[1][2] The game was named after Emmeline Pankhurst, an English suffragette and leader of women's suffrage in the United Kingdom.
The cards were designed by Edward Tennyson Reed, an English political cartoonist and illustrator well known for his work in the magazine Punch.
[1] The cards featured images of prominent figures of the women's suffrage movement in the United Kingdom.
[2] The game was widely advertised and distributed by the Women's Social and Political Union, along with private merchants.
[4] The "translation of the women's suffrage movement into card games, and also board games, helped bring the message of the cause into domestic circles where more overt forms of propaganda might not have been welcomed.