Elizabeth Fry
1780 - 1845
by Tony Wells
Elizabeth Fry was a deeply religious woman with great compassion
for those in need. Horrified by conditions in her country's prisons,
she worked tirelessly to improve the lives of the female prisoners
and by her example encouraged other women to broaden their horizons
to lead lives outside of the home.
Born in Norwich, England on May 21, 1780 to wealthy Quaker parents,
Elizabeth Gurney was the fourth of twelve children. As a child
she was painfully shy and withdrawn often suffering ill health.
As she grew up she looked for meaning to her life and became drawn
to a deeper involvement in her religion.
In 1800 she married fellow Quaker Joseph Fry and the first of
her eleven children was born the following year. But Elizabeth
soon found that domesticity did not fulfill her and felt frustrated
in her religious ambition and need to help others. Despite her
many family commitments she became increasing involved with the
Society of Friends (Quakers) and in 1811 was formally acknowledged
by them as a minister.It was in 1813 that she first became involved
with the cause to which she was to devote her life.
Alerted to conditions inside London's notorious Newgate prison
by
visiting Quaker Stephen Grellet, Elizabeth was determined to see
for herself. What she saw there appalled her. Three hundred women
shared two rooms, sleeping on straw or hammocks. Unwashed and
poorly clothed despite the freezing conditions, condemned women
were living alongside young girls awaiting trial. Newborn babies
lay abandoned and crying. Horrified by the sight of two women
stripping a dead baby to clothe another, Elizabeth resolved to
help, and aided by some Quaker friends arranged to clothe the
babies. But with the demands of her growing family, it was to
be a further four years before her prison work
could begin in earnest.
On her next visit to Newgate in 1816, Elizabeth spoke personally
with the prisoners. She was an incongruous figure amid the squalor
of the prison but she was a charismatic speaker winning the trust
of the women as she explained that she would need their co operation
if she were to be able to help them.
In February 1817 she persuaded the skeptical authorities to allow
her to set up a school in the prison for the children. It was
a great success and following on from this she now planned to
introduce a works program to provide useful work, skills and money
for the female prisoners. Receiving little encouragement from
the authorities she turned to members of her own sex for help.
"The Association for the improvement of female prisoners
in Newgate was constituted entirely of women and they set about
raising funds for the works program. The women provided materials
for the prisoners to make clothing and arranged for the sale of
the finished items. The transformation this brought about in the
demeanor
and discipline of the prisoners so impressed the authorities that
in 1818 Elizabeth was invited to give a report to the British
Parliament, the first woman ever to do so. Here she took the opportunity
to recommend that the women prisoners should have female only
attendants.
Now a respected public figure, Elizabeth toured Britain, inspecting
prisons, making recommendations for improvements and organizing
local women's visiting committees to oversee them. Related to
her work with prisoners, Elizabeth also campaigned against the
death penalty for less serious offenses and won important concessions
for females sentenced to transportation to the penal colonies
of Australia.
In 1828 the Fry's banking business collapsed and Joseph Fry was
made bankrupt. For a time Elizabeth's popularity waned; at least
in her own country. In fact she had become sidelined by her success,
as the Prison Act of 1835, which she had done so much to bring
about, had provided for Government inspectors of prisons, making
it difficult for her to gain admission even to Newgate. But by
now, news of her work had spread overseas.
In 1838 she embarked on the first of a series of exhausting tours
of
Europe, traveling throughout France, Belgium, Holland, Germany,
Switzerland and Denmark, expanding her work on Prisons and
campaigning alongside her husband and brother Joseph for the abolition
of slavery, and appealing for religious tolerance. While in Germany
she visited Pastor Fliedner's school of nursing at Kaiserswerth,
a working example of her dream that women could and should be
leading "useful lives outside of the home." On her return
to England in 1840 and fired with a new enthusiasm to improve
conditions in the hospitals, Elizabeth drew up plans for a nurses'
training school in London. A few of these "Fry nurses"
would later work alongside Florence Nightingale, nursing
wounded troops in the Crimean War.
Returning to France in 1843 Elizabeth had the satisfaction of
seeing her reforms in place and her ladies' committees all over
the country visiting women in prison. It was the same story in
Germany and Denmark. But by now Elizabeth's health was failing
and she was forced to cut back on her punishing commitments. Even
now she continued to provide help where it was needed. While convalescing
by the coast she noticed that the local fishermen were unemployed
during the summer months. She held a service for them and organized
a library and reading room where they could enjoy refreshments.
Despite her poor health she continued to travel to attend meetings
and preach but now less and less frequently. She died on October
13, 1845 after a stroke.
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Tony Wells has contributed fillers, letters and photographs to
a variety of publications in his native England, but this is his
first published full-length article. He was inspired to write
about Elizabeth Fry as she was born just a stone's throw from
the office where he toils at his day job as a planning engineer
for a telecommunications company
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