Emily Jane Harding Andrews (1850-1940) was a British artist, illustrator and suffragette. Born in Bristol, England in 1850, she studied at Clifton Ladies' College and the Bristol School of Art, and specialized in miniatures in her early career. By the mid-1880s Harding had changed her focus to illustration, often working on children's books. She married fellow artist Edward William Andrews in 1879, but continued to use her maiden name for her work. Harding became involved with the Artists' Suffrage League, designing posters for the cause, and she also co-signed a letter to the editor of The Guardian in 1908, decrying the use of physical violence against activists, alongside fellow artist and suffragist Mary Sargant Florence. Her husband dieEmily Jane Harding Andrews (1850-1940) was a British artist, illustrator and suffragette. Born in Bristol, England in 1850, she studied at Clifton Ladies' College and the Bristol School of Art, and specialized in miniatures in her early career. By the mid-1880s Harding had changed her focus to illustration, often working on children's books. She married fellow artist Edward William Andrews in 1879, but continued to use her maiden name for her work. Harding became involved with the Artists' Suffrage League, designing posters for the cause, and she also co-signed a letter to the editor of The Guardian in 1908, decrying the use of physical violence against activists, alongside fellow artist and suffragist Mary Sargant Florence. Her husband died in 1915, and she moved to Australia thereafter, dying there in 1940.