Anne Cobden-Sanderson

Julia Sarah Anne Cobden-Sanderson (née Cobden; 26 March 1853 – 2 November 1926) was an English socialist, suffragette and vegetarian.

They were already in the social circle of William Morris and Jane Burden, and it was her husband who first coined the term "Arts and Crafts".

[2] Cobden-Sanderson worked for the Independent Labour Party and was arrested as a suffragette in October 1906 (along with Minnie Baldock and Nellie Martel).

In 1907, she was invited to speak in the United States by Harriet Stanton Blatch to tell American suffragettes about the protest methods used in Britain.

[8][9] In 1908, she formed the New Food Reform Movement with Sarah Grand and vegetarians Charlotte Despard, Beatrice Webb and Seebohm Rowntree.

[10] Cobden-Sanderson opposed the rich meat diet of the period, arguing it was harmful to health and bad for digestion.

[10] The papers of 20th century Holloway governor Joanna Kelley are at the LSE library and they contain Sanderson's (confiscated?)

Cobden-Sanderson at 10 Downing Street shortly before her 1909 arrest.
Anne Cobden-Sanderson in USA ,1907