(Redirected from Dr. Richard Pankhurst)
Richard Marsden Pankhurst
'Richard Marsden Pankhurst' (May,
1834 –
July 5,
1898) was the son of Henry Francis Pankhurst (1806-1873) and Margaret Marsden (1803-1879). He was born in
Stoke but spent most of his life in
Manchester and
London. He was educated at
Manchester Grammar School and
Owens College of Manchester. In 1858 he graduated BA from the
University of London and in 1859 was awarded LLB with Honours. In 1863 he graduated LLD with gold medal. He was called to the
Bar at
Lincoln's Inn in
1867 and joined the Northern Assizes circuit. He was also a member of the Bar of the County Palatine of Lancaster Court.
Following qualification he was a founder member of the Manchester Liberal Association, although he was subsequently to fall out with the
Liberals. He campaigned for multiple causes, including
free speech, universal free
secular education,
republicanism,
home rule for the Irish,
independence for India,
nationalisation of land, the
disestablishment of the Church of England and the abolition of the
House of Lords. He established a National Society for Women's
Suffrage, drafted the Women's Disabilities Removal Bill (the first women's suffrage bill in England) and was author of the bill which became the
Married Women's Property Act (1882) which gave wives absolute control over their property and earnings.
He married Emmeline Goulden, better known as
Emmeline Pankhurst, who was some 20 years younger than him, in
1879. With her, he was instrumental in establishing the
Independent Labour Party. Together they formed the
Women's Franchise League in
1889. They were part of a political circle which included
Keir Hardie,
Annie Besant,
William Morris and
George Bernard Shaw. They were present at the
Bloody Sunday riot in
Trafalgar Square.
Known as the "Red Doctor," he ran for
Parliament in 1883 as candidate for Manchester and in 1885 for
Rotherhithe,
Kent, both times unsuccessfully. His controversial views did not win him many clients, but did afford him a place of great respect in the Independent Labour Party, even long after his sudden death, from stomach ulcers, at the age of 64.
He was father to
Adela Pankhurst,
Christabel Pankhurst and
Sylvia Pankhurst. He was buried alongside his parents in Brooklands Cemetery, Sale, Cheshire, where there is a headstone bearing their names.
=Sayings=
★ ''"Life is nothing without enthusiasms"''
★ ''"Every struggling cause shall be ours"''
★ [The House of Lord's is] ''"a public abatoir butchering the liberties of the people"''
★ [The clergy of the Church of England are] ''"a portentious beadledom"''
References
★ Manchester Faces and Places Vol 4 Page 33 (1893)
★ Burton, S: "Relatively Famous: Richard Pankhurst, The Red Doctor", ''BBC History Magazine'', February 2007, 8:2, page 22.