Q Camp

The Q Camp was an experimental community set up at Hawkspur Green, Essex, England towards the end of the Second World War. It was envisioned as a self-governing community populated by disturbed or delinquent city children who were not suitable for inclusion in the evacuation programme due to their behavioural problems.

Origins

It was originally a camp set up for adults in 1936 but it had been closed when the war started. Arthur Barron took over as camp chief and espoused the view that children could learn discipline by taking on shared responsibilities, but should not be under any compulsion to take any non-voluntary action.[1][2]

Shut down

The community was shut down for health and safety reasons after some suppliers and parents raised concerns about the welfare of the children, who had continued in their anti-social behaviour, setting fires and destroying property, whilst continuing to reject any of the responsibilities required for the running and maintenance of the camp.

gollark: You seem to just reinterpret any disagreement with you as "hate" or something.
gollark: As planned.
gollark: .
gollark: Oh, really? Huh
gollark: Just measure it yourself?!

References

  1. Jenkins, Jolyon (2006-11-21). "Breaking camp". BBC News Magazine online. Retrieved 2017-11-20.
  2. Franklin, Marjorie (1966). "Q Camp - An Epitome of Experiences at Hawkspur Camp 1936 to 1940" (PDF). Retrieved 20 November 2017.

Sources


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