Fanny Deakin, Newcastle-under-Lyme

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Date:1883 - 1968 (c.)

Description:Fanny Deakin was a Labour then Communist councillor for Newcastle-under-Lyme. She fought for better maternity care and equality after growing up poverty stricken in Silverdale. Over the course of her political career she visited the Soviet Union twice (earning her the nickname 'Red Fanny'), led a large group of miners on a protest march to Number 10 Downing Street and met with Prime Minister Ramsey Macdonald in order to get free milk for pregnant women and children under 5. She was also arrested for perjury when she gave false witness for a friend suspected of inciting a violent riot.

She retired from politics in 1951 when her husband Noah died from long-term health problems after a mining accident and was memorialised by the Fanny Deakin Maternity Home and a ward in a local hospital.
In 1991, Joyce Holliday wrote 'Go See Fanny Deakin'. It centred on Fanny Deakin as the heroine of the miners strikes and welfare fight and it was broadcast by the BBC.

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Donor ref:PA 10515 (22/48529)

Source: Brampton Museum and Art Gallery, Newcastle under Lyme

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