YMCA

Connections

Connections Sort ascending Author name Excerpt
Textual Production Evelyn Glover
During the war, the YMCA opened several huts and night hostels in London for soldiers who had recently returned from overseas. The performance was part of a series of musical and dramatic shows planned to...
politics Evelyn Glover
Although so little is known about EG 's life, her early plays show that she was a committed suffragist. During the First World War, she showed her support for the war effort by having plays...
Performance of text Evelyn Glover
EG 's one-act play A Bit of Blighty was performed for an audience of soldiers staying at the YMCA 's Shakespeare Hut on Keppel Street in London.
Occupation Una Marson
A year later she moved on to a similar position with the YMCA . During this time she was involved in amateur drama. One of her projects was to raise the funds to stage a...
Occupation Barbara Pym
Back at her parents' home in Oswestry, BP volunteered at a YMCA soldiers' camp and in a nearby first-aid camp. She also helped her mother care for evacuee children.
Allen, Orphia Jane. Barbara Pym: Writing a Life. Scarecrow Press.
5
Occupation Annie S. Swan
She was able to put her mourning behind her when her husband was elected Mayor of Hertford, and a great deal of support fell to her lot, with some social duties of her own.
Swan, Annie S. My Life. Ivor Nicholson and Watson.
126ff
Family and Intimate relationships Catherine Carswell
CC 's father, George Gray Macfarlane , had worked as a young man in the Caribbean and the USA. He exported textiles to the West Indies and was president and a founder of the YMCA
Family and Intimate relationships Ivy Compton-Burnett
Five years after Ivy came home from college, her mother's death left her, her brother Noel, and Martyn Mowll as joint trustees and guardians of her four younger sisters: Vera , Judy , Topsy ...

Timeline

6 June 1844: The Young Men's Christian Association (YMCA)...

Building item

6 June 1844

The Young Men's Christian Association (YMCA) was founded by George Williams at a meeting in London.

Texts

No bibliographical results available.