Lady Griselda Cheape

She was also assisted at the Pendlebury Sick Children's Home in Manchester, Dundee Royal Infirmary and the London Temperance Hospital.

[2] She was prominent in the Scottish National Women's Anti-Suffragette League (WASL),[1] founding the branch in St Andrews in 1909 [3]

The BWTA were pro women's suffrage, however the St Andrews branch where Lady Cheape was president (1909–12) [1][4][5] was opposed.

[6]"Lady Cheape believed that direct political representation would undermine, rather than amplify, the idea of feminine moral superiority.

Her opinions may be traced to her strongly evangelical approach to temperance reform that emphasised moral, rather than legal, ‘suasion.’"[7]She died in 1934 in London.

National Anti-suffrage Association
National Anti-suffrage Association