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George Williams, founder of the YMCA.
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A wartime newspaper article featuring the YMCA.
The YMCA has its roots in the drapery trade having been founded
by George Williams in the 1840's. George Williams, a farmer's son,
had been described as 'a careless, thoughtless, Godless and
swearing young fellow', but at the age of 16 he became a Christian
and a keen evangelical. In 1841 George moved from Dulverton,
Somerset to London to work at Hitchcock & Rogers on Ludgate
Hill as one of 140 drapery assistants. Most of these were under 20
years old and lived on the premises, being provided with board and
lodgings. Their accommodation was Spartan with two or three beds to
a room and often two men to a bed and they worked long hours,
usually 7am to 9pm with hardly a break. Since the doors are said to
have been bolted at 11pm, there wasn't a lot of time for
leisure.
By 1844, George had risen to department manager earning £40 per
annum and had married the boss's daughter. He became a member of
the Weigh House Congregational Chapel and devoted his spare time to
evangelical and temperance work. There were a number of Christian
men at H & R and they gained permission to hold weekly prayer
meetings and bible studies on Wednesdays where they prayed for the
conversion of young men. Other city companies were also holding
meetings and the feeling grew that there ought to be a society for
the 'spiritual improvement of young men'.
On 6th June 1844 therefore a meeting attended by 12 or 13 young
men was held in George's room and it was decided to form a society
for the purposes of evangelising colleagues in the drapery
establishments in London. It was initially known as The Drapers
Evangelistic Association and was interdenominational even in those
early days. By the fifth meeting, the name Young Mens Christian
Association had been adopted and within a few months the purpose
had been amended to read, 'the improvement of the spiritual and
mental condition of young men', an educational element thus being
introduced.
Other associations quickly opened in London and other cities
such as Leeds and Manchester and in the 1850's following the Great
Exhibition at the Crystal Palace the movement expanded into Europe
and the wider world. In 1851 the American YMCA Movement was founded
and from this came an emphasis on physical fitness. Both basketball
and volleyball came out of that movement. This focus on health and
fitness came to the British YMCA and when the headquarters moved to
Exeter Hall in 1881, the first gymnasium was opened in the
basement. So began a link with fitness that still continues.
In 1894, the 50th anniversary of the YMCA, George Williams
received a knighthood from Queen Victoria and the honour was
accepted by him as an honour for the YMCA. He also received the
freedom of the City of London. He died in 1905 and is buried in St
Paul's Cathedral alongside the likes of Lord Nelson and the Duke of
Wellington.
The British YMCA played its part in the First and Second World
Wars, providing the troops with food, drink and writing materials
from YMCA huts. In the years between the wars it also played its
part, setting up two employment programmes. The first was British
Boys for British Farms, which placed unemployed men into
agricultural work, and the second was the setting up of an
Employment Department to find jobs for ex servicemen.
In the late 1950's, following the publishing of a government
report stressing the need for better leisure facilities for
teenagers, the YMCA began youth clubs to help young people develop
through recreation, leisure and informal education. This was
followed by the introduction of a training programme for youth
workers and ultimately the setting up of the YMCA George Williams
College in 1970. It remained a primarily male oriented movement
until 1964 when women and girls were finally admitted.
Over 150 years after the start of the YMCA in England, the
movement continues to develop and adapt to meet the needs of
people. The legacy of George Williams lives on and continues to
thrive today.