[3][4] The couple lived at Fir Tree Lodge on Bannister Road in Southampton from 1898 to 1910 when they moved to 'Rockstone House' in Pinner, Middlesex, which was built for them.
[8] She was among 200 women arrested in March 1912 who had taken part in a window-smashing campaign in London to coincide with the reading of the Conciliation Bill in Parliament.
If I should get into prison don't pay my fine but let me go through it properly ...”[10] On 2 March 1912 she appeared at Bow Street Magistrates' Court to answer charges of wilful damage after smashing windows.
She later wrote an account of her experiences in Holloway: “I was in close confinement for twelve days, was in two hunger strikes & was forcibly fed in April & again in June.
I should like to make it quite clear that the forcible-feeding was not carried out with any idea of saving life but as a deliberate act of brutality to terrorise and torture.”[3][10] Terrero refused to sign a petition calling for the 'ousting' of Emmeline and Frederick Pethick-Lawrence from the WSPU in 1912, and appears to have taken little part in the campaign for women's suffrage thereafter.
[15] The Museum of London holds a tapestry in its collection decorated in the suffragette colours of purple, white, and green, which was embroidered in Holloway Prison by Janie Terrero.
It is embroidered with the names of her fellow hunger strikers who were imprisoned with her at Holloway Prison for their involvement in smashing windows as part of a suffragette campaign in March 1912.