Queen’s Park Book Festival

June 30th, 12.30pm. Queen’s Park, London, NW6 ‘Bad Girls and Brave Women: Reflections of a Centenary’ – I joined Shami Chakrabati, Rachel Holmes and Melissa Benn to discuss the history of women in Britain, from exceptional political pioneers to non-conformist rebels to the invisible women who don’t usually make it into the history books… Continue reading

Women Pulverise Records

Manchester Metropolitan University have released videos of their Sports and Leisure Symposium held on the Cheshire campus in February 2016, including my talk on ‘Pulverising Records: Forgotten Women Champions and the Victorian Art of Swimming the Thames.’ The videos can be found on Playing Pasts, the online magazine for Sports and Leisure History. Watch the… Continue reading

American students study Bad Girls

As from this autumn, students at Endicott College in the USA will be studying Bad Girls as part of their Popular Culture course. The course is taught by Professor Nancy Lee-Jones and I’m thrilled that she has chosen to teach the book. The college, situated near Boston, was founded in 1939 to ‘educate women for… Continue reading

Swimming, Books & Courageous Women

The new books magazine Strong Words has run an interview on the background to Daisy Belle: Swimming Champion of the World. Questions covered a passion for swimming and what inspired my other swimming books. ‘(She) has the uncanny knack of discovering fascinating stories that have often, up until she finds them, been somewhat overlooked.’  … Continue reading

Holloway Prison Exhibition

Islington Museum will be putting on an exhibition about Holloway Prison, with a focus on ‘the voices which remain unknown and unrecorded.’ This week I joined some of the volunteers to discuss the chronology of Holloway Prison and the themes that come up over and over again during its 164-year history. The museum has a… Continue reading

Islington History Society reviews Bad Girls

‘This history of Holloway Prison examines what sort of women prisoners were held there, what crimes they had committed, and how they were treated. Caitlin Davies argues that those who set up and run the justice system have historically been men – and men have always had a problem with deviant women …. A thoughtful… Continue reading

Almeida Theatre & Bad Girls

  June 12th Last night was press night at the Almeida Theatre in Islington, London, for a new production of Machinal, the 1928 play written by American journalist and playwright Sophie Treadwell. It was inspired by the case of Ruth Snyder, executed by electric chair that same year, after she’d been found guilty of killing… Continue reading

Suffragette Banners

Following a talk about the suffragettes and Holloway Prison at HMP Downview in Surrey earlier this year, inmates produced stunning banners as part of Historic England’s HerStories campaign, along with artist Lucy Orta and the London College of Fashion. The banners were used during Processions on June 10th, a mass art work celebrating 100 years… Continue reading

Who Do You Think You Are reviews Bad Girls

‘A highly readable history…As the group Reclaim Holloway campaigns for the (prison) site to include a Women’s Building to help the community, Davies provides a sympathetic feminist reading of female incarceration by men who could not control them’ – Julie Peakman, Who Do You Think You Are Magazine Continue reading

10 Wonderful Books About Swimming

Strong Words, a new magazine about books, has listed ’10 wonderful books about swimming’, both fiction and non-fiction. They include the brilliant Liquid Assets by Janet Smith, which inspired my book Taking the Waters: a swim around Hampstead Heath – described by Strong Words as ‘an intriguing story brilliantly told.’ Also on the list is… Continue reading

Sudanese Women’s Union

I’m thrilled that a copy of Bad Girls has been sent to the president of The Sudanese Women’s Union (SWU), Hanan Babiker. The SWU was co founded by a pioneer of women’s rights and anti colonialism, Fatima Ahmed Ibrahim. She was the first woman in Africa to be elected MP, in May 1965. The SWU… Continue reading

Jewish Chronicle extract

  The Jewish Chronicle has run an extract from Bad Girls, from one of the chapters about Holloway Prison during World War Two. This was the time when 3600 Jewish refugees were jailed, on the way to internment on the Isle of Man. Their ‘crime’ was to be an ‘enemy alien’. Continue reading

Washington Post Summer Reading

  ‘What your favorite authors are reading this summer’ – The Washington Post asked 11 writers what books they will be reading this summer. Ruth Ware, the bestselling psychological crime thriller author, chose Bad Girls. Continue reading

Bad Girls and the Chalk Garden

Actor Amanda Root has been reading Bad Girls to help her understand Miss Madrigal – the character she plays in The Chalk Garden, the classic 1955 play by Enid Bagnold, which opens this week at The Chichester Festival Theatre. In the play, Miss Madrigal arrives at a Sussex manor to take up a post as… Continue reading

