Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rcrh6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T12:41:35.403Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 June 2023

Catherine Hindson
Affiliation:
University of Bristol
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Theatre in the Chocolate Factory
<i>Performance at Cadbury's Bournville, 1900–1935</i>
, pp. 236 - 244
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2023

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Ackers, Peter and Reid, Alistair J. (2016) Alternatives to State Socialism in Britain: Other Worlds of Labour in the Twentieth Century. New York: SpringerGoogle Scholar
Alington, Geoffrey (1914) Plays for Schools. London: G Bell & SonsGoogle Scholar
Angell, Stephen W. and Dandelion, Ben Pink (2013) The Oxford Handbook of Quaker Studies. Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Anon (1926) The Drama in Adult Education. London: His Majesty’s Stationery OfficeGoogle Scholar
Bailey, Adrian Raymond and Bryson, John R. (2007) ‘A Quaker Experiment in Town Planning: George Cadbury and the Construction of Bournville Model Village’, Quaker Studies 11, 89113Google Scholar
Bailey, Peter (1978) Leisure and Class in Victorian England: Rational Recreation and the Contest for Control, 1830–1885. London: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Balgarnie, Robert (1877) Sir Titus Salt, Baronet, His Life and Lessons. London: Hodder and StoughtonGoogle Scholar
Bartie, Angela, Fleming, Linda, Freeman, Mark, Hutton, Alexander, and Readman, Paul (2020) Restaging the Past: Historical Pageants, Culture and Society in Modern Britain. London: UCLGoogle Scholar
Beaven, Brad (2005) Leisure, Citizenship and Working-Class Men in Britain, 1850–1945. Manchester: Manchester UniversityGoogle Scholar
Beevers, Robert (1988) The Garden City Utopia: A Critical Biography of Ebenezer Howard. Basingstoke: MacmillanGoogle Scholar
Bell, Colin and Bell, Rose (1972) City Fathers: The Early History of Town Planning in Britain. Harmondsworth: PenguinGoogle Scholar
Bendix, Regina (2009) ‘Heritage between Economy and Politics: An Assessment from the Perspective of Cultural Anthropology’, in Jane Smith, Laura and Akagawa, Natsuko, eds., Intangible Heritage. Abingdon and New York: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Binfield, Clyde (1995) ‘The Coats Family and Paisley Baptists’, The Baptist Quarterly 36:2, 8095Google Scholar
Birmingham Repertory Theatre (1934) The Birmingham Repertory Theatre, 1913–1934. Birmingham: Moody Bros LtdGoogle Scholar
Bishop, George Walter (1928) The Amateur Dramatic Year Book and Community Theatre Handbook. London: A & C BlackGoogle Scholar
Boumphrey, Ian and Hunter, Gavin (2002) Port Sunlight: A Pictorial History, 1888–1953. Prenton: Yesterday’s WirralGoogle Scholar
Bournville Works Publications (1912) Bournville Housing: A Description of the Housing Schemes of Cadbury. Bournville: Bournville WorksGoogle Scholar
Bournville Works Publications (1924) Fircroft College. Bournville: Bournville WorksGoogle Scholar
Bournville Works Publications (1933) The Bournville Dramatic Society 1912–1933: A Chronicle. Bournville: Bournville WorksGoogle Scholar
Bournville Works Publications (1936) Bournville Works and Its Institutions: A Concise Account of the Educational, Recreational and Other Schemes. Bournville: Bournville WorksGoogle Scholar
Brack, Alan (1980) The Wirral. London: B. T. BatsfordGoogle Scholar
Bradley, Ian C. (2007) Enlightened Entrepreneurs: Business Ethics in Victorian Britain. London: Weidenfeld & NicholsonGoogle Scholar
Bradley, John (2008) Cadbury’s Purple Reign: The Story behind Chocolate’s Best-Loved Brand. Chichester: John Wiley & SonsGoogle Scholar
