Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Some Account of the Life and Religious Labours of Sarah Grubb

View through CrossRef
Sarah Grubb (1756–90) was the eldest daughter of William Tuke, founder of the York Retreat. The Tukes were early members of The Society of Friends, or Quakers, and in 1779 Sarah became a minister herself. In this capacity she undertook extensive travels in Britain, France, Holland and Germany, both with her husband Robert Grubb and with female companions. Although childless herself, Sarah had strong views on education and she and her husband also found time to establish Suir Island Girls' School at their home in Clonmel, Ireland. Her determined dedication to her vocation, coupled with her frequent travels, quickly exhausted her and she died at the age of only thirty-four. The journals she kept were first published in Dublin in 1792. They are presented woven together with narrative to bridge gaps, and with extensive selections from her letters, to form an account of her life and work.
Cambridge University Press
Title: Some Account of the Life and Religious Labours of Sarah Grubb
Description:
Sarah Grubb (1756–90) was the eldest daughter of William Tuke, founder of the York Retreat.
The Tukes were early members of The Society of Friends, or Quakers, and in 1779 Sarah became a minister herself.
In this capacity she undertook extensive travels in Britain, France, Holland and Germany, both with her husband Robert Grubb and with female companions.
Although childless herself, Sarah had strong views on education and she and her husband also found time to establish Suir Island Girls' School at their home in Clonmel, Ireland.
Her determined dedication to her vocation, coupled with her frequent travels, quickly exhausted her and she died at the age of only thirty-four.
The journals she kept were first published in Dublin in 1792.
They are presented woven together with narrative to bridge gaps, and with extensive selections from her letters, to form an account of her life and work.

Related Results

Patterns and Determinants of Religious Change in the Modern Period
Patterns and Determinants of Religious Change in the Modern Period
Chapter 14 does not design a general theory of religious change, but develops a multiple theoretical perspective including various theoretical elements, which are instrumental for ...
Sharia Tribunals, Rabbinical Courts, and Christian Panels
Sharia Tribunals, Rabbinical Courts, and Christian Panels
This book explores the rise of private arbitration in religious and other values-oriented communities, and it argues that secular societies should use secular legal frameworks to f...
Faith and Fiction
Faith and Fiction
In recent years, there has been an explosion in the market for fiction on religious topics and themes, most notably Dan Brown'sThe Da Vinci Code. The variety of contemporary religi...
Occasional Religious Practice
Occasional Religious Practice
Abstract Occasional religious practice is a way of relating to religion that is characterized by participation in religious practices occasionally rather than routin...
Religious Celebrations
Religious Celebrations
This two-volume work presents a comprehensive survey of all the ways people celebrate religious life around the globe. Religious Celebrationsis an alphabetically organize...
Sarah Bernhardt at Home
Sarah Bernhardt at Home
This chapter analyzes Sarah Bernhardt at Home to show how Sarah Bernhardt, by exploring the different spaces that together represent “the home,” reveals her home's expansive horizo...
Religious People Are Against Scientific Technology
Religious People Are Against Scientific Technology
There is a myth that religious people do not like technology, whether it is the Internet, social media, or medical technologies. In fact, religious people’s concerns with many tech...
Informal Protestantism in China and Local Government Toleration
Informal Protestantism in China and Local Government Toleration
Protestantism is the fastest-growing religion in China. This chapter accounts for why Chinese society has become more religious in the reform period and, most importantly, for the ...

Back to Top