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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #67039 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67039)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Mind and Hand, by Charles H. Ham
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Mind and Hand
- Manual Training the Chief Factor in Education
-
-Author: Charles H. Ham
-
-Release Date: December 29, 2021 [eBook #67039]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Tim Lindell, Harry Lamé and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The
- Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MIND AND HAND ***
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
- Texts printed in italics in the source document have been transcribed
- _between underscores_, bold face text =between equal signs=. Small
- capitals have been changed to ALL CAPITALS.
-
- More Transcriber’s Notes (also on the use of footnotes and endnotes)
- may be found at the end of this text.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Yours faithfully
-
-Charles Henry Ham]
-
-
-
-
- MIND AND HAND
-
- _MANUAL TRAINING
- THE CHIEF FACTOR IN EDUCATION_
-
- BY CHARLES H. HAM
-
- BEING THE THIRD EDITION OF
- “MANUAL TRAINING, THE SOLUTION
- OF SOCIAL AND INDUSTRIAL PROBLEMS”
-
- ILLUSTRATED
-
- [Illustration]
-
- NEW YORK ⁛ CINCINNATI ⁛ CHICAGO
- AMERICAN BOOK COMPANY
-
-
-
-
- Copyright, 1886, by HARPER & BROTHERS.
- Copyright, 1900, by CHARLES H. HAM.
- _All rights reserved._
- W. P. 5
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE TO THE THIRD EDITION.
-
-
-The work of which this is the third edition has been before the public
-of this country, England, and all English-speaking countries since
-1886--thirteen years. As it proposes a revolution in educational
-methods, it was not to be presumed that it would escape criticism. But,
-while the reviews of it have been numerous, they have, on the whole,
-been very generous. My most radical postulates have, however, been
-received by educators of the old régime with expressions of emphatic
-dissent. In presenting the third edition of the work I have, therefore,
-thought it wise to support the text with many high authorities in the
-form of foot-notes. As was to be expected, my analysis of Greek history
-and character provoked the severest criticism. It is regarded, indeed,
-as conclusive evidence of gross ignorance of the entire subject. To meet
-the charge of ignorance, I have made a large number of citations from
-Herodotus, Thucydides, Xenophon, Plutarch, and others--authors
-consulted, originally, in the preparation of this part of the work. I
-may venture to observe, with due deference to those schoolmen who regard
-the ancient Greeks as an ideal people, that I have searched
-contemporaneous history in vain for evidence of the verity of this
-claim; and I am hence constrained to adhere firmly to the extreme views
-expressed in the text. And if these views are correct, it follows that
-the passion for Greek models in education is not only a mental
-dissipation, but a moral crime.
-
-The other new notes are commended to the careful consideration of the
-reader, as the fruit of my added years of research and reflection.
-
-The Appendix contains a compilation, in tabular form, of all the facts
-obtainable from original sources, through the aid of a skilled
-statistician, showing the physical progress of Manual Training in this
-country, and the chief countries of Europe, during the last fifteen
-years.
-
-In this edition the disguise of the first edition is dropped. In that
-edition a certain school was referred to as “the Chicago school,”
-whereas it was, in fact, purely an ideal school, which had no existence
-except in the mind of the author. But it embodied educational theories
-and ideas of Comenius and other great men which the author desired to
-see adopted. That desire not having been realized, I content myself here
-by quoting the observation of Oscar Browning as to the proneness of the
-school-master to neglect opportunities: “The more we reflect on the
-method of Comenius, the more shall we see that it is replete with
-suggestiveness, and we shall feel surprised that so much wisdom can have
-lain in the path of school-masters for two hundred and fifty years, and
-that they never stooped to avail themselves of its treasures.”
-
-It is proper to state that the terms “Kindergarten,” “Manual Training,”
-and “The New Education,” are used throughout the work as equivalents.
-
-The change of title to “Mind and Hand: Manual Training the Chief Factor
-in Education”--is made in response to the common and just criticism of
-the original title as too narrow for the broad treatment of the subject
-which characterized the text.
-
-The notes prepared especially for this edition will be found at the ends
-of the chapters to which they respectively belong.
-
-Wherever in this work apparent discrimination in favor of the male sex
-is indulged through the employment of the pronoun “he,” “his,” or “him,”
-rather than the corresponding feminine parts of speech, it is merely
-apparent, not real; for I urge the co-education of the sexes as I urge
-the co-education of Mind and Hand, because the woman is the complement
-of the man as the hand is the complement of the mind. For I believe,
-with John Stuart Mill, that “The true virtue of human beings is fitness
-to live together as equals; and to enable them to live together as
-equals, they must be associated in education”; and with Mary
-Wollstonecraft, that “Virtue will never prevail in society till the
-morals of both sexes are founded on reason, and till the affections
-common to both are allowed their due strength by the discharge of mutual
-duties.”
-
- THE AUTHOR.
-
- NEW YORK CITY, _March, 1900_.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE TO FIRST EDITION.
-
-
-In 1879 I read a paper before the Chicago Philosophical Society on the
-subject of “The Inventive Genius; or, an Epitome of Human Progress.” The
-suggestion of the subject came from Mr. Charles J. Barnes, to whom I
-desire in this public way to express my obligation for an introduction
-to a profoundly interesting study, and one which has given a new
-direction to all my thoughts.
-
-At the conclusion of my labors in the preparation of the paper, I
-realized the force of Bacon’s remark, that “the real and legitimate goal
-of the sciences is the endowment of human life with new inventions and
-riches.”
-
-In tracing the course of invention and discovery, I found that I was
-moving in the line of the progress of civilization. I found that the
-great gulf between the savage and the civilized man is spanned by the
-seven hand-tools--the axe, the saw, the plane, the hammer, the square,
-the chisel, and the file--and that the modern machine-shop is an
-aggregation of these tools driven by steam. I hence came to regard tools
-as the great civilizing agency of the world. With Carlyle I said, “Man
-without tools is nothing; with tools he is all.” From this point it was
-only a step to the proposition that, It is through the arts alone that
-all branches of learning find expression, and touch human life. Then I
-said, The true definition of education is the development of all the
-powers of man to the culminating point of action; and this power in the
-concrete, the power to do some useful thing for man--this must be the
-last analysis of educational truth.
-
-These ideas are not new. They pervade Lord Bacon’s writings, are
-admirably formulated in Rousseau’s “Emile,” and were restated by Mr.
-Herbert Spencer twenty-five years ago. More than this, Comenius,
-Pestalozzi, and Froebel attempted to carry them into practical operation
-in the school-room, but with only a small measure of success. It remains
-for the age of steel to show how powerless mere words are in the
-presence of things, and so to emphasize the demand for a radical reform
-in educational methods.
-
-In 1880 my attention was drawn to the Manual Training Department of the
-Washington University of St. Louis, Mo. In that school I found the
-realization of Bacon’s aphorism, “Education is the cultivation of a just
-and legitimate familiarity betwixt the mind and things.” I made an
-exhaustive study of the methods of the St. Louis school, and reached the
-conclusion that the philosopher’s stone in education had been
-discovered. The columns of the _Chicago Tribune_ were opened to me, and
-I wrote constantly on the subject for the ensuing three years. Meantime
-the Chicago Manual-Training School (the first independent institution of
-the kind in the world) was founded and opened, and the agitation spread
-over the whole country, and indeed over the whole civilized world.
-
-This work was commenced two years ago. I found the labor much more
-arduous than I anticipated, and its completion has hence been delayed
-far beyond the time originally contemplated for placing it in the hands
-of a publisher. It may be summarized briefly as consisting of four
-divisions: 1. A detailed description of the various laboratory class
-processes, from the first lesson to the last, in the course of three
-years. 2. An exhaustive argument _a posteriori_ and _a fortiori_ in
-support of the proposition that tool practice is highly promotive of
-intellectual growth, and in a still greater degree of the upbuilding of
-character. 3. A sketch of the historical period, showing that the decay
-of civilization and the destruction of social organisms have resulted
-directly from defects in methods of education. 4. A brief sketch of the
-history of manual training as an educational force.
-
-To Dr. John D. Runkle, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the
-founder of manual training as an educational institution in this
-country, I cannot express too strongly my deep obligation for valuable
-suggestions and constant encouragement. To him also am I indebted for
-nearly all my illustrations, as also particularly for the excellent
-portrait of M. Victor Della Vos, the founder of the new system of
-education in Russia. I am also under obligations to Col. Augustus
-Jacobson, a leading advocate of the new education, for constant counsel
-and support, as also to Dr. Henry H. Belfield, Director of the Chicago
-Manual Training School, and Mr. John S. Clark, of Boston.
-
-Of the authors consulted, I cannot forbear mention of Lord Bacon,
-Rousseau, and Herbert Spencer, whose great works constitute the
-foundation of the new system of education according to nature. Nor can I
-omit to acknowledge, with all the emphasis of which words are
-susceptible, my obligations to Mr. Samuel Smiles. His works, from the
-lives of the engineers to the shortest of his biographies, constitute an
-inexhaustible treasure-house of facts from which I have drawn without
-stint. Mr. Smiles has traced the springs of English greatness to their
-true source, the workshop. I have attempted to continue his office by
-showing that the workshop is a great educational force, and hence that
-its educational element ought to be incorporated in the system of public
-instruction.
-
-The propositions of the following pages involve an educational
-revolution destined to enlighten, and so ultimately to redeem manual
-labor from the scorn of the ages of slavery, and, in the end, to render
-the skilled laborer worthy of high social distinction, thus presenting
-at once a solution not only of the industrial question but of the social
-question.
-
- CHARLES H. HAM.
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION TO THE THIRD EDITION
-
-BY COL. FRANCIS W. PARKER, Principal of the Chicago Normal School.
-
-
-The last twenty-five years have brought much of intrinsic value into
-American education. Rapid increase in population and ever-changing
-conditions have made imperative demands for schools adequate to
-self-government.
-
-The Kindergarten led the way to other substantial reforms in education,
-and called attention to the actual needs of childhood. It proved
-conclusively that hand-work is one of the dominant interests of the
-child, and demonstrated the absolute dependence of brain-growth upon
-Manual Training.
-
-Manual Training is thus a direct outcome and sequence of the
-Kindergarten. It supplies a need for which there is no substitute. The
-belief that that which is begun in the Kindergarten should be continued
-and expanded in all upper grades, forces itself more and more upon
-thoughtful minds. Modern psychology brings its potent evidence as to the
-tremendous value of the work of the hand in the building of the brain.
-The trend of educational thought will always be in the direction of hand
-training as a fundamental element in education.
