News

Pop-up protest inspired by radical suffragist Ada Nield Chew takes place at Manchester Met

0 647

By Andy Turbine


To mark the centenary of the Representation of the People Act, which gave some women the vote for the first time in the United Kingdom’s history, the Local Youth Engagement Project took over Manchester Metropolitan University’s Arts and Humanities building to stage a pop-up protest inspired by radical suffragist Ada Nield Chew.

Nield Chew was a women’s trade unionist and author who campaigned throughout her life for the rights of women in the workplace. Her career as an activist began in 1894, with a series of protest letters to the Crewe Chronicle complaining of the conditions in the Compton Brothers clothing factory where she worked as a tailor.

Writing anonymously in her ‘A Crewe Factory Girl’ letters, she demanded a living wage, not the “lingering, dying wage”, which women at the factory were being paid. The reaction was mixed: the letters garnered the support of men’s trade unions and Crewe’s local MP, but bosses at the factory dismissed Ada when her identity was revealed.

Thankfully, the Independent Labour Party offered her work, and by the end of the year, Ada Nield Chew was elected as one of the very first working-class female Poor Law guardians.

The University of Chester’s Shelley Piasecka adapted these letters for the pop-up protest, which she directed and scripted in collaboration with Kirsty Bunting and Orlagh McCabe – senior lecturers at Manchester Met and the researchers behind the Local Youth Engagement Project.

West Yorkshire based actor Jessie Harris took on the role of Ada Nield Chew, delivering an impassioned performance as the factory girl turned campaigner.

“If we be quiet, be silent, sit still, we will never be heard or noticed, and consequently never served,” she told those gathered for the show’s two performances.

More than a century on from the letters that made Ada Nield Chew’s name, many of the words she wrote remain remarkably relevant, not only to the suffragettes and suffragists that fought for women’s voices to be heard, but for those still protesting for women to be treated fairly in the workplace.

Dr Kirsty Bunting is also organising an event later this term commemorating the radical, crusading women who marched in the Women’s Peace Crusade in Manchester and East Lancashire from 1917 to 1918. Both events have been organised with Research in Arts and Humanities at Manchester Metropolitan. For more information on upcoming RAH! events, visit mmu.ac.uk/artshumanities/rah/

About the author / 

Humanity Hallows

Leave a reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

More News Stories:

  • Spotify Wrapped – aAh! Magazine’s top albums of 2025

    By Adam Taylor It’s time to post your top artists to show how cool and different you are. Spotify Wrapped for 2025 has finally dropped. This stat-loaded list of listening habits gets everyone excited, revealing top artists, songs, podcasts, music genres, and hours listened – which can be a bit concerning… Spotify adds new features…

  • Call for online submissions: Creative Writing and Featured Artwork – Hometown

    Featured image: Suzy Hazelwood aAh! Magazine’s Literature and Creative Student Editors are delighted to announce our first online call for submissions for the 2025/26 academic year. This series invites creative writing students and visual artists to respond to the theme ‘Hometown’, offering the opportunity to showcase their work online. Manchester is a hometown for thousands, and simply…

  • What’s On: Things to do in Manchester this December

    Featured image: Manchester City CouncilBy Adam Taylor and Amy Corringham Winter is approaching, but don’t let the cold and dark days stop you getting out and about – aAh! has gathered a selection of events for all budgets for you and your friends to enjoy. Get into the festival spirit with a variety of activities…