Edith Ayrton


Edith Ayrton or Edith Ayrton Zangwill was a British author and activist. She helped form the Jewish League for Woman Suffrage.

Life

Ayrton was born in 1875 in Japan to the scientist William Edward Ayrton and the doctor Matilda Chaplin Ayrton. Her mother died in 1883 and her father married the physicist Hertha Ayrton. Ayrton was brought up in the Jewish faith. She married Israel Zangwill in a registry office in 1903. They had met as a result of her step mother sending Edith's early stories to published writer Israel for his comments. They had three children: Ayrton Israel Zangwill in 1906, a daughter Margaret in 1910 and Oliver Louis Zangwill in 1913 In 1904 she created her first novel, Barbarous Babe. Edith complained of poor health and she did not feel that she could be a militant suffragette but she and her step mother joined the Women's Social and Political Union. Edith wrote to Maud Arncliffe Sennett to tell her that she intended to generously support the WSPU. Her husband spoke publicly in support of the WSPU and was hissed by liberally minded women for his support of militant tactics.
In 1912 she helped form the Jewish League for Woman Suffrage which was open to both male and female members. The organisation sought both political and religious rights for women. It was felt that some Jewish people may be more inclined to join this group in preference to an unspecific women's suffrage group. Other members included her husband, Henrietta Franklin, Hugh Franklin, Lily Montagu, Inez Bensusan and Leonard Benjamin Franklin. Some more radical parts of the organisation were responsible for disrupting synagogue services to make their point in 1913 and 1914. The group was labelled as "blackguards in bonnets" by the wider Jewish community.
on Far End, East Preston, West Sussex
The Jewish suffrage supporters came together on 6 February 1914 with other disillusioned suffragists to create the United Suffragists. The new group was created as a reaction tp the extreme militancy of the WSPU who had started a campaign of arson and the lack of success of the National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies. The new group included her stepmother, her husband, Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence, Maud Arncliffe Sennett and Louisa Garrett Anderson.
Ayrton lived for many years in East Preston, West Sussex, in a house called Far End. She died in Edinburgh in 1945.

Works