Mabel Clarisse Warburton Explained

Mabel Clarisse Warburton
Birth Date:1879
Birth Place:Kings Langley
Death Date:1961
Death Place:Waltham Abbey
Education:Cheltenham Ladies' College
Occupation:missionary
Nationality:British

Mabel Clarisse Warburton MBE (1879–1961) was an English Christian missionary and educationalist.[1] [2] [3] [4] She founded the British High School, later called the Jerusalem Girls' College.

Biography

She was born 22 June 1879 in Kings Langley, Hertfordshire. Her father had died before her birth and her mother died in childbirth, so she was brought up by her grandparents at Bradwell House near Wolverton, Buckinghamshire. Her brother died in an institution after being declared insane. She was educated at Cheltenham Ladies' College 1895–1897.

She worked in Egypt as a missionary and was then headmistress of the British Syrian Training College in Beirut from 1899 until the start of the first world war in 1914. In 1918 she worked with bishop Rennie MacInnes in Jerusalem, and founded and partly funded the British High School, later the Jerusalem Girls' College.[5] This school educated both Jewish and Muslim girls, with high academic standards, and Warburton was its headmistress from 1919 to 1926. In 1928 Winifred Coate became the principal of the Jerusalem Girls' College. She had been head hunted by Warburton.[6]

From 1926 to 1935 she was active in social work in Bethnal Green, London, and after the second world war she founded the Ahliyyah School for Girls in Amman.

She was appointed MBE.

She died 16 November 1961 at Waltham Abbey, leaving her home, known as "Welcome Cottage", to provide accommodation for elderly local residents.[7] This charity later linked to the Abbeyfield Society, and two replacement buildings, later combined, keep her name as the "Warburton and Clarisse Lodge".[8]

Publications

Notes and References

  1. 70088. Warburton, Mabel Clarisse (1879–1961). Inger Marie . Okkenhaug.
  2. Book: Clayton . Gilbert Falkingham . An Arabian Diary . 1969 . University of California Press . 354 . https://books.google.com/books?id=HVJwx2Adz8gC&pg=PA354 . 1 November 2018 . Appendix IX: Biographies.
  3. Book: Greenberg . Ela . Preparing the Mothers of Tomorrow: Education and Islam in Mandate Palestine . 2012 . University of Texas press . 9780292749986 . 76–77 . https://books.google.com/books?id=hym-zPqZJXQC&q=%22Mabel+Warburton%22&pg=PA76 . Reading the Bible and wearing the veil: the appeal of the Anglican schools.
  4. Book: Okkenhaug . Inger Marie . The Quality of Heroic Living, of High Endeavour and Adventure: Anglican Mission, Women and Education in Palestine, 1888-1948 . 2002 . Brill . 9789004320062 . 1 November 2018.
  5. Book: 'Mission and Education as Liberating Strategies: The Case of Mabel Warburton' in Women and Religion in the Middle East and the Mediterranean. Unipub/Oslo Academic Press. 2004. Mæhle. Ingvar B.. 67–84. Inger Marie Okkenhaug.
  6. Book: Okkenhaug, Inger Marie . The Quality of Heroic Living, of High Endeavour and Adventure: Anglican Mission, Women and Education in Palestine, 1888-1948 . 2016-05-18 . BRILL . 978-90-04-32006-2 . en.
  7. News: Latest wills: £5,500 left to Waltham Abbey charities . 2 November 2018 . The Times . 3 April 1962 . 17.
  8. Web site: Warburton & Clarisse Lodge . Abbeyfield Society . 1 November 2018.
  9. Sansum . D.H. . Book Review: The Unceasing Conflict. By Mabel C. Warburton . Theology . 1 January 1960 . 63 . 475 . 35–36 . 10.1177/0040571X6006347514 . 220984787 .