Brazier, Georgina and Gwynn, Simon (2017) ‘How Cadbury, Robinsons and Taylor of Harrogate Turned Heritage into Success’. Campaign. www.campaignlive.co.ukGoogle Scholar
Bromhead, J. (2000) ‘George Cadbury’s Contribution to Sport’, The Sports Historian 20:1, 97117Google Scholar
Bryers, Mary (1994) Havergal Celebrating a Century. Erin: Boston Mills PressGoogle Scholar
Bryson, John and Lowe, Phillipa (2002) ‘Story-telling and History Construction: Rereading George Cadbury’s Bournville Model Village’, Journal of Historical Geography 28:1, 2141Google Scholar
Burden, Robert and Kohl, Stephan, eds. (2006) Landscape and Englishness. Amsterdam: RodopiGoogle Scholar
Cadbury Bros (1911) A Visit to Bournville. Birmingham: Cadbury BrosGoogle Scholar
Bournville Works Publications (1912) An Outline of the Education Scheme Connected with the Bournville Works. Birmingham: Cadbury BrosGoogle Scholar
Bournville Works Publications (1913a) A Visit to Sunny Cocoa Land. Birmingham: Cadbury BrosGoogle Scholar
Bournville Works Publications (1913b) Bournville Bunny. Birmingham: Cadbury BrosGoogle Scholar
Bournville Works Publications (1921) Bournville: A Review. Birmingham: Cadbury BrosGoogle Scholar
Bournville Works Publications (1924a) Elsie and the Bunny. Birmingham: Cadbury BrosGoogle Scholar
Bournville Works Publications (1924b) A Works Council in Being. Birmingham: Cadbury BrosGoogle Scholar
Bournville Works Publications (1925) The Factory and Recreation. Birmingham: Cadbury BrosGoogle Scholar
Bournville Works Publications (1926a) Work and Play. Birmingham: Cadbury BrosGoogle Scholar
Bournville Works Publications (1926b) Another Adventure of Elsie and the Bunny. Birmingham: Cadbury BrosGoogle Scholar
Bournville Works Publications (1936) Bournville Works and Its Institutions. Birmingham: Cadbury BrosGoogle Scholar
Bournville Works Publications (1938) Bournville Personalities. Birmingham: Cadbury BrosGoogle Scholar
Bournville Works Publications (1962) Golden Jubilee of Bournville Dramatic Society, 1912–1913 to 1961/1962. Birmingham: Cadbury BrosGoogle Scholar
Cadbury, Deborah (2010) Chocolate Wars. London: Harper CollinsGoogle Scholar
Cadbury, Edward (1912) Experiments in Industrial Organisation. London: Longmans, Green & Co.Google Scholar
Cadbury, George (1926) Presidential Address to the Eighth Annual Association for Education in Industry and Commerce. Birmingham: Cadbury BrosGoogle Scholar
Chance, Helena (2007) ‘The Angel in the Garden Suburb: Arcadian Allegory in the (‘Girls’ Grounds’ at the Cadbury Factory, Bournville, England, 1880–1930. Studies in the Histories of Gardens and Designed’, Landscapes 27:3, 197216Google Scholar
Chance, Helena (2012) ‘Mobilising the Modern Industrial Landscape for Sports and Leisure in the Early Twentieth Century’, The International Journal of the History of Sport 29:11, 16001625Google Scholar
Chance, Helena (2017) The Factory in a Garden: A History of Corporate Landscapes from the Industrial to the Digital Age. Manchester: Manchester University PressGoogle Scholar
Chapman, David L (1994) Eugen Sandow and the Beginnings of Bodybuilding. Chicago: University of IllinoisGoogle Scholar
Charnow, Sally Debra (2005) Theatre, Politics and Markets in Fin-de-siècle Paris. New York: Palgrave McMillanGoogle Scholar
Cochrane, Clare (1993) Shakespeare and the Birmingham Repertory Theatre, 1913–1929. London: Society for Theatre ResearchGoogle Scholar
Colclough, Gemma (2023) ‘The Children’s Theatre Movement of the 1920s’ in Cochrane, Claire, Goddard, Lynette, Hindson, Catherine, and Reid, Trish, eds., The Routledge Companion to Twentieth Century British Theatre. London: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Constantine, S. (1981) ‘Amateur Gardening and Popular Recreation in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries’, Journal of Social History 14:3, 387406Google Scholar
