International Women's Day 2021 - Meet Leeds's own pioneers of girl power

Pictured, clockwise, Leonara Cohen, Ellen Heaton, Betty Beecroft and Ivy Benson.Pictured, clockwise, Leonara Cohen, Ellen Heaton, Betty Beecroft and Ivy Benson.
Pictured, clockwise, Leonara Cohen, Ellen Heaton, Betty Beecroft and Ivy Benson.
Today we celebrate Leeds's own pioneers of girl power.

The city's story is filled with inspiring women who helped shape Leeds and in some cases even changed the course of history.

From scientists and entrepreneurs to women’s rights campaigners and musicians, each played their part in forging the city we know and love today.

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And to mark International Women’s Day, here are just some of the incredible women who left their mark on history and who are still celebrated in the city’s museums.

Priya Subramanian.Priya Subramanian.
Priya Subramanian.

LEONORA COHEN

A famously direct and passionate campaigner, Leonora Cohen was a force to be reckoned with in the fight for women’s rights.

One of the leading lights of the Suffrage movement to secure the vote, Leonora was arrested and jailed in 1911 when she threw a rock at the window of a government building.

Undeterred, she continued with her direct action and in 1913 she was again arrested and jailed, this time for hurling an iron bar through a showcase at the Tower of London in front

The Mel B doll is on display as part of the museum’s Sounds of Our City exhibition.The Mel B doll is on display as part of the museum’s Sounds of Our City exhibition.
The Mel B doll is on display as part of the museum’s Sounds of Our City exhibition.

of a crowd of startled schoolchildren.

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The label attached to the bar read: “Jewel House, Tower of London. My protest to the Government for its refusal to Enfranchise Women but continues to torture women