Ada Broughton

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Born1879
West Derby, Liverpool, England
Died1934(1934-00-00) (aged 54–55)
Liverpool, England
Knownforher campaigning for temperance, as an organiser in the suffragette movement; Labour councillor and alderman
Ada Broughton
Born1879
West Derby, Liverpool, England
Died1934(1934-00-00) (aged 54–55)
Liverpool, England
Organization(s)Women's Freedom League, Women's Social and Political Union, British Women's Temperance Association
Known forher campaigning for temperance, as an organiser in the suffragette movement; Labour councillor and alderman

Ada Broughton (1879–1934) was a British temperance campaigner, suffragette organiser and Labour councillor and alderman, prominent in Scotland in the Women's Freedom League, and in England in the Pembroke Chapel, British Women's Temperance Association, Women's Social and Political Union, and later in the Labour Party.

Ada Broughton was born in West Derby, Liverpool in 1879, the fourth of six children.  After she left school, she worked as a cashier.[1]

Political history

Broughton was assistant secretary to the West Bermondsey Labour party, serving the branch for 16 years when she died in 1934.[2] She was previously a lead organiser of the woman's suffrage movement; for example, she travelled widely as the Scottish organiser of the Women's Freedom League and helped English branches to organise prior to the First World War[3] and also led the British Women's Temperance Association in Northumberland.[2]

Initial role in suffrage and temperance issues and arrest

Later political career

References

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