Isabella Tod

Summary

Isabella Maria Susan Tod (18 May 1836 – 8 December 1896) was a Scottish-born campaigner for women’s civil and political equality, active in the north of Ireland. She lobbied for women’s rights to education and to property, for the dignified treatment of sex workers and, as an Irish unionist, for female suffrage. In 1887, her North of Ireland Suffrage Society helped secure the municipal vote for women in Belfast.

Isabella Tod
Born(1836-05-18)18 May 1836
Edinburgh, Scotland
Died8 December 1896(1896-12-08) (aged 60)
Belfast, Ireland
Occupation(s)Women's rights campaigner, suffragette
Organization(s)North of Ireland Women's Suffrage Society, Ladies National Association for the Repeal of the Contagious Diseases Acts, Belfast Women's Temperance Association, Irish Women's Liberal Unionist Association

Life edit

Tod was born in Edinburgh and was educated at home by her mother, Maria Isabella Waddell, who came from County Monaghan, Ireland. Her father was James Banks Tod, a merchant from Edinburgh.[1] In the 1850s she moved with her mother to Belfast. She was a contributor to the Dublin University Magazine, an independent literary and political magazine; the Presbyterian newspaper, The Banner of Ulster (under the editorship of the veteran tenant righter James MacKnight); and, in the 1880s, the Northern Whig, the liberal rival to the Belfast News Letter.[2]

In 1868, Tod was the only woman to give evidence to a select committee inquiry on the reform of the married women’s property law in 1868. In 1872, after completing a speaking tour of Ireland,[3] and with the support of William Johnston MP[4] and of his nationalist counterpart, Joseph Biggar MP,[5][6] she established the North of Ireland Women's Suffrage Society.[7]

Ireland had not been included in the local government acts that enfranchised single and widowed women ratepayers in England and Scotland in 1869 and 1882 respectively.[8] Determined lobbying by Tod and her society ensured that in creating a municipal franchise for the new "city" of Belfast, the 1887 Act (guided through Parliament by Johnston) conferred the vote on persons rather than men. This was eleven years before women elsewhere Ireland gained the vote in local government elections.[9]

In 1874, Margaret Byers Tod formed the Belfast Women's Temperance Association,[10] and together they campaigned for secondary and tertiary education for girls. She had helped Byers establish The Ladies' Collegiate School Belfast (Victoria College) (1859), and was instrumental in the foundation of the Queen's Institute Dublin (1861), Alexandra College Dublin (1866), and the Belfast Ladies' Institute (1867). Advancing, in The Education of Girls of the Middle Classes (1874),[11] a programme of education to prepare women for gainful employment, Tod lobbied for the inclusion of girls within the terms of the Intermediate Education act of 1878.[1]

Along with Anna Haslam, a Quaker from Youghal, she was on the executive committee of the Ladies National Association for the Repeal of the Contagious Diseases Acts.[12] They campaigned, with success in 1886, for the repeal of the Acts,[13] on the grounds that the legislative attempt to protect the health of soldiers forced medical examinations upon prostitutes that violated the women's civil liberties.[14][15] Tod insisted on the humanity of women engaged in the sex trade, and on a recognition of the trade’s root causes: poverty, “inequality of law” and “inequality of social judgement”.[13]

Tod and Halsam also campaigned, with less success, for women to be able to serve as Poor Law Guardians. In 1896, a bill was passed allowing with certain property qualifications to serve, but by the end of the century out of 8,000 Poor Law Guardians in Ireland only 85 were women.[14]

When, in 1888 the Women’s Liberal Federation split on the issue of Irish Home Rule, Tod, citing the threat of a socially-conservative majority in an Irish parliament, co-founded the Irish Women's Liberal Unionist Association.[14] She believed "that petty legislature of the character which would be inevitable" under home rule would block further advances for women:[16] "I perceived that [it] would be the stoppage of the whole work of social reform for which we had laboured so hard".[17]

