Alice Arnold (mayor) explained

Caption:In Coventry's mayoral regalia which she initially refused to wear – not wanting to seem different from her constituents
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Alice Arnold (1881–1955) was a socialist and trade unionist in Coventry. She was one of the first women on the city council, serving for 36 years, and became the first female mayor of the city in 1937.

Arnold was born on 19 January 1881 in the Coventry Workhouse to Caroline and Samuel Arnold; her mother and three siblings had been admitted to the workhouse on 23 November 1880 and were discharged on 19 February 1882.[1] Arnold was employed in factories from the age of eleven. Her experiences made her want to improve life for people in her community, she became an organiser of the Worker's Union[2] and Secretary of the Coventry Social Democratic Federation (SDF) Women’s Circle.

In 1919 she was elected as an independent Labour councillor in Coventry. She campaigned for better living conditions for those living in the city. Alice was elected Mayor in 1937. At the mayoral ceremony, she assured men that women had no desire for sex antagonism but that they did feel that it was time for them to stand side by side with men in the work of the world.

Alice was popular with the electorate of the city[3] and in October 1938 she led a protest for 'peace and plenty.' The protest culminated in a delegation of over 100 people delivering a petition signed by 60,000 Coventry citizens (two-thirds of the city's electorate) to the Home Office. The aim of the petition was to promote peace and abolish poverty.

Notes and References

  1. Hunt . C.J. . 2003 . Alice Arnold of Coventry: trade unionism and municipal politics 1919 - 1939 . PhD . .
  2. News: 2021-07-17. Coventry City of Culture: The women who helped shape a 'city of justice'. en-GB. BBC News. 2021-07-18.
  3. Hunt . Cathy . 14 June 2007 . Everyone’s Poor Relation: the poverty and isolation of a working‐class woman local politician in interwar Britain . Women's History Review . 16 . 3 . 417-430.