Margaret Ashton


Margaret Ashton was an English suffragist, local politician, pacifist and philanthropist, and the first woman City Councillor for Manchester.

Career

Margaret Ashton was the first woman to run for election to Manchester City Council, and in 1908 became the first woman City Councillor when she was elected Councillor for Manchester Withington.
with suffragists v. anti-suffragists. Ashton is third from left on the front row.
As a member of Manchester's public health committee and chair of the maternity and child welfare subcommittee, Ashton endorsed municipal mother and baby clinics and promoted free milk for babies and new mothers. In 1914 she founded the Manchester Babies Hospital with Dr Catherine Chisholm.
With the outbreak of the first world war in 1914, Ashton was amongst the internationalist minority who split from the NUWSS and the suffragette movement. She was a signatory of the 'Open Christmas Letter', a call for peace addressed in sisterhood "To the Women of Germany and Austria", which was published in Jus Suffragii in January 1915. She started a Manchester branch of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom.

Legacy

In 1938, some friends and admirers of Ashton formed a memorial committee which funded two activities:
In 1982, the Harpurhey High School for Girls was re-opened as Margaret Ashton Sixth Form College.
Her name and picture are on the plinth of the statue of Millicent Fawcett in Parliament Square, London; it was unveiled in 2018.
Margaret Ashton is one of six women on a nomination list for a new public statue in Manchester. The winner, chosen by public vote, will be announced in 2019.