12 November 2024

UK's 1st female parliamentarian: Nancy Astor

American Nancy Langhorne (1879-1964) was born in Virginia, daughter of a wealthy railroad entrepreneur. In the 1890s Nancy and her sis­ter Irene were enrolled in a finishing school in New York where they were prepared for entering high society. Nancy met and married her first husband Robert Gould Shaw II in 1897 in New York when Nan­cy was 18; in 1898 they had a son. However the marriage was un­happy and the couple divorced in 1903.

Nancy and sister Phyllis emigrated to Britain in 1905. Glamorous and charming, Nancy became popular in aristocratic cir­cles, fancying Waldorf Astor, American expatriate son of Observer Newspaper owner. They married & moved to Clive­den, a great Buckinghamshire estate from Waldorf’s father where Nancy became a key hostess. Note the couple had 5 children together.

Nancy Astor became the first female MP to take her seat 
in parl­iament, Dec 1919
X.com

Nancy’s new husband wanted to enter politics. Waldorf was defeated in his first attempt to win election to the House of Commons in the Jan 1910 but was elected for the Unionist Party in Plymouth in a later by-election. Nancy too had political interests; through her social connect­ions she was involved in a political circle advocating unity and equality among English-speakers.

Waldorf enjoyed a promising political career for some years and in 1918, when his constituency was dissolved, became MP for Plymouth Sut­ton. After his father’s death in Oct 19­19, Waldorf's son succeeded to the peerage, inheriting a] the title 2nd Viscount Astor and b] dad’s seat in the House of Lords. He had to relin­qu­ish his seat in the House of Commons, triggering a by-election.

In Nov 1918, just after some women in Britain won the right to vote, the Qualification of Women Act allowed women to become MPs. Nancy made the decision to stand for her hus­band’s vacant seat in the resulting by-election. A gifted campaign­er, Nancy managed to appeal to all social classes with her charm.

In Dec 1919 Viscountess Nancy Astor became the first female MP to sit in parl­iament. She was a member of the conservat­ive Unionist Party for Plymouth Sutton, winning 52%.

As the only woman in parliament for c2 years, Nancy faced nasty sexism. She gained a reputation for heckling and inter­rupting, at the same time working for welfare reforms, equal voting rights and women’s access to the professions. In Feb 1920, Nancy delivered her maiden speech, amid heckling.

Active both in and out of government, she advocated the devel­opment and expansion of nursery schools for children’s educ­ation, working to recruit women into the civil service, police force, education reform and House of Lords. She was con­cerned about the treatment of juvenile victims of crime. Nancy sup­ported raising the age of drinking alcohol to 18 (not 14) and low­er­ing the voting age of women to 21.

In the 1930s both Nancy and Waldorf, and their Cliveden Set colleagues, backed Neville Chamb­erlain’s appeasement policy. The Cliveden Set believed they were reducing the threat of ent­er­ing into a war against Germany. In 1934 Astor publicly asked the League of Nations’ High Commissioner for Refugees whether he be­l­ieved that the Jews had brought persec­ution upon themselves over the years. She was critical of the Nazis for devaluing the position of women but she was very sympath­etic to the Nazis’ brutal attitude to comm­un­ists and European Jewry.  Nancy maintained a pro-German stance, even after the war started. Yet she contributed to the war effort by running Canadian Hospital for Soldiers on the grounds of Cliveden. 

Cliveden, 
Waldorf and Nancy Astor’s country house 

Shed always been anti-Catholic, but during the war Nancy started becoming increasingly erratic, suggesting a Catholic con­spiracy was sub­verting the Foreign Office. After 26 years in the House of Commons and 7 successful elect­ions, Nancy lost popularity among her fellow MPs. She retired in 1945 when the Conservative Party found her a political liability.  

Nancy’s retirement put increasing strain on their marriage so the couple separated for some years. Waldorf’s death was in 1952; Nancy died at Grimsthorpe Castle Lincs in 1964.

Now for the controversial question that historians disagree on: how truly feminist was Nancy Astor? Even before 1919, Astor had feminist sympathies. In 1915 she was wrote often to Emmeline Pankhurst and later worked with suff­rage organ­isations facilit­ating meetings with senior Con­serv­atives politicians. And she worked to support legis­lation on women in the workplace and women's safety out on the streets. Despite claiming to be an ardent feminist, and considering herself a representative of working women, Nancy was one of the richest and most aristocratic women in Britain. Did she know how working families lived.. and suffered?

Astor linked up with women’s peace groups and regarded women as natural pacifists. Yet she vigorously pursued Anglo-German neutrality and entertained the Nazi top brass at her Cliveden seat! American-born Astor was xenophobic, anti-Semitic and anti-Catholic. Certainly Nancy did not invent pre-WW2 anti-Semitism in Britain and was reflecting only what she believed was the prevalent philosophy then. The racist and anti-Semitic prejudices of her time were found in many men who held similar views. Astor was pilloried in the German-appeasement and anti-Semitic debates, yet she was surrounded by like-minded senior men who escaped scrutiny. Her gender made people judge her by a higher standard.
 
Nancy and Waldorf Astor in 1920

Astor quickly grew into her role as the first woman MP. She could well have steered clear of women’s issues, as many of her Tory colleagues did. But she was det­ermined to prove that women were as physically capable of being full participants in the rigours of political life as men; in fact women were even MORE suited to pub­lic life as women had moral courage. Female moral cour­age was a constant theme throughout her speeches. But for a woman like Astor to be openly racist and openly anti-Semitic was nasty.







