Suffragette sites added to Historic England heritage list

Emmeline Pankhurst Image copyright LSE Library
Image caption Emmeline Pankhurst's tomb has also now been Grade II*-listed

More than 40 sites - including meeting halls, post boxes and prisons - have had their links to the suffragette movement officially recognised.

The sites, crucial to the campaign to get women the vote where protests were held, direct action carried out or strategies plotted, have been updated on the National Heritage List.

They include Epsom Racecourse and Manchester's Free Trade Hall.

A London post box set alight in a protest is also included.

The tomb of the movement's leader Emmeline Pankhurst, which is in London's Brompton Cemetery, has also been upgraded to Grade II*-listed.

Image copyright Historic England
Image caption Emmeline Pankhurst - the leader of the suffragette movement - died at the age of 69 in London

The 41 sites are already listed buildings but until now there has been no record of their links to the suffragette movement on the heritage list, Historic England said.

The Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) was founded by Emmeline Pankhurst in Manchester in 1903 and the organisation started to campaign for women's suffrage using the motto "Deeds, not words".

Image copyright Historic England
Image caption The suffragette campaign is said to have started at Manchester's Free Trade Hall

The sites include:

Emmeline Pankhurst's great-granddaughter Helen Pankhurst, who said the recognition for the sites was "wonderful".

Image copyright Historic England
Image caption The post box on Hampstead High Street was set alight
Image copyright Historic England
Image caption Sefton Park Palm House in Liverpool was targeted with a homemade bomb, the fuse of which was blown out by the wind
Image copyright Historic England
Image caption Two suffragettes were so "charmed" with the "old-world room" at the Old Grammar School, Kings Norton, Birmingham, they could not bear to set it on fire, according to a message they left on the blackboard
Image copyright Historic England
Image caption Suffragette Emily Wilding Davison was killed during a protest at the Epsom Derby in 1913
Image copyright Historic England
Image caption A homemade suffragette bomb was found at the entrance to Smeaton's Tower in Plymouth but the wick had been blown out
Image copyright Historic England
Image caption Many WSPU meetings were held at Bristol's Victoria Rooms and professional boxers were hired to keep medical students from interrupting Mrs Pankhurst's speech
Image copyright Historic England
Image caption Aylesbury Prison was the starting point for the suffragettes' largest mass hunger strike, which spread to other prisons with 80 women taking part
Image copyright Historic England
Image caption During protests against politicians who were meeting in Newcastle, stones were thrown through the window of the post office on St Nicholas Street
Image copyright Historic England
Image caption Winston Churchill was targeted by protesters at Sheffield's Culters' Hall, including by women who sent him several telegrams during a dinner