Cooper, Roger (1997) ‘Bernard Sleigh, Artist and Craftsman, 1872–1954’, The Journal of the Decorative Arts Society 1850–the Present 21, 88102Google Scholar
Cossons, W. E., ed. (1933) The Bournville Dramatic Society, 1912–1933. Bournville: Cadbury BrosGoogle Scholar
Crawford, Margaret (1995) Building the Workingman’s Paradise: The Design of American Company Towns. New York: VersoGoogle Scholar
Crewe, Steven (2014) ‘What about the Workers? Works-based Sport and Recreation in England c.1918–c.1970’, Sport in History 34:4, 544568Google Scholar
Crosfield, John F. (1985) A History of the Cadbury Family. London: J. CrosfieldGoogle Scholar
Cross, Gary (2015) Consumed Nostalgia: Memory in the Age of Fast Capitalism. New York City: Columbia University PressGoogle Scholar
Cullen, Alex (1910) Adventures in Socialism: New Lanark Establishment and Orbiston Community. London: A. and C. BlackGoogle Scholar
Culpin, Ewart Gladstone (1913) The Garden City Movement up to Date. London: Garden Cities and Town Planning AssociationGoogle Scholar
Cunningham, Hugh (2016) Leisure in the Industrial Revolution, c.1780–c.1880. London: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Dale, (1907) ‘Bournville’ The Economic Review. January 1907, 13–27Google Scholar
Darley, Gillian (2007) Villages of Vision: A Study of Strange Utopias. Nottingham: Five Leaves PublicationsGoogle Scholar
Davidson, Lorna (2010) ‘A Quest for Harmony: The Role of Music in Robert Owen’s New Lanark Community’, Utopian Studies 21:2, 232251Google Scholar
Davis, Tracy C. (2007) The Economics of the British Stage. Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Davison, T. Raffles (1916) Port Sunlight: A Record of Its Artistic and Pictorial Aspect. London: B. T. BatsfordGoogle Scholar
Day, Agnes M. (1924) Historical Plays for Schools. Exeter: A. Wheaton and Co.Google Scholar
Dellheim, Charles (1987) ‘The Creation of a Company Culture: Cadburys, 1861–1931’, The American Historical Review 92:1, 1344Google Scholar
Dover Wilson, J. (1929) The Schools of England: A Study in Renaissance. Chapel Hill: University of North CarolinaGoogle Scholar
Dowd, Kevin William (2001) The Social and Political Activity of the Cadbury Family: A Study in Manipulative Capitalism. Thesis, Swansea University. http://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa42781Google Scholar
Drinkwater, J. (1925) The Collected Plays of John Drinkwater. Volume One. London: Sidgwick and JacksonGoogle Scholar
Drinkwater, J. (1932) Discovery. London: Ernest BennGoogle Scholar
Ferguson, Reginald Williams (1912) An Outline: The Educational System Connected with the Bournville Works. Birmingham: Messrs Cadbury Bros LtdGoogle Scholar
Finlay-Johnson, Harriet (1911) The Dramatic Method of Teaching. London: NisbetsGoogle Scholar
Fishman, Robert (1982) Urban Utopias in the Twentieth Century: Ebenezer Howard, Frank Lloyd Wright and Le Corbusier. Cambridge, MA: MIT PressGoogle Scholar
Fitzgerald, Robert (2005) ‘Products, Firms and Consumption: Cadbury and the Development of Marketing, 1900–1939’, Business History 47:4, 511531Google Scholar
Foght, H. W. (1914) ‘The Danish Folk High Schools’, United States Bulletin of Education 22, whole issueGoogle Scholar
Foulkes, Richard (1997) Church and Stage in Victorian England. Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Gardiner, A. C. (1923) Life of George Cadbury. London: CassellGoogle Scholar
Gee, Phillip (1922) The Industrial Year Book. London: H. B. HammondGoogle Scholar
George, W. L. (1907) Engines of Social Progress. London: A & C BlackGoogle Scholar
George, W. L. (1909) Labour and Housing at Port Sunlight. London: Alston RiversGoogle Scholar
Gilman, Frederick John (1916) The Workers and Education. London: George Allen and UnwinGoogle Scholar
Gilman, Harvey (2003) A Light That Is Shining: An Introduction to the Quakers. London: Quaker BooksGoogle Scholar
