Image

Sea Thrift

Identifier

Armeria Maritima

Date of Entry

28/08/2010

Coordinates

53.471189, -2.330893

Location Description

Verge near Cargill,
Cumbria

Author

Marie Cole

Author Notes

N/A

Source

N/A
Image

Sea Thrift

Identifier

Armeria Maritima

Date of Entry

14/08/2018

Coordinates

53.471189, -2.330893

Location Description

Verge near Cargill,
Cumbria

Author

John Seymour

Author Notes

N/A

Source

N/A

Image

Sea Thrift

Identifier

Armeria Maritima

Date of Entry

02/04/2024

Coordinates

53.471189, -2.330893

Location Description

Verge near Cargill,
Cumbria

Author

Katherine Watts

Author Notes

N/A

Source

N/A
Image

Sea Thrift

Identifier

Armeria Maritima

Date of Entry

06/07/2019

Coordinates

53.471189, -2.330893

Location Description

Verge near Cargill,
Cumbria

Author

Sean James

Author Notes

N/A

Source

N/A
Image

Kinship - Mine Banner

Text

XX
   
Date of Entry

1910

Author

 Ann Macbeth

Dimenions

2220mm x 2635 mm

Medium

Linen, Silk, Cotton

Sources


www.londonmuseum.org.uk/bbbbbbb/v/object
Sadegh Hosseinniaee, Mohammad Jafari, Ali Tavili, Salman Zare and Giovanna Cappai, “Chelate Facilitated Phytoextraction of PB, CD, and Zn from a Lead–Zinc Mine Contaminated Soil by Three Accumulator Plants,” Scientific Reports 13:1 (December 1, 2023),
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-48666-5.

Kathryn Yusoff, “Queer Coal: Genealogies in/of the Blood,” philoSOPHIA 5:2 (June 2015): 203–29, https://doi.org/10.1353/phi.2015.a608468.
WSPU Holloway Prisoners Banner XX 2220mm x 2635 mm Linen, Silk, Cotton philoSOPHIA 5:2 (June 2015): 203–29, 
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Image

WSPU Holloway Prisoners Banner

Text

This banner displays the names of several women who went on hunger strike while imprisoned in HMP Holloway. It was created by Ann Macbeth, head of the embroidery department at the Glasgow School of Art, who was later imprisoned in 1912 for militant activities - the same year as Mabel ‘Pansy’ Tuke. Both women endured hunger strikes and were subjected to force-feeding by prison guards.
 
Date of Entry

1910

Author

Ann Macbeth

Dimenions

2220 mm x 2635 mm

Medium

Linen, Silk, Cotton

Source

www.londonmuseum.org.uk/collections/v/object-91239/wspu-holloway-prisoners/
Image

WSPU Holloway Prisoners Banner held aloft during 'From Prison to Citizenship' procession

Text

Ann Macbeth’s textile was paraded during the Prisoners’ Pageant in 1910, alongside hundreds of women who had been imprisoned in HMP Holloway. This protest was part of the Great Procession of Women, a demonstration supporting the Conciliation Bill that was being debated in Parliament.

Date of Entry

18th June 1910

Author

H. Searjeant

Dimenions

136 mm x 86 mm

Medium

Photograph

Source

www.londonmuseum.org.uk/collections/v/object-453186/wspu-from-prison-to-citizenship-procession/
    -->  
Image

Mabel ‘Pansy’ Tuke

Text

“I was born two houses down from where Mabel ‘Pansy’ Tuke passed into memory. No plaque settles amongst the pebbledash to commemorate her presence, only the damson flowers weeding the unkempt lawn. Plucking them as a child, I would rest the petals as morning offerings to the pavement, hoping that violet flourishes grew upon my return from school.”  
 
Mabel Tuke (b.1871) was the Joint Honorary Secretary of the Women's Social and Political Union from 1908. Together with Emmeline Pankhurst, she threw a stone through one of 10 Downing Street’s windows on 1 March 1912, and was subsequently imprisoned in HMP Holloway. Pankhurst had given her the nickname ‘Pansy’ after the violet flowers Mabel was said to hand out at Suffrage rallies - and to striking miners just days before her incarceration. She died in Neville’s Cross, Durham in 1962.

She is depicted here in a silver gelatin print by Christine Broom in 1909. Metal mines in the North East of England, close to where Mabel passed away, often gleaned silver from seams of Galena ore. Some of this metal was used in the production of photography prints.

Her portrait hangs in Lea Inn in the North Pennine lowlands.

Date  of Entry

1909

Author

Christine Broom    

 
    -->  
Image

Mabel ‘Pansy’ Tuke

Text

“I was born two houses down from where Mabel ‘Pansy’ Tuke passed into memory. No plaque settles amongst the pebbledash to commemorate her presence, only the damson flowers weeding the unkempt lawn. Plucking them as a child, I would rest the petals as morning offerings to the pavement, hoping that violet flourishes grew upon my return from school.”  
 
Mabel Tuke (b.1871) was the Joint Honorary Secretary of the Women's Social and Political Union from 1908. Together with Emmeline Pankhurst, she threw a stone through one of 10 Downing Street’s windows on 1 March 1912, and was subsequently imprisoned in HMP Holloway. Pankhurst had given her the nickname ‘Pansy’ after the violet flowers Mabel was said to hand out at Suffrage rallies - and to striking miners just days before her incarceration. She died in Neville’s Cross, Durham in 1962.

She is depicted here in a silver gelatin print by Christine Broom in 1909. Metal mines in the North East of England, close to where Mabel passed away, often gleaned silver from seams of Galena ore. Some of this metal was used in the production of photography prints.

Her portrait hangs in Lea Inn in the North Pennine lowlands.

Date  of Entry

1909

Author

Christine Broom    

 
    -->  
Image

Mabel ‘Pansy’ Tuke

Text

“I was born two houses down from where Mabel ‘Pansy’ Tuke passed into memory. No plaque settles amongst the pebbledash to commemorate her presence, only the damson flowers weeding the unkempt lawn. Plucking them as a child, I would rest the petals as morning offerings to the pavement, hoping that violet flourishes grew upon my return from school.”  
 
Mabel Tuke (b.1871) was the Joint Honorary Secretary of the Women's Social and Political Union from 1908. Together with Emmeline Pankhurst, she threw a stone through one of 10 Downing Street’s windows on 1 March 1912, and was subsequently imprisoned in HMP Holloway. Pankhurst had given her the nickname ‘Pansy’ after the violet flowers Mabel was said to hand out at Suffrage rallies - and to striking miners just days before her incarceration. She died in Neville’s Cross, Durham in 1962.

She is depicted here in a silver gelatin print by Christine Broom in 1909. Metal mines in the North East of England, close to where Mabel passed away, often gleaned silver from seams of Galena ore. Some of this metal was used in the production of photography prints.

Her portrait hangs in Lea Inn in the North Pennine lowlands.

Date  of Entry

1909

Author

Christine Broom    

 
Sea Thrift