Jump to content

New Forest Shakers

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by InternetArchiveBot (talk | contribs) at 19:31, 16 April 2020 (Rescuing 1 sources and tagging 0 as dead.) #IABot (v2.0). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The New Forest Shakers or Walworth Jumpers (also Children of God, Girlingites or Convulsionists) were a new religious movement created by Mary Anne Girling (or Mary Ann Girling) in the 1870s in England. Originally from Suffolk, Girling preached the Second Coming, celibacy, chastity and communal life (a kind of communalism).

In Suffolk

Mary Ann Clouting was born in Little Glemham, Suffolk in 1827. She married George Stanton Girling and they had two children. Sometime around 1858, Girling received a vision from Jesus Christ in her Ipswich bedroom.[1] She apparently received a second vision in 1864 informing her that the second coming was at hand.[2] Girling left her husband and children, and travelled around the villages and towns of Suffolk preaching her mission.[3] Within 18 months "Girlingism" had 50 adherents.[4] This ecstatic, esoteric sect claimed that they died with conversion, and were then reborn to eternal life.

Walworth Jumpers

In 1871, having been persecuted and threatened in Suffolk, Girling went to London.[5] She initially fell in with the Peculiar People of Plumstead and preached to them there.[6] She soon fell out with them when she began claiming her own divinity, and she withdrew from their circle taking many of their followers with her.[6] Girling's mission began operating from a railway arch near the Walworth Road,[7] where she preached excitedly before crowds of several thousands, which led to the nickname "the Jumpers of Walworth."[8] Attacked by hostile mobs in London, Girling announced to her followers in 1872 that they were going to move to Hordle in the New Forest in Hampshire.[9]

New Forest Shakers

In January 1873 Girling and her followers arrived in Hordle.[10] They settled in New Forest Lodge, a house which was partially paid for by one of the followers Julia Wood,[11] the remainder being mortgaged. 160 believers gathered there, cultivating vegetables and worshipping. They were prohibited from sexual activity, as well as from economic transactions. They proceeded to farm the land, but Girling forbade the sect to sell either their produce or their labour.[12] The mortgage remained unpaid and on a bitterly cold night of December 1874, in the rain, sleet and snow, 60 women, 35 men and 45 children were evicted.[13] All the furniture was left along a half mile stretch of the road.[13] It included 3 pianos, 77 beds, boxes of eggs, butter and vegetables valued at about £1,000 and worthless by the end of the night.[13]

They were aided by the political philosopher Auberon Herbert, who gave them temporary shelter on his estate in nearby Ashley.[14] Other prominent sympathisers of their plight included liberal politician William Cowper,[15] and local eccentric and spiritualist Andrew Peterson.[16] By February 1875, they had returned to Hordle, camping in a field near New Forest Lodge.[17] They were evicted in 1878,[18] but a local landowner gave them a field in nearby Tiptoe where they set up camp. After this, the sect faded from national prominence.[19] The census of 1881 records 64 people were encamped in the field,[20] but by 1886 the community was reduced to 12 women and 8 men.[21] Girling died from uterine cancer on 18 September 1886 and the sect broke up.[22] Girling was buried in Hordle churchyard.[13]

Notes

  1. ^ Hoare 2005, p. 23
  2. ^ Hoare 2005, p. 25
  3. ^ Hoare 2005, p. 29
  4. ^ Hoare 2005, p. 32
  5. ^ Hoare 2005, p. 45
  6. ^ a b Hoare 2005, p. 103
  7. ^ Hoare 2005, p. 104
  8. ^ Glinert 2009, p. 252
  9. ^ Hoare 2005, p. 136
  10. ^ Hoare 2005, p. 139
  11. ^ Hoare 2005, p. 137
  12. ^ Hoare 2005, p. 149
  13. ^ a b c d "Jo Ivey, Report on New Forest Traditions Archived 2013-03-09 at the Wayback Machine, pages 27-8. New Forest Museum
  14. ^ Hoare 2005, p. 281
  15. ^ Hoare 2005, p. 194
  16. ^ Hoare 2005, p. 160
  17. ^ Hoare 2005, p. 306
  18. ^ Hoare 2005, p. 343
  19. ^ Hoare 2005, p. 374
  20. ^ Hoare 2005, p. 377
  21. ^ Hoare 2005, p. 392
  22. ^ Hoare 2005, p. 395

References

  • Glinert, Ed (2009), Martyrs & Mystics: The Extraordinary Untold Story of Britain's Spiritual Heritage, HarperCollins, ISBN 0-00-728642-2
  • Hoare, Philip (2005), England's Lost Eden: Adventures in a Victorian Utopia, Fourth Estate, ISBN 0-00-715910-2

Further reading