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to Jacob
Hancock (1845–1913), a cloth weaver, and his second wife Mary (nee Harding, subsequently Pepler, c1859–1910), also a cloth weaver. Although widely reported to have thirteen siblings, Florence was one of at least 20 children - both parents had previously been widowed, with children from those
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Her official biographies report that
Hancock cared for her younger siblings in her youth, as she was orphaned before turning eighteen. However, while her mother died when she was seventeen, and as the oldest girl the role of keeping the house fell to her and her half-sister Laura (who lived with the
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In addition, members of Jacob's earlier family - William (1866–99), Joseph (1868–1943/9), Albert (1870–1952), Charles (1873–c1940), Martha (1875–78) and Mary (1876–1944) - also lived with the family, as did some of Mary's older children from her marriage to
Frederick Pepler - Thomas (b&d 1878),
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relationships. She was the second child of Jacob and Mary, the others being Walter
Hancock (1890–1914), Wilfrid Hancock (1895–96), Wilfred George Hancock (1896–1962), Lily Mabel Hancock (1898–1979), Ernest Edwin Hancock (1899–1953), and William John Hancock (born and died 1902).
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Rosa
Augusta (1879–80), Rose (1881–?), Laura (1882–1973), Frederick (1884–1915), Florence (1885–86) and Herbert James Vincent (1887–1952). Two of her brothers - Walter and Frederick - were killed on active service in the early years of the
106:. In the 1920s she was chair and secretary for the Gloucester Independent Labour Party. She became a full-time district organiser for the Workers' Union in 1917, and continued as an organiser as the Workers' Union became the
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Hancock married John
Donovan in 1964, a colleague from the TGWU. Although the couple lived in Bristol, where Hancock had spent much of her single life, she died in Chippenham in 1974, while visiting one of her sisters.
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She started work in
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It is reported that her interest in unions and workers rights was sparked by her father, who took her to see an address by
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at the factory, and when the sacking of two other founders led to a strike, she took a prominent role.
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Members of the
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499:Dames Commander of the Order of the British Empire
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35:(25 February 1893 – 14 April 1974) was a
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302:Duffus, Jane (2018).
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326:Trade union offices
127:President of the TUC
79:in a factory making
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62:David Lloyd George
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172:References
104:Clay Cross
47:Chippenham
471:Tom Yates
64:, future
163:Marriage
110:(TGWU).
422:1947/8
257:27 June
232:27 June
153:Remploy
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195:(PDF)
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