Florence Balgarnie (19 August 1856 – 25 March 1928) was a British suffragette, speaker, pacifist, feminist, and temperance activist.
[1][2] Characterised as a "staunch Liberal", and influenced by Lydia Becker, Balgarnie began her support of women's suffrage from the age of seventeen.
Robert Balgarnie (1826–1899), a well-known Nonconformist minister[4] of the South Cliff Congregational Church, and his wife, Martha Rooke.
Balgarnie held this appointment till 1895, and thereafter made time for speaking and writing on behalf of temperance and other causes.
[5] She was also affiliated with the International Arbitration & Peace Association, the British Anti-lynching League,[1] the London Anti-lynching Comittee,[9] the Society for Promoting the Return of Women as County Councillors, Personal Rights Association, Moral Reform Union, and the Men and Women's Club.