44 Westbourne Terrace

What did Susan Lawrence do at 44 Westbourne Terrace?

By Legacy Team·

Lawrence at 44 Westbourne Terrace Standing before 44 Westbourne Terrace, you're at the home where Susan Lawrence orchestrated much of her pioneering work as a social reformer and Labour politician during the early twentieth century. From this elegant Victorian townhouse in Westminster, Lawrence—one of Britain's first female Labour MPs—received constituents, drafted legislation on behalf of working people, and hosted the intellectual circles that shaped progressive politics in 1920s London.

The address became a hub of political activism where this fierce advocate for education reform, workers' rights, and women's suffrage strategized campaigns and entertained fellow reformers, making it far more than a residence but rather a nerve centre of social change. For Lawrence, who lived here during some of her most influential years, this Westbourne Terrace address represented her bridge between the comfortable middle-class world of her upbringing and her unwavering commitment to fighting poverty and inequality—a contradiction she resolved by using her privilege and position to relentlessly advocate for those with neither.

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The commemorative plaque at 44 Westbourne Terrace