[10] Known as "Dundee’s hunger-striker", during her imprisonment in Winson Green Prison in Birmingham[11] Macfarlane went on hunger strike along with Gertrude Wilkinson and her sister Edith Begbie.
[10] An article in The Vote published on 23 June 1933 reproduced a letter to The Times that Macfarlane had co-signed as Honorary Secretary of the Six Point Group.
[16] The archive of the University of Liverpool holds a large amount of correspondence from the Six Point Group from 1933 where they are involved in the case of female staff losing their jobs on getting married.
In one letter Macfarlane invites a Dr Miller to a forthcoming Suffragette Dinner and in which she suggests a meeting with Charlotte Marsh.
[17] Florence Geraldine Macfarlane returned to Los Angeles in California in 1939 at which time her medical record described her as suffering “extreme restlessness and nervousness”.