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Memoir of the Life of Elizabeth Fry 2 Volume Set : With Extracts from Her Journal and Letters

Part of the Cambridge Library Collection - British and Irish History, 19th Century series
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Elizabeth Fry (nee Gurney, 1780-1845) was descended from two wealthy Quaker banking families.

Her Quaker faith was crucial to her adult life and she became active in social reform.

Despite having eleven children, she was active in community work, and became a Quaker minister.

Persuaded to visit the women's wing in Newgate Prison in 1813, she was appalled at the conditions in which the prisoners, and their children, lived.

She became a pioneer in seeking to improve the situation for women in prisons and on transportation ships.

The British Ladies' Society for Promoting the Reformation of Female Prisoners was probably the first national British women's society.

Fry's ideas on the humane treatment of prisoners influenced international legal systems.

This memoir, based on her letters and diaries, was edited by two of her daughters, and was first published in 1847.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1108030378 / 9781108030373
Mixed media product
07/07/2011
United Kingdom
1048 pages, 2 Plates, black and white
250 x 324 mm, 1600 grams
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