Louisa Nott-Bower
Louisa Adelaide Nott-Bower, born Louisa Yorke was a British archer, born in Wales, who competed at the 1908 Summer Olympics in London, at age 47. She was also active on behalf of women's rights and moral welfare.
Early life
Louisa Adelaide Yorke was born in Troedyraur, Ceredigion, the youngest of the twelve children of James Charles Yorke and Georgiana Augusta Hawkins. Her father died when she was a girl. Her mother was from Somerset.Olympics
Nott-Bower and her husband were amateur archers, affiliated with the Royal Richmond Archery Club. She competed at the 1908 Games in the only archery event open to women, the double National round competition. She was 47 years old that year and took eleventh place in the event with 503 points. The women's archery medalists that year were her British teammates Queenie Newall, Lottie Dod, and Beatrice Hill-Lowe.Women's rights
Nott-Bower was active in the women's suffrage movement and afterward. She attended the International Council of Women meeting in Switzerland in 1920 and headed the English branch of the International Woman's Council. Late in life, she attended an international women's meeting in Washington, D.C., and lectured on women's rights in the United States. She was also in the newspapers for her quotable observations about fashion and cookery, and about Americans as compared to the British.In 1924, Lady Nott-Bower spoke at a conference on moral welfare organised by the National Council of Women. Her talk concerned "the problem of sexual offences against children, and suggested certain new lines of action in the case both of the offender and the victim".