Jane Short

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Jane Short (also known as Rachel Peace; 1881–1964) was a British militant suffragette and member of the Women's Social and Political Union. Between 1911 and 1913 she was arrested on three occasions for window-smashing and once for arson. She was imprisoned four times in HM Prison Holloway, serving a total of nineteen months, the longest recorded term for a suffragette.

Jane Short (also known as Rachel Peace), Holloway Prison, 1913

Jane was born Florence Jane Short on 25 April 1881 at 3 Lewis Grove, Catford, London. Her father, Samuel Short (1857-1924), was from Whitechapel and her mother, Mary (née Brown), was from Suffolk. Although Samuel was a manual worker for Lewisham Council Jane's three siblings entered middle-class professions. Jane worked as a shirt machinist and later as a self-employed embroideress and massage therapist. Her interests included astrology and Esperanto, and she expressed deep concern about the sexual and economic exploitation of working-class women.

By 1911 Short was living at 126 Wilbury Road, Letchworth Garden City. Her fellow lodger, Charles Purdom, was the town’s planner and a historian of the garden city movement. Her landlady, Kate Hayward, was the sister-in-law of the town’s founder Ebenezer Howard, president of the Letchworth branch of the Men's League for Women's Suffrage.[1]

Suffragette activity and convictions

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