Up until 1982 women in the UK could be refused service at a bar without a man

0
2601

Up until 1982, there was a centenary British law that stated that women weren’t allowed to be served in pubs on their own. They had to sit on a table and have their drinks ordered by a male companion. This only changed in November 1982, after lawyer Tess Gill and journalist Anna Coote were banned from El Vino pub on Fleet Street, London, for standing with their male colleagues at the bar, rather than sitting at the tables that women were confined to. They took their case to the Court of Appeal, where the ban was lifted and the centenary law scrapped, in a landmark ruling. A massive win for women, who could no longer be refused service in pubs….

Award Winning Independent Citizen Media Needs Your Help. PLEASE SUPPORT US FOR JUST £2 A MONTH https://dorseteye.com/donate/

To report this post you need to login first.
Previous articleMan knocked unconscious during robbery in Poole
Next articleWhenever we hear about Latin America in western media it is almost always lies
Dorset Eye
Dorset Eye is an independent not for profit news website built to empower all people to have a voice. To be sustainable Dorset Eye needs your support. Please help us to deliver independent citizen news... by clicking the link below and contributing. Your support means everything for the future of Dorset Eye. Thank you.