Agnes Pochin

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Born
Agnes Heap

1825 (1825)
Died1908 (aged 8283)
Llanrwst, Clwyd, Wales
OthernamesMrs Henry Davis Pochin Justitia (Pen Name)
KnownforEarly advocate for women's suffrage
Agnes Pochin
Born
Agnes Heap

1825 (1825)
Died1908 (aged 8283)
Llanrwst, Clwyd, Wales
Other namesMrs Henry Davis Pochin Justitia (Pen Name)
Known forEarly advocate for women's suffrage
SpouseHenry Davis Pochin
Childrenthree survived infancy, including Laura McLaren, Baroness Aberconway
Parent(s)George Gretton Heap; Hannah Lord. M. 1813 Rochdale

Agnes Pochin (née Heap; 1825 – 1908) was an early British campaigner for women's rights. She funded campaigns, wrote one of the first tracts and was one of the three speakers at the first suffrage meeting in Manchester.

Agnes Heap was born in 1825 at Timperley, near Manchester.[1] Her sister was married to the chemist James Woolley and she married his business partner Henry Pochin. The marriage took place at the Unitarian Cross Street Chapel in Manchester in 1852.[2]

Pochin wrote in 1855 a frequently overlooked work. John Chapman published her work titled "The Right of Women to Exercise the Elective Franchise". She argues for not only equal voting rights but also equality with respect to education, divorce, ambition or social aspiration. She wrote that "Women's life in the middle classes is, and has been rendered a dull one". It was signed "Justitia", and it was not published under her name until 1873. In 1858 Pochin unsuccessfully tried to get John Bright to introduce a women's right to vote clause into his Reform Bill. Bright could see no reason to oppose such a move personally but he thought that including this clause might jeopardise the bill.[2] From 1866 to 1868, her husband was Mayor of Salford.[3]

The start of the suffrage campaign

Posthumous recognition

References

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