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Gauld, Mary B. One Hundred years of Women: The Quest for Equality. In Aberdeen University Review, Autumn, 1994.
Gordon, Eleanor. Women and The Labour Movement in Scotland 1850-1914. In Modern Scottish History 1707 to the Present, Vol 4, East Linton, 1998. Extracts from Gordon's book of the same name. (OUP, 1991)
Hewitt, Patricia & Mattinson, Deborah. Women’s Votes: The Key to Winning. Fabian Society Research Series No 353, 1989.
Holton, Sandra Stanley. Silk Dresses and Lavender Kid Gloves: the wayward career of Jessie Craigen, working suffragist. In Women’s History Review, Vol 5, No 1, 1996. Craigen lectured throughout Scotland from the 1870s.
Leneman, Leah. Force Feeding & The Vote. In Harper & Queens, October, 1992.
Leneman, Leah. In Search of the Suffragettes. In Folio, National Library of Scotland, c1992. Details how archives in National Library can be used for research on the suffrage movement.
Leneman, Leah. The Women’s Suffrage Movement in the North of Scotland. In Northern Scotland, Vol 11, 1991. Leneman pushes the suffrage story northwards, taking in the Aberdeen by-election of 1907 and suffrage communities as far north as Shetland. Notable for revealing the instinct of northern women to remain autonomous from national leaders.
Leneman, Leah. The Scottish Churches and ‘Votes for Women.’ In Records of the Scottish Church History Society, Edinburgh, 24:2, 1991.
Leneman, Leah. The Awakened Instinct: vegetarianism and the women’s suffrage movement in Britain. In Women’s History Review, Vol 6, No 2, 1997. Article examines the extent to which vegetarianism was found in the militant and non-militant strands of the women’s suffrage movement.
Leneman, Leah. When Women Were Not 'Persons: The Scottish Women Graduates' Case, 1906-08. In Juridical Review, 1991.
Malmgreen, Gail. Mary Gawthorpe: A Suffragette in America. In North West Labour History Journal (USA), No 28, 2003. Malmgreen uses the Gawthorpe papers in the Tamiment Library, New York.
Mercer, John. Commercial Places, public spaces: suffragette shops and the public sphere. In University of Sussex Journal of Contemporary History, 7, 2004.
Methven, Moira. Strong Spirits in Dundee – President’s Perspective. In Information Scotland, Volume 2 (1), February 2004. Article tracing radical history of Dundee women, including suffrage activity.
Moore, Lindy. The Women’s Suffrage Campaign in the 1907 Aberdeen By-election. In Northern Scotland, Vol 5, No 2, 1983. Interesting article which sets out day-to-day routine of by-election campaigning as the WSPU went about its business. Of particular note is the debate among its members over which women should actually get the vote, if won.
Moore, Lindy. Feminists and Femininity: A Case Study of WSPU Propaganda and Local Response at a Scottish By-election. In Women’s Studies International Forum, Vol 5, No 6, 1982.
Morrow, Bob. “We Want the Vote!” In Scots Magazine, June 1988.
Pedersen, Sarah. Within their sphere? Women correspondents to Aberdeen daily newspapers 1900-1914. In Northern Scotland, July 2002.
Pedersen, Sarah. The Conciliatory Suffragette. In History Scotland, Mar/Apr 2005. Concerns activities in the Aberdeen area of Caroline Phillips and her correspondence with national suffrage leaders.
Purvis, Jane. The Prison Experience of the Suffragettes in Edwardian Britain. In Women’s History Review, Vol 4, No 1, 1995. Includes discussion of Fanny Parker’s treatment at Perth in 1914.
Roddick, Jackie. Women and Voting Systems. In Radical Scotland, No 42, Dec/Jan 1990.
Smitley, Megan. ‘Inebriates’, ‘Heathens’, Templars and Suffragists: Scotland and Imperial Feminism, c1870-1914. In Women’s History Review, Vol 11, Number 3, 2002. Article examining suffrage debate and ‘empire’ within Scottish Christian Union, a temperance group.
Smyth, Jim. Women, Socialism and the Suffrage. In Radical Scotland, June/July, 1984.
Stephen, Jessie. Memories of Jessie Stephen. In Spare Rib, No 32, 1975. How Stephen participated in Scottish militancy.
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