Graham, John (1915) ‘Music in a Garden City’ Musical Herald (April), 156–600Google Scholar
Griffiths, Alison (2002) Wondrous Difference: Cinema, Anthropology, and Turn-of-the-Century Visual Culture. New York: Columbia University PressGoogle Scholar
Grivetti, Louis E. and Shapiro, Howard-Yana (2011) Chocolate: History, Culture and Heritage. Oxford: John Wiley and SonsGoogle Scholar
Groves, Rick, Middleton, Alan, Murie, Alan, and Broughton, Kevin (2003) Neighbourhoods That Work: A Study of the Bournville Estate Birmingham. Bristol: Policy PressGoogle Scholar
Hackenesch, Silke (2017) Chocolate and Blackness: A Cultural History. Frankfurt-on-Main: Campus VerlagGoogle Scholar
Hall Grey Architects (2006) Rowntree Cocoa Works: Historic Building Report. York: York City CouncilGoogle Scholar
Harvey, William Alexander (1906) The Model Village and Its Cottages. London: B. T. BatsfordGoogle Scholar
Havergal, Nick J. (2020) Performing Masculinities in South West England at the Turn of the Twentieth Century. PhD Thesis, University of BristolGoogle Scholar
Head, Brandon (1903) The Food of the Gods: A Popular Account of Cocoa. London: R. Brimley JohnsonGoogle Scholar
Heniger, Alice Minnie Herts (1911) The Children’s Educational Theatre. New York: Harper and BrosGoogle Scholar
Hickman, Clare (2018) ‘Care in the Countryside: The Theory and Practice of Therapeutic Landscapes in the Early Twentieth Century’, in Dick, Malcom and Mitchell, Elaine, eds., Gardens and Green Spaces in the West Midlands Since 1700. Hatfield: University of Hertfordshire Press, 160185Google Scholar
Hicks, Canon (1903) ‘A Visit to Bournville’, The Manchester Guardian, July 18: 6Google Scholar
Hoban, Sally (2013) The Birmingham Municipal School of Art and Opportunities for Women’s Paid Work in the Arts and Crafts Movement. PhD Thesis, University of BirminghamGoogle Scholar
Hoffman, J. M. (1993) Imaging the Industrial Village: Architecture, Art, and Visual Culture in the Garden Community of Bournville, England. PhD Thesis, Yale UnversityGoogle Scholar
Holdsworth, Nadine, Milling, Jane, and Nicholson, Helen, eds. (2017) ‘Theatre, Performance and the Amateur Turn’, Special issue of Contemporary Theatre Review 27:1Google Scholar
Holdsworth, Nadine, Milling, Jane, and Nicholson, Helen, eds. (2018) The Ecologies of Amateur Theatre. New York: SpringerGoogle Scholar
Holroyd, Abraham (1873) Saltaire and Its Founder, Sir Titus Salt. Bradford: T. BrearGoogle Scholar
Holt, Richard (1990) Sport and the Working Class in Modern Britain. Manchester: Manchester UniversityGoogle Scholar
Hoyland, John S. (1947) They Saw Gandhi. New York: Fellowship PublicationsGoogle Scholar
Jagger, Mary A. (1914) The History of Honley and Its Hamlets from the Earliest Time to the Present DayGoogle Scholar
Jesse, Louie (1929) Historical Plays for Schools, Volume 1 – Wales. Cardiff: Educational Publishing CompanyGoogle Scholar
Kargon, Robert H. and Molella, Arthur P. (2008) Invented Edens: Techno Cities of the Twentieth Century. Boston: MIT PressGoogle Scholar
Kemp, Thomas C. (1948) Birmingham Repertory Theatre: The Playhouse and the Man. Birmingham: Cornish BrothersGoogle Scholar
Kimberley, John (2016) ‘Edward Cadbury: An Egalitarian Employer and Supporter of Working Women’s Campaigns’ in Ackers, Peter and Reid, Alistair J., eds., Alternatives to State-Socialism in Britain: Other Worlds of Labour in the Twentieth Century. New York: Springer, 153178Google Scholar
King, Mike (2014) Quakernomics: An Ethical Capitalism. London: AnthemGoogle Scholar
Lambert, Cornelia (2011) ‘“Living Machines”: Performance and Pedagogy at Robert Owen's Institute for the Formation of Character, New Lanark, 1816–1828’, The Journal of the History of Childhood and Youth 4:3, 419433Google Scholar