-
-Twenty-five years ago Manual Training was little known in this country
-as a factor in education. Charles H. Ham, imbued with a fervid
-patriotism, saw clearly that one of the intrinsic needs of education--an
-absolute necessity in the evolution of a democracy--is the training of
-the whole being, hand, brain, and soul, through educative work. He was,
-indeed, a pioneer, beginning his work when there was very little
-attention given to this important subject, and at a time, too, when it
-was opposed by nearly all leading educators.
-
-Mr. Ham, together with Colonel Jacobson, brought a strong influence to
-bear upon the Commercial Club of Chicago, to found a Manual-Training
-school. This school is now a department of the Chicago University and
-has been in successful operation for thirteen years. There are in
-Chicago to-day the Armour Institute, the Lewis Institute, and the Jewish
-Manual-Training School, all prominent and well established. There is
-also a high school for Manual Training in connection with the public
-schools, and, best of all, there are indications which show that
-hand-work is making its way throughout the grades.
-
-Mr. Ham, without doubt, had a strong influence upon the late George M.
-Pullman, which led him to provide, through his will, for a
-Manual-Training school for the children of the city which he built.
-
-Manual-Training schools are now maintained in almost every city in the
-Union. Much remains to be done before Manual Training takes its true
-place in education. The majority of these schools now in existence are
-for boys who have graduated from the grammar school, which leaves the
-years between six and fourteen with little or no hand-work. Thus the
-most important period for brain-growth through hand activity is
-neglected.
-
-The future of Manual Training is to introduce hand-work as the principal
-factor in the first four years’ work, to be continued in the four years
-of the grammar grades, and correlated with all other subjects. Indeed,
-the ideal is to introduce Manual Training in all courses of study, from
-the Kindergarten to the University, inclusive.
-
-The patrons of Cook County Normal School owe to Mr. Ham the
-establishment of Manual Training in connection with the primary grades
-of the school, nearly fifteen years ago; for without the practical aid
-he gave it, it could not have been accomplished at that time. The
-children--indeed, all the people of this country--owe him an immense
-debt of gratitude for his heroic championship of hand-work.
-
-Manual Training gives a true dignity to labor; it calls attention to the
-place of hand-work in human progress, and as civilization goes on it
-will have a higher and still higher place in the hearts of the people.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- THE IDEAL SCHOOL.
-
- Its Situation. -- Its Tall Chimney. -- The Whir of Machinery and Sound
- of the Sledge-hammer. -- The School that is to dignify Labor. -- The
- Realization of the Dream of Bacon, Rousseau, Comenius, Pestalozzi, and
- Froebel. -- The School that fitly represents the Age of Steel. Page 1
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- THE MAJESTY OF TOOLS.
-
- Tools the highest Text-books. -- How to Use them the Test of
- Scholarship. -- They are the Gauge of Civilization. -- Carlyle’s
- Apostrophe to them. -- The Typical Hand-tools. -- The Automata of the
- Machine-shop. -- Through Tools Science and Art are United. -- The
- Power of Tools. -- Their Educational Value. -- Without Tools Man is
- Nothing; with Tools he is All. -- It is through the Arts alone that
- Education touches Human Life. 7
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- THE ENGINE ROOM.
-
- The Corliss Engine. -- A Thing of Grace and Power. -- The Growth of
- Two Thousand Years. -- From Hero to Watt. -- Its Duty as a
- School-master. -- The Interdependence of the Ages. -- The School in
- Epitome. 14
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- THE DRAWING-ROOM.
-
- Twenty-four Boys bending over the Drawing-board. -- Analysis and
- Synthesis in Drawing. -- Geometric Drawing. -- Pictorial Drawing. --
- The Principles of Design. -- The Æsthetic in Art. -- The Fundamentals.
- -- Object and Constructive Drawing. -- Drawing for the Exercises in
- the Laboratories. -- The Educational Value of Drawing. -- The Language
- of Drawing. -- Every Student an expert Draughtsman at the end of the
- Course. 16
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
- THE CARPENTER’S LABORATORY.
-
- The Natural History of the Pine-tree. -- How it is Converted into
- Lumber, what it is Worth, and how it is Consumed. -- Where the
- Students get Information. -- Working Drawings of the Lesson. -- Asking
- Questions. -- The Instructor Executes the Lesson. -- Instruction in
- the Use and Care of Tools. -- Twenty-four Boys Making Things. -- As
- Busy as Bees. -- The Music of the Laboratory. -- The Self-reliance of
- the Students. 21
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
- THE WOOD-TURNING LABORATORY.
-
- A Radical Change. -- From the Square to the Circle; from Angles to
- Spherical, Cylindrical, and Eccentric Forms. -- The Rhythm of
- Mechanics. -- The Potter’s Wheel of the Ancients and the Turning-
- lathe. -- The Speculation of Holtzapffels on its Origin. -- The Greeks
- as Turners. -- The Turners of the Middle Ages. -- George III. at the
- Lathe. -- Maudsley’s Slide-rest, and the Revolution it wrought. -- The
- Natural History of Black-walnut. -- The Practical Value of
- Imagination. -- Disraeli’s Tribute to it; Sir Robert Peel’s Want of
- it. -- The Laboratory animated by Steam. -- The Boys at the Lathes. --
- Their Manly Bearing. -- The Lesson. 30
-
-
- CHAPTER VII.
-
- THE FOUNDING LABORATORY.
-
- The Iron Age. -- Iron the King of Metals. -- Locke’s Apothegm. -- The
- Moulder’s Art is Fundamental. -- History of Founding. -- Remains of
- Bronze Castings in Egypt, Greece, and Assyria. -- Layard’s
- Discoveries. -- The Greek Sculptors. -- The Colossal Statue of Apollo
- at Rhodes. -- The Great Bells of History. -- Moulding and Casting a
- Pulley. -- Description of the Process, Step by Step. -- The Furnace
- Fire. -- Pouring the Hot Metal into the Moulds. -- A Pen Picture of
- the Laboratory. -- Thus were the Hundred Gates of Babylon cast. --
- Neglect of the Practical Arts by Herodotus. -- How Slavery has
- degraded Labor. -- How Manual Training is to dignify it. 45
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
-
- THE FORGING LABORATORY.
-
- Twenty-four manly-looking Boys with Sledge-hammer in Hand -- their
- Muscle and Brawn. -- The Pride of Conscious Strength. -- The Story of
- the Origin of an Empire. -- The Greater Empire of Mechanics. -- The
- Smelter and the Smith the Bulwark of the British Government. -- Coal
- -- its Modern Aspects; its Early History; Superstition regarding its
- Use. -- Dud. Dudley utilizes “Pit-coal” for Smelting -- the Story of
- his Struggles; his Imprisonment and Death. -- The English People
- import their Pots and Kettles. -- “The Blast is on and the Forge Fire
- sings.” -- The Lesson, first on the Black-board, then in Red-hot Iron
- on the Anvil. -- Striking out the Anvil Chorus -- the Sparks fly
- whizzing through the Air. -- The Mythological History of Iron. -- The
- Smith in Feudal Times. -- His Versatility. -- History of Damascus
- Steel. -- We should reverence the early Inventors. -- The Useful Arts
- finer than the Fine Arts. -- The Ancient Smelter and Smith, and the
- Students in the Manual-training School. 58
-
-
- CHAPTER IX.
-
- THE MACHINE-TOOL LABORATORY.
-
- The Foundery and Smithy are Ancient, the Machine-tool Shop is Modern.
- -- The Giant, Steam, reduced to Servitude. -- The Iron Lines of
- Progress. -- They converge in the Shop; its triumphs from the
- Watchspring to the Locomotive. -- The Applications of Iron in Art is
- the Subject of Subjects. -- The Story of Invention is the History of
- Civilization. -- The Machine-maker and the Tool-maker are the best
- Friends of Man. -- Watt’s Great Conception waited for Automatic Tools;
- their Accuracy. -- The Hand-made and the Machine-made Watch. -- The
- Elgin (Illinois) Watch Factory. -- The Interdependence of the Arts. --
- The making of a Suit of Clothes. -- The Anteroom of the Machine-tool
- Laboratory. -- Chipping and Filing. -- The File-cutter. -- The Poverty
- of Words as compared with Things. -- The Graduating Project. -- The
- Vision of the Instructor. 78
-
-
- CHAPTER X.
-
- MANUAL AND MENTAL TRAINING COMBINED.
-
- The new Education is all-sided -- its Effect. -- A Harmonious
- Development of the Whole Being. -- Examination for Admission to the
- Chicago School. -- List of Questions in Arithmetic, Geography, and
- Language. -- The Curriculum. -- The Alternation of Manual and Mental
- Exercises. -- The Demand for Scientific Education -- its Effect. --
- Ambition to be useful. 105
-
-
- CHAPTER XI.
-
- THE INTELLECTUAL EFFECT OF MANUAL TRAINING.
-
- Intelligence is the Basis of Character. -- The more Practical the
- Intelligence the Higher the Development of Character. -- The use of
- Tools quickens the Intellect. -- Making Things rouses the Attention,
- sharpens the Observation, and steadies the Judgment. -- History of
- Inventions in England, 1740-1840. -- Poor, Ignorant Apprentices become
- learned Men. -- Cort, Huntsman, Mushet, Neilson, Stephenson, and Watt.
- -- The Union of Books and Tools. -- Results at Rotterdam, Holland; at
- Moscow, Russia; at Komotau, Bohemia; and at St. Louis, Mo. -- The
- Consideration of Overwhelming Import. 113
-
-
- CHAPTER XII.
-
- THE EDUCATION OF WOMEN A NECESSITY.
-
- The Difference between Ancient and Modern Systems of Education. --
- Plato Blinded by Half-truths. -- No place in the present order of
- things for Dogmatisms. -- Education begins at Birth. -- The Influence
- of Women extends from the Cradle to the Grave. -- The Crime of Crimes.
- -- Neglect to educate Woman. -- The Superiority of Women over Men as
- Teachers. -- Froebel discovered it. -- Nature designed Woman to Teach;
- hence the Importance of Fitting her for her Highest Destiny. 123
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII.
-
- THE MORAL EFFECT OF MANUAL TRAINING.
-
- Mental Impulses are often Vicious; but the Exertion of Physical Power
- in the Arts is always Beneficent -- hence Manual Training tends to
- correct vicious mental Impulses. -- Every mental Impression produces a
- moral Effect. -- All Training is Moral as well as Mental. --
- Selfishness is total Depravity; but Selfishness has been Deified under
- the name of Prudence. -- Napoleon an Example of Selfishness. -- The
- End of Selfishness is Disaster; but Prevailing Systems of Education
- promote Selfishness. -- The Modern City an Illustration of
- Selfishness. -- The Ancient City. -- Existing Systems of Education
- Negatively Wrong. -- Manual Training supplies the lacking Element. --
- The Objective must take the Place of the Subjective in Education. --
- Words without Acts are as dead as Faith without Works. 130
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV.
