Born to a coal merchant and shipping agent, Edward Downing, and one of four siblings, Caroline Lowder Downing, became a trained nurse, and in 1908 joined the Women's Social and Political UnionChelsea Branch, with her sister Edith Elizabeth Downing, an artist, and both became militant suffragettes. Downing took part in the window smashing on 1 March 1912, causing £50 of damage, imprisoned in Winson Green Prison, Birmingham, went on hunger strike and was force fed. Describing experiences of fellow sufferers of that painful treatment, Downing's activism and its resultant convictions were also duly reported in the WSPU newspaper Votes for Women, for example: On 28 November 1911: 'Miss Caroline Downing was charged with trying to break throughthe police cordon at Palace Yard. She said that it was a purely political action, in face of Mr. Asquith’s broken pledge and the insult he put upon women by bringing in a Manhood Suffrage Bill in response to women’s demand. She said next time she would do worse. Magistrate: “I hope not.” ’. On 7 March 1912:
'On Thursday afternoon Miss Caroline Downing was recalled and charged with breaking windows value £50 at 221, Regent Street. She said it was part of a political protest for a purely political motive for gaining votes for women; this violence was as repellant to them as to the Government, but they were compelled to take these methods. As soon as the vote was granted this violence would cease automatically. She was committed to take her trial on the 20th, refusing bail.’
On 5 July 1912: under the heading ‘Forcible Feeding - A Danger And An Outrage’
'Caroline Downing entered the debate with the following statement: ‘I should like definitely to deny the statement that has been made in the House of Commons and elsewhere that forcible feeding by tube is only painful when the victim struggles. Mrs. Bowen, with whom I was in constant companionship during the whole of the time, suffered greatly both from the pain in the nostrils and throat and in the stomach, though she was quite passive. Miss Farmer, another passive victim, also suffered a very great deal. The underground cells are dreadfully cold and damp, so cold that I have scarcely ever been really warm all these months. I have worn winter things and furs and shawl up to Saturday, and till the last ten days have had broken chilblains on my hands. Mrs. Bowen and I could not sleep from cold and aching limbs and back. Water spilt on the stone floor did not dry for hours, though wiped up. Mildew is on the walls of my cell. To sleep on a plank bed four inches from such a floor is to court disease. For the last sixteen days we were given proper bedsteads in response to our complaints.’
Downing was awarded a Hunger Strike Medal, dated 1 March 1912, 'for Valour', which was exhibited in the 'Women's Place in Parliament Exhibition at the Palace of Westminster during the centenary year after women were given the right to vote in British elections. A clear image of the medal was released on social media on 15 October 1915 and 5 February 2018. And the dedication on the inside of the original presentation box said:
'Presented to Caroline Lowder Downing by the Women’s Social and Political Union in recognition of a gallant action, whereby through endurance to the last extremity of hunger and hardship, a great principle of political justice was vindicated.'