Leighton, Wilfrid (1959) Fircroft, 1909–1959. Birmingham: Fircroft TrustGoogle Scholar
Lever, William Hulme (1927) Viscount Leverhulme. London: G Allen and UnwinGoogle Scholar
Lunn, Pam (1997) ‘“You Have Lost Your Opportunity” British Quakers and the Militant Phase of the Women's Suffrage Campaign: 1906–1914’, Quaker Studies 2:1, Article 2Google Scholar
Mackay, Constance D’Arcy (1927) Children’s Theatre and Plays. Drama League Library of the Theatre Arts?. New York: D’Appleton and CompanyGoogle Scholar
Marsh, Jan (2010) Back to the Land: The Pastoral Impulse in Victorian England, 1880–1914. London: Faber and FaberGoogle Scholar
Masterman, H. B. (1920) The Story of the English Towns, Birmingham. London: Society for Promoting Christian KnowledgeGoogle Scholar
Matthews, Bache (1924) A History of the Birmingham Repertory Theatre. London: Chatto and WindusGoogle Scholar
McCrone, Kathleen E. (1991) ‘Class, Gender and English Women’s Sport, c.1890–1914’, Journal of Sports History 18:1, 159182Google Scholar
Mclintock, John and Strong, James (1877) Cyclopaedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature. New York: Harper and BrosGoogle Scholar
Meakin, Budgett (1905) Model Factories and Ideal Conditions of Labour and Housing. London: T. Fisher UnwinGoogle Scholar
Mees, Bernard (2016) ‘Changing Approaches to Business Ethics’ in Wilson, John, Toms, Steven, de Jong, Abe, and Buchnes, Emily, eds., The Routledge Companion to Business History. Abingdon on Thames: Taylor and FrancisGoogle Scholar
Minnery, John (2012) ‘Model Industrial Settlements and their Continuing Govenance’, Planning Perspectives 27:2, 309321Google Scholar
Moore, Anne Carol (1920) Roads to Childhood. New York: G H DoranGoogle Scholar
Moran, James (2013) ‘Pound, Yeats and the Regional Repertory Theatres’ in Alexander, Neil and Moran, James, eds., Regional Modernisms. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press: 83103Google Scholar
Nicholls, Douglas M. (1946) The Story of a Great Experiment, Being a Brief History of Bournville Day Continuation School. Birmingham: Cadbury BrosGoogle Scholar
Nicholson, Graham and Fawcett, Jane (1988) The Village in England: History and Tradition. New York: RizzoliGoogle Scholar
Nicholson, Steve (2004) ‘A Critical Year in Perspective: 1926’ in Milling, Jane, Thomson, Peter, Kershaw, Baz, and Donohue, Joseph Walter, eds., The Cambridge History of British Theatre, volume 3. Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Nworah, Kenneth Dike (1971) ‘The Liverpool ‘Sect’ and British West African Policy 1895–1915’, African Affairs 70:281, 349364Google Scholar
O’Malley, Evelyn (2020) Weathering Shakespeare: Audiences and Open-Air Performance. London: BloomsburyGoogle Scholar
Oral Histories.Google Scholar
Ormandy, James (2021) ‘Hockey’s Religious Foundations, Part 3: Quakers Play and Support Hockey’s Development’ Playing Pasts Online Magazine for Sport and Leisure HistoryGoogle Scholar
Owen, Robert Dale (1824) An Outline of the System of Education at New Lanark. Glasgow: Wardlaw and CunninghamGoogle Scholar
Packer, Ian (2003) ‘Religion and the New Liberalism: The Rowntree Family, Quakerism, and Social Reform’, Journal of British Studies 42:2, 236257Google Scholar
Parker, John (1925) Who’s Who in the Theatre: A Biographical Record of the Contemporary Stage. Boston: Small, Maynard and CompanyGoogle Scholar
Parratt, Catriona (2001) More than Mere Amusement: Working-Class Women’s Leisure in England, 1750–1914. Boston: Northeastern UniversityGoogle Scholar
Pearson, Lynn F. and White, Patricia (1988) Architectural and Social History of Cooperative Living. Basingstoke: Palgrave MacmillanGoogle Scholar
Phillips, Simon (2003) Industrial Welfare and Recreation at Boots Pure Drug Company. PhD Thesis. Nottingham Trent UniversityGoogle Scholar