22 comments:

  1. Nancy is a magnificent and respectful woman of note.

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    1. roentare
      She must have been very brave. I know that Churchill publicly stated he wanted to freeze the Viscountess out of Parliament. Other Members of Parliament bullied her, publicly and behind closed doors :(

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    1. BetBhai
      Do you know if Viscountess Astor debated policies on betting during her time in Parliament? What was her position?

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  3. It's odd that her husband had to relinquish his seat in the Commons, because he was a peer, but she didn't. She sounds thoroughly unpleasant in her personal views, though liberal in her politics - a strange mix.

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    1. jabblog
      Waldorf was only offered a title in the United Kingdom in Jan 1916 as Baron Astor. In June 1917, he was elevated to the rank of Viscount. But he died in 1919, before he could be raised to an earl or lord, therefore he was never admitted to the House of Lords.

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  4. Never heard of the woman, it would had been hard being the first female in such a role that took courage, determination and inner strength being a wealthy would had made it hard for her to relate to the average person struggled to put food on the table. Also from this I get that she was racist and didn't like jews not good traits in my eyes but she did succeed against the odds

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    1. Jo-Anne
      Nancy married Waldorf Astor in 1906, and they moved to Cliveden in Bucks in the UK. When her husband won the title Viscount in 1919, Nancy was the first woman to win his title (Viscountess) and his seat in Parliament. Viscountess Astor was the first woman to be elected through the custom of aristocratic women taking over their late husband's parliamentary seat. She had to be VERY strong!

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  5. I also never heard of her. or the unionist party. Hopefully someday the United States will elect an president.

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    1. peppylady
      After 1886, the Conservatives allied with the Liberal Unionist Party and they held office for most of the next 20 years. Lord Salisbury's and Arthur Balfour's governments until 1906 were called Unionist. The Conservative Party was also known as the Unionist Party in the early C20th and formally merged with the Conservative Party and later the Liberal Unionists.

      Does "someday the United States will elect an president" refer to Trump?

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  6. She was a brave woman to work in such a male dominated environment where she was bullied and heckled constantly. Unfortunately, her racist and anti semitism views spoiled her profile.

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    1. dianeb
      In 1918 some women over 30 got the vote. It was also the year that a separate law was passed, Parliament Act Qualification of Women, which allowed women to stand and be elected as MPs. But even then, it was not just a male dominated environment... it was a nasty, anti woman environment.

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  7. She was complicated for sure and I don't think I would have liked her but her feminism is there for sure . I think perhaps that we like to assume that feminists are more left leaning . Being a feminist is surely about looking at life and how society works from a female perspective .That can include a right wing perspective or a left wing one . The men of her time were entitled both literally and psychologically and would have found her forthright manner hard to take . Winston certainly did . As for supporting appeasement , I cant help thinking that the last war was only 20 years away and the horrors that were to come were beyond people imagination . I wonder if her idea changed after the reality of Nazi atrocity came to light after the war ?

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    1. mem
      I agree.... that we like to assume that feminists were more leftist! But despite Astor being feminist and pro-peace, she had some very right wing views.

      Mind you, so did prominent feminists then eg Helene Lange (BDF board member and women's suffragist in Hamburg Senate), gay writer Gertrud Bäumer (Reichstag delegate) and Clara Zetkin (Marxist theorist, women's rights activist, KPD Reichstag delegate) at least until the Nazis took over in 1933. See Wiki.

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  8. Virginia-born Lady Astor was the first woman to sit in the U.K Westminster Parliament. Her outspokenness in unpopular causes left her open to heartbreak, both public and private.
    The 1982 tv series starred Lisa Harrow, Lise Hilboldt and James Fox.

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    1. I could only find two helpful reviews:
      Prof S. This is classic BBC early Masterpiece Theatre excellence! A top drawer production, this nine-part series is about the life and times of American Nancy Langhorne (born VA, 1879). The southern socialite would ultimately become the first woman to take a seat in the British House of Commons. Her role, including political strategy and sway, contributed to Winston Churchill becoming Prime Minister. This series was nominated for two BAFTA Awards (1983) and for an Emmy and a Golden Globe. Whether it is historically accurate or not can be best determined by other critics. But if you like period piece costume drama, after watching 9 of these 55-minute episodes, you will leave richly entertained.

      William S This life of Nancy Langhorn, later Nancy Astor, comes as a 3 DVD set, with over 7 hours of viewing. Good value! The sets and staging are lavish, and the narrative convincing. It would be interesting to compare with other biographies of the Astor family. It was a slight pity that her niece, Joyce Grenfell, does not get any mention, but you can't have everything. Overall this is well worth watching. Originally made for TV in 1981-2, one of Pierce Brosnan's early appearances.

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  9. She sure had spunk, Hels. Good on her.

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    1. Margaret
      It was disgusting in a democracy that adult women could not vote or win a seat in Parliament until after 1918. She and those who followed her needed spunk !

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  10. There is a TV series on BBC iPlayer which looks at National Trust houses, of which Cliveden was one. The theme of the episode was the celebrated hostesses who had owned each house. I thought both sounded rather unpleasant people who achieved whatever they did achieve mainly because they were born into positions of great privilege. Having said that, I'd be interested to visit Cliveden one day!

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  11. Jenny
    Remember that Waldorf bought and renovated Cliveden, years before he met Nancy. So it was his taste and ambition, not hers (at first). Do visit - the architecture, interiors and gardens are very special.

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  12. Irina
    Very clever indeed. She understood the legislative details of the police force, women's employment, work safety, alcohol issues, voting rights for women, children's education etc etc.

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