Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Joshua Rowntree

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Preceded by
  
Sir George Sitwell

Name
  
Joshua Rowntree

Preceded by
  
John Frank

Role
  
Member of Parliament


Party
  
Liberal Party

Religion
  
Quakers

Succeeded by
  
George Sitwell

Died
  
February 10, 1915, Scalby, North Yorkshire, United Kingdom

Books
  
The Imperial Drug Trade: A Re-statement of the Opium Question, in the Light of Recent Evidence and New Developments in the East

Political party
  
Gladstonian liberal

Joshua Rowntree (6 April 1844 – 10 February 1915) was elected Member of Parliament (MP) for Scarborough in 1886 and served, as a Gladstonian Liberal, until 1892, when he was succeeded by the Conservative, Sir George Reresby Sitwell, whom he had defeated in 1886.

Contents

Early life

He was educated at Bootham School, York.

Quakers

He was an active Quaker. After he left Parliament, in 1892, he 'gave himself with whole heart and mind to the modern interpretation of Quakerism'. He took a quiet part in enabling British Friends to come to terms with scientific discoveries and biblical criticism and with shaking off outdated customs—notably through the Manchester conference (1895), Scarborough summer school (1897), and the establishment in 1903 of a study centre at Woodbrooke, Birmingham. He was editor of The Friend from 1872 to 1875.

He gave the Swarthmore Lecture in 1913 under the title Social Service - its place in the Society of Friends.

Joshua Rowntree's publications

  • Opium habit in the East: A study of the evidence given to the Royal Commission on Opium, 1893–94. P. S. King & Son: Westminster, 1895.
  • Applied Christianity and War. An address. [c. 1904.]
  • The imperial drug trade. Methuen, First edition, 1905, Second edition, 1906
  • Social Service, its place in the Society of Friends. (Series: Swarthmore Lectures) Headley Bros.: London, 1913.
  • References

    Joshua Rowntree Wikipedia