Women of South London
@womenofsouthlondon.bsky.social
640 followers 200 following 370 posts
Celebrate the amazing mostly historic women with a connection to South London. Meet suffragettes, actresses, activists, writers, pioneering HCPs, politicians, sportswomen & many more women from all walks of life. Includes some reposts from the other place
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Reposted by Women of South London
dohertyta.bsky.social
Meet Fanny Pease (1866–1946) #Nurse & #Suffragette

Born in #Woolwich she was force fed at Holloway Prison for suffrage activism. Awarded an RRC for WW2 nursing

#HistNursing #WomensHistory #WomenInRed
#NursesInRed #Wikipedia
@rcnhistory.bsky.social

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fanny_P...
en.wikipedia.org
Reposted by Women of South London
annri.bsky.social
Salter Road , the gardens in Southwark Park, her statue ...Bermondsey remembers her .
Reposted by Women of South London
treesforbermondsey.bsky.social
You may well have walked along some of the streets of houses built when Ada Salter was Mayor of Bermondsey in the 1920s and which survived the Blitz, unlike many which surrounded them. An early environmentalist, she lined the streets of Bermondsey with over 9000 trees. We are lucky indeed!
womenofsouthlondon.bsky.social
Happy Birthday Ada Salter (nee Brown) born OTD 1866.

Bermondsey Icon.

- Social Reformer
- Trade unionist
- Environmentalist
- Pacifist
- First woman councillor Bermondsey 1909
- First woman mayor in London 1922
- First labour woman mayor in UK
Reposted by Women of South London
socwkhistory.bsky.social
This day in social work history ⏳

14th July 2005: Cicely Saunders, nurse, social worker, physician and writer, died in Bromley (aged 97). Saunders was the founder of St Christopher’s Hospice, considered to be the first modern hospice.
womenofsouthlondon.bsky.social
2/2 … followed by the innovatory ‘Vision On’ in 1964, designed to appeal to all children, hearing and non hearing.

And it's Ursula we can thank for revamping a seemingly mediocre series from France into the mega popular 'The Magic Roundabout.'
womenofsouthlondon.bsky.social
1/2 Ursula Eason b1910 Mount Nod Road, Streatham, pioneered TV programmes for deaf children. She joined BBC 1933 in Belfast, moving to children’s tv in London 1952, becoming Asst. Head Children’s Programmes 1955.

Partially deaf herself, she developed the monthly ‘For Deaf Children’ 1953 …
womenofsouthlondon.bsky.social
womenofsouthlondon.bsky.social
Fanny Wilkinson was the first woman to attend the Crystal Palace School of Landscape Gardening. She was responsible for the design and laying out of Vauxhall Park for the Kyrie Society and Myatts Fields Park, Camberwell for the MPGA.
Reposted by Women of South London
roadsw9.bsky.social
Charlotte Sherman leased/rented 30 Loughborough Road c.1910-1922 and set up a home for young girls here. Emma Percival (not yet found much about her) was the matron living with between 6 and 10 girls aged 2-16. Wonder if Charlotte had other smaller homes for girls too.
womenofsouthlondon.bsky.social
2/2 In all she cared for some 2700 girls. She lived until she was 97, still working to the end, including typing her own letters and living in West Square.
A nearby primary school was named in her honour: sadly it was announced recently the school is to close.
womenofsouthlondon.bsky.social
1/2 Charlotte Sharman b1832, Union Place, Southwark was concerned about young girls living on the street and, after placing many with suitable families, she raised sufficient money to open an orphanage in 1867 in West Square to provide “a home & domestic training for destitute orphan girls”.
Reposted by Women of South London
lambetharchives.bsky.social
Opening on 15 July A Vanishing Kennington, an exhibition of the Manning Photographers studio archive, now passed to Lambeth Archives, it charts the lives of Lambeth residents and businesses over seventy years from nearly half a million photos. #lambetharchives #photography #lambeth #southlondon
The image shows a wedding photo of a bride, Miss B. Mortimer and her wedding party from 1 April 1951 in Kennington Road (to the right the bridesmaid and father of the bride).
womenofsouthlondon.bsky.social
A plaque honouring Jeanie Nassau Senior will be unveiled this Friday, 4 July, at 2pm at Battersea Arts Centre, the site of Elm House where she lived with her husband. Organised by the Battersea Society. All welcome.
womenofsouthlondon.bsky.social
1/3 Jeanie Senior (nee Hughes) b1828 was an energetic social reformer/philanthropist who lived some of her married life at Elm House, Clapham. She had many causes but in particular the progress of young girls when they left the workhouse, leading to her appointment as 1st woman civil servant 1873 …
womenofsouthlondon.bsky.social
Wimbledon champion Dora Boothby lived in Harold Road, Upper Norwood in 1901, later living in South Norwood Hill. She won silver medal at the 1908 Olympics, the 1909 Ladies Singles Champion at Wimbledon, also winning the mixed doubles title in Badminton Championships same year.
womenofsouthlondon.bsky.social
But in London you get the additional treat of humidity
Reposted by Women of South London
cecilearchives.bsky.social
Criminal!!!
newseye.bsky.social
NEW: The death shadow cast by Musk.

“When U.S.-supported soup kitchens were forced to close, babies starved quietly, their mothers said, while older siblings died begging for food.”

The world’s richest man did this to the world’s poorest children.

Don’t ever forget.
In Sudan, where children clung to life, doctors say USAID cuts have been fatal
The Trump administration’s cuts to USAID had an immediate and deadly impact in war-ravaged Sudan, according to civilians, doctors and aid officials.
www.washingtonpost.com
womenofsouthlondon.bsky.social
1/2 Dora Boetemah b1957 Ghana, housing activist. 1977 moved to Angell Town Estate, Brixton, 1987 founded Angell Town Community Project to ensure tenants were fully involved with voting rights in the redevelopment of their estate.
womenofsouthlondon.bsky.social
3/3 Her marriage was not a happy one. She formed an intense friendship with artist G F Watts who painted the portrait of her shown above.

She died aged 48, exhausted, in 1877
womenofsouthlondon.bsky.social
2/3 … as inspector of workhouses with a brief to produce a report about girls’ education in workhouse schools. In this she put forward the new idea, among others, of fostering which was adopted. Her appointment, as a senior woman civil servant, was controversial and not repeated for many years.
womenofsouthlondon.bsky.social
1/3 Jeanie Senior (nee Hughes) b1828 was an energetic social reformer/philanthropist who lived some of her married life at Elm House, Clapham. She had many causes but in particular the progress of young girls when they left the workhouse, leading to her appointment as 1st woman civil servant 1873 …
womenofsouthlondon.bsky.social
bethlemmuseum.bsky.social
Find out how a chance find at a house clearance led to a fascinating installation on the extraordinary life of Penelope 'Popsy' Carroll (1919-1993).

'Please Write Me' is by Kate Iles with sound by Mary Hooper.

#crisispoint #criminaljusticesystem #mentalhealth #bethlemmuseumofthemind