Isabella Carrie
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Isabella Scrimgeour Carrie (3 May 1878 – 29 November 1981) was a Scottish suffragette and schoolteacher. She became a suffragette after bouncers threw her out of a meeting where
Winston Churchill Sir Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill (30 November 1874 – 24 January 1965) was a British statesman, military officer, and writer who was Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1940 to 1945 (Winston Churchill in the Second World War, ...
was speaking. She was said to have remarked, "I did not come to the meeting as a suffragette, but I am now".


Life

Carrie was born in
Arbroath Arbroath () or Aberbrothock ( ) is a former royal burgh and the largest town in the Subdivisions of Scotland, council area of Angus, Scotland, Angus, Scotland, with a population of 23,902. It lies on the North Sea coast, some east-northeast of ...
in 1878 to Richard and Ann Carrie. She attended school locally and at the age of fourteen she became a pupil-teacher. This meant that she got some training as she taught at a school for four years. She moved to Edinburgh where she attended the Church of Scotland Training College. She then taught in Fife and Arbroath but her health declined. She was teaching in Dundee in 1908 when the suffragettes were beginning to make headlines.Hamilton, S. (2004-09-23). Carrie, Isabella Scrimgeour (1878–1981), suffragette and schoolteacher. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Retrieved 29 November 2017, from http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/10.1093/ref:odnb/9780198614128.001.0001/odnb-9780198614128-e-60800. She came to be associated with the
Women's Social and Political Union The Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) was a women-only political movement and leading militant organisation campaigning for women's suffrage in the United Kingdom founded in 1903. Known from 1906 as the suffragettes, its membership and p ...
in an unusual way. She had gone to hear
Winston Churchill Sir Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill (30 November 1874 – 24 January 1965) was a British statesman, military officer, and writer who was Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1940 to 1945 (Winston Churchill in the Second World War, ...
speak and he was a well known opposer of women having the vote. Carrie got up to ask a question on this subject and she was thrown out of the hall. The bouncers had assumed she was one of the suffragettes who were heckling Churchill's meetings. The mistake of the bouncers was mirrored by WSPU members who also assumed that her question to Churchill was part of a campaign. The WSPU were a militant organisation involved in increasing criminal protests to draw attention to their cause. They asked Carrie to join them but she did not feel it was possible, although she was said to have remarked 'I did not come to the meeting as a suffragette, but I am now'. However she remained a secret supporter, as she was a primary school teacher but in 1912 she began the risky task of looking after WSPU members who were travelling in the area, and she maintained a small library for the organisation. Her respectable middle class profile meant that her house in Baldovan Terrace, Dundee, which she had moved to when her father died, was not an obvious suspect for housing what the authorities considered criminals. Carrie was asked to keep her visitors' identities secret and she kept her word. Even after the first and the second world war she would not reveal who led the WSPU in Dundee, and she often left her house open and food available but did not actually meet the WSPU visitors herself. It is known that she once expected to house
Emmeline Pankhurst Emmeline Pankhurst (; Goulden; 15 July 1858 – 14 June 1928) was a British political activist who organised the British suffragette movement and helped women to win in 1918 the women's suffrage, right to vote in United Kingdom of Great Brita ...
in 1914 but Pankhurst was arrested in Glasgow before she got to Carrie's house, but she said in some way she was relieved due to the risk of the police raiding her property as Pankhurst was most wanted, though she would have liked to meet her. Carrie did not have good health and in 1938 she retired and decided to spend her money on a trip around the world as she felt that death was near. Carrie got as far as New York before war broke out. She did not fully reveal her suffragette past until 1976, as she was concerned that she may still be at risk of imprisonment. Carrie was to live until she was over 100 years old. She died in a nursing home on 29 November 1981 in
Broughty Ferry Broughty Ferry (; ; ) is a suburb of Dundee, in Scotland. It is situated four miles east of the City Centre, Dundee, city centre on the north bank of the Firth of Tay. The area was a separate burgh from 1864 until 1913, when it was incorporated ...
.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Carrie, Isabella 1878 births 1981 deaths People from Arbroath 20th-century Scottish educators 20th-century Scottish women educators Scottish suffragettes