What did Emily Davison brass plaque do at House of Parliament?


The Story
# Emily Davison and the House of Commons Broom Cupboard On the night of April 2nd, 1911, Emily Wilding Davison made her way through the corridors of the House of Commons and hid herself in a broom cupboard in the Crypt—a small, dark space that would become an unlikely stage for an act of quiet rebellion. When dawn broke and census enumerators began their work, Emily emerged to record her address not as her home, but as "The House of Commons," a deceptively simple claim that struck at the heart of her lifelong fight for women's suffrage. This cramped cupboard, unremarkable in every way, became the physical manifestation of her argument: if women deserved political representation, why could they not claim the very seat of Parliament as their residence? Two years later, when Emily threw herself beneath the King's horse at the Derby in a final, devastating act of protest, this hidden night in the Crypt lived on as a testament to her willingness to break the rules, challenge the system, and demand that women be counted as full citizens—literally rewriting the official record to prove her point.
Location
House of Parliament