Mary Sophia Allen (1878–1964) – women's rights activist, pioneer policewoman, later involved in far-right political activity
Katharine Russell, Viscountess Amberley (1844–1874) – early advocate of birth control, president of the Bristol and West of England Women's Suffrage Society
Elizabeth Garrett Anderson (1836–1917) – physician, feminist, first dean of a British medical school, first female mayor, and magistrate in Britain
Louisa Garrett Anderson (1873–1943) – Chief Surgeon of Women's Hospital Corps, Fellow of Royal Society of Medicine, jailed for her suffragist activities
Rhoda Anstey (1865–1936) – teacher, member of the WFL and one of the earliest members of the Gymnastic Suffrage Society[1]
Selina Cooper (1864–1946) – textile mill worker, local magistrate, member of the North of England Society for Women's Suffrage
Catherine Corbett (1869–1950) – British suffragette; jailed and went on hunger strike
Annie Coultate (1856–1931) – teacher and founder of the local WSPU branch in York[5]
Ethel Cox (born 1888) – British suffragette who smashed windows at the house of the home secretary
Isabel Cowe (1867–1931) – Scottish suffragist who helped organise the 400-mile Scottish Suffrage March from Edinburgh to Downing Street, London to present a petition for women's enfranchisement[6]
Annie Walker Craig (1864–1948) – British suffragette involved in rock-throwing and arson in England and Scotland
Jessie Craigen (c. 1835 – 1899) – working-class suffragist who gave speeches all around the country
Muriel Craigie (1889–1971) - Scottish suffragist, and war volunteer organiser
Virginia Mary Crawford (1862–1948) – Catholic suffragist, journalist and author, a founder of the Catholic Women's Suffrage Society
Lillian Dove-Willcox (1875–1963) – suffragette who was a member of Emmeline Pankhurst's personal bodyguard
Flora Drummond (1878–1949) – organiser for WSPU, imprisoned nine times for her activism in Women's Suffrage movement, inspiring orator nicknamed "the General"
Bessie Drysdale (1871–1950) – member of the WSPU National Executive Committee, one of the 52 women arrested during a suffragette march to the House of Commons in 1907, and writer for the short lived radical feminist magazine The Freewoman (1911–1913)[9]
Louise Eates (1877–1944) – suffragette, chair of Kensington Women's Social and Political Union and a women's education activist
Maude Edwards (fl. 1914) – suffragette who was force-fed in prison despite having a heart condition
Norah Elam (1878–1961) – prominent member of the WSPU; imprisoned three times
Elizabeth Clarke Wolstenholme Elmy (1833–1918) – public speaker and writer; formed the first British suffragist society, first paid employee of the British Women's Movement
Dorothy Evans (1888–1944) – activist and organiser, worked for WSPU in England and the north of Ireland; imprisoned several times
Helga Gill (1885–1928) – Norwegian-born British suffragist who spoke at meetings
Katie Edith Gliddon (1883–1967) – watercolour artist and militant suffragette
Frances Gordon (born c. 1874) – prominent in the militant wing of the Scottish women's suffrage movement; imprisoned and force-fed
Eva Gore-Booth (1870–1926) – member of the executive committee of the National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies and co-secretary of the Manchester and Salford Women's Trade Union Council
Gerald Gould (1885–1936) – writer, known as a journalist, reviewer, essayist, and poet; co-founder of United Suffragists
Hazel Hunkins Hallinan (1890–1982) – American women's rights activist, journalist, and suffragist who moved to Britain and was active in the movement there
Cicely Hamilton (1872–1952) – actress, writer, journalist, feminist
Ishbel Hamilton-Gordon (1857–1939) – author, philanthropist, and an advocate of woman's interests
Mary Dormer Harris (1867–1936) – suffragist, writer and organiser of local conferences in the Midlands[12]
Jane Ellen Harrison (1850–1928) – linguist, feminist, co-founder of modern studies in Greek mythology, supporter of women's suffrage
Kate Harvey (1862–1946) – participated in the Women's Tax Resistance League and was jailed for her refusal to pay tax if she were not allowed the right to vote
Evelina Haverfield (1867–1920) – aid worker and nurse in WWI, member of the WSPU, arrested several times
Alice Hawkins (1863–1946) – suffragette jailed five times for militant action
Emily Hobhouse (1860–1926) – exposed the squalid conditions in concentration camps in South Africa during the Second Boer War; active in the People's Suffrage Federation
Olive Hockin (1881–1936) – artist and author; imprisoned after arson attacks suspected to be suffragette-related
Vera Holme (1881–1969) – actress, driver and chauffeur for the Pankhursts'
Winifred Holtby (1898–1935) – feminist, socialist, and writer, including a new voters guide for women in 1929
Edith Sophia Hooper (1868–1926) – suffragist and biographer of Josephine Butler
Margaret Mackworth (1883–1958) – activist and director of more than thirty companies
Sarah Mair (1846–1941) – campaigner for women's education and suffrage
Lavinia Malcolm (1847–1920) – Scottish suffragist and local Liberal Movement politician, the first Scottish woman to be elected to a local council (1907) and the first woman Lord Provost of a Scottish burgh town, in Dollar, Clackmannanshire
Kate Manicom (1893–1937), British suffragette and trade unionist
Flora Masson (1856–1937) - nurse, suffragist, writer and editor
Elizabeth McCracken (1871–1944) – feminist writer (" L.A.M. Priestley"), Belfast WSPU militant, refused wartime political truce with the government.