Pickering, Michael (1982) Village Song and Culture: A Study Based on the Blunt Collection of Song from Adderbury North Oxfordshire. London: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Pickering, Michael (2008) Blackface Minstrelsy in Britain. AshgateGoogle Scholar
Pumphrey, Mary E. (1952) Recollections of Fircroft: An Experiment in Adult Education. Birmingham: Fircroft College TrustGoogle Scholar
Purdom, C. P. (1913) The Garden City: A Study in the Development of a Modern Town. London: J. M. Dent and SonsGoogle Scholar
Purkayastha, Prarthana (2019) ‘Decolonising Human Exhibits: Dance, Re-enactment and Historical Fiction’, South Asian Diaspora 11:2, 223238Google Scholar
Radcliffe, Christopher (1997) ‘Mutual Improvement Societies and the Forging of Working‐Class Political Consciousness in Nineteenth‐Century England’, International Journal of Lifelong Education 16:2, 141155Google Scholar
Ramamurthhy, Anandi (2003) Imperial Persuaders: Images of Africa and Asia in British Advertising. Manchester: Manchester UniversityGoogle Scholar
Readman, Paul (2018) Storied Ground: Landscape and the Shaping of English National Identity. Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Rees, Amanda (2012) ‘Nineteenth-Century Planned Industrial Communities and the Role of Aesthetics in Spatial Practices: The Visual Ideologies of Pullman and Port Sunlight’, Journal of Cultural Geography 29:2, 185214Google Scholar
Richardson, Angelique and Willis, Chris, eds. (2019) The New Woman in Fiction and Fact: Fin-de-Siècle Feminisms. New York: SpringerGoogle Scholar
Ridge, C. Harold (1928) Stage Lighting for Little Theatres. Cambridge: W. Heffer and SonsGoogle Scholar
Robertson, Emma (2016) ‘“Belles from Bristol and Bournville in New Surroundings”: Female Confectionary Workers as Transnational Agents’, Women’s History Review 25:4, 563583Google Scholar
Rogers, T. B. (1931) A Century of Progress, 1831–1931: Cadbury, Bournville. Bournville: CadburyGoogle Scholar
Rose, Sonya L. (1993) Limited Livelihoods: Gender and Class in Nineteenth-Century England. Oakland: University of California PressGoogle Scholar
Rowley, Trevor (2006) The English Landscape in the Twentieth Century. Oxford: A & C BlackGoogle Scholar
Rowlinson, Michael (2002) ‘Public History Review Essay: Cadbury World’, Labour History Review 67:1, 101119Google Scholar
Rowntree, Benjamin Seebohm (1901) Poverty: A Study of Town Life. London: Macmillan & Co.Google Scholar
Rowntree, John Wilhelm and Binns, Henry Bryan (1903) A History of the Adult School Movement. London: Headley BrosGoogle Scholar
Rowntree, Joshua, ed. (1905) John Wilhelm Rowntree, Essays and Addresses. London: Headley BrosGoogle Scholar
Russell, Dave (1997) Popular Music in England 1840–1914: A Social History. Manchester: Manchester University PressGoogle Scholar
Schulze-Gaevernitz, (1900) Social Peace: A Study of the Trade Union Movement in England. Translated by Graham Wallas. London: Swan Sonnenschein and CoGoogle Scholar
Sharpe, John (1855) Sharpe’s Road Book for the Rail. London: David BogueGoogle Scholar
‘Sidney Currie’, Mapping the Practice and Profession of Sculpture in Britain and Ireland 1851–1951, University of Glasgow History of Art and HATII, online database 2011 http://sculpture.gla.ac.uk/view/person.php?id=msib4_1207321560 [accessed 15 Jul 2021]Google Scholar
Silver, Daniel Aaron and Clark, Terry Nichols (2016) Scenescapes: How Qualities of Place Shape Social Life. Chicago: University of Chicago PressGoogle Scholar
Siméon, Ophélie (2017) Robert Owen’s Experiment at New Lanark: From Paternalism to Socialism. New York: Springer, Palgrave Studies in UtopianismGoogle Scholar
Siraut, M. C., Thacker, A. T., and Williamson, Elizabeth (2006) ‘Parishes: Street’ in Dunning, R W, London, eds., A History of the County of Somerset: Volume 9, Glastonbury and Street. British History Online, 165198. www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/som/vol9/pp165-198 [accessed 6 October 2021]Google Scholar
