Titanic Survivor to Trailblazing Barrister: The Remarkable Life of Elsie Bowerman
I have been learning more about the lives of the people on the Titanic, and I wanted to understand more about one woman, Elsie Bowerman. She was not only a survivor, but someone who spent her life pushing against the limits on women of her time.
She was born on the 18th of December 1889 in Tunbridge Wells, into a comfortable family. Her father died while she was still very young and It is hard not to imagine how this might have affected her, perhaps it encouraged her sense of independence and her resilience. She was sent to Wycombe Abbey as a boarder, and later continued her education at Girton College, Cambridge, at a time when higher education for women was still very limited.
While at Cambridge, she became involved in the growing movement for women’s rights, she joined the Women's Social and Political Union. She organised events, handed out literature, and supported leading figures like Emmeline Pankhurst.
In April 1912, Elsie and her mother boarded the RMS Titanic as first-class passengers, they were still active in the suffrage cause even in the days before they left. When the ship hit the iceberg, their lives changed along with everyone else on board. Elsie was only 22 years old. She and her mother managed to get into Lifeboat 6 and they luckily both survived the disaster. We often think about survival as a relief, but it must also have been quite overwhelming- they were forced to leave behind so many other people, they would have lived with the memories of that night forever.
During the First World War, she stayed closely connected to the suffrage movement and the wider efforts of supporting women’s roles in society. She worked abroad as part of medical support efforts in Serbia, she witnessed hardship and conflict first-hand. She travelled through Europe during the early parts of the revolution in Russia, which must have been quite frightening , but also eye-opening.
After the war, as women slowly began to gain new rights, she moved into politics and organisation, she supported campaigns and helped to shape new groups focused on national and social issues. But perhaps one of her most significant achievements came when the law finally allowed women to become legal professionals. She trained as a barrister and was called to the bar in the 1920s, becoming one of the first women to stand in court. To step into a world that was seen as for men, must have need an immense amount confidence and determination.
Later in life, she continued her work on an international level, even contributing to efforts connected to the United Nations and the status of women. Even into her later years, it seems she never gave up her belief that women’s roles in society could and should expand.
It makes me wonder, when we think about people like Elsie Bowerman, do we remember them for the moments they survived, or for the changes they helped to create?
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Elsie Bowerman was a survivor of the Titanic and a suffragette
Date: 1910