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The Priest and the Elementary School in the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 September 2015

Extract

The Report of a Select Committee in 1835 gave the total of Catholic day schools in England as only 86, with the total for Scotland being 20. Catholic children had few opportunities for day school education. HMI Baptist Noel reported in 1840: ‘very few Protestant Dissenters and scarcely any Roman Catholics send their children to these [National] schools; which is little to be wondered at, since they conscientiously object to the repetition of the Church catechism, which is usually enforced upon all the scholars. Multitudes of Roman Catholic children, for whom some provision should be made, are consequently left in almost complete neglect, a prey to all the evils which follow profound ignorance and the want of early discipline.’ With the establishment of the lay dominated Catholic Institute of Great Britain in 1838 numbers rose to 236 in the following five years, although the number of children without Catholic schooling was still estimated to be 101,930. Lay control of Catholic schools diminished in the 1840s. In 1844, for example, Bishop George Brown of the Lancashire District in a Pastoral letter abolished all existing fund-raising for churches and schools and created his own district board which did not have a single lay member. The Catholic Poor School Committee was founded in 1847, with two laymen and eight clerics and the bishops requested that the Catholic Institute hand over all its educational monies to this new body and called for all future collections at parish level to be sent to it. Government grants were secured for Catholic schools for the first time in 1847. The great influx of Irish immigrants during the years of the potato famine (1845–8) increased the Catholic population and church leaders soon noted the great leakage among the poor. The only way to counteract this leakage was to educate the young under the care of the Church.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Catholic Record Society 2001

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References

Notes

1 Reports of the Committee of Council on Education, 1840–1 p. 176

2 Report of Catholic Poor School Committee, 1848 p. 32

3 By 1870 there were 666 Catholic schools under inspection throughout England and Wales and by 1882 there were 1,562, educating 190,540 children.

4 Letter of Vicars Apostolic, York, 15 Feb. 1848, in The Tablet, 26 Feb. 1848

5 Catholic School, 7, June 1849 p. 99

6 Ibidem p. 100

7 Ibidem p. 100

8 Catholic Directory and Ecclesiastical Register, 1850, London 1850, p. 41 Google Scholar

9 Ibidem, London 1870, p. 288 Some of this number were private chapels belonging to Religious houses or landed estates; some 660, were ‘parochial’ churches, registered for marriage.

10 N. Wiseman: Words of Peace and Justice, p. 16

11 Guy, R. E.: The Synods in English, St. Gregory’s Press, Stratford upon Avon, 1886 p. 268 Google Scholar

12 Ibidem p. 269

13 Ibidem p. 131

14 Ibidem p. 131

15 Ibidem p. 268

16 The Tablet, 28 Aug. 1869 p. 401

17 Pastoral Letter of Cardinal Wiseman Enjoining the Collection for the Building of Churches and Schools in the Archdiocese, London, 1864, pp. 1920 Google Scholar, in Norman, E. R., The English Catholic Church in the Nineteenth Century, Oxford, Clarendon, 1984 p. 177 Google Scholar

18 The Tablet, 12 June 1869 pp. 60–61

19 Ibidem p. 62

20 Joint Pastoral Letter of the Archbishop and Bishops of the Province of Westminster, in Provincial Council Assembled, 12 Aug. 1873 in The Tablet, 20 Sept. 1873 p. 365

21 The Tablet 21 Aug. 1869 p. 369

22 Ibidem 27 Feb. 1869 p. 466

23 Ibidem 13 March p. 637

24 Ibidem 12 June 1869 p. 45

25 Ibidem 21 Aug. 1869 p. 368

26 Guy op.cit. p. 295

27 Ibidem p. 170

28 Ibidem p. 245

29 Joint Pastoral Letter of the Archbishop and Bishops of the Province of Westminster, in Provincial Council Assembled, 12 Aug. 1873 in The Tablet, 20 Sept. 1873 p. 365

30 Pastoral letter of Henry Edward, Archbishop of Westminster for the Feast of the Sacred Heart, 3rd Sunday after Pentecost, 1869 in The Tablet, 12 June 1869 p. 61

31 The Tablet 27 Feb. 1869 p. 580

32 Ibidem 5 June 1869 p. 26

33 Guy op.cit. p. 132

34 Ibidem p. 245

35 The Tablet, 2 April 1887

36 ACTA, Meeting of the Bishops in Low Week, 1888 (10 April), in Norman op.cit, p. 175

37 J. Fell and J. Whitford: St. Cuthbert and the First Martyrs’ School-Centenary 1887–1977, 1900

38 Synodus Diocesana Liverpolitana decima quinta, Liverpool, 1902 p. 14

39 Report of the Committee of Council on Education, 1851 p. 47

40 Ibidem 1851 p. 48

41 Ibidem 1850 p. 514

42 Ibidem 1855 p. 615

43 Ibidem 1854 p. 673

44 W. B. Ullathorne: Notes on the Education Question, p. 9

45 T. J. Brown The Distress in the Iron District of the Diocese of Newport and Menevia, Jan. 1873 qu.in Norman op.cit. p. 200

46 Committee of Council Report, 1860 op.cit. pp. 220–221

47 cf. Supple-Green, J. F.: The Catholic Revival in Yorkshire, 1850–1900, Leeds Philosophical and Literary Society, 1990, p. 33 Google Scholar

48 Sneyd-Kinnersley, E. M.: H.M.I., London MacMillan, 1908 p. 185 Google Scholar

49 Ibidem p. 188

50 Ibidem p. 188

51 Committee of Council Report. 1880 p. 220

52 Sneyd-Kinnersley op.cit. p. 122

53 Ibidem p. 124

54 Guy op.cit. p. 281