Background
Marie Gray was born in Kennington, London, the daughter of Charles and Eliza Gray from Tunbridge Wells.
Marie Gray was born in Kennington, London, the daughter of Charles and Eliza Gray from Tunbridge Wells.
George Gray was a successful businessman who became rich through importing fruit and producing confectionery. In 1881 Marie Gray married Charles Corbett, a barrister. Corbett was later elected Liberal Member of Parliament for East Grinstead sitting from 1906 until January 1910.
Their daughters were Dame Margery Corbett Ashby, an international feminist campaigner and Liberal Parliamentary candidate, and Cicely Corbett Fisher, a suffragist and workers" rights activist.
Charles Corbett strongly supported votes for women. He was a partisan in Parliament of the National Union of Women"s Suffrage Societies and a vigorous campaigner outside.
In 1913 he helped to form the East Grinstead branch of the Men"s League for Women"s Suffrage. The Corbett family’s opinions and campaigning on the question of votes for women often attracted hostility in the traditionally conservative area of East Grinstead.
Marie and her two feminist daughters often made public speeches on the subject of women"s rights in East Grinstead High Street.
East Grinstead was traditionally a safe Conservative seat and the crowds were usually very hostile. A survey carried out in 1911 suggested that less than 20% of the women in East Grinstead supported women having the vote in parliamentary elections. This may have been one factor in Charles Corbett’s loss of his seat in the January 1910 general election where the Tory candidate was said to have inflicted a crushing defeat.
In 1908 Mrs Corbett became honorary secretary of the Forward Suffrage Movement Within the Women's Liberal Federation, a group founded by Eva McLaren and Frances Heron Maxwell to concentrate the suffrage efforts of Liberal women inside the Liberal Party and through the WLF. As a delegate of this group she attended a congress in Budapest in 1913 organised by the International Women's Suffrage Alliance.
Mrs Corbett championed poor relief. As part of her work she saw to it that all children were removed from the Workhouse and placed with foster parents.
She was a member of the Burgess Hill branch from 1905-1909 and was sometime President of the Danehill and East Grinstead branch. She was a member of the Uckfield Board of guardians for 36 years, one of the first women poor law guardians and was also recorded as being the first woman to serve as a Rural district councillor in Uckfield.