Joan Mary Fry

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Joan Mary Fry (27 July 1862 25 November 1955) was an English Quaker campaigner for peace and social reform.

Joan Fry was born on 27 July 1862 in London, into a wealthy family of Quakers. She was the daughter of a judge, Sir Edward Fry and his wife, Mariabella Hodgkin (1833 1930), and sister of art critic Roger Fry who was a member of the avant-garde Bloomsbury Group, of the prison reformer Margery Fry, of the Quaker activist and writer Ruth Fry, of the poet and bryologist Agnes Fry.[1]

Work

During the First World War she served as a Quaker Prison Chaplain and helped conscientious objectors to military service at their tribunals and in prison.

In 1919 she and other Friends travelled to the defeated Germany and organised food distribution networks as famine relief there. Seven years later, Fry returned to the United Kingdom in 1926 where she further worked to relieve poverty and unemployment.

She gave the 1910 Swarthmore Lecture, entitled The Communion of Life to the Quakers' "London Yearly Meeting".

Personal life

When her sister-in-law Helen Coombe was placed permanently in a mental hospital, she helped her brother Roger with bringing up their children.

She was a committed vegetarian.[2]

Death

Fry died in London on 25 November 1955.

Recognition

The Royal Mail's "Britons of Distinction" postage stamps - issued on 23 February 2012 - celebrated ten people from the world of science and technology, architecture, politics and the arts. One of them features Joan Mary Fry.[3]

Sources

  • Oxford Dictionary of National Biography article by Sybil Oldfield, 'Fry, Joan Mary (1862–1955)’, Oxford University Press, 2004 . Retrieved 27 Dec 2006.

Joan Mary Fry's publications

Further reading

References

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