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Surveillance image of the Suffragette Kitty Marion

1913-1914

Museum of London

Museum of London
London, United Kingdom

This surveillance photograph of the suffragette prisoner Kitty Marion was taken by an undercover photographer working for the Home Office. Kitty, weakened by hunger-strike, is being helped out of Holloway prison into the prison yard.
In 1913 Marion was suspected of committing five acts of arson, yet was arrested only for the fifth - the burning of the Grand Stand at Hurst Park Racecourse. For this she was sentenced, on the 3 July 1913, to three years and 21 days of hard labour in Holloway. Weakened through hunger-strike, she was twice released under the Prisoner's Temporary Discharge for Ill Health Act (referred to by the suffragettes as the 'Cat and Mouse Act') into a Women's Social and Political Union nursing home. Leaving the home, she would evade the authorities and commit further acts of arson or window-breaking before being captured and re-imprisoned. During Marion's last spell in Holloway, she was forcibly fed 232 times over a period of 14 weeks and two days. On 16 April 1914 she was released again under the Act, having lost 2 stone 8lbs (16kg) in weight.

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