Margaret Skirving Gibb
Margaret Skirving Gibb was a Scottish suffragette and chess player. She was involved in several suffragette activities including slashing a portrait of one of the founders of the Scottish National Portrait Gallery in 1914.
Involvement in the campaign for women's suffrage
In 1911 Gibb refused to partake in the census, along with her mother and the rest of the family. In March 1914 Gibb was found guilty of striking a constable outside Holloway prison with a dog whip and sentenced to two months in Holloway.After Emmeline Pankhurst's re-arrest in 1914, Gibb entered the National Portrait Gallery and slashed the portrait of one of gallery's founders, Thomas Carlyle by John Everett Millais. She was sentenced to six months imprisonment. During the reporting of this arrest, she is referred to as Ann Hunt, which she used as an alias. The portrait only went back on display a century later. Following this attack security for women entering the National Portrait Gallery was tightened
She was one of a number of suffragettes photographed when Scotland Yard commissioned the undercover photography of militant suffragettes from 1913. The images were used to identify suffragettes attempting to enter public buildings such as museums and art galleries, where they might attempt to damage the objects.