-
- THE MIND AND THE HAND.
-
- The Mind and the Hand are Allies; the Mind speculates, the Hand tests
- its Speculations in Things. -- The Hand explodes the Errors of the
- Mind -- it searches after Truth and finds it in Things. -- Mental
- Errors are subtile; they elude us, but the False in Things stands
- self-exposed. -- The Hand is the Mind’s Moral Rudder. -- The Organ of
- Touch the most Wonderful of the Senses; all the Others are Passive;
- it alone is Active. -- Sir Charles Bell’s Discovery of a “Muscular
- Sense.” -- Dr. Henry Maudsley on the Muscular Sense. -- The Hand
- influences the Brain. -- Connected Thought impossible without
- Language, and Language dependent upon Objects; and all Artificial
- Objects are the Work of the Hand. -- Progress is therefore the Imprint
- of the Hand upon Matter in Art. -- The Hand is nearer the Brain than
- are the Eye and the Ear. -- The Marvellous Works of the Hand. 144
-
-
- CHAPTER XV.
-
- THE POWER OF THE TRAINED HAND.
-
- The Legend of Adam and the Stick with which he subdued the Animals. --
- The Stick is the Symbol of Power, and only the Hand can wield it. --
- The Hand imprisons Steam and Electricity, and keeps them at hard
- Labor. -- The Destitution of England Two Hundred and Fifty Years ago:
- a Pen Picture. -- The Transformation wrought by the Hand: a Pen
- Picture. -- It is due, not to Men who make Laws, but to Men who make
- Things. -- The Scientist and the Inventor are the World’s Benefactors.
- -- A Parallel between the Right Honorable William E. Gladstone and Sir
- Henry Bessemer. -- Mr. Gladstone a Man of Ideas, Mr. Bessemer a Man of
- Deeds. -- The Value of the latter’s Inventions. -- Mr. Gladstone
- represents the Old Education, Mr. Bessemer the New. 157
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI.
-
- THE INVENTORS, CIVIL ENGINEERS, AND MECHANICS OF ENGLAND, AND ENGLISH
- PROGRESS.
-
- A Trade is better than a Profession. -- The Railway, Telegraph, and
- Steamship are more Potent than the Lawyer, Doctor, and Priest. --
- Book-makers writing the Lives of the Inventors of last Century. -- The
- Workshop to be the Scene of the Greatest Triumphs of Man. -- The Civil
- Engineers of England the Heroes of English Progress. -- The Life of
- James Brindley, the Canal-maker; his Struggles and Poverty. -- The
- Roll of Honor. -- Mr. Gladstone’s Significant Admission that English
- Triumphs in Science and Art were won without Government Aid. --
- Disregarding the Common-sense of the Savage, Legislators have chosen
- to learn of Plato, who declared that “The Useful Arts are Degrading.”
- -- How Improvements in the Arts have been met by Ignorant Opposition.
- -- The Power wielded by the Mechanic. 170
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII.
-
- POWER OF STEAM AND CONTEMPT OF ARTISANS.
-
- A few Million People now wield twice as much Industrial Power as all
- the People on the Globe exerted a Hundred Years ago. -- A Revolution
- wrought, not by the Schools and Colleges, but by the Mechanic. -- The
- Union between Science and Art prevented by the Speculative Philosophy
- of the Middle Ages. -- Statesmen, Lawyers, Littérateurs, Poets, and
- Artists more highly esteemed than Civil Engineers, Mechanics, and
- Artisans. -- The Refugee Artisan a Power in England, the Refugee
- Politician worthless. -- Prejudice against the Artisan Class shown by
- Mr. Galton in his Work on “Hereditary Genius.” -- The Influence of
- Slavery: it has lasted Thousands of Years, and still Survives. 184
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII.
-
- AUTOMATIC CONTRASTED WITH SCIENTIFIC EDUCATION.
-
- The Past tyrannizes over the Present by Interposing the Stolid
- Resistance of Habit. -- Habits of Thought like Habits of the Body
- become Automatic. -- There is much Freedom of Speech but very little
- Freedom of Thought: Habit, Tradition, and Reverence for Antiquity
- forbid it. -- The Schools educate Automatically. -- A glaring Defect
- of the Schools shown by Mr. John S. Clark, of Boston. -- The Automatic
- Character of the Popular System of Education shown by the Quincy
- (Mass.) Experiment. -- Several Intelligent Opinions to the same
- Effect. -- The Public Schools as an Industrial Agency a Failure. -- A
- Conclusive Evidence of the Automatic and Superficial Character of
- prevailing Methods of Education in the Schools of a large City. -- The
- Views of Colonel Francis W. Parker. -- Scientific Education is found
- in the Kindergarten and the Manual-training School. -- “The
- Cultivation of Familiarity betwixt the Mind and Things.” 191
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX.
-
- AUTOMATIC CONTRASTED WITH SCIENTIFIC EDUCATION -- _Continued._
-
- The Failure of Education in America shown by Statistics of Railway and
- Mercantile Disasters. -- Shrinkage of Railway Values and Failures of
- Merchants. -- Only Three per Cent. of those entering Mercantile Life
- achieve Success. -- Business Enterprises conducted by Guess: Cause,
- Unscientific Education. -- Savage Training is better because
- Objective. -- Mr. Foley, late of the Massachusetts Institute of
- Technology, on the Scientific Character of Manual Education -- Prof.
- Goss, of Purdue University, to the same Effect -- also Dr. Belfield,
- of the Chicago Manual-training School. -- Students love the Laboratory
- Exercises. -- Demoralizing Effect of Unscientific Training. -- The
- Failure of Justice and Legislation as contrasted with the Success of
- Civil Engineering and Architecture. 210
-
-
- CHAPTER XX.
-
- AUTOMATIC CONTRASTED WITH SCIENTIFIC EDUCATION -- _Continued._
-
- The Training of the Merchant, the Lawyer, the Judge, and the
- Legislator contrasted with that of the Artisan. -- The Training of the
- Merchant makes him Selfish, and Selfishness breeds Dishonesty. --
- Professional Men become Speculative Philosophers, and test their
- Speculations by Consciousness. -- The Artisan forgets Self in the
- Study of Things. -- The Search after Truth. -- The Story of Palissy.
- -- The Hero is the Normal Man; those who Marvel at his Acts are
- abnormally Developed. -- Savonarola and John Brown. -- The New England
- System of Education contrasted with that of the South. -- American
- Statesmanship -- its Failure in an Educational Point of View. -- Why
- the State Provides for Education; to protect Property. -- The British
- Government and the Land Question. -- The Thoroughness of the Training
- given by Schools of Mechanic Art and Institutes of Technology as shown
- in Things. -- Story of the Emperor of Germany and the Needle-maker. --
- The Iron Bridge lasts a Century, the Act of the Legislator wears out
- in a Year. -- The Cause of the Failures of Justice and Legislation. --
- The best Act is the Act that Repeals a Law; but the Act of the
- Inventor is never Repealed. -- Things the Source and Issue of Ideas;
- hence the Necessity of Training in the Arts. 229
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI.
-
- EDUCATION AND THE SOCIAL PROBLEM -- HISTORIC.
-
- _EGYPT AND GREECE._
-
- Fundamental Propositions. -- Selfishness the Source of Social Evil;
- Subjective Education the Source of Selfishness and the Cause of
- Contempt of Labor; and Social Disintegration the Result of Contempt of
- Labor and the Useful Arts. -- The First Class-distinction -- the
- Strongest Man ruled; his First Rival, the Ingenious Man. --
- Superstition. -- The Castes of India and Egypt -- how came they about?
- -- Egyptian Education based on Selfishness. -- Rise of Egypt -- her
- Career; her Fall; Analysis thereof. -- She Typifies all the Early
- Nations: Force and Rapacity above, Chains and Slavery below. -- Their
- Education consisted of Selfish Maxims for the Government of the Many
- by the Few, and Government meant the Appropriation of the Products of
- Labor. -- Analysis of Greek Character -- its Savage Characteristics.
- -- Greek Treachery and Cruelty. -- Greek Venality. -- Her Orators
- accepted Bribes. -- Responsibility of Greek Education and Philosophy
- for the Ruin of Greek Civilization. -- Rectitude wholly left out of
- her Scheme of Education. -- Plato’s Contempt of Matter: it led to
- Contempt of Man and all his Works. -- Greek Education consisted of
- Rhetoric and Logic; all Useful Things were hence held in Contempt. 247
-
-
- CHAPTER XXII.
-
- EDUCATION AND THE SOCIAL PROBLEM -- HISTORIC.
-
- _ROME._
-
- Vigor of the Early Romans -- their Virtues and Vices; their Rigorous
- Laws; their Defective Education; their Contempt of Labor. -- Slavery:
- its Horrors and Brutalizing Influence. -- Education Confined to the
- Arts of Politics and War; it transformed Courage into Cruelty, and
- Fortitude into Stoicism. -- Robbery and Bribery. -- The Vices of
- Greece and Carthage imported into Rome. -- Slaves construct all the
- great Public Works; they Revolt, and the Legions Slaughter them. --
- The Gothic Invasion. -- Rome Falls. -- False Philosophy and
- Superficial Education promoted Selfishness. -- Deification of
- Abstractions, and Scorn of Men and Things. -- Universal Moral
- Degradation. -- Neglect of Honest Men and Promotion of Demagogues. --
- The Decline of Morals and Growth of Literature. -- Darwin’s Law of
- Reversion, through Selfishness to Savagery. -- Contest between the
- Rich and the Poor. -- Logic, Rhetoric, and Ruin. 263
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIII.
-
- EDUCATION AND THE SOCIAL PROBLEM -- HISTORIC.
-
- _THE MIDDLE AGES._
-
- The Trinity upon which Civilization Rests: Justice, the Arts, and
- Labor; and these Depend upon Scientific Education. -- Reason of the
- Failure of Theodoric and Charlemagne to Reconstruct the Pagan
- Civilization. -- Contempt of Man. -- Serfdom. -- The Vices of the
- Time: False Philosophy, an Odious Social Caste, and Ignorance. -- The
- Splendid Career of the Moors in Spain, in Contrast. -- Effect upon
- Spain of the Expulsion of the Moors. -- The Repressive Force of
- Authority and the Atrocious Philosophy of Contempt of Man. -- The
- Rule of Italy -- a Menace and a Sneer. -- The work of Regeneration. --
- The Crusades. -- The Destruction of Feudalism. -- The Invention of
- Printing. -- The Discovery of America. -- Investigation. --
- Discoveries in Science and Art. 278
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIV.
