Maud Pember Reeves (24 December 1865 – 13 September 1953) (born Magdalene Stuart Robison) was a feminist, writer and member of the Fabian Society.
In 1885, she married the journalist and politician William Pember Reeves and became interested in socialism and the suffragist movements, having become involved in the suffrage issue through Julius Vogel.
[2] With Charlotte Shaw and Bessie Hutchins, she had pressed in 1907 on the Fabian Society executive for action on sex equality, supported also by Millicent Murby, but encountered reluctance.
Other members of the FWG included Beatrice Webb, Alice Clark, Edith Nesbit, Susan Lawrence, Margaret Bondfield, and Marion Phillips.
[11] In 1913 Reeves published as Fabian Tract #162 a survey of poverty in Lambeth, a poor borough in South London, called Round About a Pound a Week, a work that was reprinted in 2008 by Persephone Books.