Caroline (Kitty) was the sixth child of 12 siblings, 11 of whom survived infancy,[4] and one of the seven daughters of Horatio Nelson Kenney (1849–1912) and Anne Wood (1852–1905). Her sisters included Sarah (Nell), Ann (Annie), Jessica (Jessie), Alice and Jane (Jennie). Annie and Jessie took leading roles in the Women's Social and Political Union. Kitty and Jennie had been trained by Maria Montessori. They were employed; they ran a recovery centre for suffragettes in Kensington at a gothic pile known as Tower Cressy. The suffragettes needed to convalesce after they had been imprisoned and force-fed.[5]
Suffragette's Rest
In August 1909 Kitty was first invited to Eagle House, home of the Blathwayts and also known as the Suffragette's Rest, to join her two sisters.[3]
During the summer of 1910, Kitty and her sister Jennie, who were both teachers, joined Annie at Eagle House to recuperate from illness. Both had surgery and further nursing care from the Blathwayts and remained at Batheaston for some months.[6]
In 1916 the Lenox School, a primary school to prepare girls to enter the Finch School, was founded in New York.[7] The Lenox School employed Kitty and Jennie Kenney as joint heads until they retired in 1929.[5]
Kitty moved to Philadelphia and then finally to California. She died in 1952.[5]
^The Militant Suffrage Movement : Citizenship and Resistance in Britain, by Laura E. Nym Mayhall, Assistant Professor of History, Catholic University of America
^Woodhead, Geoffrey (2003). The Kenney family of Springhead. The Working Class Movement Library, Salford.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)