-
- EDUCATION AND THE SOCIAL PROBLEM -- HISTORIC.
-
- _EUROPE._
-
- The Standing Army a Legacy of Evil from the Middle Ages. -- It is the
- Controlling Feature of the European Situation. -- Its Collateral
- Evils: Wars and Debts. -- The Debts of Europe Represent a Series of
- Colossal Crimes against the People; with the Armies and Navies they
- Absorb the Bulk of the Annual Revenue. -- The People Fleeing from
- them. -- They Threaten Bankruptcy; they Prevent Education. -- Germany,
- the best-educated Nation in Europe, losing most by Emigration. -- Her
- People will not Endure the Standing Army. -- The Folly of the European
- International Policy of Hate. -- It is Possible for Europe to Restore
- to Productive Employments 3,000,000 of men, to place at the Disposal
- of her Educators $700,000,000, instead of $70,000,000 per annum, and
- to pay her National Debts in Fifty-four Years, simply by the
- Disbandment of her Armies and Navies. -- The Armament of Europe Stands
- in the Way of Universal Education and of Universal Industrial
- Prosperity. -- Standing Armies the Last Analysis of Selfishness; they
- are Coeval with the Revival during the Middle Ages of the Greco-Roman
- Subjective Methods of Education. -- They must go out when the New
- Education comes in. 289
-
-
- CHAPTER XXV.
-
- EDUCATION AND THE SOCIAL PROBLEM -- HISTORIC.
-
- _AMERICA._
-
- An Old Civilization in a New Country. -- Old Methods in a New System
- of Schools. -- Sordid Views of Education. -- The highest Aim
- Money-getting. -- Herbert Spencer on the English Schools. -- Same
- Defects in the American Schools. -- Maxims of Selfishness. -- The
- Cultivation of Avarice. -- Political Incongruities. -- Negroes
- escaping from Slavery called Fugitives from Justice. -- The Results of
- Subjective Educational Processes. -- Climatic Influences alone saved
- America from becoming a Slave Empire. -- Illiteracy. -- Abnormal
- Growth of Cities. -- Failure of Justice. -- Defects of Education shown
- in Reckless and Corrupt Legislation. -- Waste of an Empire of Public
- Land. -- Henry D. Lloyd’s History of Congressional Land Grants. -- The
- Growth and Power of Corporations. -- The Origin of large Fortunes,
- Speculations. -- Old Social Forces producing old Social Evils. --
- Still America is the Hope of the World. -- The Right of Suffrage in
- the United States justifies the Sentiment of Patriotism. -- Let
- Suffrage be made Intelligent and Virtuous, and all Social Evils will
- yield to it; and all the Wealth of the Country is subject to the Draft
- of the Ballot for Education. -- The Hope of Social Reform depends upon
- a complete Educational Revolution. 307
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVI.
-
- THE MANUAL ELEMENT IN EDUCATION IN 1884.
-
- The Kindergarten and the Manual-training School one in Principle. --
- Russia solved the Problem of Tool Instruction by Laboratory Processes.
- -- The Initiatory Step by M. Victor Della-Vos, Director of the
- Imperial Technical School of Moscow in 1868. -- Statement of Director
- Della-Vos as to the Origin, Progress, and Results of the New System of
- Training. -- Its Introduction into all the Technical Schools of
- Russia. -- Dr. John D. Runkle, President of the Massachusetts
- Institute of Technology, recommends the Russian System in 1876, and it
- is adopted. -- Statement of Dr. Runkle as to how he was led to the
- adoption of the Russian System. -- Dr. Woodward, of Washington
- University, St. Louis, Mo., establishes the second School in this
- Country. -- His Historical Note in the Prospectus of 1882-83. -- First
- Class graduated 1883. -- Manual Training in the Agricultural Colleges.
- -- In Boston, in New Haven, in Baltimore, in San Francisco, and other
- places. -- Manual Training at the Meeting of the National Educational
- Association, 1884. -- Kindergarten and Manual-training Exhibits. --
- Prof. Felix Adler’s School in New York City -- the most Comprehensive
- School in the World. -- The Chicago Manual-training School the first
- Independent Institution of the Kind -- its Inception; its
- Incorporation; its Opening. Its Director, Dr. Belfield. -- His
- Inaugural Address. -- Manual Training in the Public Schools of
- Philadelphia. -- Manual Training in twenty-four States. --
- Revolutionizing a Texas College. -- Local Option Law in Massachusetts.
- -- Department of Domestic Economy in the Iowa Agricultural College. --
- Manual Training in Tennessee, in the University of Michigan, in the
- National Educational Association, in Ohio. -- The Toledo School for
- both Sexes. -- The Importance of the Education of Woman. -- The Slöjd
- Schools of Europe. 328
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVII.
-
- PROGRESS OF THE NEW EDUCATION -- 1883-1899.
-
- Educational Revolution in 1883-4. -- Urgent Demand for Reform. --
- Existing Schools denounced as Superficial, their Methods as Automatic,
- their System as a Mixture of Cram and Smatter. -- The Controversy
- between the School-master of the Old Régime and the Reformer. -- The
- Leaders of the Movement, Col. Parker, Dr. MacAlister, and others --
- followers of Rousseau, Bacon, and Spencer. -- “The End of Man is an
- Action, not a Thought.” -- The Conservative Teachers fall into Line.
- -- The New Education becomes an Aggressive Force pushing on to
- Victory. -- The Physical Progress of Manual Training -- its Quality
- not equal to its Extent. -- The New System of Training confided to
- Teachers of the Old Régime. -- Ideal Teachers hard to find. --
- Teachers willing to Learn should be Encouraged. -- The effects of
- Manual Training long antedate its Introduction to the Schools. --
- Bacon’s Definition of Education. -- Stephenson and the Value of
- Hand-work. -- Manual Training is the union of Thought and Action. --
- It is the antithesis of the Greek methods, which exalted Abstractions
- and debased Things. -- The Rule of Comenius and the Injunction of
- Rousseau -- few Teachers comprehend them. -- The Employment of the
- Hands in the Arts is more highly Educative than the acquisition of the
- rules of Reading and Arithmetic. -- What the Locomotive has
- accomplished for Man. -- Education must be equal, and Social and
- Political Equality will follow. -- The foundation of the New Education
- is the Baconian Philosophy as stated by Macaulay. -- Use and Service
- are the Twin-ministers of Human Progress. -- Definitions of Genius. --
- Attention. -- Sir Henry Maine. -- Manual Training relates to all the
- Arts of Life. -- Mind and Hand. -- Newton and the Apple. -- The Sense
- of Touch resides in the Hand. -- Robert Seidel on Familiarity with
- Objects. -- Material Progress the basis of Spiritual Growth. -- Plato
- and the Divine Dialogues. -- Poverty, Society, and the Useful Arts. --
- Selfishness must give way to Altruism. -- The Struggle of Life. -- The
- Progress of the Arts and the final Regeneration of the Race. -- The
- Arts that make Life sweet and beautiful. -- The final Fundamental
- Educational Ideal is Universality. -- Comenius’s definition of Schools
- -- the Workshops of Humanity. -- That one Man should die ignorant, who
- had capacity for Knowledge, is a Tragedy. -- Mental and Manual
- Exercises to be rendered homogeneous in the School of the Future. --
- The hero of the Ideal School. 370
-
-
- APPENDIX 387
-
-
- INDEX 427
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS.
-
-
- PAGE
-
- PORTRAIT OF THE AUTHOR _Frontispiece_
-
- THE LABORATORY OF CARPENTRY 23
-
- COURSE IN THE LABORATORY OF CARPENTRY 27
-
- THE WOOD-TURNING LABORATORY 31
-
- COURSE IN THE WOOD-TURNING AND PATTERN LABORATORY 41
-
- THE FOUNDING LABORATORY 49
-
- COURSE IN THE FOUNDING LABORATORY 53
-
- THE FORGING LABORATORY 59
-
- COURSE IN THE FORGING LABORATORY 67
-
- THE MACHINE-TOOL LABORATORY 79
-
- THE CHIPPING, FILING, AND FITTING LABORATORY 89
-
- COURSE IN THE MACHINE-TOOL LABORATORY 95
-
- THE STUDENTS WITH THEIR BOOKS 107
-
- M. VICTOR DELLA-VOS, THE FOUNDER OF MANUAL TRAINING IN RUSSIA 329
-
- DR. JOHN D. RUNKLE, THE FOUNDER OF MANUAL TRAINING IN THE UNITED
- STATES 335
-
-
-POWER.
-
- “_His tongue was framed to music,
- And his hand was armed with skill;
- His face was the mould of beauty,
- And his heart the throne of will._”
-
- --EMERSON.
-
-
-
-
-MIND AND HAND:
-
-MANUAL TRAINING THE CHIEF FACTOR IN EDUCATION.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-THE IDEAL SCHOOL.
-
- Its Situation. -- Its Tall Chimney. -- The Whir of Machinery and Sound
- of the Sledge-hammer. -- The School that is to dignify Labor. -- The
- Realization of the Dream of Bacon, Rousseau, Comenius, Pestalozzi, and
- Froebel. -- The School that fitly represents the Age of Steel.
-
-
-The Ideal School is an institution which develops and trains to
-usefulness the moral, physical, and intellectual powers of man. It is
-what Comenius called Humanity’s workshop, and in America it is becoming
-the natural center of the Public School system. The building,
-well-designed for its occupancy, is large, airy, open to the light on
-every side, amply provided with all appliances requisite for instruction
-in the arts and sciences, and finished interiorly and exteriorly in the
-highest style of useful and beautiful architectural effects. The
-distinguishing characteristic of the Ideal School building is its
-chimney, which rises far above the roof, from whose tall stack a column
-of smoke issues, and the hum and whir of machinery is heard, and the
-heavy thud of the sledge-hammer resounding on the anvil, smites the ear.
-
-It is, then, a factory rather than a school?
-
-No. It is a school; the school of the future; the school that is to
-dignify labor; the school that is to generate power; the school where
-every sound contributes to the harmony of development, where the brain
-informs the muscle, where thought directs every blow, where the mind,
-the eye, and the hand constitute an invincible triple alliance. This is
-the school that Locke dreamed of, that Bacon wished for, that Rousseau
-described, and that Comenius, Pestalozzi, and Froebel struggled in vain
-to establish.
