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Edward Grubb (Quaker) : ウィキペディア英語版 | Edward Grubb (Quaker) Edward Grubb (October 19, 1854 - January 23, 1939) was an influential English Quaker who made significant contributions to revitalizing pacifism and a concern for social issues in the Religious Society of Friends in the late 19th century as a leader of the movement known as the ''Quaker Renaissance''. He also wrote a number of hymns including ''Our God, to Whom we turn''. He would later play a major role in the No-Conscription Fellowship, an organization that united and supported conscientious objectors in Britain during World War One. ==Early career== Grubb was born in Sudbury, Suffolk, educated at Bootham School,〔(''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'' )〕 York and studied at the University of Leeds and University of London. He began his career as a teacher when he returned to Bootham School in York, England. Bootham was a boarding school for boys of the Religious Society of Friends. Grubb had attended the school himself, beginning in 1868 at the age of fourteen. He would later move on to teach at a number of other schools, including other Quaker schools. He received his B.A. in 1876 and in 1877 married Emma M. Horsnail of Bulford Mill, who he had courted for seven years.
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