That work was continued into the new century, in Belfast, by the NIWS—from 1909, the Irish Women's Suffrage Society—engaging, among others, Dr. Elizabeth Bell, the city's first practicing female doctor and gynecologist, and the writer Elizabeth McCracken ("L.A.M. Priestley").[18]

Tod died at 71 Botanic Avenue, Belfast on 8 December 1896 from pulmonary tuberculosis. She is buried in Balmoral Cemetery in South Belfast.[19]

Commemoration edit

In October 2013 Margaret Mountford presented a BBC Two Northern Ireland documentary called Groundbreakers: Ulster's Forgotten Radical, which highlighted the life of Isabella Tod.[20]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Newman, Kate. "The Dictionary of Ulster Biography". www.newulsterbiography.co.uk. Retrieved 6 March 2019.
  2. ^ The Newsroom (21 May 2018). "A nod to Tod: formidable but forgotten force within the women's movement". www.newsletter.co.uk. Retrieved 12 November 2022.
  3. ^ O'Neill, Marie (1985). "The Dublin Women's Suffrage Association and Its Successors". Dublin Historical Record. 38 (4): (126–140), 127. ISSN 0012-6861. JSTOR 30100670.
  4. ^ Redmond (2021), p. 55
  5. ^ Women's Suffrage Journal. Trübner. 1878. p. 58.
  6. ^ Murray, Janet Horowitz; Stark, Myra (2016). The Englishwoman's Review of Social and Industrial Questions: 1876. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-315-40764-7.
  7. ^ "Belfast suffragettes". Archived from the original on 31 July 2013. Retrieved 25 July 2013.
  8. ^ Woman and her Sphere (2014). "Suffrage Stories:'We Believe That The Rousing Of The Irish People Had Best Be Left To Irish Women'". Woman and her Sphere. Retrieved 25 March 2023.
  9. ^ Connolly, S.J.; McIntosh, Gillian (1 January 2012). "Chapter 7: Whose City? Belonging and Exclusion in the Nineteenth-Century Urban World". In Connolly, S.J. (ed.). Belfast 400: People, Place and History. Liverpool University Press. p. 256. ISBN 978-1-84631-635-7.
  10. ^ uhistadmin (18 April 2015). "Isabella Tod". Ulster History Circle. Retrieved 6 March 2019.
  11. ^ Tod, Isabella M. S. "On the Education of Girls of the Middle Classes: (1874)". The Education Papers. doi:10.4324/9780203708958.
  12. ^ Luddy, Maria (22 January 2013). "Women and the Contagious Diseases Acts 1864-1886". History Ireland. Retrieved 9 July 2019.
  13. ^ a b Striapacha Tri Chead Bliain Duailcis (Prostitutes: Three Hundred Years of Vice) Niamh O’Reilly, J Irish Studies
  14. ^ a b c Mecham, Mike (2019). William Walker: Social Activist & Belfast Labourist, 1870-1918. Dublin: Umiskin Press. p. 73. ISBN 9781916448957.
  15. ^ Crowe, Catriona (10 December 2018). "How Irish women won the right to vote in 1918". The Irish Times. Retrieved 3 April 2024.
  16. ^ "Isabella Tod". Presbyterian Historical Society of Ireland. Retrieved 5 December 2023.
  17. ^ Cited in Connolly and McIntosh (2012), p. 265.
  18. ^ Urquhart, Diane (1 June 2002). "'An articulate and definite cry for political freedom': the ulster suffrage movement". Women's History Review. 11 (2): 273–292. doi:10.1080/09612020200200321. ISSN 0961-2025.
  19. ^ "Isabella Tod: Ulster's Forgotten Radical on BBC Two NI". Northern Ireland Screen. 21 October 2013. Retrieved 6 March 2019.
  20. ^ "Ulster's Forgotten Radical Isabella Tod, Series 1, Groundbreakers - BBC Two". BBC. Retrieved 13 June 2018.