-
-It is, then, science and the arts in apotheosis. For if it be, as
-claimed, the Ideal school, it is destined to lift the veil from the face
-of Nature, to reveal her most precious secrets, and to divert to man’s
-use all her treasures.
-
-Yes; it is to other schools what the diamond is to other precious
-stones--the last analysis of educational thought. It is the
-philosopher’s stone in education; the incarnated dream of the alchemist,
-which dissolved earth, air, and water into their original elements, and
-recombined them to compass man’s immortality. Through it that which has
-hitherto been impossible is to become a potential reality.
-
-In this building which resembles a factory or machine-shop an
-educational revolution is to be wrought. Education is to be rescued from
-the domination of mediæval ideas, relieved of the enervating influence
-of Grecian æstheticism, and confided to the scientific direction of the
-followers of Bacon, whose philosophy is common sense and its law,
-progress. The philosophy of Plato left in its wake a long line of
-abstract propositions, decayed civilizations, and ruined cities, while
-the philosophy of Bacon, in the language of Macaulay, “has lengthened
-life; mitigated pain; extinguished diseases; increased the fertility of
-the soil; given new securities to the mariner; spanned great rivers and
-estuaries with bridges of form unknown to our fathers; guided the
-thunderbolt innocuously from heaven to earth; lighted up the night with
-the splendor of the day; extended the range of the human vision;
-multiplied the power of the human muscles; accelerated motion;
-annihilated distance; facilitated intercourse, correspondence, all
-friendly offices, all dispatch of business; enabled man to descend to
-the depths of the sea, to soar into the air, to penetrate securely into
-the noxious recesses of the earth, to traverse the land in cars which
-whirl along without horses, and the ocean in ships which run ten knots
-an hour against the wind.”
-
-It is this beneficent work of Bacon that the Ideal school is to
-continue--the work of demonstrating to the world that the most useful
-thing is the most beautiful thing--discarding Plato, the apostle of idle
-speculation, and exalting Bacon, the minister of use.
-
-In laying the foundations of education in labor it is dignified and
-education is ennobled. In such a union there is honor and strength, and
-long life to our institutions. For the permanence of the civil compact
-in this country, as in other countries, depends less upon a wide
-diffusion of unassimilated and undigested intelligence than upon such a
-thorough, practical education of the masses in the arts and sciences as
-shall enable them to secure, and qualify them to store up, a fair share
-of the aggregate produce of labor.
-
-If this school shall appear like a hive of industry, let the reader not
-be deceived. Its main purpose, intellectual development, is never lost
-sight of fora moment. It is founded on labor, which, being the most
-sacred of human functions, is the most useful of educational methods.
-It is a system of object-teaching--teaching through things instead of
-through signs of things. It is the embodiment of Bacon’s
-aphorism--“Education is the cultivation of a just and legitimate
-familiarity betwixt the mind and things.” The students draw pictures of
-things, and then fashion them into things at the forge, the bench, and
-the turning-lathe; not mainly that they may enter machine-shops, and
-with greater facility make similar things, but that they may become
-stronger intellectually and morally; that they may attain a wider range
-of mental vision, a more varied power of expression, and so be better
-able to solve the problems of life when they shall enter upon the stage
-of practical activity.
-
-It is a theory of this school that in the processes of education the
-idea should never be isolated from the object it represents;[E1] (1)
-because the idea, being the reflex perception or shadow of the object,
-is less clearly defined than the object itself, and (2) because joining
-the object and the idea intensifies the impression. Separated from its
-object the idea is unreal, a phantasm. The object is the flesh, blood,
-bones, and nerves of the idea. Without its body the idea is as impotent
-as the jet of steam that rises from the surface of boiling water and
-loses itself in the air. But unite it to its object and it becomes the
-vital spark, the animating force, the Promethean fire. Thus steam
-converts the Corliss engine--a huge mass of lifeless iron--into a thing
-of grace, of beauty, and of resistless power. Suppose the teacher, for
-example, desires to convey to the mind of a child having no knowledge of
-form an impression of the shape of the earth; he says, “It is globular.”
-The child’s face expresses nothing because there is in its mind no
-conception of the object represented by the word globular. The teacher
-says, “It is a sphere,” with no better success. He adds, “A sphere is a
-body bounded by a surface, every point of which is equally distant from
-a point within called the centre.” The child’s face is still
-expressionless. The teacher takes a handful of moist clay and moulds it
-into the form of a sphere, and exhibiting it, says, “The earth is like
-this.” The child claps its hands, utters a cry of delight, and exclaims,
-“It is round like a ball!”
-
-This is an illustration of the triumph of object-teaching, the method
-alike of the kindergarten and the manual training school. As the child
-is father of the man, so the kindergarten is father of the manual
-training school. The kindergarten comes first in the order of
-development, and leads logically to the manual training school. The same
-principle underlies both. In both it is sought to generate power by
-dealing with things in connection with ideas. Both have common methods
-of instruction, and they should be adapted to the whole period of school
-life, and applied to all schools.
-
-The Ideal school, most precisely representative of the present age--the
-age of science--is dedicated to a homogeneous system of mental and
-manual training, to the generation of power, to the development of true
-manhood. And above all, this school is destined to unite in indissoluble
-bonds science and art, and so to confer upon labor the highest and
-justest dignity--that of doing and responsibility. The reason of the
-degradation of labor was admirably stated by America’s most
-distinguished educational reformer, the late Mr. Horace Mann, who said,
-“The labor of the world has been performed by ignorant men, by classes
-doomed to ignorance from sire to son; by the bondmen and bondwomen of
-the Jews, by the helots of Sparta, by the captives who passed under the
-Roman yoke, and by the villeins and serfs and slaves of more modern
-times.”
-
-When it shall have been demonstrated that the highest degree of
-education results from combining manual with intellectual training, the
-laborer will feel the pride of a genuine triumph; for the consciousness
-that every thought-impelled blow educates him, and so raises him in the
-scale of manhood, will nerve his arm, and fire his brain with hope and
-courage.
-
- [E1] “And the attempt to convey scientific conceptions without the
- appeal to observation, which can alone give such conceptions firmness
- and reality, appears to me to be in direct antagonism to the
- fundamental principles of scientific education.”--“Physiography,”
- [Preface], p. vii. By T. H. Huxley, F.R.S. New York: D. Appleton &
- Co., 1878.
-
- This theory is the antithesis of that of Plato, namely; “that the
- simplest and purest way of examining things, is to pursue every
- particular by thought alone, without offering to support our
- meditation by seeing or backing our reasonings by any other corporal
- sense.”--Plato’s “Divine Dialogues,” p. 180. London: S. Cornish & Co.,
- 1839.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-THE MAJESTY OF TOOLS.
-
- Tools the Highest Text-books. -- How to Use them the Test of
- Scholarship. -- They are the Gauge of Civilization. -- Carlyle’s
- Apostrophe to them. -- The Typical Hand-tools. -- The Automata of the
- Machine-shop. -- Through Tools Science and Art are United. -- The
- Power of Tools. -- Their Educational Value. -- Without Tools Man is
- Nothing; with Tools he is All. -- It is through the Arts alone that
- Education touches Human Life.
-
-
-Sacred to the majesty of tools might be appropriately inscribed over the
-entrance to this Ideal school; for its highest text-books are tools, and
-how to use them most intelligently is the test of scholarship. To
-realize the potency of tools it is only necessary to contrast the two
-states of man--the one without tools, the other with tools. See him in
-the first state, naked, shivering with cold, now hiding away from the
-beasts in caves, and now, famished and despairing, gaunt and
-hollow-eyed, creeping stealthily like a panther upon his prey. Then see
-him in the poetic, graphic apostrophe of Carlyle:--“Man is a tool-using
-animal. He can use tools, can devise tools; with these the granite
-mountains melt into light dust before him; he kneads iron as if it were
-soft paste; seas are his smooth highway, winds and fire his unwearying
-steeds. Nowhere do you find him without tools; without tools he is
-nothing, with tools he is all!”
-
-What a picture of the influence of tools upon civilization! It is
-through the use of tools that man has reached the place of absolute
-supremacy among animals. As he increases his stock of tools he recedes
-from the state of savagery. The great gulf between the aboriginal savage
-and the civilized man is spanned by the seven hand-tools--the axe, the
-saw, the plane, the hammer, the square, the chisel, and the file. These
-are the universal tools of the arts, and the modern machine-shop is an
-aggregation of them rendered automatic and driven by steam.
-
-The ancients constructed automata which were exceedingly ingenious. In
-the statues that could walk and talk, the Chinese puppets and the
-marionettes of the Greeks there was a hint of the modern automatic
-tools, which, driven by steam, fashion with equal accuracy the delicate
-parts of the watch and the huge segments of the marine engine. The
-ancients knew more of science than of art. They were familiar with the
-power of steam, but knew not how to apply it to the wants of man. They
-knew that steam would turn a spit, but they had not a sufficient
-knowledge of art to convert the power they had discovered into a monster
-of force, and train it to bear the burdens of commerce. They never
-thought to apply the jet of steam used to turn a spit to great automatic
-machines, and to fit into them saws and files, and needles and drills,
-and gimlets and planes, and compel them to do the work of thousands of
-men. But this is precisely what the modern mechanic has accomplished. In
-making a slave of steam, science and art have combined to free mankind.
-
-We marvel at the dulness of the ancients as shown in their failure to
-utilize in the useful arts the discoveries of science. That they should
-have studied the stars over their heads to the neglect of the earth
-under their feet is incomprehensible to the modern mind. But will not
-future generations marvel at us? Is it not an astounding fact that, with
-a knowledge of the tremendous influence of tools upon the destiny of the
-human race so graphically depicted by Carlyle, the nations have been so
-slow in incorporating tool-practice into educational methods? The
-distinguishing features of modern civilization sprang as definitively
-from cunningly devised and skilfully handled tools as any effect from
-its cause. And yet the world’s statesmen have failed to discover the
-value of tool-practice as an educational agency. The face of the globe
-has been transformed by the union of art and science, but the world’s
-statesmen have not discerned the importance of uniting them in the
-curriculum of the schools. If the ancients could see us as we see them,
-they would doubtless laugh at us as we laugh at them.
-
-We might take a lesson from the savage. He is taught to fight, to hunt,
-and to fish, and in these arts the brain, the hand, and the eye are
-trained simultaneously. He is first given object-lessons, as the pupil
-of the kindergarten is taught. Then the tomahawk, the spear, and the bow
-and arrow are placed in his hands, and he fights for his life, or fishes
-or hunts for his dinner. The young Indian is taught all that it is
-necessary for him to know, and he is educated, practically, in the
-savage’s three workshops--the battle-field, the forest and plain, the
-sea and lake. Thus the young savage enters upon the duties of his life
-with an exact practical knowledge of them. He has not been taught a
-theory of fighting, he has used the weapons of warfare; he has not
-studied the arts of fishing and hunting, he has handled the spear and
-the bow and arrow, and their use is as familiar to him as the
-multiplication table is to the boy in the public school.
