On May 18, 1796, Savery traveled to Europe with a small party of Quaker ministers; Samuel Emlen, Deborah Darby, Rebecca Young, Sarah Talbot, and Phoebe Speakman. They reached
Liverpool on June 19, 1796, and he immediately held meetings there, in
Manchester and in
London. Savery and his party then traveled to Germany, to visit
Bad Pyrmont which was then, and still is, the center of German Quakerism. On their return to England on May 16, 1797, Savery preached throughout the British Isles. At
Bath, he met the English religious writer and philanthropist,
Hannah More, and was introduced by her to the preeminent abolitionist of the time,
William Wilberforce. Savery's greatest influence in his ministry abroad was when he visited Norwich where he met the
Gurneys, a prominent Quaker family and Elizabeth Gurney, later Elizabeth Fry. He influenced her to a deeper Quaker witness by his ministry at the Norwich Meeting House on February 4, 1798, and in personal meetings with her. Fry would later credit Savery,
Deborah Darby and
Priscilla Gurney with influencing her decision. Before leaving Britain, Savery visited Ireland and stayed at Anner Mills,
Clonmel, the home of the Irish Quaker businesswoman and social benefactor,
Sarah Pim Grubb. Savery was greatly troubled by the widespread poverty he saw in Ireland and on June 27, 1799, back in London, he reported to William Wilberforce on the destitute state of the people there. On August 1, 1799, Savery and his companions concluded their ministry in Europe and sailed from Liverpool for New York. ==Later years==