Archive of the Dawson Family, primarily the activities and careers of the sisters Agnes Dawson, Elizabeth Tidswell and Clara Follett, including: family-related memorabilia - correspondence, personal items, birth/marriage/death certificates - of sisters Mary Dawson Bowden Smith, Agnes Dawson, Elizabeth Dawson Tidswell and Clara Dawson Follett, their parents, grandparents, Mary’s daughter-in-law Elizabeth (known as Fairy) Bowden Smith and Clara’s daughter Mary Follett Hanson, 1864-1955; Certificates, diplomas, correspondence and papers regarding the professional lives of Agnes, Elizabeth and Clara Dawson, with documents regarding the National Union of Women Teachers (NUWT) and London County Council, 1896-1971; 39 photographs of the family and professional lives of the three Dawson sisters (Agnes Dawson, Clara Dawson Follett and Elizabeth Dawson Tidswell), 1865-1954; Suffragette tea service, brooches, belt, sashes, shawls, stationery and other ephemera in the colours (purple, green white) and with the logo of the Women's Social and Political Union, c1906.
Dawson Family Archive (1864-1971)
This material is held atBishopsgate Institute Special Collections and Archives
- Reference
- GB 372 DAWSON
- Dates of Creation
- 1864-1971
- Name of Creator
- Language of Material
- English
- Physical Description
- 3 boxes
Scope and Content
Administrative / Biographical History
Agnes Dawson (1873-1953), educator and feminist, trained at Saffron Walden College. By 1917 she was headteacher at Crawford Street Infants’ School in Camberwell. She was an enthusiastic supporter of Montessori active education for young children. In a pamphlet she wrote she called for nursery schools to be built wherever there was a demand, in order to assist working-class women. A member of the National Union of Teachers (NUT) Agnes campaigned for the union to support women’s suffrage and equal pay, and to oppose mixed elementary schools, since female teachers would be denied status and promotion in male-dominated mixed schools. She stood for the national executive of the NUT unsuccessfully in 1916 and 1917. In 1912 she became the first president of the Women Teachers’ Franchise Union. In 1919 she was president of the National Federation of Women Teachers (NFWT; a group within the NUT). Although a Labour Party member, she dissuaded the central council of the NFWT from affiliating, believing that women in the Labour Party would be ‘swamped’. She later helped lead the campaign for the NFWT to leave the NUT and become an autonomous union, the National Union of Women Teachers. She was a constitutional suffragist, and stated that the only militant act she ever undertook was to sit up all night at a friend’s house during Census night 1911. In 1925 she resigned her teaching job and stood successfully for the London County Council as a Labour Party candidate for North Camberwell. She did this full-time, sustained by money from NUWT members. When Labour gained control of the council for the first time in 1934, Agnes became chair of the powerful Finance and General Purposes sub-committee. After much campaigning she persuaded the leader, Herbert Morrison, to remove the marriage bar on women teachers in 1935. In 1937 Agnes left her advisory post with the NUWT and did not stand again for the LCC. She retired to Newport, Essex, where she continued public work as a JP. From 1925 she lived with Anne Munn, a former teacher, whom she called her ‘pal and partner’, until Anne’s death in 1952. Her paternal grandparents were Hannah (1810-1878) and Jacob Dawson (1803-?), a Dissenting minister; her parents were Sarah Burford (1842-1917) and Isaac Dawson (1844-1932), a journeyman carpenter. Her eldest sister, Mary Dawson Bowden-Smith (1866-1911), emigrated to South Africa. Her two younger sisters, Elizabeth Dawson Tidswell (1875-1966) and Clara Dawson Follett (1877-1955), also became teachers and, in the 1920s, members of the NUWT. References Kean, Hilda, Deeds Not Words, (London: Pluto Press, 1990) http://hildakean.com/?page_id=275#sthash.jVPPoXyN.dpuf Tidswell, Elizabeth (nee Dawson) (1875-1966). Active in the teaching profession and the Suffrage movement, and a member of the National Union of Women Teachers (NUWT), Elizabeth Dawson was born in 1875, the third of four daughters. Her paternal grandparents were Hannah (1810-1878) and Jacob Dawson (1803-?), a Dissenting minister; her parents were Sarah Burford (1842-1917) and Isaac Dawson (1844-1932), a journeyman carpenter. Her eldest sister, Mary Dawson Bowden-Smith (1866-1911), emigrated to South Africa. Her other two sisters, Agnes Dawson (1873-1953) and Clara Dawson Follett (1877-1955), also became teachers and members of the NUWT. In the 1891 Census Elizabeth, then 15 years of age, is given as a dressmaker’s apprentice. By the time of the 1901 Census she is Elizabeth Tidswell, having married Charles Tidswell in December of 1900. Between 1896 and 1911 Elizabeth trained and received certificates and diplomas in Housewifery, Inorganic Chemistry, Hygiene and Cookery from the Joint Committee on Manual Training of the School Board for London, the Board of Education, the National Union for the Technical Education of Women in Domestic Sciences and the Metropolitan Board Teachers’ Training School of Domestic Economy. In 1927 she became Registered as a Teacher and admitted as a Member of the Royal Society of Teachers. With her sister Agnes she appears in a photograph in the book ‘History of the N.U.W.T’ by Emily Phipps (1928), included in this collection. She retired from teaching in 1935, at which time she was awarded a formal certificate acknowledging her ‘valuable and faithful service’ to the teaching profession (included in this collection). She died 22 May 1966, aged 90. Follett, Clara Dawson (1877-1955). Born in 1877, Clara Dawson was the youngest of the four Dawson sisters. Her paternal grandparents were Hannah (1810-1878) and Jacob Dawson (1803-?), a Dissenting minister; her parents were Sarah Burford (1842-1917) and Isaac Dawson (1844-1932), a journeyman carpenter. Her eldest sister, Mary Dawson Bowden-Smith (1866-1911), emigrated to South Africa. Her other two sisters, Agnes Dawson (1873-1953) and Elizabeth Dawson Tidswell (1875-1966), were, like Clara, teachers and members of the National Union of Women Teachers (NUWT). In the 1901 Census, Clara is listed as an Elementary School teacher. By the time of the 1911 Census she is Clara Follett, having married Ernest Jones Follett in July of that year. Her father-in-law, Henry Gillard Follett, was a ship-builder. An active member of her profession and the NUWT, Clara is included in a photograph (together with her sisters Agnes and Elizabeth) of a group of approximately 200 women outside Portsmouth Guildhall, possibly at the NUWT Conference that took place there in 1921 (photograph included in this collection). She is also depicted in a photograph of protesters with placards reading ‘Women Teachers Are Training Citizens’, ‘Women Teachers Require the Parliamentary Franchise’ and ‘Public Sympathy is Practical Help
Arrangement
The Dawson Family Archive is divided into the following four sections:
- DAWSON/1: Family Memorabilia
- DAWSON/2: Teaching and Suffrage
- DAWSON/3: Dawson Family Photographs
- DAWSON/4: Suffragette Tea Service and Textiles
Access Information
OPEN
Acquisition Information
Deposited with Bishopsgate Institute by Jill Follett Mayer, November 2015
Other Finding Aids
Adlib catalogue
Archivist's Note
Entry compiled by Grace Biggins
Conditions Governing Use
Photocopying and digital photography (without flash) is permitted for research purposes on completion of the Library's Copyright Declaration form and with respect to current UK copyright law.