Barbara Bodichon Ayrton-Gould (née Ayrton; 3 April 1886[2] – 14 October 1950) was a British Labour politician and suffragist who served as the Member of Parliament (MP) for Hendon North from 1945 to 1950.
In March 1912, Ayrton-Gould participated in smashing store windows in the West End of London for suffrage, for which she served time in prison.[6] On her release, in 1913, she went to France, disguised as a schoolgirl, so she would not be arrested again.[4][6]
In 1914, Ayrton-Gould left the Women's Social and Political Union due to frustration with the autocratic tendencies of their leaders, as well as Christabel Pankhurst's continuing absence.[4][6] On 6 February 1914, she, her husband, and Evelyn Sharp founded the United Suffragists,[4] notable for accepting both male and female members.[6] The United Suffragists ended their campaign when 1918's Representation of the People Act gave women limited suffrage in the United Kingdom.[6]
Political office
Ayrton-Gould became a member of the National Executive Committee of the Labour Party in 1929,[7] and served as vice-Chair in 1938 and Chair of the Labour Party from 1939 to 1940.[5] As from 1922, she made four unsuccessful attempts to get elected as MP.[4] During the general election of 1929 she missed victory in Northwich by only four votes.[8] The fifth time, Gould was elected Member of Parliament for newly created Hendon North constituency in Labour's landslide victory of 1945.[5] The forerunner constituency, Hendon, had since 1935 grown considerably in population (and to some extent number of homes) and was split in two; it had been solidly won by Conservative candidates since 1910, however the north division fell to Gould's campaign, a feat not to be repeated until 1997 by a Labour candidate. In Parliament, the two main issues of Gould's concern were food supplies and child poverty. Thus, she succeeded in introducing a resolution which called for a government enquiry into child neglect.[9] She also was a Justice of the Peace in Marylebone.[3]
^Ogilvie, Marilyn Bailey (1986). Women in Science: Antiquity Through the Nineteenth Century (3rd ed.). Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. ISBN0-262-15031-X.