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charles russell and the making of boys' clubs

A key figure in the boys' club movement and an important chronicler of young people' lives, Charles Russell wrote what was the standard text on 'lads work'. 

contents: introduction · conclusion · bibliography · how to cite this article

To be published late 2008

picture: c e b russell - believed to be in the public domainCharles E. B. Russell (1866-1917)

Bibliography

Eagar, W. McG. (1953) Making Men. The history of the Boys’ Clubs and related movements in Great Britain, London: University of London Press.

Henriques, B. (1933) Club Leadership, London: Oxford University Press.

Jeffs, T. J. (1979) Young People and the Youth Service, London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.

Pelham, T. H. W. (1889) Handbook to Youths' Institutes and Working Boys' Clubs... With preface by ... Archdeacon Farrar ... With a list of Societies, institutes and clubs for young men and boys in the Diocese of London, London: London Diocesan Council for the Welfare of Young Men. 64 pages. A second edition appeared in 1890 entitled ‘Boys Clubs’ and was published by Rivingtons.

Russell, C. E. B. and Rigby, L. M. (1908) Working Lads' Clubs, London: Macmillan and Co.

Young, A. E. and Ashton, E. T. (1956) British Social Work in the Nineteenth Century, London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. 

Links

The aims and growth of lads' clubs - Charles Russell and Lilian M. Rigby (1908) 'Aims and Growth' taken from Working Lads' Clubs, London: Macmillan and Co.

How to cite this article: , the encyclopedia of informal education, www.infed.org/

© Mark K. Smith 2001