Ethel Venton
Ethel Venton (1891 – February 1988) was an English secularist, Labour Party councillor and animal welfare activist. She was the first female president of the National Secular Society, from 1971–1972, having previously served as a vice-president. BiographyEthel Johnstone was born in the East End of London, and married Laurence (Laurie) Venton (died 1957) in 1915. Labour party activismDuring the 1930s, Venton served as a Labour Party councillor in West Ham and was a member of committees concerned with hospitals and child welfare. Secularist activismVenton joined the National Secular Society and was a friend of Chapman Cohen, serving as a vice-president of the Society for some years. When, in 1971, long-serving president David Tribe unexpectedly decided not to stand again, Venton was elected his successor. She was the only candidate and served as president for only one year before being replaced by Barbara Smoker in 1972. According to her obituary in The Freethinker,[1]
Animal welfare activismVenton was a vegetarian, and a committed opponent of animal cruelty. She was secretary of the National Council for Animal Welfare,[2] organising the annual "Animal Fair" at the old Royal Horticultural Hall (Lindley Hall, London) in that capacity for many years before a fall at the age of 86 led to declining health and the decision to merge the NCAW into the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. Final years and deathAccording to her obituary in The Freethinker, March 1988:[1]
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