Search This Blog

Three Products With Great Woodworking Plans

There are heaps of various items with extraordinary carpentry anticipates the Internet today and it very well may be extremely difficult to ...

Powered by Blogger.

Quaker Alphabet Blog 2015 - B for William Charles Braithwaite

SHARE:

W.C. Braithwaite William Charles Braithwaite was born in Camden, London on 23 December 1862, eighth of the nine children of Joseph Bevan Bra...

W.C. Braithwaite
William Charles Braithwaite was born in Camden, London on 23 December 1862, eighth of the nine children of Joseph Bevan Braithwaite and Martha Gillett. He was a pretty child, 'very fair, with a captivating smile, his golden hair arranged in one long curl on the top of his head', and was doted on by his older sisters. He showed an early love of books and learned to read when he was three.

William was brought up in a close, contented Quaker family but had little contact with others of his own age. Both his parents travelled in the ministry and were often away from home, but their absences were accepted as normal. William grew particularly close to his father with whom he shared a love of study.

William was educated at home until he was eleven when he was sent away to Quaker schools, first in Weston-super-Mare and then in Scarboroough. Leaving school at seventeen, William went to University College London, graduating in 1881. He was active in sport but also in the Bunhill Adult School and the Friends Christian Fellowship Union.

J.B. Braithwate, William's father
William next turned his attention to the law, studying mostly at home or in his father's chambers. After qualifying in 1887 William lived at home and worked for ten years with his father in his conveyancing practice at Lincoln's Inn, a happy arrangement for them both. William explored London, studied, wrote poetry and did peace work with his uncle and neighbour, George Gillett.

His friend George Newman, who met him at this time, says he was 'a reserved, imperturbable man, of quiet but exceptional power...He never failed you. He was circumspect, seeing all sides and sympathizing with many...possessing a delightful sense of humour and a well-developed faculty of imagination.'

William's life changed in 1896 when he became engaged to Janet Morland and accepted the offer of a partnership in Gillett's Bank in Banbury, Oxfordshire. He had to give up the legal profession and move away from home, but banking gave him a more settled income and more leisure for study and for his work with the Society of Friends.

Banbury Quaker Meeting House in 1910s
He settled happily in Banbury with Janet and the couple had four children, three boys and a girl. There was a shift in attitude towards family life from one generation to another. William's father had encouraged his children to join him in his study, but had expected them to do so in absolute quiet. In contrast it was a source of wonder to William's friends how he could calmly collate an ancient manuscript or prepare an Adult School lesson while his small children played around the room, asking questions and demanding his help in their games.

As well as his other interests William became involved in public life in Banbury. He was a magistrate from 1906 until his death and chairman of the Education Committee for many years. He was also very involved with the local Quaker school, Sibford.

John Wilhelm Rowntree
William was much influenced by his friendship with John Wilhelm Rowntree who he had met at Yearly Meeting 1893. They shared a belief in the need for education for Friends and for strengthening the Society and developing its ministry. One of John Wilhelm's projects was the writing of a standard history of Quakerism and he had begun collecting thousands of books and pamphlets for the necessary research when he died suddenly and unexpectedly in 1905. William took up the project and worked on it in his leisure time for the next fourteen years. He sometimes became so absorbed in the work 'that he seemed to be living in the seventeenth century, far removed from the events that were passing around him.' The Beginnings of Quakerism and The Second Period of Quakerism were completed in 1919 and have not yet been surpassed.

At the beginning of 1922 several of William's long-term projects were nearing completion. The histories had been finished eighteen months earlier, the new Yearly Meeting Book of Discipline, which William was much concerned with compiling, had been agreed and Gilletts Bank had been amalgamated with Barclays after negotiations in which William had taken a major role.

In the last week of January William ministered at Banbury Meeting, took a leading part in a conference on Ministry in Oxford, began a series of Adult School evening talks and worked in the bank. On Friday he felt unwell but went to London by the early train to attend an educational meeting. He became much worse and only just managed to get to Paddington and onto the train home. He arrived in Banbury in a state of collapse, sank into a diabetic coma and died the next day, 28 January 1922, aged fifty nine.


COMMENTS

INNER POST ADS 2

Thanks for reading OUR Post! DID YOU ENJOY THIS ARTICLE? Subscribe to OUR Blog and you'll never miss a single post.

