William Ball (suffragist)

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Born4 November 1862[1]
Died1935(1935-00-00) (aged 72–73)[2]
KnownforSuffragist, imprisoned, force-fed, moved to lunatic asylum
William Ball
Born4 November 1862[1]
Died1935(1935-00-00) (aged 72–73)[2]
OrganizationNational Transport Workers Federation
Known forSuffragist, imprisoned, force-fed, moved to lunatic asylum
SpouseMiriam Jennie Warick
poster by WSPU about men being force fed

William Ball (4 November 1862 – 1935)[3] was a British workers union member, jailed for his support of women's suffrage, and subject of a WSPU pamphlet, "Torture In An English Prison", which described his experience being force-fed such that his health deteriorated and he was sent to a lunatic asylum.

William Ball was born in Coton, Staffordshire to Thomas Ball, a gardener, and Elizabeth Ball. In Birmingham in 1891, he married Miriam Jennie Warick, with whom he had five children.[3] Ball was a member of the National Transport Workers Federation.[4]

He was an athlete and a "championship sprinter" of the Midlands. According to the WSPU pamphlet Torture In An English Prison, neither he nor his family had any history of mental illness.[4]

Imprisonment and consequences

"Torture In An English Prison"

References

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