Esther Roper

Esther Roper (4 August 1868 – 28 April 1938) was a suffragist and social justice campaigner who fought for equal employment and voting rights for working-class women.The couple fell in love, and the following year Gore-Booth gave up a life of privilege to move in with Roper in a terraced house in Rusholme, Manchester.Roper later wrote of their meeting in Italy: "For months illness kept us in the south, and we spent the days walking and talking on the hillside by the sea.[9] In the late 1800s and early 1900s Roper and Gore-Booth helped to organize groups of female flower-sellers, circus performers, barmaids and coal pit-brow workers as their right to work was threatened by moral crusades and new legislation.In 1916, along with trans woman Irene Clyde, they founded Urania, a privately circulated journal which expressed their pioneering views on gender and sexuality.She was buried alongside Gore-Booth in St John's churchyard, Hampstead, on 30 April, with a quote from lesbian icon Sappho carved on their gravestone."[15] Roper's name and picture (and those of 58 other women's suffrage supporters) are on the plinth of the statue of Millicent Fawcett in Parliament Square, London, unveiled in 2018.
Roper (seated), Edith Palliser (left), Mrs. Blaxter (right)
Eva Gore-Booth, Roper's partner
Eva Gore-Booth, Roper's partner
ChorleyEnglandSt John-at-HampsteadsuffragistEva Gore-BoothEdith PalliserChurch Missionary SocietyOwens CollegeManchesterAncoatsLydia BeckerNational Union of Women's Suffrage SocietiesGeorge MacdonaldRusholmevegetariansWomen’s Social and Political UnionEmmeline PankhurstIrene ClydeUraniaFirst World WarInternational Committee of Women for Permanent Peaceconscientious objectorsEthel RhindThe TimesSapphoConstance Markieviczplinthstatue of Millicent FawcettParliament SquareTiernan, SonjaOxford University Press