Women and the vote

Page 7 – About the suffrage petition

The database on this site is a digitised version of the main suffrage petition submitted to Parliament on 28 July 1893. It contains the names and addresses of about 24,000 women aged 21 years or older. The original petition comprised more than 500 individual sheets, which were signed in various parts of the country. These were glued together to form a single roll that stretched more than 270 m.

The information reproduced on this site is based on a transcript of the original petition produced by volunteers from the Society of Genealogists in 1993 as part of the suffrage centenary commemorations. The Suburb/Town and City/Region fields have been added to provide consistent information about the signatories’ location. Every effort has been made to make these location fields accurate, but some gaps and errors inevitably remain.

Further research is required to discover what happened to the other 1500 or so names that are supposed to be on this petition (see below). We have also found some discrepancies in the petition, including almost identical copies of some sheets (sheets 103 & 109; 180 & 218; 265 & 268; 365 & 387 and 391 & 392 have been discovered so far).

See also: The women's suffrage petition: from document to database (2017, NZHistory Facebook note)

This video from the He Tohu exhibition tells the story of the the Women's Suffrage Petition:

Thirteen petitions

This petition was by far the largest of 13 separate petitions collected by women’s suffrage supporters in 1893. When pro-suffrage MP Sir John Hall presented them to the House of Representatives on 11 August, he noted that they contained the signatures of 31,872 women, almost a quarter of the adult (voting age) European female population of New Zealand.

  • Mary J. Carpenter and 25,519 others
  • Kate Baldwin and 2765 others
  • (Mrs?) Gerald L. Peacock, of Devonport, Auckland: 2301 names
  • Elizabeth M. Eyre Kenny and 601 others (probably collected in Nelson)
  • Caroline Anderson and 393 others
  • Mrs J. Irwin Wilson, of Whangarei: 83 names
  • Marian Kirker and 49 others
  • Clara M. Birch and 40 others
  • Sophia James and 34 others
  • Lizzie F. Rattray, of Auckland: 31 names [see the DNZB’s biography of Lizzie Frost Rattray ]
  • Harriet Win: 23 names
  • F. Nightingale, of Nelson: 16 names
  • Sarah Lurchin and 15 others

Little is known about the 12 smaller petitions, which do not appear to have survived. It is likely that they were compiled in specific regions, which would help explain some notable gaps in the geographical coverage of the Carpenter petition (see table below).

Sources for petition information: Appendix to the Journals of the House of Representatives, 1893, I-1 and I-2; Journals of the House of Representatives, 1893.

Regional breakdown of the petition database

As this table shows, Canterbury and Otago were particularly strongly represented on the main suffrage petition. Areas such as Bay of Plenty, East Coast and Nelson are hugely under-represented, and it is likely that some of the separate, smaller petitions referred to above were compiled in these regions.

Region

Signatories

Northland211
Auckland2142
Coromandel141
Waikato79
King Country2
Bay of Plenty3
East Coast4
Taranaki269
Volcanic Plateau0
Whanganui1119
Manawatū/Horowhenua1270
Hawke’s Bay1763
Wairarapa607
Wellington1260
Nelson1
Marlborough203
West Coast272
Canterbury4432
South Canterbury1312
Otago7471
Southland1430
TOTAL23991

1892 petition

We also have a transcript of the 1892 suffrage petition which has more than 17,000 names, including some from places missing on the 1893 petition. You can download a transcript of this 1892 petition as an Excel file here.

How to cite this page

'About the suffrage petition', URL: https://nzhistory.govt.nz/politics/womens-suffrage/about-the-petition, (Ministry for Culture and Heritage), updated 17-Jul-2023

Community contributions

14 comments have been posted about About the suffrage petition

What do you know?

Gareth Phipps

Posted: 10 Jan 2013

Hi Sharon - over 30 suffrage petitions were presented to the Houses of Parliament between the late 1880s and 1893. The largest single number was 13 in 1893. Of these, only two have survived and are preserved at Archives New Zealand.

Sharon Wallis

Posted: 09 Jan 2013

How many petitions were there? Can we view all of them? And where can are these now stored, Archives in Wellington?

admin

Posted: 02 Nov 2011

Hi Jackie - you can see the first four names on the sheet here - Mary Carpenter, Annie Gilberthorpe, Susan Clarkson and Julia Shelton. Regards, Jamie Mackay

Jackie Stoddard

Posted: 02 Nov 2011

I was told one of my anscestors was one of the first 4 suffragettes (excuse my ignorance ) I have to look it up as to who it was , but it may help if you could tell me those 4 names please
The list is too daunting so need to ask some relatives ...they are all getting old and not very reliable at passing info on ...and I'd like to keep a file
thanks Jackie S

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