-
-We have more and better tools than the savage possesses. With the aid of
-science and art we harness steam to our chariot and compel it to draw us
-whither we will. We steal fire from the clouds and make it serve us as a
-messenger. We imprison the air, and with it stop the flying railway
-train; with the aid of science and art we reduce the most subtile forces
-of nature to servitude. But we neither teach our youth how to master
-their elements nor how to use them.
-
-Tools represent the steps of human progress--in architecture, from the
-mud hut to the modern mansion; in agriculture, from the pointed stick
-used to tear the turf to a thousand and one ingenious instruments of
-husbandry; in ship-building, from the rudderless, sailless boat to the
-ocean steamer; in fabrics, from the matted fleece of the shepherd to the
-varied products of countless looms; in pottery, from the first rude
-Egyptian cup to the exquisite vase of the Sevres factory. And so of
-every art that contributes to the comfort and pleasure of man; the
-development of each has been accomplished by tools in the hands of the
-laborer.
-
-Since, then, man owes so much to labor, he has doubtless educated the
-laborer and showered honors upon him (?). On the contrary, the labor of
-the world has been performed by the most ignorant classes, by bondmen,
-by helots and captives, by serfs and slaves. The laborer has been held
-in such contempt, and been so debased by ignorance, that he has often
-violently protested against improvements in the tools of the trades, and
-with vandal hands destroyed the mill, the factory, and the forge erected
-to ameliorate his condition. At the top of the social scale the sage has
-studied the stars and invented systems of abstract philosophy; at the
-bottom ignorance has deified itself and starved. This divorce of
-science from art has resulted in such incongruities as the Pyramids of
-Egypt and periodical famines; as the hanging gardens of Babylon and the
-horrors of Jewish captivity; as the Greek Parthenon and dwellings
-without chimneys; as the statues of Phidias and Praxiteles, and royal
-banquets without knives, forks, or spoons; as the Roman Forum and the
-Roman populace crying for bread and circuses; as Socrates, Plato, Seneca
-and Aurelius, and Caligula, Claudius, Nero and Domitian.
-
-On the other hand the union of science with art tunnels the mountain,
-bridges the river, dams the torrent, and converts the wilderness into a
-fruitful field.
-
-Science discovers and art appropriates and utilizes; and as science is
-helpless without the aid of art, so art is dead without the help of
-tools. Tools then constitute the great civilizing agency of the world;
-for civilization is the art of rendering life agreeable. The savage may
-own a continent, but if he possesses only the savage’s tools--the spear
-and the bow and arrow--he will be ill-fed, ill-housed, ill-clothed, and
-poorly protected both against cold and heat. He might be familiar with
-all the known sciences, but if he were ignorant of the arts his state,
-instead of being improved, would be rendered more deplorable; for with
-the thoughts, emotions, sensibilities, and aspirations of a sage he
-would still be powerless to steal from heaven a single spark of fire
-with which to warm his miserable hut.
-
-In the light of this analysis Carlyle’s rhapsody on tools becomes a
-prosaic fact, and his conclusion--that man without tools is nothing,
-with tools all--points the way to the discovery of the philosopher’s
-stone in education. For if man without tools is nothing, to be unable to
-use tools is to be destitute of power; and if with tools he is all, to
-be able to use tools is to be all-powerful. And this power in the
-concrete, the power to do some useful thing for man--this is the last
-analysis of educational truth.
-
-There is no better definition of education than that of Pestalozzi--“the
-generation of power.” But what kind of power? Not merely power to think
-abstractly, to speculate, to moralize, to philosophize, but power to act
-intelligently. And the power to act intelligently involves the exertion,
-in greater or less degree, of all the powers, both mental and physical.
-Education, then, is the development of all the powers of man to the
-culminating point of action. What kind of action? Action in art. What is
-art? “The power of doing something not taught by nature or instinct;
-power or skill in the use of knowledge; the practical application of the
-rules or principles of science.” Again we have the last analysis of
-education--“skill in the use of knowledge; the application of the rules
-or principles of science.” And this is tool practice.
-
-It is unnecessary, in an educational view, to divide the arts by the
-employment of the terms “useful” and “fine;” for the fine arts can only
-exist legitimately where the useful arts have paved the way. In a
-harmonious development the artist will enter on the heels of the
-artisan. Art is cosmopolitan. It is not less worthily represented by the
-carpenter with his square, saw, and plane, and the smith with his
-sledge, than by the sculptor with his mallet and chisel, and the painter
-with his easel and brush; both classes contribute to the comfort and
-pleasure of man; for comfort is enhanced by pleasure, and pleasure is
-intensified by comfort. It follows that the ultimate object of education
-is the attainment of skill in the arts. To this end the speculations
-and investigations of philosophy and the experiments of chemistry lead.
-At the door of the study of the philosopher and of the laboratory of the
-chemist stands the artisan, listening for the newest hint that
-philosophy can impart, waiting for the result of the latest chemical
-analysis. In his hands these suggestions take form; through his skilful
-manipulation the faint indications of science become real things, suited
-to the exigencies of human life.
-
-It is the most astounding fact of history that education has been
-confined to abstractions. The schools have taught history, mathematics,
-language and literature, and the sciences, to the utter exclusion of the
-arts, notwithstanding the obvious fact that it is through the arts alone
-that other branches of learning touch human life. As Bacon has so aptly
-expressed it, “The real and legitimate goal of the sciences is the
-endowment of human life with new inventions and riches.” In a word,
-public education stops at the exact point where it should begin to apply
-the theories it has imparted. At this point the school of mental and
-manual training combined--the Ideal School--begins; not only books but
-tools are put into the hands of the pupil, with this injunction of
-Comenius; “Let those things that have to be done be learned by doing
-them.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-THE ENGINE-ROOM.
-
- The Corliss Engine. -- A Thing of Grace and Power. -- The Growth of
- Two Thousand Years. -- From Hero to Watt. -- Its Duty as a
- School-master. -- The Interdependence of the Ages. -- The School in
- Epitome.
-
-
-Let us enter the Ideal School building and take a bird’s-eye view of the
-visible processes of the new education.
-
-The first object that attracts attention is the engine. It is a
-“Corliss,” fifty-two horse-power, and makes that peculiar kind of noise
-which conveys to the mind of the observer an impression of restrained
-power. When the student, upon entering the school, is shown this
-beautiful machine he is told that it, like all other inventions, is a
-growth--the growth of at least two thousand years; that the power of
-steam was known to the ancients--the Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans; that
-Hero, a philosopher of Alexandria, invented a crude steam-engine before
-the beginning of the Christian era, and that the engine before us, which
-throbs and trembles under the pressure of its battery of steel boilers
-in doing duty as a school-master, is the latest development of Hero’s
-conception. The educational idea underlying this fact is the
-interdependence of the ages; each generation is a link between the past
-and the future. “To show,” as Philarète Chasles says, “that man can only
-act efficiently by association with others, it has been ordained that
-each inventor shall only interpret the first word of the problem he sets
-himself to solve, and that every great idea shall be the _résumé_ of
-the past at the same time that it is the germ of the future.”
-
-The first word of the solution of the steam-power problem came from Hero
-down the ages, through Decans, Papin, Savory, Newcomen, Breighton, and
-Smeaton, to Watt. To Watt is awarded the honor of the invention of the
-modern steam-engine; but the first conception of his engine was derived
-from an atmospheric machine through the accident of it having been
-placed in his hands for repairs. Smeaton was the inventor of that
-atmospheric engine, and his mind was one of the links in the chain of
-intelligences extending back to Egypt, through whose united agency the
-steam-engine became a real thing of power in the cunning hands of James
-Watt, of whom the late Dr. Draper said, “He conferred on his native
-country more solid benefits than all the treaties she ever made and all
-the battles she ever won.” This law governing great achievements is full
-of encouragement to the student of mechanics, for while the thought of
-compassing any great discovery or invention may well appall even the
-boldest, the most humble may hope through studious industry to
-contribute something to the sum of human knowledge.
-
-The engine-room of our school is neater than that of the ordinary
-machine-shop, but the furnace roars like any other, its open mouth shows
-a bank of glowing coals, and the “stoker,” with grimy hands, wipes the
-sweat from his sooty brow. The whole school is here seen in epitome: the
-“stoker” typifies the student toiling at the forge, and in the polished
-engine, exhibiting both grace and power in its automatic action, we see
-the student’s graduating project, a machine, the joint creation of
-brain, eye, and hand.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-THE DRAWING-ROOM.
-
- Twenty-four Boys bending over the Drawing-board. -- Analysis and
- Synthesis in Drawing. -- Geometric Drawing. -- Pictorial Drawing. --
- The Principles of Design. -- The Æsthetic in Art. -- The Fundamentals.
- -- Object and Constructive Drawing. -- Drawing for the Exercises in
- the Laboratories. -- The Educational Value of Drawing. -- The Language
- of Drawing. -- Every Student an expert Draughtsman at the end of the
- Course.
-
-
-Passing from the engine-room we enter the room assigned to drawing,--the
-first step in art education--where twenty-four boys are bending over
-the drawing-board, pencil in hand. Every school-day for three years
-these boys will spend an hour in this room. Each division of
-drawing--free-hand and mechanical--is thoroughly taught. Every graduate
-of the institution will be an expert draughtsman. The room is very
-still, only the scratching sound of twenty-four pencils is heard. The
-instructor moves about among the students, with here and there a hint, a
-suggestion, a correction, or a word of commendation--“good.”
-
-Drawing is the representation on paper of the facts, and the appearance
-to the eye of forms. The exercise proceeds by both analysis and
-synthesis. A cube is divided into all the geometric figures of which it
-is susceptible, and these figures are imitated with the pencil on paper.
-Then the figures are reunited, and the cube is similarly imitated. As
-the child in the kindergarten is taught several fundamental geometric
-facts through the use of variously subdivided cubes, so the student of
-drawing is taught by a similar process how to represent these
-fundamental facts on paper. For example (1), the student is taught to
-draw the following (sketches 1, 2, and 3) geometric forms of the square,
-oblong, and circle; (2) he is taught (sketches 4, 5, 6, and 7) to
-represent the facts of the oblong block and cylinder; (3) these facts
-are expressed as follows (sketches 8 and 9) in working drawings.