Smith, Chris, Child, John, and Rowlinson, Michael (1990) Reshaping Work: The Cadbury Experience. Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Spirn, Anne Whiston (1998) The Language of Landscape. New Haven and London: Yale UniversityGoogle Scholar
Stead, F. H. (1902) ‘George Cadbury’, The Review of Reviews (April): 350–357Google Scholar
Strong, Josiah, Tolman, William Howe, and Bliss, Dwight Porter, eds. (1906) Social Progress: A Year Book and Encyclopaedia of Economic, Industrial, Social and Religious Statistics, 1904–1906. New York City: Baker and Taylor CoGoogle Scholar
Surdam, David (2020) Business Ethics from Antiquity to the 19th Century: An Economist’s View. London: Palgrave MacmillanGoogle Scholar
Tarn, J. N. (1965) ‘The Model Village at Bromborough Pool’, The Town Planning Review 35: 4, 329336Google Scholar
The Rowntree Society (2016) The Rowntree Legacy: Capitalism, Compassion, Change. York: The Rowntree SocietyGoogle Scholar
Tolman, William Howe (1901) ‘A Trust for Social Betterment’ in Hines, Walter Page, ed., The World’s Work: A History of Our Time. New York: DoubledayGoogle Scholar
Towle, G. M. (1872) ‘Saltaire and Its Founder’, Harper’s New Monthly Magazine 44, 827835Google Scholar
Turnbull, Richard (2014) Quaker Capitalism: Lessons for Today – Enterprise and Faith. Oxford: The Centre for Enterprise, Markets and EthicsGoogle Scholar
Vamplew, W. (2015) ‘Sport, Industry and Industrial Sport in Britain before 1914’, Sport in Society 19:3, 340355Google Scholar
Vamplew, W. (2016) ‘Workers’ Playtime: Developing an Explanatory Typology of Work-Associated Sport in Britain’ in Pomfret, Richard and Wilson, John K., eds., Sports through the Lens of Economic History. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar PublishingGoogle Scholar
Vining, Elizabeth Gray (1958) Friend of Life: The Biography of Rufus M Jones. Philadelphia: LippincottGoogle Scholar
Wagner, Gillian (1987) The Chocolate Conscience. London: Chatto and WindusGoogle Scholar
Wiener, Martin J. (2004) English Culture and the Decline of the Industrial Spirit. Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Williams, Iola A. (1931) The Firm of Cadbury, 1831–1931. London: Constable and Co.Google Scholar
Wilson, William E. (1984) The Angel and the Serpent: The Story of New Harmony. Bloomington: Indiana University PressGoogle Scholar
Wood, H. G. and Ball, Arthur E. (1922) Tom Bryan, First Warden of Fircroft: A Memoir. London: G. Allen and UnwinGoogle Scholar
Woods, Alice. B. (1920) Educational Experiments in England. London: MethuenGoogle Scholar
Wray, William and Ferguson, Reginald, eds. (1920) A Day Continuation School at Work. London and New York: Longmans, Green, and Co.Google Scholar
Yallop, Jacqueline (2015) Dreamstreets. London: Jonathan CapeGoogle Scholar
Yoshino, Ayako (2011) Pageant Fever: Local History and Consumerism in Edwardian Culture. Tokyo: Waseda Daigaku ShuppanbuGoogle Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Bibliography
  • Catherine Hindson, University of Bristol
  • Book: Theatre in the Chocolate Factory
  • Online publication: 23 June 2023
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009271837.012
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Bibliography
  • Catherine Hindson, University of Bristol
  • Book: Theatre in the Chocolate Factory
  • Online publication: 23 June 2023
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009271837.012
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Bibliography
  • Catherine Hindson, University of Bristol
  • Book: Theatre in the Chocolate Factory
  • Online publication: 23 June 2023
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009271837.012
Available formats
×