Monday 28 March 2016

Eunice Emerson - an independent woman






EUNICE EMERSON  1897 – NOVEMBER 1988

Eunice known as ‘Nin’ was an accomplished performer.  From her early years she was encouraged by her musician father to act and sing and Eunice progressed from school and church performances to political events, World War One charity shows and amateur opera.  Eunice’s amateur career and even early female suffrage sympathies were encouraged by her parents and the new freedoms accorded to women during World War One allowed her to develop her independence.

Eunice one of nine children of William Emerson and Kate nee Elson was born in Winslow, Buckinghamshire.  Her four elder siblings Florence Kate, known as ‘Topper’ born 1890, Elsie Ruth, known as Ruth born 1891, William Norris, referred to as Will born 1893 and Jessica Rose, known as Jesse born 1895 all survived into adulthood.  Younger brother Douglas Elson, known as Doug born 1898 and sister, Phyllis Irene, known as Phyll, born 1906 thrived but Amy Drusicilla born 1903 lived just two years and Basil Gordon born 1910 died aged six years.   According to Jesse they had a happy childhood with full parental participation in their upbringing. 
 
Photograph taken circa 1907.   Back row Elsie Ruth, Florence and Will with the dog.  Front Row, Jesse, Phyllis, William, Douglas, Kate and Eunice.

Eunice alongside all the children were encouraged to participate in the Congregational Church and School drama and music events.  They were likely influenced in their musical and thespian endeavours by their father William who was involved in the community as Winslow’s Hon. Bandmaster (a position he held from at least the start of the twentieth century).[1]    Aged thirteen Eunice sang in a trio representing Winslow Schools at Great Horwood in a fund raising event for the churchyard walls.  Eunice with her fellow students Nora Bimrose and Jack Rolfe performed Urchins we, ‘singing and acting most beautifully’.[2]  She also took a leading role as ‘Dick Whittington’ in the Winslow Schools Children’s Operetta held at the Oddfellows Hall in Winslow and her brother Douglas also had a major role as Jack Fitzwarren.[3]  Whilst representing her school, most newspaper reports of Eunice’s early performances were on behalf of the Congregational Church or Baptist Abstinence Society in Winslow.  In 1907 aged only ten years she rendered a dialogue Ten Little Temperance Boys and siblings Florence, Jesse and William also performed during the evening.[4]  In 1912 she took the premier role as the Queen in the Congregational Church May Festival and Douglas also shone as leader of the boys.[5]  Perhaps her predominance was wearing thin when Eunice was reported as being the Queen of the May ‘again’ at the Sunday School Festival in June.[6]  This saturation of Eunice was not just not restricted to school or religiou establishments and  her later performances indicated suffragist sympathies.

Prime Minister H. H. Asquith dissolved parliament on 28 November 1910 and in the process abandoned the 1910 Conciliation Bill granting female suffrage. Dissent amongst women was rife and this was not restricted to adult female and active suffragettes and suffragists.  Eunice just fourteen years old expressed her opinion.  In celebration of Liberal candidate Sir Henry Verney’s victory in 1911 Eunice delivered a recitation of Indignant Nelly.[7]   A most suitable recitation for children widely performed in the latter part of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.  However did the messages in Eunice’s performance content highlight her early suffragist sympathies?  Indignant Nelly was performed extensively in the latter nineteenth and early twentieth centuries and was considered a suitable recitation for children.  A lengthy humorous Victorian verse in children’s vernacular it relates a tale about a little girl and her brother scared by the scratching of mice at night.  The brother refused to rescue Nellie’s doll excusing himself with stomach ache but Nellie fearing that her dollie would be bitten, bravely and without shoes rescues her baby.  Leading to the final punch line ‘Let a woman do a sing (sic) you wouldn’t do yourself’.  This was a juvenile choice for a teenage girl to perform at a political celebration however it delivered a punch.  The moral of the verse indicated that females were more resilient and braver then men.  The possibility that this indicated Eunice was influenced by the female suffrage movement and performed an innocuous verse with a hidden meaning was further evidenced by her second performance of the evening.  The Curfew Must Not Ring Tonight by Rose Hardwick Thorpe (written in 1867 but set in the seventeenth century) relates the heroism of young Bessie in preventing the tolling of the curfew bell that would signal her lover’s execution.  Bessie’s valour gained the pity of Cromwell and reprieve from death for her lover.  The moral of this verse also reflected the bravery of women and additionally their ability to influence men with their actions.  Professional actresses were courted by the suffrage movements due to their effectiveness in speaking at public meetings and also for training other women.[8]  Amateur actresses also played a role.  That Eunice was permitted or even encouraged to perform at a political event highlighted that women were involved indirectly in politics and encouraged by husbands and fathers to lobby for the franchise.  However with the outbreak of war in 1914 the suffrage movement turned their efforts from fighting for the franchise to supporting the war effort to prove women’s worth for the vote. 

Eunice embraced the opportunity to perform in fund raising events.  Starting with appropriate (for her age) musical events organised by the Congregational Church in Winslow to raise money for Belgium refugees in November 1914 Eunice embraced the new freedoms accorded to women during World War One.[9]  By 1915 women escaped domestic drudgery and the home to work in industry, transport, on the land in the civil service, etc., replacing men who by 1916 were conscripted to serve in the army.  With women working in former men’s jobs, Eunice aged eighteen in 1915 could argue her case to act to a wider range audience and performed at the Winslow Concert Hall alongside civilian and service personnel.  She rendered a recitation of The Doctor and his Apprentice an apt early nineteenth humorous verse for a Red Cross fund raising event.[10]  Eunice performed throughout 1915-1917 at various events in aid of war charities.  She was acclaimed for her duologue with Lieut. Scott Gaddy hosted by the Norfolk Regiment at St Lawrence Hall, Winslow in November 1915.[11]  Eunice performed a humorous sketch about a newly- wed couple on honeymoon in Wales, A Breezy Morning; a play that just two years earlier would have been considered too risqué for a girl of no more than nineteen.  Eunice embraced the new independence accorded to women and continued her amateur acting and singing career.
 
                                                                          Eunice Emerson, Pitti- Sing, Mikad, 1931

From the late 1920s and still single, Eunice lived with her sister Phyllis in Salisbury where they both performed in amateur opera.[12]   Whether single by design or subject to loss of a lover during the war is subject to conjecture, (possibly her brother Williams divorce in 1928 soured ideals of marriage or alternatively she was happy with her single life).  Aged fifty living in Southgate, London Eunice married John Hildrow in 1947.     She was just one of the women whose lives were changed by World War One.  Eunice was influenced by the suffrage movement, permitted to show her opinions , encouraged to act and sing and was an example of the early twentieth century emancipated women.

                                              




[1] Bucks. Herald, 17 January 1903.


[2] Buckingham Advertiser and Free Press, 23 April, 1910.


[3] Bucks Herald, 23 April 1910.


[4] Buckingham Advertiser and Free Press, 9 February 1907.


[5] Bucks Herald, 11 May 1912.


[6] Bucks Herald, 29 June 1912.


[7] Buckingham Advertiser and Free Press, 4 February 1911.


[8] M. Pugh, The March of the Women: A Revisionist Analysis of the Campaigns of Female Suffrage, 1867-1914, (Oxford, 2000), p. 225.


[9] Buckingham Advertiser and Free Press, 28 November 1914.


[10] Bucks. Herald, 14 April 1915.


[11] Buckingham Advertiser and Free Press, 11 December 1915.


[12] Western Gazette, 13 May 1927