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The Citizens of Morley College
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 December 2012
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References
1 University extension lectures were initially founded to bring university courses to young men who could not leave home and to women who wished to train as teachers; they subsequently appealed to upwardly mobile clerks and artisans.
2 Fieldhouse, Roger, A History of Modern British Adult Education (Leicester, 1996), 29–31Google Scholar, and The Workers’ Educational Association: Aims and Achievements, 1903–1977 (Syracuse, NY, 1977)Google Scholar. See also McIntyre, Stuart, A Proletarian Science: Marxism in Britain, 1917–1933 (London, 1986), 89–90Google Scholar; Harrop, Sylvia, Oxford and Working-Class Education (Nottingham, 1987)Google Scholar.
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9 Emma Cons’s great-grandfather, a piano-case maker, had emigrated to London from the Rhineland in 1772; his son and grandson followed him in this craft. Findlater, Richard, Lilian Baylis: The Lady of the Old Vic (London, 1975), 24Google Scholar.
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11 Lucy Cavendish was the widow of the Irish secretary Lord Frederick Cavendish, assassinated in Dublin’s Phoenix Park in 1882.
12 Lucy Cavendish had worked with the Parochial Mission Women, the Soho House of Charity, Mrs. Talbot’s Westminster soup kitchen, with Hack Tuke and the Mental After-Care Association, with the Saint Mary’s Penitentiary for juvenile prostitutes, and with Louisa Twining and the Ladies Diocesan Association, pushing open the doors of workhouses to outside scrutiny.
13 Letter and memoranda, 1 November 1909, Old Vic Archives, OVLB/000047/2.9/1/B2, Bristol University, Bristol.
14 Letters from Cons to Cavendish, 1 January 1904, and 21 January 1904, Old Vic Archives, OVEC/000180/1–9, Bristol University, Bristol.
15 In 1871 Caroline Martineau had written Aunt Rachel’s Letters on Water and Air (London) as a way of introducing children to the basic concepts of science. She followed that with similar books aimed at piquing children’s interest in natural science: Chapters on Sound (London, 1875)Google Scholar and Earth, Air and Water or The World we Live in (London, 1881)Google Scholar. In 1880 she was elected a member of the Physical Society, the premier organization of British physicists.
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17 For example, Sir William Harcourt, writing to Gladstone concerning the appointment of Lord Frederick Cavendish as Irish Secretary, had observed that “F. Cavendish is like the άμύμονεσ, a man whom all like and respect.” Gardiner, A. G., The Life of Sir William Harcourt (London, 1923), 434Google Scholar.
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27 First Morley College Annual Report, Morley College Archives, Borough of Lambeth Archives IV/224/1/19, London, 1890, 9.
28 Reminiscences of Sir Frederick Black (n.d.), Old Vic Archives, OV/M/000012/4, Bristol University, Bristol.
29 Ibid.
30 Special supplement of the Morley College Magazine in memory of Caroline Martineau, 1902, Old Vic Archives, OV/M/000015/4, 14, Bristol University, Bristol.
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34 Morley College Annual Report, Morley College Archives, Borough of Lambeth Archives, IV/224/1/19, London, 1890, 8.
35 Richards, Offspring, 85.
36 Morley College Annual Report, Morley College Archives, Borough of Lambeth Archives, IV/224/1/19, London, 1890, 10.
37 Daily News, 11 May 1888, 6.
38 Morley College Annual Report, Morley College Archives, Borough of Lambeth Archives, IV/224/1/19, London, 1890, 9–12.
39 Ibid., 12.
40 Richards, Offspring, 169.
41 Forster, E. M., Howards End (New York, 1921), 45Google Scholar. Virginia Woolf, who taught at Morley College from 1905 to 1907, also clearly based her portrait of Smith, Septimus in Mrs. Dalloway (London, 1925) on one or more of her studentsGoogle Scholar.
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45 Richards, Offspring, 139.
46 Ibid.
47 Executive committee minutes, Morley College Archives, Borough of Lambeth Archives IV/224/1/1/2, London.
48 Richards, Offspring, 73.
49 Morley College Annual Report, Morley College Archives, Borough of Lambeth Archives, London, 1892, 3.
50 Ibid., 4.
51 Graham Wallas Papers, 1/32, London School of Economics (LSE) Archives, London, 7 December 1906.
52 Morley College Annual Report, Morley College Archives, Borough of Lambeth Archives, London, 1893, 7, 8.
53 Richards, Offspring, 134.
54 In this instance a diplomatic compromise was reached that satisfied both students and college authorities.
55 Morley College Annual Report, Morley College Archives, Borough of Lambeth Archives, London, 1892, 4.
56 Morley College Annual Report, Morley College Archives, Borough of Lambeth Archives, London, 1893, 12.
57 Trevelyan also directed a Shakespeare reading circle during the 1907/8 academic year. Richards, Offspring, 154.
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65 Lecture delivered at Morley College, Graham Wallas Papers, 6/3, Lecture VIII, LSE Archives, London, 22 November 1893.
66 Lecture delivered at Morley College, Graham Wallas Papers, 6/3, Lecture IX, LSE Archives, London, 29 November 1893.
67 Special supplement of Morley College Magazine in memory of Caroline Martineau, Old Vic Archives, OV/M/000015/4, Bristol University, Bristol; Morley College Archives, Borough of Lambeth Archives, London, 1902, 15.
68 Arnold, Alfred William, “The Old Guard Dies but Never Surrenders,” Justice, 15 October 1913Google Scholar, and “Bandê Mataram,” Justice, 15 September 1907.
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71 Morley College Magazine, Morley College Archives, Borough of Lambeth Archives, London, 1 June 1892, 4.
72 Richards, Offspring, 159.
73 Morley College Magazine, Morley College Archives, Borough of Lambeth Archives, London, July 1901.
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75 MPs did not receive a salary until 1911.
76 Morley College Magazine, Morley College Archives, Borough of Lambeth Archives, London, December 1902, 16.
77 Richards, Offspring, 159.
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82 The scholarships (£7 for a month in Cambridge and £5 for a fortnight in Oxford) were invariably easier to arrange than was the student’s time off from work.
83 Richards, Offspring, 116.
84 Miss Emma Cons and Miss Jane Cobden Local Government, 1889 Cobden MSS 348, West Sussex Records Office, Chichester.
85 Richards, Offspring, 170.
86 Goldman, “Intellectuals”; McKibbin, “Why Was There No Marxism in Great Britain?”
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89 Goldman, “Intellectuals,” 291–95.
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92 Ibid., 161.
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