Suffrage leader Harriot Stanton Blatch cracks the whip
and tells activists “no more pink teas.”
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Tagged Harriott Stanton Blatch, High Tea, pink teas, Votes for Women, women's suffrage
Tea receptions had a distinct function during the suffrage movement –of bringing women together, to raise funds and rally for the cause. In March of 1915, Harriot Stanton Blatch and her Women’s Political Union called upon activists to end their suffrage frills: “No more pink teas,” Mrs. Blatch said. “But direct work with the men.” Mrs. Blatch’s reaction suggests that women might have been loving their tea parties a little too much and put organizing for the suffrage general election on the back burner. Which is another reason to use the occasion of High Tea events to combine education, pleasure and discussion about the world and how we can make a special contribution in these times.
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Harriot Stanton Blatch, High Tea, pink tea, tea parties, Women's Political Union