Portrait of suffragette and Titanic survivor Elsie Bowerman to go to auction

Handout photo issued by Duke's Auction House of a portrait of Titanic survivor and suffragette Elsie BowermanHandout photo issued by Duke's Auction House of a portrait of Titanic survivor and suffragette Elsie Bowerman
Handout photo issued by Duke's Auction House of a portrait of Titanic survivor and suffragette Elsie Bowerman
A rare portrait of an early suffragette and Titanic survivor has been discovered by an auctioneer whose own ancestor shared a lifeboat with her after the liner sank.

Timothy Medhurst was researching the astonishing life of Elsie Bowerman when he happened upon his connection with her.

The expert’s great-great-grandfather, Robert Hitchens, was a quartermaster on the doomed ship and was in lifeboat number six, along with Ms Bowerman and about 22 others.

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He was apparently overruled by the strong females on the boat who demanded they be allowed to row in order to keep warm.

Handout photo issued by Duke's Auction House of  Titanic survivor and suffragette Elsie BowermanHandout photo issued by Duke's Auction House of  Titanic survivor and suffragette Elsie Bowerman
Handout photo issued by Duke's Auction House of Titanic survivor and suffragette Elsie Bowerman

Elsie Bowerman joined Emmeline Pankhurst’s Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU) two years before boarding the Titanic in 1912.

After her return to the UK she continued her work with the WSPU, then in the First World War joined a Scottish women’s hospital unit and witnessed the Russian Revolution at first hand.

She subsequently became secretary of the Women’s Guild of Empire and was the first female barrister to practise at the Old Bailey.

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In the Second World War she worked with the Woman’s Royal Volunteer Services as well as the Ministry of Information and the BBC.

Handout photo issued by Duke's Auction House of  Titanic survivor and suffragette Elsie BowermanHandout photo issued by Duke's Auction House of  Titanic survivor and suffragette Elsie Bowerman
Handout photo issued by Duke's Auction House of Titanic survivor and suffragette Elsie Bowerman

In 1947 she went to the United States to help set up the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women.

She died in 1973 following a stroke and a blue plaque now marks the site in St Leonards, East Sussex, where she lived.

Now the portrait of Ms Bowerman that measures 3.5in by 2.8in (9cm by 7cm) is going under the hammer at Duke’s auction house in Dorchester.

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Auctioneer Tim Medhurst said: “This small portrait is an amazing snippet of history in which you can see a woman of survival, dedicated to equal rights.

“It is a wonderful thing to be able to look at the same lady who would have looked at my great- great-grandfather over 100 years ago on board a lifeboat in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean.

“It is a nice painting in oils and it is unusual to see a female subject dressed in service clothes - she is wearing the uniform of the Scottish Women’s Hospital.

“We don’t know who the artist was, but clearly this lot will have interest for collectors of memorabilia in the Titanic and the suffragette movement.”

The portrait, which was consigned by a local man who was cleaning out his home, will be sold in March with an estimate of up to £1,000.

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