The Suffrage Oak is a Hungarian oak tree in Kelvingrove Park in Glasgow, planted in 1918 by a number of female suffrage organisations to commemorate the passing on the Representation of the People Act in 1918. A plaque was added in 1995 by the Women's Committee of Glasgow City Council on International Women's Day. It was named Scotland's Tree of the Year in 2015 after being nominated by the Glasgow Women's Library.
The Suffrage Oak in 2019 following its damage from Storm Ophelia
The Suffrage Oak in Kelvingrove Park, Glasgow
The tree with its Scotland's Tree of the Year 2015 sign.
With a Suffragette tricolour band.
Kelvingrove Park is a public park located on the River Kelvin in the West End of the city of Glasgow, Scotland, containing the Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum.
The River Kelvin passing through the park
The Stewart Memorial Fountain [de], celebrating the establishment of the Loch Katrine and Milngavie waterworks
Monument to Field Marshal The 1st Earl Roberts, the Anglo-Irish military commander, at Kelvingrove Park
Vandalised bandstand in 2007, before its 2013 restoration.