Emily Davison
Emily Wilding Davison (11 October 1872 – 8 June 1913) was a British suffragette and militant activist associated with the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU), renowned for her repeated acts of civil disobedience, including arson and disruption of public events, which led to multiple imprisonments and hunger strikes.[1] Born in Blackheath, London, she pursued higher education, earning honours in English literature from institutions including Oxford and the University of London, before dedicating herself fully to suffrage campaigning after 1909.[2] Her most notable action occurred on 4 June 1913 at the Epsom Derby, where she entered the racetrack and attempted to seize the reins of Anmer, the horse ridden by King George V's jockey, resulting in fatal injuries from being trampled.[2] Davison's activism exemplified the WSPU's shift toward confrontational tactics under Emmeline Pankhurst, involving stone-throwing at political buildings, setting fire to postboxes, and interrupting speeches by government officials such as David Lloyd George.[1] Arrested at least eight times between 1909 and 1912, she endured force-feeding during hunger strikes in prisons like Strangeways, where she also attempted self-harm to protest treatment.[2] In 1911, she evaded the census by hiding in a broom cupboard within the House of Commons, symbolically asserting her political presence.[2] These actions reflected her belief, expressed in writings, that personal sacrifice could compel government attention to suffragette demands and halt punitive measures like force-feeding.[2] The Epsom Derby incident has sparked debate over Davison's intentions, with empirical evidence—including her purchase of a return railway ticket from Epsom to London, a ticket to a suffragette dance later that day, and planned travel to France—suggesting she did not anticipate death.[3] She carried two WSPU flags, consistent with a plan to attach a suffrage emblem to the horse's bridle as a publicity stunt, a tactic she had rehearsed; newsreel footage and witness accounts indicate she may have misjudged the horse's speed amid the chaos.[3][2] The coroner's inquest ruled her death an accident, though WSPU leaders later promoted a narrative of deliberate martyrdom to galvanize the movement.[2] This portrayal, amplified in contemporary press and Pankhurst memoirs, contrasted with contemporary skepticism and the absence of a suicide note or farewell communications.[3]