Maud Ward
The daughter of an Anglican vicar, she studied at the National Training School of Cookery, and became a cook. She became interested in socialism, and joined the Social Democratic Federation in Tunbridge Wells, teaching a class on Marxist economics.[1]
Maud M. A. Ward was a British socialist activist.
Ward was a supporter of women's suffrage, joining the Adult Suffrage Society, and serving as its secretary from 1908 to 1909.[1] She was also on the committee of the Women's Labour League, and was a close friend of its leader, Margaret Bondfield, at one time sharing a house with her and Ethel Clarke.[2]
In about 1911, Ward gave up activism to become the Chief Woman Inspector for the National Insurance Act 1911.[1]
References
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