Double Standards of Justice

One of the joys of writing a book is hearing readers’ reactions, especially when they relate their personal or professional lives to stories in the book. Here former probation officer Mike Guilfoyle tells the Centre for Crime and Justice Studies about a woman called ‘Elsha’. Read more Continue reading

Holloway and the Victorian Supersleuth

  Author Angela Buckley – the Victorian Supersleuth – has often found her criminal investigations lead her to Holloway Prison, particularly when she researched the life of Amelia Dyer, a Victorian baby farmer. Read more Continue reading

Camden New Journal reviews Bad Girls

‘Bad Girls offers many great tales of those who called the now-closed Holloway prison their home…and Caitlin Davies delves into every conceivable story.For those living in the shadow of Islington’s Holloway prison the imagination has run wild for years, concocting images of terrible conditions. Caitlin offers a comprehensive and much-needed answer. The study of Britain’s… Continue reading

Hexham Book Festival

Caitlin joined Dr Helen Pankhurst to discuss the history of women’s rights at the Hexham Book Festival on May 5th. Helen’s new book, Deeds not Words, outlines a century of fighting for equality. It was brilliant to share the stage with Helen and also a little surreal, seeing as Bad Girls discusses the experiences of… Continue reading

Born in Holloway

An audience member who attended the Holloway Prison talk at Old St Pancras Church on April 30th brought along her father’s birth certificate. He was born at Holloway Prison in 1951. Now she is trying to find out more about her grandmother. Continue reading

Old St Pancras talk

                  Caitlin gave an illustrated talk on the history of Holloway Prison and the role of the chaplain, as part of the Parish of Old St Pancras’ Spring History Lecture Series on April 30th. The talk was introduced by Fr James.            … Continue reading

Badass Women’s Hour

I joined ‘Inspirational Conversations’ on talkRADIO’s award winning Badass Women’s Hour on May 12th, to talk about the inmates and staff of Holloway Prison. Listen here   Continue reading

Monocle 24 interview

I chatted about Bad Girls, the history of Holloway Prison and what will happen to the prison site now, with Georgina Godwin on The Weekend Edition, Monocle 24 Radio. Continue reading

Bath Spa University talk

June 9th. 4.10pm. Bath Spa University Caitlin gave a talk at the end of term summer event for students from the MA in Creative Writing at Bath Spa University. Classes take place at Corsham Court, a former royal manor where peacocks roam the grounds. She spoke about how to earn a living as a writer,… Continue reading

West Hampstead Library talk

The audience at the Bad Girls talk at West Hampstead library on May 22nd shared many of their own experiences of Holloway. One man, a former solicitor, recalled a horrific visit to Holloway in the 1960s when he was working with a 16-year-old client, while the writer Anna Meryt spoke of her time teaching in… Continue reading

Conway Hall talk

Caitlin gave an illustrated talk on ‘The Hollowayettes: the Suffragettes at Holloway Prison’ as part of Conway Hall’s Thinking on Sunday series. Conway Hall, in the Holborn area of London, has a long tradition of celebrating free speech and hosting radical speakers including suffragettes. It is also home to the library of the Ethical Society.… Continue reading

Interview on the Yasmeen Khan Show

I talked about Bad Girls and the 164-year old history of Holloway Prison with Yasmeen Khan on talkRADIO. Questions ranged from ‘what is the point of prison?’ to what should be done with the derelict Holloway Prison site. Listen here Continue reading

Haunt London talk

Haunt London, which promotes London history and folklore, organised a sell out event at the Backyard Comedy Club in East London on April 17th. Caitlin spoke about ‘The Hollowayettes: the Suffragettes at Holloway Prison’, while the brilliant Sarah Jackson revealed the stories of the East London Suffragettes. Sarah co-founded the East End Women’s Museum, which… Continue reading

Islington History Society feature

The Spring issue of the Journal of the Islington Archaeology & History Society featured Holloway Prison on its cover, as well as running an extract from Bad Girls. The journal also covered the recently re named Cat and Mouse Library next to Holloway Prison (the new name is a reference to the Temporary Discharge for… Continue reading

History Revealed reviews Bad Girls

‘Women who broke the law throughout much of British history often also broke another taboo: what was expected of their gender. Caitlin Davies’ book explores HMP Holloway, the London lockup where many of these female felons were incarcerated. It’s fascinating both for its portrait of larger-than-life women and the ways in which they were regarded… Continue reading

The Telegraph reviews Bad Girls

‘Caitlin Davies’ revealing account of the jail’s 164-year history offers overwhelming evidence for her thesis, that ‘ever since Holloway opened, women have been held up to different standards: were they good wives and mothers, did they know their place?’..(She) makes a good case for the prison’s role as ‘a graduating university for militants’…(and) digs into… Continue reading