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“Helen Taylor and her Fight for the People” is a scholarly account of an uncompromising 19th century woman of principle, loyalty, and dedication, who has now largely faded from the popular consciousness.
One question this book raised for me, was to wonder what Helen might have achieved had she been a man? But there again, she was not a woman to let her gender get in the way, as illustrated by in 1885 she stood as a female candidate for parliament. Her thoughts on the use of pronouns was arguably 150 years ahead of its time, although her arguments were to do with equality rather than identity.
Helen Taylor was a difficult woman to get along having “a genius for turning friends into foes”. Helen was also a marvellously stubborn woman – when subject to a libel court case, she stood by her principles rather than issue a retraction, and paid a hefty fine as a result. Basically, once Helen Taylor decided on something, there was no shifting her, no matter what the cost in terms of relationships or financial. Back in the late 19th century this was explained as her being a ‘difficult woman’, but part of me wonders if there might, in the modern day, be a more technical explanation for her difficulties relating to people.
But regardless of her personality, Helen was a heroine to many, often the poorest in society, as she became their voice in the fight against unfair rents and poverty, and a crusader for free education for the poor. Typical of her stance were outrageous suggestions such as spending public money to support the homeless and starving, rather than to finance colonialism. Helen Taylor comes across as a woman of such towering principle that she scared witless the women’s suffrage movement. At a time when suffrage was seen as unfeminine (and therefore undesirable in the misogynist 19th century) Helen Taylor’s persona represented everything the softer suffrage movement wished to conceal (because it scared men!) and so even amongst those who should have been her ‘sisters’ in campaigning, she ruffled feathers.
It was moving to read about the end of Helen’s life, which revealed a more human side to her and her living relatives. A book of significance for anyone interested in 19th century feminism and factions within the suffrage movement, amongst other significant political issues of the day.

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Dr Janet Smith, Helen Taylor and her Fight for the People Education Reformer, Feminist and Pioneer of the Labour Movement, Pen & Sword | Pen and Sword History, June 2025.

Thank you, NetGalley and Pen and Sword, for providing me with this uncorrected proof for review.

Janet Smith has amassed a spectacular amount of information. Not only does Helen Taylor, largely unknown, come to life but so much more is gleaned about her mother, Harriet Taylor (later, Stuart Mill) and her stepfather, John Stuart Mill. This is an immensely engaging book. The content is inspiring, in its volume, the range of topics and the enthusiasm with which Smith investigates long held beliefs about Helen Taylor, to show another side to this formidable and remarkable woman. Although the writing is less dynamic than my experience with Pen and Sword publications, its accessibility is intact – the content is such a driving force that this non-fiction book could be classed a ‘page turner.’

There are three parts, covering Helen Taylor’s early years as the daughter of Harriet Taylor, separated from her husband, and close friend of John Stuart Mill; her public life after the death of her mother, John Stuart Mill, and her good friend, Kate Amberly; and the years between 1886 and her death in 1907.

It is worth reflecting on the place that Smith gives Helen Taylor’s personal life in this book, so clearly dedicated to her work in education, as a feminist and as a member of the labour movement. Helen Taylor has been seen as an abrasive figure, a woman jealously holding on to John Stuart Mill’s legacy, and overall, a difficult woman politically and personally. Smith seeks to show another side to the way in which Taylor approached her personal and political relationships. Her insightful and sensitive discussion of Helen Taylor, her family and personal relationships and those with her fellow campaigners is a shining feature of this biography. Readers involved in any political movement will recognise the dilemmas that arise, the cracks that appear insurmountable when fighting for crucial policies and ideas, and the heartbreak that surrounds friends lost over conflicting aspirations and strategies. Smith’s work is a wonderful insight into this world.

The political world that Helen Taylor inhabited, and in which her background fostered her responses was that of campaigning for positions, such as those on the London School Board and Parliament, working assiduously for a feminist approach to issues, and land reform. For a brief time, she adopted an acting career. However, her background almost guaranteed her adoption of a political life. She was tireless in working on her stepfather’s papers, and here John Stuart Mill deserves an accolade. Rather than accept his wife’s and daughter’s assistance with his work and let it go unremarked, he assiduously referred to their contribution to his ideas. Smith’s reference to features such as this is another engaging part of reading her work.

There are endnotes, a bibliography and index. Several photos accompany the text, schools, posters, her homes, and herself with family, her family members, and friends. These end fittingly, with Helen Taylor’s grave inscription, ‘She fought for the People.’

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She fought for the people - inscription on tombstone. A detailed and important historical record of the work of Helen Taylor in England and Ireland during the 1800s fighting for reform and social justice. Thank you to the author. Thank you to #netgalley and the publisher for an ARC.

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You know it’s going to be a good book when it starts with a brawl. Helen Taylor and Her Fight for the People by Janet Smith resurfaces the story of an important figure in women’s and social movements in England (and Ireland and Scotland) in the late 19th century. Often remembered (if at all!) as Harriet Taylor Mill’s daughter and John Stuart Mill’s stepdaughter (she was also his collaborator), she was in her own right a prominent and accomplished political figure. The causes she advanced included equal pay for women teachers, free education for all, land reform (she advocated nationalizing all land), Irish home rule, and of course, women’s suffrage. A London school board member, her advocacy for education also included an equitable curriculum for girls and, in effect, day care at schools (which she had seen in other countries), so that instead of being made to stay home to take care of their younger siblings, girls could attend school. Taylor was also the first woman to run for Parliament (the catalyst for the aforementioned brawl at a campaign event). She was a forceful personality (as she would have needed to be), and the book is a reminder of how, frankly, silly it is to fixate on a female political figure’s likability instead of her efficacy. A contemporary who recognized that described her as “one of the most gifted champions of the working class which this country has ever had.” In addition to reconstructing Taylor’s contributions, the book is a lively and engaging political and social history of England and beyond.

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