-Sketches 8 and 9 are such drawings as would be placed in the hands of a
-mechanic as plans for the manufacture of the solids they represent; and
-the most elaborate working drawings for building and mechanical purposes
-are merely the complete development of this division of the art.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Another division of drawing consists in the representation of solids or
-objects as they appear to the eye or pictorially. The oblong block and
-cylinder, for example, appear to the eye very differently from their
-facts represented in the working drawings (sketches 8 and 9), as
-thus--(sketches 10 and 11).
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The development of this division of drawing leads to general pictorial
-representation.
-
-Finally the mastery of the art of drawing involves a study of the
-principles of design as applied to industrial articles with the purpose
-of enhancing their value, as designs for wall-paper, carpets,
-embroideries, tapestry, textiles generally, and decorative work in wood.
-This is the æsthetic element in the art which appeals to and develops
-the student’s taste. It is an important feature of drawing, not less on
-this account than from the fact that the designer’s profession is a very
-lucrative one, but it is less important than object and constructive
-drawing, because less fundamental. Besides, object and constructive work
-in drawing come first in the order of development, and it is an
-inexorable rule of the new education to follow implicitly the hints of
-nature.
-
-The basis of the art of drawing is geometry, and its _a_, _b_, _c_
-consists in a knowledge of certain geometrical lines, curves, and
-angles. This knowledge is gained from examples on the black-board which
-are reproduced on paper. But to relieve the student of this school from
-the tedium of reproducing, hundreds of times in succession, the same
-lines, angles, and curves, object-drawing is introduced very early in
-the course; and to render the exercise more attractive, as well as to
-impress it more firmly upon the mind, the objects drawn during the day
-are made features of the construction lesson in the carpenter’s
-laboratory, the wood or iron turning laboratory, or the laboratory of
-founding on the following day. At first the objects selected for this
-exercise are of a very simple character, as a piece of plain moulding--a
-piece of elaborate moulding; parts of a drawing-board--an entire
-drawing-board; parts of a table or desk--an entire table or desk; parts
-of a draughtsman’s stool--an entire stool; parts of a chair--an entire
-chair.
-
-As the student advances in the general course he advances in object and
-constructive drawing, from simple to complex forms. He draws, for
-example, various parts of the steam-heating apparatus, and from these
-draughts makes working drawings of patterns for moulding. These he works
-out in the Carpenter’s Laboratory, and thence takes them to the
-moulding-room, where they are used in the lesson given in moulding for
-casting. This method of instruction leads to a critical analysis of the
-entire interior of the school building. Each article is resolved into
-the original elements of its construction, and each element or part is
-first represented on paper, then expanded into working drawings, and
-then wrought out in wood and iron. Finally the student reaches the
-engine, every part of which is made the subject of exhaustive study; the
-facts of every part are represented on paper, working drawings of every
-part are made, and every part is reproduced in steel and iron in
-miniature, and, as a triumph of drawing, a representation on paper of
-the completed engine is produced.
-
-The value of drawing as an educational agency is simply incalculable. It
-is the first step in manual training. It brings the eye and the mind
-into relations of the closest intimacy, and makes the hand the organ of
-both. It trains and develops the sense of form and proportion, renders
-the eye accurate in observation, and the hand cunning in execution.
-
-The students are intent upon their work. The eye is busy acting as
-interpreter between the mind and the hand. Having conveyed the
-impression of an object to the mind, under its direction it now
-photographs the object on paper, and the hand obeying the will traces it
-out in lines. Thus the power is gained of multiplying forms of things
-with the pencil as words are multiplied by types.
-
-Drawing is a language--the language in which art records the discoveries
-of science. It is not German, it is not French, it is not English--it is
-universal--common to all draughtsmen. The face of the student exhibits
-vivid flashes of intelligence as the picture reveals itself under his
-hand. Each line is a word, an angle completes the sentence; with a curve
-and a little delicate shading we have a paragraph. The picture begins to
-glow with thought. The student’s face flushes, his heart beats quick and
-his hand trembles. But he restrains himself, and adds more lines, more
-angles and curves, more shading, and the picture is complete. It stands
-out in bold relief, and looks like a real thing. If the student knows
-the story of the brazen statue of Albertus Magnus he half expects his
-picture of a locomotive to move. He listens for the sound of the hissing
-steam, and a smile lights up his face as the illusion vanishes.
-Presently he will take his drawing to the shop, and at the bench, the
-lathe, the anvil, and the forge, reproduce it in iron and steel, and
-actually vitalize it with steam.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-THE CARPENTER’S LABORATORY.
-
- The Natural History of the Pine-tree. -- How it is Converted into
- Lumber, what it is Worth, and how it is Consumed. -- Where the
- Students get Information. -- Working Drawings of the Lesson. -- Asking
- Questions. -- The Instructor Executes the Lesson. -- Instruction in
- the Use and Care of Tools. -- Twenty-four Boys Making Things. -- As
- Busy as Bees. -- The Music of the Laboratory. -- The Self-reliance of
- the Students.
-
-
-Passing from the Drawing-Room down a flight of stairs we enter the
-Carpenter’s Laboratory. Here we find twenty-four boys seated before a
-black-board. At their left stands the instructor with a piece of white
-pine in his hand. The piece of pine is the subject of his lecture. He
-frequently breaks the thread of his remarks to ask questions, and he is
-as frequently interrupted by questions from members of the class. The
-scene closely resembles an animated discussion, of which a desire to
-learn by asking questions is the chief characteristic. The discussion is
-about pine-trees and pine lumber. A pale-faced, city-bred boy rises to
-describe the pine-tree. He describes a fir-tree, such as may be seen in
-well-kept urban grounds and parks, and describes it in well-chosen,
-almost poetic phrase. The instructor shakes his head, but with a genial
-smile, and recognizes a boy whose face is tanned brown, and who rises at
-the nod and stands rather awkwardly as he speaks. He has seen the pine
-in its native wilds, and he describes quite graphically its long, bare
-trunk and slender limbs. But he says nothing of its narrow, linear
-leaves, of a dark green color, nor of its woody cones, nor of the
-Æolian-harp-like sound of the wind in its branches. Why, the instructor
-wants to know, and he propounds a series of questions, the answers to
-which afford a brief sketch of the boy’s history. His father is a dealer
-in pine logs, and once this boy went with him into the pineries of
-Northern Michigan in mid-winter, when the landscape was white with snow,
-and there saw the huge trees sway back and forth under the woodman’s
-axe, saw them topple over, and heard the loud crash of their fall, saw
-them trimmed and sawed into mill-logs. He took no note of the woody
-cones, nor of the narrow leaves of the pine, nor did the sound of the
-wind in its branches make any impression upon his mind. He saw the pine
-as his father saw it, with the eyes of a lumberman. He learned just one
-thing, and learned it so well that he is able to tell the story of the
-pine-tree from the moment of its fall from the stump in the great forest
-to its arrival at the mill, and thence, cut into boards, planks, and
-timber, to the raft or schooner bound for Chicago.
-
-Then the different varieties of the pine-tree are enumerated, and the
-uses to which their woods are severally adapted mentioned. The countries
-which chiefly produce the pine-tree are named, and the climatic
-conditions most favorable to its growth briefly referred to. This
-discussion leads to the subject of commerce in pine lumber--quantity
-consumed, demand and supply, etc; and this in turn brings a boy to his
-feet with the statement that at the present rate of consumption the
-supply of pine in North America will be exhausted in fifty years. In
-answer to a question the boy says he read the statement in a newspaper.
-This leads to further inquiry as to the sources of information sought by
-the members of the class, whereupon it appears that fifteen boys have
-consulted the title “pine” in some encyclopedia with a view to the
-present lesson, and that eighteen boys have read the market report under
-the title “lumber” in a daily journal, in order to learn the value of
-white-pine boards. The value being stated by half a dozen boys, each
-member of the class computes the cost of the piece of pine in the hands
-of the teacher.
-
-[Illustration: THE LABORATORY OF CARPENTRY.]
-
-Ten minutes having been consumed in the inquiry into the nature and
-value of the wood in which the lesson of the day is to be wrought, the
-instructor makes working drawings of the lesson on the black-board. It
-may consist of a plain joint, a mitre joint, a dove-tail joint, a tenon
-and mortise, or a frame involving all these, and more manipulations. In
-the few minutes devoted to this exercise any question that occurs to the
-mind of the student may be asked, and no impatience is manifested or
-felt if the questions are numerous and reiterated. But as a
-matter-of-fact very few questions are asked during the black-board
-exercise, because each student, having gone over every step of it in his
-drawing-class the day previous, is perfectly familiar with the subject.
-
-The instructor now quits the black-board for the bench, where, in the
-presence of the whole class, he executes the difficult parts of the
-lesson, still propounding and answering questions. If a new tool is
-brought into requisition, instruction is given in its care and use. Now
-the boys repair to their benches, throw off their coats, and seize their
-tools. In a moment the silence and repose of the recitation-room are
-exchanged for the noise and activity of the laboratory. A quarter of an
-hour ago we left twenty-four boys, with bowed heads, making drawings of
-things; for a quarter of an hour we have listened to a peculiar kind of
-recitation involving much practical knowledge on the subject of the
-pine-tree and its product, lumber; now we stand in the presence of
-twenty-four boys, in twenty-four different attitudes of labor, making
-things. They are literally as busy as bees, using the square, the saw,
-the plane, and the chisel; they are, as the journeyman carpenter would
-say, “getting out stuff for a job.” The coarse, buzzing sound of the
-cross-cut saw resounds loudly through the room; above this bass note the
-sharp tenor tone of the rip-saw is heard, and the rasping sound of half
-a dozen planes throwing off a series of curling pine ribbons comes in as
-a rude refrain. The faces of the boys are ruddy with the glow of
-exercise; the pale-faced boy who mistook a fir-tree for a pine will have
-his revenge on the angular boy from the Michigan pinery, for he is doing
-a finer piece of work than the other.
-
-[Illustration: COURSE IN THE LABORATORY OF CARPENTRY.]
-
-In the midst of the harmonious confusion caused by the use of saws,
-planes, mallets, and chisels, the instructor raps on his desk, and
-silence is restored; three or four boys stand in a group about the
-instructor’s desk, the others pause and wipe the perspiration from their
-brows. It is a picture full of interest--twenty-four boys, with flushed,
-eager faces, lifting their eyes simultaneously to the face of the
-instructor, waiting for the hint which is to come, and which is sure in
-these now active minds to result in a prompt solution of the main
-problem of the day’s lesson. A similar question from several boys shows
-the instructor that the lesson has not been made clear; hence the
-general explanation which follows the call to order. So the work goes
-on, with now and then an interruption. There is a student trying to fit
-a tenon into its mortise; he is nervous and impatient; the instructor
-observes him, foresees a catastrophe, and moves towards his bench. But
-it is too late! The tenon being forced the mortise splits, and the
-discomforted student makes a wry face. The instructor approaches with a
-word of good cheer, but with the warning aphorism that “haste makes
-waste.” The student’s face flushes, and he chronicles his failure as
-Huntsman, the inventor of cast-steel, did his, by burying the wreck
-under a pile of shavings, and commencing, as the lawyers say, _de novo_.