Name

18th century,1,Aberdeen,1,Aberystwyth,1,Abiah Darby,3,abolition,1,Abraham Darby,1,Abraham Morrice,1,acceptance,1,Ackworth School,3,action,1,Adult schools,3,adultery,1,advices and queries,10,affliction,1,Africa,1,age,1,alcohol,1,Alexander Drummon,1,Alexander Kilham,1,Alfred Neave Brayshaw,1,Alfred Waterhouse,1,Alice Hayes,2,Alison Uttley,1,alphabet,3,Amelia Opie,2,America,3,Amersham,1,Andrew Sowle,1,Ann Fothergill,1,Ann Jenkins,1,Ann Wilson,1,Anna Braithwaite,1,Anna Elizabeth Baker,1,Anna Maria Fox,1,Anna Rebecca Gilpin Whiting,1,Anne Wilson,1,Anner Mills,1,Annie Clark,2,Annual Monitor,2,Anti-slavery,2,anxiety,2,Arch Street meeting,1,architect,2,architecture,2,Area Meeting,3,Arnold Norlind,1,art,3,Arthur Eddington,1,attenders,1,Australia YM,1,authority,1,autobiography,1,award,1,badges,1,balance,1,Ballitore,1,Banbury,1,banking,1,baptism,1,Barbados,3,Barclay Fox,1,Barclays Bank,1,baskets,1,Bath,4,Beaconites,1,Beatrice Saxon Snell,1,Beatrix Potter,1,beaver hat,1,beginnings,1,Ben Pink Dandelion,1,Benjamin Franklin,2,Benjamin Lamb,1,Benjamin Lay,1,Benjamin Seebohm,1,Berne,1,Bevan family,1,Bible Society,1,Bingley,1,biography,3,Birmingham,4,birthday; old age,1,birthright friends,2,Blake,1,blogging,17,blogs,8,blogstuff,2,Book of Miracles,1,Bootham,1,botany,1,Bradford,4,Bradford Cemetery Company,1,Bridlington,1,Bridport,1,Brigflatts,1,Bristol,4,Bristol Monthly Meeting,1,Britain Yearly Meeting,20,Britain YM,1,British,1,Bryan Lancaster,1,Bull and Mouth,1,Bunhill Fields,1,burial grounds,1,Burlington,1,calendar,1,campaigning,1,canals,1,Canterbury,1,Caroline Fox,1,cartoons,1,Castle Donnington,1,Catherine Payton Phillips,9,Catholic Worker movement,1,cats,1,challenge,1,change,3,Charles Gilpin,1,Charney Bassett,1,Charney Manor,2,Cheltenham,1,Chesterfield's act,1,Chicago,1,Child Education,1,Children,1,Christian,1,Christian Faith and Practice,1,Christiana Hird Hustler. Joseph Wood,1,Christine Davis,1,Christmas,1,Christmas tree,1,church government,1,Church of England,1,Cicely Mary Barker,1,civility,1,clerkship,2,Cleveland,1,Clonmel,2,clothes,1,Coalbrookdale,5,Colchester,1,colour,1,Colthouse,1,Come to Good,1,comfort,1,comfortable,1,commitment,2,committees,2,commonplace books,1,community,6,computers,1,convergence,2,convergent Friends,2,conversion,1,conviction,1,convincement,6,Cork,1,Cornwall,2,corporate discipline,1,Countersett Meeting House,1,craft,3,Craig Barnett,1,creativity; blogs,1,creativity; shadow,1,cremation,1,criminal conversation. James Jenkins,1,criticism,1,D Elton Trueblood,1,daughter,1,David Boulton,1,David Milner,1,dear,1,death,2,Deborah Darby,1,deist,1,depression,1,despair,1,dialogue,1,disability,1,discernment,1,discipline,3,disgrace,1,disownment,1,diversity,2,doctors,1,Donna MacDaniel,1,Dorothy Day,1,dowsing,1,Dr Fothergill,1,Dublin,1,Durham,2,duty,1,Edinburgh,2,editor,2,education,3,Edward Burrough,1,Edward Coxere,1,Edward H Milligan,1,Einstein,1,Elfrida Vipont,1,Elias Hicks,1,Elizabeth Bradford,1,Elizabeth Fry,6,Elizabeth Hoyland,1,Elizabeth Lamb,1,Elizabeth Rawlinson,1,Elizabeth Shackleton. smallpox. medicine,1,Ellis Hookes,1,embroidery,1,Emilia Fogelklou