Alice Abadam (2 January 1856 – 1940) was a Welsh suffragette, feminist and public speaker.
Early life
Abadam was born in London in 1856 to Edward Abadam and his wife, Louisa (née Taylor) Abadam.[1] Her father was the eldest son of Edward Hamlin Adams, a Jamaican-born banker and merchant who made his money overseas before settling in Britain.[2] In 1825 Edward Hamlin Adams bought Middleton Hall in Carmarthenshire following the death of its owner, Sir William Paxton.[3] The Hall was passed down to his son Edward in 1842,[4] who added the old Welsh patronym, Ab, to the family name.
Abadam, by her own account, had a happy childhood and was educated by a governess at Middleton Hall. She was the youngest of seven children, and saw little of her mother who suffered ill-health brought about by post-natal depression. By 1861 her mother was living away from the family in Brighton, and in 1871 was living back at her paternal home in Dorset. Despite living apart, her parents remained married until the death of Edward in 1875.[5]
Her father was a High Sheriff of Carmarthenshire.[4] He held anti-clerical views, but Abadam converted to Catholicism in 1880. A musical upbringing led her to becoming the organist and choir master at St Mary's Church on Union Street, in the centre of Carmarthen. Abadam met Dr. Alice Vowe Johnson, a social worker and they were companions for the rest of their lives.[6]
Work as a suffragette
In 1905 Abadam joined the Central Society for Women's Suffrage.[7] She became a well known speaker and she addressed a number of suffrage societies,[7] including a two-week speaking tour around Birmingham in 1908,[4][7] and other areas in 'the North' often by bicycle and sketching her experiences.[8]
Abadam, in 1911, spoke on 'How the Vote will affect the White Slave Traffic' to the MansfieldNational Union of Women's Suffrage Societies,[9] and in the same year when the Catholic Women's Suffrage Society formed, she urged Catholic women to move from local or small charitable works to make join suffrage campaigns to "influence the lives of millions of their poor and unprotected sisters for the good."[11]
In Norwich in August 1912, speaking for an hour and quarter, Adadam appealed directly to the Catholic clergy not to abuse their power by promoting 'indifference and uninformed opposition' to women's suffrage,[4] reported in The Tablet,ba Catholic newsletter.[11] Her outspokenness and open criticism of clergy, including Father Henry Day, who opposed votes for women, led to a label for Abadam as 'arrogant' and 'paranoid' and her followers were called 'Abadamites' in another Catholic publication, Universe.[11]Alice Meynell wrote supportively in The Tablet, "A Tribute to Miss Abadam".[12]
And in Plymouth in 1913, she placed a motion at the Catholic Women's Suffrage Society, that this meeting 'calls upon the Government to extend the Parliamentary franchise to women in the interests of justice, morality and religion.' [13]
in a 1913 pamphlet, "The Feminist Vote, Enfranchised or Emancipated?”, Abadam wrote more generally on women's rights, that 'The Constructive Feminist has to be no man's shadow. She must be herself – free to the very soul of sex servility. So, and only so, can she save a stricken world.'[4]
By 1916, Abadam was chair of the Federated Council of Suffrage Councils.[4]
In 1920, she founded the Feminist League with a wide debating agenda and lending library on topics related to feminism but also including freemasonry, embryology and witches.[6]
Abadam was involved in supporting a Breton order of White Sister nuns escape persecution and settle in Wales.[6] Abadam served on a committee for art at the University of Wales later in her life.[9] She died in Abergwili in 1940 and left her money to her niece, Mary Edith Morris. Abadam also left an education legacy to pay for boarding school for her great niece Margaret Vaughan, who was four years old at her death.[4]
Vaughan said at the centenary of some women getting the right to vote through the Representation of the People Act 1918, that her family's view of Abadam was “Everybody thought she was incredible clever and noble and she gave so much to feminism. I am immensely grateful to her for everything. I feel that she was my major benefactor. Everybody in our family admires her and I still have a collection of paintings of hers which I regularly get out to look at.” And her own daughter has a glass with 'Votes for Women' inscribed on it.[4]
Some of Abadam's own sketches are published on the website The Sybil.[8]
Abadam was recognised by the Women's Archive Wales as a feminist, suffragist, orator and author. A blue plaque at 26 Picton Terrace, Carmarthen, Abadam's home from 1886 to 1904[14] and at the National Botanical Garden of Wales Llanarthney on the site of her childhood home, the former Middleton Hall,[4] was unveiled on 24 November 2018 by Abadam's great-niece Margaret Vaughan,[15] who ensures that her family's memories of suffragist Alice Abadam lives on.
References
^Oxford dictionary of national biography. British Academy., Oxford University Press. (Online ed.). Oxford. 26 April 2024. ISBN9780198614128. OCLC56568095.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: others (link)
^ abcCrawford, Elizabeth (1999). The women's suffrage movement : a reference guide, 1866-1928. London: UCL Press. p. 1. ISBN0-203-03109-1. OCLC53836882.
^ abcdeCrawford, Elizabeth (1999). The women's suffrage movement : a reference guide, 1866-1928. London: UCL Press. p. 1. ISBN0-203-03109-1. OCLC53836882.
Cook, Kay; Evans, Neil (1991). "'The Petty Antics of the Bell-Ringing Boisterous Band'? The Women's Suffrage Movement in Wales, 1890–1918". In John, Angela V. (ed.). Our Mothers' Land, Chapters in Welsh Women's History 1830–1939. Cardiff: University of Wales Press. ISBN0-7083-1129-6.
Crawford, Elizabeth (2003). The Women's Suffrage Movement: A Reference Guide 1866–1928. Routledge. ISBN9781135434021.
John, Angela V. (1991). "Beyond Paternalism: The Ironmaster's Wife in the Industrial Community". In John, Angela V. (ed.). Our Mothers' Land, Chapters in Welsh Women's History 1830–1939. Cardiff: University of Wales Press. ISBN0-7083-1129-6.