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Sources
1. Title:   Women's Suffrage Movement
Author:   Elizabeth Crawford
Url:   http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=ygXwlK_mj50C&dq=%22catherine+Corbett%22+suffragette&source=gbs_navlinks_s
2. Title:   Ancestry.com
Text:   Published by permission of the Controller of HMSO and the Office for National Statistics
Url:   http://search.ancestry.com http://search.ancestry.com
Link:   http://search.ancestry.com
3. Title:   Ancestry.com
Text:   Published by permission of the Controller of HMSO and the Office for National Statistics
Url:   http://search.ancestry.com http://search.ancestry.com
Link:   http://search.ancestry.com

Notes
a. Note:   N14 Feminist; friend and admirer of Emmeline Pankhurst
 Photo of her with Asquith 28 Apr 1909 (/dserve.exe?dsqIni=Dserve.ini&dsqApp=Archive&dsqCmd=Show.tcl&dsqDb=Catalog&dsqPos=4&dsqSearch=((text)='asquith')
 Visited PAVA 1904
  Catherine Isabel Ida Vans Corbett, of Birtley House, Bramley, Surrey, died on 8 May 1950, aged 80. Administration of her will was granted in Oct to Arthur Brian Ashby, Ernest George Vans Agnew and Frank Vans Agnew. Her estate was valued at £798 7s.
  Helen Archdale took part in the Scottish suffrage demonstration on 9 October 1909, and a few days later, together with Adela Pankhurst, Maud Joachim, Catherine Corbett, and Laura Evans, disrupted a meeting addressed by Winston Churchill in Dundee, was convicted of breach of the peace, and imprisoned. All four immediately started a hunger strike, and were released after four days.


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