Skip to main content
  • Home
  • Articles arrow_drop_down
  • Submissions arrow_drop_down
  • Editorial Policies arrow_drop_down
  • About arrow_drop_down
  • Login
  • Register
  • Home
  • Articles arrow_drop_down
  • Submissions arrow_drop_down
  • Editorial Policies arrow_drop_down
  • About arrow_drop_down
  • Login
  • Register
menu
  • Articles
  • Issues
  • Author Guidelines
  • Submit an Article
  • Journal Policies
  • Publisher Policies
  • About
  • Editorial Team
  • Contact
  • Become a Reviewer
  • Articles
  • Issues
  • Author Guidelines
  • Submit an Article
  • Journal Policies
  • Publisher Policies
  • About
  • Editorial Team
  • Contact
  • Become a Reviewer
Fellowship, Service and the ‘Spirit of Adventure’: The Religious Society of Friends and the Outdoors Movement in Britain, C. 1900–1950
Research Article
Fellowship, Service and the ‘Spirit of Adventure’: The Religious Society of Friends and the Outdoors Movement in Britain, C. 1900–1950
Research Article
Fellowship, Service and the ‘Spirit of Adventure’: The Religious Society of Friends and the Outdoors Movement in Britain, C. 1900–1950

Abstract

This article considers the involvement of members of the Religious Society of Friends in various manifestations of the outdoors movement in early twentieth-century Britain. It examines the Edwardian ‘Quaker tramps’ and their role in the ‘Quaker renaissance’, and goes on to consider the influence of Friends in organisations such as the Holiday Fellowship and the Youth Hostels Association, as well as interwar Quaker mountaineers. It argues that, while the outdoor activities of the Quaker renaissance were essentially internal to the Religious Society of Friends, a wider conception of social service took Quakers beyond the boundaries of the Society in the interwar period, resulting in a more profound influence on the outdoors movement. These activities of Friends were associated with the promotion of the ‘social gospel’, and represented a significant strand of Quaker service in the first half of the twentieth century.

Keywords

outdoors movement, Quakers, youth hostels, mountaineering, tramps

How to Cite

Freeman, M., (2009) “Fellowship, Service and the ‘Spirit of Adventure’: The Religious Society of Friends and the Outdoors Movement in Britain, C. 1900–1950”, Quaker Studies 14(1), 72–92. doi: https://doi.org/10.3828/quaker.14.1.72

Downloads

Download XML
Download PDF

67

Views

101

Downloads

Share

𝕏

Authors

Mark Freeman (University of Glasgow, Scotland)

Downloads

  • Download XML
  • Download PDF

Issue

  • Volume 14 • Issue 1 • 2010

Publication details

Pages 72–92
Published on 2009-03-01

Licence

Identifiers

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.3828/quaker.14.1.72

Peer Review

This article has been peer reviewed.

File Checksums (MD5)

  • XML: 0c9ff4a4d7f9d4ef76f6e5ecd6c67d52
  • PDF: 0b9ddee107bf1a93119621b496b67a9e

Table of Contents

Non Specialist Summary

This article has no summary

Close

| ISSN: 2397-1770 | Published by Open Library of Humanities | Privacy Policy |