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The Australian Bush Brotherhoods and their English Origins

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 February 2009

Extract

This winning and much-quoted declamation, made in Oxford in 1908 by G. H. Frodsham, the Anglican bishop of North Queens-land, enshrines the aura of romance which has ever since surrounded the Australian bush brotherhoods. The attraction of this form of community life, especially to younger English clergy, lay in its spirit of adventure and in the once magnetic appeal to empire loyalty: duty and sacrifice, for a limited term, in a not too foreign land.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1996

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References

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49 Brotherhood of Our Holy Redeemer, Broken Hill (1915), diocese of Riverina; brotherhood of St Aidan (1915–18) at Tailem Bend, diocese of Adelaide, founded by the Revd J. W. Clarke; brotherhood of Our Saviour (1915–20), diocese of Grafton; brotherhood of St Paul (1916–22) at Hastings, diocese of Melbourne, founded by the Revd Frederick Watts; brotherhood of St John the Evangelist, Sale (1920–4), diocese of Gippsland; brotherhood of St Paul, Pt Pirie (1922–4), diocese of Willochra, also founded by Watts; brotherhood at Margaret River, diocese of Bunbury (1922–4); brotherhood of St Stephen, Quorn (1926), diocese of Willochra; brotherhood at Broken Hill (again), in 1929, Archdeacon J. H. A. Chauvel, principal; brotherhood of St Andrew, Manangatang (1936–8), diocese of St Arnaud, founded by the Revd Francis Morton; brotherhood of St John the Baptist (1944–7), Murray Bridge (‘the Mallee Fathers’), diocese of Adelaide, founded by the Revd L. E. W. Renfrey.

50 Witt, , Bush bishop, 95Google Scholar. S. H. Davies, of the Charleville brotherhood, was bishop of Carpentaria from 1922 to 1950; W. E. Elsey, brotherhood of St Boniface, was bishop of Kalgoorlie from 1919 to 1950.

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