Pank-a-Squith was created for the British Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) and produced by a German company around 1909.
[3] Starting in 1909, the game was sold in the WSPU shops in Britain and was used as a way to generate funds for the suffragette movement.
Played similarly to snakes and ladders, players roll dice to move their pieces along the board's tiles.
[10] The goal is to move from the outermost square, which represents home, to the end point at the center, which depicts the Houses of Parliament.
[1] On the twenty-fifth square, Emmeline Pankhurst is shown being arrested, as she was after striking a police officer on June 29, 1909.