Book charts Bexhill's suffragette movement

A STONE-throwing mob tried to break up a public meeting at Marina as local Suffragettes campaigned for votes for women.

But, as a new book reveals, campaigners a century ago were not shy of indulging in direct action themselves.

They set light to a bungalow in Cooden'¦

When newly-extended Bexhill Museum re-opens for the 2010 season on Tuesday, February 2 its ongoing Awards For All-funded Quest For Equality exhibition devoted to the campaign for women's suffrage will be complemented by a companion volume published under the museum's own imprint.

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Bexhill's Suffragettes tells the story of the local campaign through the pages of the town's rival papers - the Observer and the Chronicle, which the Observer later absorbed.

What museum curator Julian Porter and volunteers Claire Eden and Yvonne Cleland found in researching the papers' bound files for 1912-1914 was a revelation to them.

Julian says: "When we got the bound copies of the Observer and Chronicle in 2008 we realised that there was an immense wealth of information to which we previously had no direct access..