Jo Cox Foundation: Great Get Together 2019
An evaluation report from the 2019 edition of the The Great Get Together – a series of community events which brought about cohesion and wellbeing around the UK.
We supported the Jo Cox Foundation to explore community connection and social action through The Great Get Together.
Total project spend
Total project duration
Grantee organisation
The Moment to Movement grant continued the legacy of Jo Cox’s work and values through the Great Get Together and the Great Winter Get Together. These campaigns have shown just how powerful an event can be at galvanising a movement of positive action.
Established in 2016, following the murder of Jo Cox MP, the Labour MP for Batley and Spen, the Great Get Together helps people to make genuine connections, through community events including lunches, sports days and street parties. It takes place annually on the weekend closest to Jo’s birthday in June. The Great Winter Get Together is held over two weeks in January, with events and activities organised across the country to demonstrate the power of meaningful connection to reduce loneliness, an issue close to Jo’s heart.
With this grant, the Jo Cox Foundation were working to to grow the Great Get Together from a ‘moment’ to a year-round movement of social and community action. The campaign aims to empower the More in Common network of volunteers and organisers which sit at the heart of it. This network is a dedicated collection of groups and partnerships across the UK, that bring their local communities together through projects and events.
Some of the successes during the grant period have included:
Spirit of 2012 partnered with the Jo Cox Foundation to develop a framework for storytelling for local organisers to tell their own unique stories, helping to strengthen bonds and create more connected communities.
The More in Common network is a nationwide group of dedicated organisers. They work year-round to create more cohesive and compassionate communities through outreach and bringing people together, as well as organising annual Great Get Together events.
The Digital Storytelling project produced engaging video profiles of five community organisers, re-telling how they became involved in the Great Get Together, what they’ve learnt so far from their experiences, and what they want to do next. The locations, motivations and experiences of these organisers are varied, but dedication to bringing communities together runs throughout the profiles.
The videos personalise the Great Get Together, and showcase the importance of individuals within their communities and larger movements. The Digital Storytelling project has also developed a story-banking framework to empower more organisers to gather and share compelling stories from within their communities.
Project in numbers
Spirit funded 30 of our grantees to organise Great Get Togethers across the UK to bring communities together to eat, drink, talk and connect.
The funded projects were supported by Spirit and the Jo Cox Foundation through resource packs, marketing materials to promote the events, and tips for hosting events via the Great Get Together website. A huge range of Great Get Togethers took place, including Tai Chi and Tea in Northern Ireland, a Big Fit Walk in Perth, an accessible biking event in Kent, and five separate T20 events with Breaking Boundaries, a project that uses cricket to bring people together.
The T20 Great Get Togethers hosted thousands of cricket fans for a mix of a mix of food, drink, face-painting, dance and, of course, cricket, bringing together people of all ages and ethnicities in a day of celebration.
The Spirit-funded Great Get Togethers enabled the projects to reach more people, increase awareness of their activities, and crucially, encouraged people to talk and connect through positive events.
I was experiencing increasing depression as a result of social isolation in the earlier days of the pandemic. Organising our Great Get Together party has contributed to my feeling even more part of a very caring community in my street, and it was a joy to work together so happily with others, to feel very valued and indeed loved, and to see so many residents having such a happy time and such fun. It has been heart-warming for me to see how this has helped and is helping other residents.
Organiser, Great Get Together 2020