Group    From 18/3/1818 

British and Foreign Sailors' Society

Sailors’ Society is an international Christian charity working in ports across the world.

After the Napoleonic Wars ended, the need for ships declined, and many former seafarers became destitute. In 1818, George Charles 'Bosun' Smith, a preacher and former sailor, called a public meeting at the City of London Tavern in Bishopsgate. This resulted in the formation of the society with the aim of relieving the plight of the sailors. It gained much patronage from the British royal family as well as the monarchies of Italy and Russia.
It now has chaplains and ship visitors in many ports around the world.

Like many other organisations of this type the name has changed over the years.  From JISC: "Originally known as the Port of London Society, the society was renamed The British & Foreign Sailors' Society at a public meeting in July 1833. A board of directors was elected, consisting of forty-five clergymen and twenty-eight laymen, among which were Royal Naval and Mercantile Marine Officers and Members of Parliament. The British and Foreign Sailors' Society continued until 1925 when its name was changed to The British Sailors' Society. In 1995 it became the British and International Sailors' Society (BISS)."

Wikipedia picks up the name story: "In 1995 the name was changed to The British & International Sailors’ Society. The most recent name change took place on 1 December 2007 when the present name {Sailors' Society} was adopted."

Credit for this entry to: Alan Patient of www.plaquesoflondon.co.uk

This section lists the memorials created by the subject on this page:
British and Foreign Sailors' Society

Creations i

William Tyndale and the Bible Society

2023: Esther Jung asked us about a date discrepancy on this inscription: both...

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Other Subjects

F. C. Verrall

F. C. Verrall

Co-partner or employee of the South Suburban Gas Company. Served but did not die in WW1.

Person, Armed Forces

War served, WW1
1 memorial
1st London (City of London) Brigde. R.F.A.
1 memorial
Henry James Edmund Kippin

Henry James Edmund Kippin

Henry James Edmund Kippin was born on 15 January 1882 at Perrin's Court, Hampstead, the eldest son and the second of the ten children of Edmund Kippin (1852-1916) and Letitia Kippin née Cook (1856-...

Person, Armed Forces

War served, WW1
1 memorial
A. E. Grundy

A. E. Grundy

Resident of Willesden who volunteered and died in the Anglo Boer War, 1899-1900.

Person, Armed Forces, South Africa

War dead, Other war
1 memorial