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Margaret Dockrell

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Margaret Dockrell
Born
Margaret Shannon

18 March 1849
18 Charlotte Street,Dublin,Ireland
Died29 June 1926(1926-06-29)(aged 77)
"Camolin", Eaton Square, Monkstown
NationalityIrish
Occupationcouncillor

Margaret Dockrell(néeShannon;18 March 1849 – 29 June 1926) was an Irishsuffragist,philanthropist,and councillor.[1]

Early life and family

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Margaret Shannon was born on 18 March 1849, at 18 Charlotte Street,Dublin.She was the eldest child of solicitor George William Shannon and Emily Shannon (née Goodman). She had two sisters and two brothers. She attendedAlexandra College,and later lectures for women atTrinity College Dublin.She marriedMaurice Dockrellin July 1875. The couple had seven children, one daughter and six sons. She went on to become a director and member of the board of her husband's family company: Messrs Thomas Dockrell & Sons & Co. Ltd.[1]

Political career

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Dockrell was an active member of the committee of theDublin Women's Suffrage and Local Government Association,later known as the Irish Women's Suffrage and Local Government Association (IWSLGA), founded in 1876 to promote women's suffrage by democratic methods. She attended international women's suffrage conferences in Stockholm in 1911 and Budapest in 1913.[2]She was also a committee member of the London Women's Suffrage Society, speaking on the role of women in local government at theInternational Congress of Womenin London in 1899.The Irish Citizenlisted her as a suitable woman candidate to run for the senate seat proposed by theHome rule billin 1912.[1][3]

Dockell was a member of theNational Union of Women Workers,sitting as a member of its public services committee. Like many of her contemporaries, she believed that women were best placed to address issues around health, societal moral well-being, and housing. From 1898, the Local Government (Ireland) Act, allowed women to be candidates for local government elections. Dockrell first ran as a candidate in the Urban District Council (UDC) of theMonkstownward of Blackrock, County Dublin in the 1898 local elections, where she was returned as the 3rd of 9 elected, becoming one of only 4 women councillors elected in Ireland.[1]

Dockrell described herself as aunionistand a Protestant, sitting as a council on the Blackrock UDC until her death. She was the only woman councillor on that UDC until 1925 and the election of Ellen O'Neill. Dockrell was also the first woman chair of a UDC when she was elected to the position in 1906.[1]

Marriage and family

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Margaret marriedMaurice Dockrellon 27 July 1875 in Dublin Ireland. They had 7 children.

  • Thomas Edward Dockrell (2 Jan 1878 – 16 Jan 1915)
  • Henry Morgan Dockrell(17 Apr 1880 – 26 Oct 1955)
  • Maurice Dockrell (abt 1883)
  • James Dockrell (abt 1884 – 30 Aug 1888)
  • George Dockrell(22 Oct 1886 – 23 Dec 1924)
  • Kenneth Brooks Dockrell (9 Jan 1888 – 11 Mar 1937)
  • Anna Dorothy Dockrell (Abt. 1890 – 24 Jan 1976)

Later life

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Despite the political and societal turmoil of the early 20th century in Ireland and the establishment of theIrish Free State,Dockrell continued in her commitment to local politics. This included being the first woman to be elected to a Dublin county council in 1920. Despite remaining a committed unionist, Dockrell worked with the Free State government. Following her husband's knighthood, she was also known as Lady Dockrell. Dockrell died on 29 June 1926, at her home "Camolin", Eaton Square, Monkstown.[1]She is buried inDeans Grange Cemetery.Her son,Henry Morgan Dockrellwas also a politician, and another sonGeorgewas an Olympic swimmer, who competed at the1908 Summer Olympics.Her granddaughterMarguerite Dockrell,Henry's daughter, also represented Ireland as a swimmer at theAmsterdam Olympicsin 1928.

References

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  1. ^abcdefSheahan, Mary (2009). "Dockrell, Margaret Sarah". In McGuire, James; Quinn, James (eds.).Dictionary of Irish Biography.Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  2. ^Yeates, Padraig."The war against the War".The Irish Times.Retrieved16 January2020.
  3. ^Naughton, Lindie (2016).Markievicz: A Most Outrageous Rebel.Dublin: Merrion Press.ISBN9781785370847.