Armine Nutting Gosling (1861 – December 15, 1942) was a Canadian suffragette, best known for her involvement in the nascent Newfoundland women's rights movement.
[4] While in Newfoundland, she met William Gilbert Gosling, a "fellow resident"[5] of the boarding house she occupied in St. John's.
[6] After World War I she became active in politics as president of the Women's Party, which ran two candidates in the 1925 St. John's municipal election.
Her first public address that touched on women's rights was given in 1894 at the Athenaeum Club on the topic of Charles Wesley's hymn "Jesus, Lover of my Soul.
"[9] Armine Gosling took an active interest in many causes, helping to found the Society for the Protection of Animals in 1912, as well as being a keen and competent curler.