Norlind,1,encouragement,2,ending,1,environment,1,epistles,1,equality,4,essay competition,1,Esther Seebohm,1,Esther Tuke,3,evangelical,1,Evangelical Friends,1,Exeter,1,experienced friend,2,extinction,1,F Morley Fletcher,1,Facebook,8,failure,3,Falmouth,1,family,7,family history,4,Fanny Henshaw,1,Farfield,1,fashion,1,father,1,felt; craft; creativity; workshop,1,feminism,1,finger looms,1,flower fairies,1,Folkestone,1,France,1,Frances Owen,1,Francis Howgill,1,Frederick Denison Maurice,1,Freedom Friends Church,1,Friends,1,Friends Foreign Mission Association,1,Friends General Conference,1,Friends Historical Society,1,Friends House,1,Friends House Library,4,Friends Quarterly,1,friendship,5,Fritz Eichenberg,1,gambling,1,Gentleman's Magazine,1,George Dillwyn,1,George Drummond,1,George Fox,12,George III,1,George Keith,2,George Lloyd Hodgkin,1,George Newman,1,Gerard Manley Hopkins,1,Gillett's Bank,1,glaucoma,1,Grace Hall Chamber,6,Gracechurch Street,1,Gravestones,2,Grayrigg,1,grocer,1,guidance,1,Gulielma Springett Penn,1,Hannah Cathrall,1,Hannah Darby,1,Hannah Kilham,1,Hannah Whitall Smith,1,happiness,1,Harold Moore,1,Havelock North,1,health,1,hebdomadally,1,help,2,Henry J Cadbury,1,Henry Stanley Newman,1,Hicksites,1,High Flatts,1,Hilda Clark,1,history,1,Holland,1,home,1,Hope,1,house,1,Hubert Lidbetter,1,Image,1,inspiration,1,International Womens Day,1,interruption,1,intervisitation,1,Inward Guide,2,Inward Light,3,Inward Teacher,4,Ireland,5,
ltr
item
Woodworking Nutz : Quaker Alphabet Blog 2015 - B for William Charles Braithwaite
Quaker Alphabet Blog 2015 - B for William Charles Braithwaite
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgjEda9D3lKJSx-J-RzFkPddlY-Py0kcgdNTcP8GHWlw63mgfi4ej2xIvZUrPOiWsRZCxqkwpuMRM5gGBx5r_cC5AmY1ZVpXKz_MnmHJABOXaN1nlBtQB-5il7GfjnZk0V6zZm4jgmO-4g/s1600/Q+-+Quaker+Bishop+WC+Braithwaite+1920.jpg
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgjEda9D3lKJSx-J-RzFkPddlY-Py0kcgdNTcP8GHWlw63mgfi4ej2xIvZUrPOiWsRZCxqkwpuMRM5gGBx5r_cC5AmY1ZVpXKz_MnmHJABOXaN1nlBtQB-5il7GfjnZk0V6zZm4jgmO-4g/s72-c/Q+-+Quaker+Bishop+WC+Braithwaite+1920.jpg
Woodworking Nutz
https://steppingstonse78.blogspot.com/2015/01/quaker-alphabet-blog-2015-b-for-william.html
https://steppingstonse78.blogspot.com/
http://steppingstonse78.blogspot.com/
http://steppingstonse78.blogspot.com/2015/01/quaker-alphabet-blog-2015-b-for-william.html
true
6015725076022654814
UTF-8
Loaded All Posts Not found any posts VIEW ALL Readmore Reply Cancel reply Delete By Home PAGES POSTS View All RECOMMENDED FOR YOU LABEL ARCHIVE SEARCH ALL POSTS Not found any post match with your request Back Home Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat January February March April May June July August September October November December Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec just now 1 minute ago $$1$$ minutes ago 1 hour ago $$1$$ hours ago Yesterday $$1$$ days ago $$1$$ weeks ago more than 5 weeks ago Followers Follow THIS CONTENT IS PREMIUM Please share to unlock Copy All Code Select All Code All codes were copied to your clipboard Can not copy the codes / texts, please press [CTRL]+[C] (or CMD+C with Mac) to copy