serious political organiser who led a 100,000-member movement for over twenty years. She wrote books on economics. She published widely on women's rights. She advised governments. She negotiated with major political parties. She gave thousands of speeches. She helped change British law. The image of Victorian ladies as quiet and uninvolved in public life is itself a stereotype. Fawcett, like many serious women of her time, was deeply involved in shaping society. She was unusual in her success but not in her ambition.

Intellectual Connections
Develops
Mary Wollstonecraft
Wollstonecraft's A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792) was the founding text of British feminism. She argued that women were rational beings who deserved equal education and rights. Fawcett, more than a century later, took these arguments and built them into a mass political movement. Wollstonecraft made the case in writing. Fawcett organised people around it. Both stand in a long British tradition of arguing that equal rights for women are a matter of justice, not negotiation. Reading them together gives students a sense of how feminist thought moved from solitary writing to organised politics across the nineteenth century.
In Dialogue With
Harriet Martineau
Martineau, the Victorian writer and social theorist, was a generation older than Fawcett. She wrote extensively on women's rights, education, and political economy in the 1830s and 1840s. Fawcett's first book, Political Economy for Beginners (1870), continued Martineau's tradition of explaining economics for general readers. Both women combined serious intellectual work with active campaigning. Martineau died in 1876 when Fawcett's career was just beginning. Reading them together shows the long history of British women writing about economics, politics, and women's rights, decades before any of them could vote.
In Dialogue With
John Stuart Mill
Mill, the philosopher and MP, gave the speech in 1866 that inspired the 19-year-old Fawcett to commit her life to women's suffrage. Mill's book The Subjection of Women (1869) made the philosophical case Fawcett would later organise around. Mill argued that the legal subordination of women was wrong on principles of justice and harmful in practice. Fawcett, who became personally close to Mill, took his arguments and turned them into political action. Reading Mill with Fawcett shows how a philosophical case becomes a movement. The philosophy is necessary but not sufficient. Someone has to organise the meetings, write the pamphlets, and keep the work going for decades.
Complements
Wangari Maathai
Maathai, the Kenyan environmental activist and 2004 Nobel Peace laureate, ran a long campaign over decades using peaceful methods to change a society. Like Fawcett, she organised mass action without resorting to violence. Like Fawcett, she faced opposition from a government that did not want her movement to succeed. Like Fawcett, she lived to see major progress. Reading them together gives students two very different examples of how patient peaceful organisation can shift a country. The contexts (Victorian Britain and post-colonial Kenya) are different. The patterns of organising are recognisably similar.
Anticipates
Audre Lorde
Lorde, the twentieth-century African American Black lesbian poet and activist, came from a different tradition than Fawcett but shared a basic insight. Movements for justice should not be limited to a single issue. Fawcett worked for women's votes, women's education, women's property rights, women's protection from exploitation, and international peace. Lorde insisted that real liberation had to address race, class, gender, and sexuality together. Both refused single-issue thinking. Reading them together gives students a sense of how feminist thought has expanded across more than a century while keeping certain core commitments.
Complements
Nelson Mandela
Mandela, in South Africa, ran a much longer campaign with very different methods (he eventually accepted armed struggle in the 1960s). Both leaders, however, faced the same fundamental question: how do you change an unjust political system that does not want to change? Both eventually won. Both spent decades persuading public opinion. Both lived to see the change they had worked for. Reading them together gives students a useful contrast. Fawcett's commitment to peaceful methods made her movement slower but kept its moral standing. Mandela's willingness to use force in extreme conditions raised hard ethical questions. There is no single right answer. The contrast is illuminating.
Further Reading

For research-level engagement, the NUWSS papers held at the Women's Library at the London School of Economics are the major archive. Sandra Stanley Holton's Suffrage Days: Stories from the Women's Suffrage Movement (1996) is a careful study of less-famous campaigners. Krista Cowman's Women in British Politics, c.1689-1979 places Fawcett in the longer history of women's political activism. For the Boer War episode, the Royal Commission report Fawcett led is available in archives, alongside Emily Hobhouse's earlier writings. The Women's History Review and the Journal of Women's History regularly publish work on Fawcett and the suffrage tradition.