<p>This is the first critical study of Clara Dorothea Rackham <em>née Tabor</em> (1875–1966) a towering figure in the suffrage labour co-operative peace and adult education movements but virtually forgotten today. </p><p>This clearly written and engaging study is based on unpublished primary sources including Rackham’s unpublished speeches letters diaries and contemporary media coverage of her work in local and national archives. It reassesses this remarkable woman not only as a politician who changed the face of Cambridge the university city in which she lived and worked but also as a public intellectual whose feminist advocacy of a fair just and equal society helped pave the way to Britain’s postwar settlement and Welfare State. Rackham came to prominence as Chairman of the National Union of Women’s Suffrage Societies as a government factory inspector and championing the rights of unemployed women in the 1930s. An early broadcaster on BBC radio and among the first women appointed magistrates and councillors her name became synonymous with enlightened local government. The transformation of women’s lives in Victorian and twentieth-century Britain is crucial to understanding Rackham’s ideals intellectual formation and priorities as a Labour Party politician.</p><p>This book will be of interest to historians and students of gender history and women’s lives.</p>
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