Agnes Syme Macdonald (1882–1966) – Scottish suffragette who served as the secretary of the Edinburgh branch of the WSPU before setting up the Edinburgh Women Citizens Association (WCA) in 1918
Frances Melville (1873–1962) – suffragist, advocate for higher education for women in Scotland, and one of the first women to matriculate at the University of Edinburgh
Elizabeth Pease Nicholl (1807–1897) – abolitionist, anti-segregationist, suffragist, chartist and anti-vivisectionist
Helen Ogston (1882–1973) – Scottish suffragette known for interrupting David Lloyd George on 5 December 1908 at a meeting in the Royal Albert Hall and subsequently holding off the stewards with a dog whip
Emmeline Pankhurst (1858–1928) – a main founder and the leader of the British Suffragette Movement
Sylvia Pankhurst (1882–1960) – campaigner and anti-fascism activist
Frances Mary "Fanny" Parker OBE (1875–1924) – New Zealand-born suffragette prominent in the militant wing of the Scottish women's suffrage movement and repeatedly imprisoned for her actions
Grace Paterson (1843–1925) – school board member, temperance activist, suffragist, and founder of the Glasgow School of Cookery
Aileen Preston (1889–1974) – Emmeline Pankhurst's chauffeur and the first woman in history to qualify for the Automobile Association Certificate in Driving[22]
Clara Rackham (1875–1966) – magistrate, prison reformer, factory inspector, long-serving alderman and city councillor in Cambridge
Jane Rae (1872–1959) – political activist, suffragette, councillor and justice of the peace
Lolita Roy (born 1865) – believed to have been an important organizer of the Women's Coronation Procession (a suffrage march in London) in 1911, and marched as part of it with either her sisters or her daughters[25][26]
Myra Sadd Brown (1872–1938) – suffragette activist in the WSPU, imprisoned and force-fed
Lavena Saltonstall (1881–1957) – suffragette, activist for the Women's Labour League and WSPU and writer of column "The Letters of a Tailoress" for the Halifax Guardian
Amy Sanderson (born c1875-6) – Scottish suffragette, imprisoned twice, executive member of WFL
Margaret Sandhurst (1828–1892) – one of the first women elected to a city council in the United Kingdom
Jessie Saxby (1842–1940) – author, folklorist and suffragette
Alice Schofield (1881–1975) – suffragette and politician who was the first woman councillor in Middlesbrough
Amelia Scott (1860–1952) – suffragette, established `the ‘Leisure Hour Club for Young Women in Business’ in Tunbridge Wells and participated in the suffrage ‘pilgrimage’ to London organised by the Kentish Federation of Women’s Suffrage Societies
Arabella Scott (1886–1980) – Scottish suffragette who endured five weeks of solitary confinement in Perth prison and force feeding twice a day
May Seaton-Tiedeman (1862–1948) – American-born campaigner in Britain for divorce law reform and suffragist
Frances Simson (1854–1938) – suffragist, campaigner for women's higher education and one of the first of eight women graduates from the University of Edinburgh
May Sinclair (1863–1946) – member of the Woman Writers' Suffrage League
Sophia Duleep Singh (1876–1948) – had leading roles in the Women's Tax Resistance League, and the WSPU
Ethel Snowden (1881–1951) – socialist, human rights activist, feminist politician
Jessie M. Soga (1870–1954) - Xhosa/Scottish contralto singer, music teacher and suffragist. She was described as the only black suffrage campaigner based in Scotland.
Isabella Tod (1836–1896) – Scottish suffragist, women's rights campaigner in the north of Ireland, helped women secure the municipal franchise in Belfast.
Aethel Tollemache (c. 1875–1955) – member of the Bath WSPU branch, went on hunger strike in Holloway Prison
Alice Vickery (1844–1929) – doctor, the first British woman to qualify as a chemist and pharmacist and delegate to the Congress of the International Women’s Suffrage Alliance in Amsterdam in 1908
Marion Wallace Dunlop (1864–1942) – suffragette went on hunger strike after being arrested for militancy
Edith Splatt (1873?–1945) - dressmaker, journalist, councillor in Devon
Beatrice Webb (1858–1943) – sociologist, economist, socialist, labour historian, social reformer
Vera Wentworth (1890–1957) – went to Holloway for the cause and was force fed. She door stepped and then assaulted the Prime Minister twice. She wrote "Three Months in Holloway".
Rebecca West (1892–1983) – author, journalist, literary critic, travel writer
Eliza Wigham (1820–1899) – suffragist and abolitionist
Jane Wigham (1801–1888) – suffragist and abolitionist
Ellen Wilkinson (1891–1947) – politician, member of parliament, served as minister of education
Gertrude Wilkinson (1851–1929) – militant suffragette and member of the Women's Social and Political Union
Laetitia Withall (1881–1963) – poet, author and militant suffragette
Celia Wray (1872–1954) – suffragette and architect
I.A.R. Wylie (1885–1959) – Australian writer, suffragette in UK, working on The Suffragette
Barbara Wylie (1861–1954) – organiser of the Glasgow branch of the WSPU, went on a speaking tour of Canada and gave a speech that inspired the slogan "deeds not words"