Leading British suffragist campaigner Millicent Fawcett is set to become the first woman to be honoured with a statue in the iconic Parliament Square here, media reports said today.
A bronze casting of Fawcett will be unveiled next year to coincide with the centenary of women winning the right to vote.
The Mayor of London Sadiq Khan said the statue was "long overdue".
More From This Section
Fawcett founded the National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies in 1897, aged 50.
The organisation used peaceful tactics to campaign, including non-violent demonstrations, petitions and the lobbying of MPs.
It went on to lead to the suffragette movement emerging - the more radical and militant group led by Emmeline Pankhurst.
The statue will portray Fawcett holding a placard reading "courage calls to courage everywhere" - taken from a speech she gave after the death in 1913 of campaigner Emily Wilding Davidson at the Epsom Derby.
The new statue will be designed by Turner Prize-winning artist Gillian Wearing and will be paid for using the five million pounds fund announced in this year's spring Budget to mark next year's centenary of the first British women to get the vote.
Millicent died in 1929, a year after women were granted the vote on equal terms to men.
In 2015, the statue of Mahatma Gandhi was unveiled at the Parliament Square. The statues of iconic leaders like anti- apartheid icon Nelson Mandela and former US president Abraham Lincoln are also in the square.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content