Jack Catchpool Explained

Jack Catchpool
Honorific-Suffix:CBE
Office3:Warden of Toynbee Hall
Term Start3:1963
Term End3:1964
Predecessor3:Arthur Eustace Morgan
Successor3:Walter Birmingham
Birth Date:22 August 1890
Birth Place:Leicester, UK
Death Place:Welwyn Garden City, UK
Education:Sidcot School
Woodbrooke Quaker Study Centre

(Egerton) St John Pettifor Catchpool (1890-1971) also known as Jack Catchpool was a social worker who served as the warden of Toynbee Hall, London. He was general secretary of the Youth Hostels Association from its inception in 1930 until 1950.[1]

Early life

He attended the Quaker institutions Sidcot School and Woodbrooke Quaker Study Centre.[2]

Career

During the First World War, Catchpool served with the Friends' Ambulance Unit in France and then with the Friends' war victims' relief committee in Russia.[2]

After the war, he held the post of sub-warden of Toynbee Hall from 1920 to 1929. He was a member of the London County Council education committee from 1925 to 1931.[2]

From 1930 to 1950 he served as the first general secretary of the Youth Hostels Association, and in 1938 he was elected president of the International Youth Hostel Federation.[2] He was also the Chairman of the Romney Street Group from 935 to 1950.[3]

Personal life

He married Ruth Allason in 1920 and they had five children.[1]

His older brother was Corder Catchpool.[4]

He was appointed chevalier of the Dutch Order of Orange-Nassau in 1948 and Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1951.

He died at his home in Welwyn Garden City, Herfordshire, on 13 March 1971.[2]

Publications

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Toynbee Hall Annual Report 1971. Toynbee Hall. 1971. 21 February 2022.
  2. Catchpool, (Egerton) St John Pettifor . Graham . Heath . 37268 . 2004 .
  3. Lee . J. M. . The Romney Street Group: Its Origins and Influence—1916–1922 . Twentieth Century British History . 1 January 2007 . 18 . 1 . 106–128 . 10.1093/tcbh/hwl044.
  4. Freeman . Mark . 2010 . Fellowship, Service and the 'Spirit of Adventure': the Religious Society of Friends and the outdoors movement in Britain, c.1900–1950 . Quaker Studies . 14 . 1 . 72–92 .