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Emily Williamson Festival heads to Manchester Art Gallery

A new festival is to celebrate the campaigning legacy of RSPB founder Emily Williamson (1855-1936), Didsbury’s famous eco activist. Taking place at Manchester Art Gallery, Friday 12 to Sunday 14 November, it will feature some of the region’s most dynamic change makers exploring the links between conservation, campaigning, science and art.

Following immediately after the COP26 UN Climate Change Conference in Glasgow, the Emily Williamson Festival will showcase local stories of resistance, resilience and hope in the world of conservation today. Of the 24 speakers, 23 are women.

The Festival will to shine a spotlight on an inspiring range of Manchester individuals making a difference in their own backyards, as well as some key female players in the conservation world – including RSPB CEO Beccy Speight, the British Ornithologists’ Union President Juliet Vickery, campaigner and Springwatch presenter Megan McCubbin, and Emily Williamson’s descendent, bird scientist Professor Melissa Bateson.

The living link between Emily’s history and her eco-campaigning legacy will be explored in a range of panel debates, including:
• Victorian Manchester’s greenness, and the city’s changing relationship with the natural world today.
• Campaigning tactics across the centuries, from the RSPB’s foundation to today.
• The fashion industry vs environmentalists, then and now, with treasures from the city’s Victorian past put under the lens (bird skins from Manchester Museum; feathered hats from Manchester Art Gallery).
• The link between nature and mental health.

Festival founder, social historian and author Tessa Boase, uncovered Emily’s story and photograph while researching her book on the RSPB’s origins, says:

“Emily Williamson understood the value, magnificence and significance of nature, especially birds. She stood firm and fought against the powerful worldwide ‘murderous millinery’ trade – and she won. This festival celebrates her achievement and remarkable legacy, showcasing some exceptional women fighting for nature here in Manchester today.”

The festival will culminate in the announcement of the winning design of a statue for Emily, which members of the public have been voting for in their thousands. The maquettes (miniature statues) of the four shortlisted designs will be on display at Manchester Art Gallery from Saturday 30 October until Sunday 14 November and with voting open until 12pm on Sunday 14 November.

Emily founded what would become the RSPB from her home in Didsbury’s Fletcher Moss Park in 1889 by inviting her friends to tea and asking them to sign a pledge to ‘Wear No Feathers’. That one pledge ricocheted through the next century, spawning campaigns and movements that changed the face of UK conservation. A statue of Emily in the grounds of her former home is one of the ways of giving her the recognition that she deserves and it’s hoped that her legacy will be used to inspire a new generation of nature activists.

Emily’s story shows us that one voice can make a difference. With 15% of birds in Britain now facing extinction, her legacy is more crucial than ever.

Emily Williamson founded the (R)SPB, now the UK’s largest conservation charity, in 1889. In 1891 she teamed up with two other eco pioneers to take it to the next level: Etta Lemon and Eliza Phillips of Croydon. None of these women has been remembered by history. As Tessa Boase explains, “The first thing that struck me when I visited RSPB headquarters at The Lodge, Sandy, was the male portraits looming down all round the entrance hall. Where were the female founders? After unearthing their photographs, I commissioned these drawings from nature-lover and artist Clare Abbatt in the hope that, one day, they might hang in The Lodge and redress the gender balance.”

The large drawings of Emily, Etta and Eliza will feature alongside the shortlisted designs of a statue for Emily Williamson. This will be the first time that the portraits have gone on public display.

Manchester Art Gallery is open Wednesday to Sunday, 10am to 5pm. For further information on the Emily Williamson Festival and the Emily Williamson Statue Campaign visit: www.emilywilliamsonstatue.com/