I'm raising £2000 to continue to raise funds for a blue plaque and other ways to remember George Brewster, an 11 year-old chimney sweep who changed history.

Organised by Joanna Hudson
In memory

Story

George Brewster – an 11-year-old Chimney Sweep’s ‘apprentice’ , On a cold February in 1875 was sent up a boiler chimney at Fubourn Mental Asylum by his master. He sadly suffocated, nothing out of the ordinary for Victorian England however, the story afterwards is remarkable! The inquest made the London papers and when the Earl of Shaftsbury read about the boy's brutal death, he vowed to make a change.

The death of George Brewster in a chimney flue in 1875 was the catalyst for a law criminalising the practice of using child labour in the chimney sweeping industry. George Brewster was the last 'climbing boy' to die in England, but his death was part of a much greater transformation of British industrial society that saw the end of child labour practices in all industries – mining, farming and in factories amongst others and set in motion the introduction of compulsory education for all children.

The most remarkable part of the story - it is mostly unknown. 145 years after his sad death, I have vowed to get George's story out there. I have a huge project ahead.. but to start with I am raising money for a BLUE PLAQUE at the original Mental Asylum building entrance where George died. If I raise any more money, I will work towards getting him a headstone on his un-marked grave, and then onto working with a museum to get an exhibition about his life and his amazing story.

Help me to remember George, his death saved the lives of so many.

Help Joanna Hudson

Sharing this page with your friends could help raise up to 3x more in donations

You can also help by sharing this link on:

About fundraiser

Joanna Hudson
Organiser

Donation summary

Total
£710.00