Trekkie107 - Days In The Life Of A Geeky Jock

trekkie107 - Days in the life of a Geeky Jock
trekkie107 - Days in the life of a Geeky Jock
trekkie107 - Days in the life of a Geeky Jock
trekkie107 - Days in the life of a Geeky Jock
trekkie107 - Days in the life of a Geeky Jock

More Posts from Trekkie107 and Others

11 years ago

so my team goes up against the London Hornets tomorrow. time to bring on the pain and bring home a win!


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8 years ago

Typing “beautiful women” into a search engine will give you pictures of basic white bitches. And what happens when you search “beautiful BLACK women”? You’ll get some black and white pictures of basic white bitches.

8 years ago

Tfw when a racist bitch delete and her coon ass friend upset about it 

Tfw When A Racist Bitch Delete And Her Coon Ass Friend Upset About It 

Ha biiiiiitch!

10 years ago

Fallout vs Skyrim

11 years ago

So the Maidstone Pumas dropped out of the 2014 National league season.... guess not winning a single game for three years wears a team down huh?


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9 years ago

A new document has surfaced which shows British women, of all classes, voting in 1843, some 75 years before they received the parliamentary franchise in 1918. History professor, Sarah Richardson, explains what this discovery means and how it was possible:

Occasionally, just occasionally, you encounter a document that radically changes your view of the past. This happened to me very recently. The source was just a few scraps of parchment in a box of solicitors’ papers in Lichfield. But, at a stroke, it provided me with tangible proof that Victorian women were not only eligible to vote, but actually exercised that right, some 75 years before they received the parliamentary franchise in 1918.

The document in question was a poll book for the election to the local office of Assistant Overseer of the Poor, in the parish of St Chad’s, Lichfield in 1843. I was tipped off about its existence by a friend, Philip Salmon of the History of Parliament. It was a schedule of voters, their addresses, the rates they paid and how they voted. But as I looked down the list of names, some immediately jumped off the page: Elizabeth Shorthouse, Hannah Holiman, Phoebe Skelton, Ann Mallett… In all, there were thirty women playing an active role in the election. Although I knew that in theory women retained the right to vote for some local officials in the nineteenth century, I had never seen any evidence of them doing so in practice. This lack of evidence had led me, and many other historians, to assume that voting was entirely a male prerogative before the twentieth century.

The record was compiled because the solicitors were the agents for the Conservative party in Lichfield. The town was a highly marginal constituency in this period, so the party clearly wanted to keep tabs on the political temperature between parliamentary elections. The solicitor would have compiled the poll book from the ballot papers returned by the voters.

In the period before the secret ballot, everyone was entitled to know how people voted. It was unusual to have an election for an Assistant Overseer. This was a powerful post responsible for collecting poor rates and deciding how they were allocated. But the overseers were usually appointed to avoid the expense of an election. All heads of households, paying rates were entitled to vote. This was a very wide franchise, and one that included single and widowed women.

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A polling document from 1843 which clearly shows women’s names among those who voted

My assumption was that the women would be of genteel status. But as I checked their names against the 1841 census return, I was surprised to see the diversity of the group of voters. There were a few women of independent means, owning property and land. There were also women, probably widows, who had inherited their husbands’ businesses. So, for example, the wealthiest female elector on the roll was Grace Brown, a butcher, who managed a large household including several servants.

Due to the high rates that she paid, Grace was entitled to four votes in the election, which she cast in favour of the Conservative candidate. But I was amazed to see many women on the list who were far lower down the social scale including the laundress, Caroline Edge, the servant, Sarah Payne and even paupers, including Sarah Batkin of Stowe Street.

The poll book is all that remains of an unremarkable local parish election in a comfortable Midlands market town in the mid nineteenth century. Yet, it has prompted a need to re-write the history books by providing the first substantial proof that women were able to vote long before they received the parliamentary or municipal franchise.

Sarah Richardson is an Associate Professor in History at the University of Warwick and author of The Political Worlds of Women: Gender and Politics in Nineteenth Century Britain.

10 years ago

Dose anyone ells think of TF2 when they look at this?

Wonder Woman: The Art Of War Statue By Robert Valley
Wonder Woman: The Art Of War Statue By Robert Valley
Wonder Woman: The Art Of War Statue By Robert Valley
Wonder Woman: The Art Of War Statue By Robert Valley
Wonder Woman: The Art Of War Statue By Robert Valley
Wonder Woman: The Art Of War Statue By Robert Valley

Wonder Woman: The Art of War Statue by Robert Valley

Available Fall 2015


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trekkie107 - Days in the life of a Geeky Jock
Days in the life of a Geeky Jock

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