Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 January 2018
The Sex Disqualification (Removal) Act 1919 ended the prohibition on female jurors. This did not mean that English and Welsh juries became representative institutions overnight, however: the property qualifications ensured that juries were still drawn from the top few per cent of the local population; and the 1919 Act expressly permitted trial judges to order single-sex juries where the nature of the evidence required it. The continued existence of peremptory challenges allowed defendants in felony trials to exclude women from their juries whenever they preferred to be tried only by men. Finally, some judges permitted female jurors to excuse themselves from particular trials if they so desired. This paper explores the effects these factors had on the practical enjoyment of the female jury franchise after the passing of the 1919 Act. It finds that the picture is remarkably localised: rates of women serving on juries were very different for the five assize circuits for which adequate records exist (Midland, Oxford, South Eastern, South Wales and Western). By exploring these issues, this paper reveals how flexible the female jury franchise was in its early years, and shows how important local differences were in keeping women off the jury.
This research was funded by a British Academy/Leverhulme Trust Small Research Grant, and by Newcastle University's Faculty Research Fund. I am grateful for the helpful comments on earlier drafts of this paper received at the Osgoode Society Legal History Workshop in March 2016, at the Socio-Legal Studies Association conference in April 2016 and at the Society of Legal Scholars conference in September 2016. I am also grateful to Ann Sinclair for assistance with literature searches, and to Legal Studies' two anonymous reviewers for their helpful comments on an earlier draft of this paper.
This paper was last updated on 03/08/2022
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2. Representation of the People Act 1918.
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10. Sex Disqualification (Removal) Act 1919, s 1(b).
11. Not completely abolished until the 1980s: Criminal Justice Act 1988, s 118(1).
12. Juries Act 1825, s 1. Separate qualifications had been set for Welsh juries, although these were repealed by the Juries Act 1870, s 7.
13. Criminal Justice Act 1972, Sch 6; Juries Act 1974, s 1.
14. Juries Act 1825, s 50.
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23. ‘Belfast Recorder's Court: criminal business resumed’ Northern Whig and Belfast Post (Belfast) 18 February 1921 at 7.
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40. ‘Women jurors vindicated’ Derby Daily Telegraph (Derby) 11 September 1920 at 2.
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42. See eg M Garrett Fawcett ‘To the Editor of The Times’ The Times (London) 1 February 1921 at 10; ‘Mixed juries: a women's rights view’ Yorkshire Post (Leeds) 31 January 1921 at 6; ‘Women as jurors’ Yorkshire Post (Leeds) 15 March 1921 at 6. Judges also occasionally made this sort of argument: ‘Women jurors in sexual cases: Mr Justice Shearman's view’ The Times (London) 7 June 1921 at 7.
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45. See eg ‘Mixed juries’, ibid; ‘Women as jurors’, ibid.
46. See eg ‘Women's Council and women jurors: “false conception of delicacy”’ Evening Telegraph (Dundee) 9 March 1921 at 3; ‘Women as jurors’, ibid; ‘Women's reform campaign’ Lincolnshire Echo (Lincoln) 13 February 1926; ‘Silly, sentimental ways of men: women teachers demand equality’ Evening Telegraph (Dundee) 6 January 1927 at 4.
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51. ‘The Pavilion’ Bucks Herald (Aylesbury) 13 April 1928 at 5.
52. ‘The Central Cinema: popular “turns” to be introduced’ Bury Free Press (Bury St Edmunds) 26 May 1928 at 5.
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59. Hollis, above n 30.
60. Belloc Lowndes, above n 58, at 8.
61. Ibid, at 8.
62. ‘The Rules of the Supreme Court (Women Jurors), 1920’, s 3 (National Archives: LCO 2/559).
63. On circuit rules generally, see R Cock ‘The Bar at assizes: barristers on three nineteenth century circuits’ (1976) 6 Kingston L Rev 36. For the admission of women to particular circuits, see C Corcos ‘Portia Goes to Parliament: women and their admission to membership in the English legal system’ (1998) 75 Denv U L Rev 307 at 398-399; P Polden ‘Portia's progress: women at the Bar in England, 1919-1939’ (2005) Int'l J Legal Prof 293 at 323-324; and J Bourne ‘Helena Normanton and the opening of the Bar to women’ PhD thesis, King's College London (2014) at 195-196.
64. Anwar et al, above n 26.
65. In other words, local officials had a great deal of discretion regarding the discharge of their duties. On the development of the clerk of assize and other related local officials, see Cockburn, JS A History of English Assizes 1558-1714 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1972) pp 70–84 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
66. See eg winter 1921 Buckinghamshire assizes, in Midland Circuit 1919-1921, unpaginated. The clerk actually responds to a handwritten note written by another official, but the first official's notes appear to have been copied out from a newspaper report (see the passage transcribed by the same official on the following page).
67. The fact that people could still be registered at multiple addresses at this time means that there is some slight overlap in the figures below, where for example a person is registered both at their home and at their business. The numbers of such double-registered people appear to be reasonably small, however. Furthermore, the fact that such double-counting happened both for jurors and for non-jurors means that any attempt to exclude duplicates from the analysis would require the identification of each duplicate among the nearly 400,000 individuals - jurors and non-jurors - named in the electoral registers consulted. For this reason, a small amount of overlap has to simply be acknowledged as a limitation of the method used.
68. J Oldham ‘Special juries in England: nineteenth century usage and reform’ (1987) J Legal Hist 148.
69. The female juror rate at Leicester was a slightly lower 1.6 per 12 in 1921, which suggests that the overall decline in female jurors during the 1920s was probably not caused by post-war demographic changes.
70. It should be noted here that data for Bristol's juries, as for juries in the South Western Circuit generally, only goes up to the end of 1925. But given that female participation on assize juries was continuing to fall elsewhere between 1926 and 1929, it is likely that the true wholedecade average for Bristol was actually even lower than 1.3 women perjury.
71. Logan, Feminism and Criminal Justice, above n 1, pp 86-95; Logan, ‘“Building a new and better order”’, above n 1, at 704-706.
72. ‘Vaquier's fight for life: appeal dismissed’ Portsmouth Evening News (Portsmouth) 28 July 1924 at 8.
73. R v Vaquier (1925) 18 Cr App R 112, 113. See also ‘Rv Mahon’ The Times 20 August 1924 (CCA).
74. R v Williams (1927) 19 Cr App R 67.
75. ‘Objection to a woman juror: new trial to be held’ Yorkshire Post (Leeds) 8 December 1925 at 7.
76. ‘Exemptions refused women: three empanelled in murder trial’ Lancashire Daily Post (Preston) 14 January 1921 at 2.
77. ‘Women jurors' ordeal: “guilty” verdict in murder trial’ Dundee Courier (Dundee) 19 January 1921 at 5.
78. ‘Town and district’ Northampton Mercury (Northampton) 25 October 1928 at 8.
79. Anwar et al, above n 26, at 12.
80. Autumn 1920 Worcester assizes, in Oxford Circuit 1914-1920, p 490.
81. Summer 1921 Cornish assizes, in Western Circuit 1920-1922, unpaginated.
82. The crime statistics grouped together ‘Unnatural offences’, ‘Attempts to Commit Unnatural Offences’ and ‘Indecency with Males’: Judicial Statistics (England and Wales for 1922, Criminal) (Annual Report) Cmd 2265, 1924, p 15.
83. Lord Morris Report of the Departmental Committee on Jury Service Cmnd 2627, 1965, p 104.
84. ‘Antiquated power: recorder and right to challenge women jurors’ Gloucester Citizen (Gloucester) 25 September 1929 at 5.
85. Autumn 1923 Hampshire assizes, in Western Circuit 1922-1925, unpaginated.
86. Autumn 1920 Sussex assizes, in South Eastern Circuit 1919-1922, p 244.
87. Winter 1921 Norwich assizes, in South Eastern Circuit 1919-1922, p 239.
88. Winter 1921 Hampshire assizes, in Western Circuit 1920-1922, unpaginated.
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90. ‘Woman juror and KC Hull Daily Mail (Hull) 1 December 1921 at 3.
91. ‘Quaker objects: woman juror released at Durham’ Sunderland Daily Echo (Sunderland) 26 February 1923 at 5.
92. Letter from Ernley Blackwell to Claud Schuster 9 December 1919 (National Archives: LCO 2/559) at 2.
93. ‘Problem of the woman juror: has she proved a failure?’ Dundee Evening Telegraph (Dundee) 7 December 1921 at 3.
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98. ‘Judge and lady jurors: grim questions which arise in court’ Northern Daily Mail (Hartlepool) 3 November 1922 at 8.
99. ‘Delicacy and duty - do they conflict? A lady juror's view’ Yorkshire Post (Leeds) 27 January 1921 at 6.
100. ‘Marie Studholme a juror’ Hull Daily Mail (Hull) 15 December 1922 at 3.
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103. ‘Our readers’ views: women jurors and capital punishment' Yorkshire Evening Post (Leeds) 21 March 1921 at 7.
104. ‘Woman juror's ordeal at murder trial’ Yorkshire Evening Post (Leeds) 22 March 1922 at 7. It cannot have helped that she lived very near the prison where her defendant was held.
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108. Darling J's address at Bristol, as recorded by LC Danger (Bristol Clerk of the Peace), 4 May 1920 (National Archives: HO 45/11071/383085/27a).
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111. Corcos, above n 65, at 398-399.
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113. The fact that so many jurors were needed per session suggests that the practice of using the same jury for several trials had probably ended.
114. ‘Juries: persons frequently summoned for service on, in Leicester’ (HO45/24646/59).
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