-Thus the lesson proceeds “by the usual laboratory methods employed in
-teaching the sciences;” the class learns the thing to be done by
-doing it. The students are at their best, because the lesson to be
-learned compels a close union between the three great powers of
-man--observation, reflection, and action. No student seeks aid from
-another, because such a course would be impossible without the knowledge
-of the whole class. A feeling of self-reliance is thus developed, the
-disposition to shirk repressed, and a sense of sturdy independence
-encouraged and promoted.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-THE WOOD-TURNING LABORATORY.
-
- A Radical Change. -- From the Square to the Circle; from Angles to
- Spherical, Cylindrical, and Eccentric Forms. -- The Rhythm of
- Mechanics. -- The Potter’s Wheel of the Ancients and the
- Turning-lathe. -- The Speculation of Holtzapffels on its Origin. --
- The Greeks as Turners. -- The Turners of the Middle Ages. -- George
- III. at the Lathe. -- Maudslay’s Slide-rest, and the Revolution it
- wrought. -- The Natural History of Black-walnut. -- The Practical
- Value of Imagination. -- Disraeli’s Tribute to it; Sir Robert Peel’s
- Want of it. -- The Laboratory animated by Steam. -- The Boys at the
- Lathes. -- Their Manly Bearing. -- The Lesson.
-
-
-When the twenty-four boys of the Carpenter’s Laboratory have become
-expert in the use of the tools employed in carpentry they will be
-introduced to the Wood-turning Laboratory. The change is radical--from
-the square to the circle, from the prose to the poetry of mechanical
-manipulation. Carpentry is distinguished for its corners and angles,
-turnery for its spherical, cylindrical, and eccentric forms. In these
-forms Nature abounds and delights, and it is in these forms that the
-rhythm of mechanics exists. It is by the Turners that the arts are
-supplied with a thousand and one things of use and beauty. The machines,
-great and small, from the locomotive to the stocking-knitter--without
-which the work of the modern world could not be done--these wonderful
-contrivances, seemingly more cunning than the hand of man, owe their
-very existence to the turning-lathe.
-
-[Illustration: THE WOOD-TURNING LABORATORY.]
-
-The skilled instructor in this department of the school loves to dwell
-upon the history of turning. Its origin is enveloped in the obscurity of
-early Egyptian traditions. It is the subject of one of the oldest myths,
-which runs thus: “Num, the directing spirit of the universe, and oldest
-of created beings, first exercised the potter’s art, moulding the human
-race on his wheel. Having made the heavens and the earth, and the air,
-and the sun and moon, he modelled man out of the dark Nilotic clay, and
-into his nostrils breathed the breath of life.”
-
-The Potter’s Wheel of the ancients contained the germ of the
-turning-lathe found in every modern machine-shop, whether for the
-manipulation of wood or iron. Holtzapffels has an ingenious speculation
-as to the origin of the invention of the lathe. In his elaborate work on
-“Turning and Mechanical Manipulation” he says,
-
-“It would appear probable that the origin of the lathe may be found in
-the revolution given to tools for piercing objects for ornament or use.
-At first it may be supposed that a spine or thorn from a tree, a
-splinter of bone or a tooth, was alone used and pressed into the work as
-we should use a brad-awl. The process would naturally be slow and
-unsuitable to hard materials, and this probably suggested to the
-primitive mechanic the idea of attaching a splinter of bone or flint to
-the end of a short piece of stick, rubbing which between the palms of
-his hands would give a rotary motion to the tool.”
-
-Of the steps of progress in invention, from the rude turning-tools of
-the ancients down to the beginning of the present century, when
-Maudslay’s improvement made the lathe the king of the machine-shop,
-little is known. By the Greeks the invention of turning was ascribed to
-Dædalus. Phidias, who produced the two great masterpieces of Greek art,
-Athene and Jupiter Olympius, was familiar with the then existing system
-of wood-turning. In cutting figures on signets and gems in such stones
-as agate, carnelian, chalcedony, and amethyst, the Greek artificers used
-the wheel and the style. In the abundant ornamentation of Roman
-dwellings--their elaborately carved chairs, tables, bedsteads, sofas,
-and stools--there is ample evidence of a knowledge of the art of turning
-in wood. Improvements were made in turning-tools, and fine ornamental
-work was done by the artisans of the Middle Ages, to which the
-cathedrals and palaces of the time bear witness. Later, during the
-sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, turning became a fashionable
-amusement among the French nobility and gentry. Louis XVI. was an expert
-locksmith, and spent much of his royal time in that pursuit. The fashion
-extended to England. George III. is said to have been an expert
-wood-turner, to have been “learned in wheels and treadles, chucks and
-chisels;” and as a matter of course a pursuit indulged by kings was
-followed by many nobles. There is, however, no evidence that those
-distinguished amateurs made any improvements in the tools they used;
-inventions and discoveries in this as in all departments of art came
-from the other end of the social scale. When the Spaniards sacked
-Antwerp in 1585 the Flemish silk-weavers fled to England and set up
-their looms there; and a century later, upon the revocation of the Edict
-of Nantes, the silk industry of England received a new accession of
-refugee artisans consisting of persecuted Protestants. Doubtless with
-the Flemish weavers there crossed the British Channel representatives of
-all the useful arts, including that of turning; for in another hundred
-years England took the front rank among nations in nearly all industrial
-pursuits.
-
-Among the great inventions and discoveries which distinguished the last
-quarter of the eighteenth century, Maudslay’s slide-rest attachment to
-the lathe was one of the greatest, if not the greatest. Without it
-Watt’s invention would have been of little more real service to mankind
-than the French automata of the first quarter of the same century--the
-mechanical peacock of Degennes, Vaucauson’s duck, or Maillardet’s
-conjurer. Mr. Samuel Smiles, in his admirable book on “Iron-workers and
-Tool-makers,” declares that this passion for automata, which gave rise
-to many highly ingenious devices, “had the effect of introducing among
-the higher order of artists habits of nice and accurate workmanship in
-executing delicate pieces of machinery.” And he adds, “The same
-combination of mechanical powers which made the steel spider crawl, the
-duck quack, or waved the tiny rod of the magician, contributed in future
-years to purposes of higher import--the wheels and pinions, which in
-these automata almost eluded the human senses by their minuteness,
-reappearing in modern times in the stupendous mechanism of our
-self-acting lathes, spinning-mules, and steam-engines.”
-
-That there was a logical connection between the two eras of mechanical
-contrivance--that of the ingenious automata and that of the useful
-modern machines--is extremely probable. That the refugee artisans from
-Antwerp and from France had a stimulating effect upon English invention
-and discovery there can be little doubt; and that the French automata,
-which were much written about, and exhibited as a triumph of mechanical
-genius, became known to and exercised an influence upon the minds of
-intelligent mechanics is equally probable. We are therefore surprised to
-find Mr. Smiles arriving at a conclusion in such direct conflict with
-his general views of the gradual growth of inventions, namely, “that
-Maudslay’s invention was entirely independent of all that had gone
-before, and that he contrived it for the special purpose of overcoming
-the difficulties which he himself experienced in turning out duplicate
-parts in large numbers.”
-
-But however this may be, Mr. Maudslay’s invention revolutionized the
-workshop. Before its introduction the tool of the artisan was guided
-solely by muscular strength and the dexterity of the hand; the smallest
-variation in the pressure applied rendered the work imperfect. The
-slide-rest acting automatically changed all that. With it thousands of
-duplicates of the most ponderous, as well as the most minute pieces of
-machinery, are executed with the utmost precision. Without it the
-steam-engine, whether locomotive or stationary, would have been hardly
-more than a dream of genius; for the monster that is to be fed with
-steam can be properly constructed only by automatic steam-driven tools;
-or, as another has expressed it, “Steam-engines were never properly made
-until they made themselves.”
-
-Ten minutes are thus agreeably and profitably occupied by the instructor
-in a review of the history of a single invention, and its relations to
-the whole field of mechanical work.
-
-Another branch of the lesson consists of an inquiry into the natural
-history, qualities, value, and common uses of the wood which is to be
-the material of the day’s manipulation--black-walnut. Holding a piece of
-the purplish brown wood high in his hand the instructor discharges, as
-it were, a volley of questions at the class, “What is it called?” “Where
-is it found?” “How large does the tree grow?” “For what is the wood
-chiefly used?” Up go a dozen hands. The owner of one of the hands is
-recognized, and he rises to tell all about it, but is only allowed to
-say “black-walnut.” The next speaker is permitted to say that “the
-black-walnut is found all over North America;” the next that it is more
-abundant west of the Alleghanies, and most abundant in the valley of the
-Mississippi; the next that in a forest it has a limbless trunk from
-thirty to fifty feet high, but in the “open” branches near the ground;
-the next that it is extensively used in house-finishing, in furniture,
-for all kinds of cabinet-work, and especially for gunstocks.
-
-Further inquiry elicits the information that the black-walnut is a
-quick-growing, large tree; that its wood is hard, fine-grained, durable,
-and susceptible of a high polish, and that through use and exposure it
-turns dark, and with great age becomes almost black. One student
-describes the leaves, another the fruit or nuts, and states that they
-are used in dyeing; a third states that the black-walnut is a great
-favorite for planting in the treeless tracts of the West, on account of
-its rapid growth and the value of its timber. When the subject appears
-to be nearly exhausted, a boy at the farther end of one of the forms
-rises timidly and tells the story of the late Mr. W. C. Bryant’s great
-black-walnut-tree at Roslyn, Long Island. He concludes, excitedly, “It
-is one hundred and seventy years old and twenty-five feet in
-circumference.”[1] The timid boy dwells upon his story of the “big”
-tree with evident fondness, and his eyes dilate with satisfaction as he
-resumes his seat. The circumstance of the great age no less than the
-enormous size of the tree has captivated his imagination. The
-discriminating instructor will not fail to note such incidents of the
-lesson. It is through them that the special aptitudes of students are
-disclosed. The instructor will always bear prominently in mind that the
-purpose of the school is not to make mechanics but men. Nor will he
-forget, as Buckle remarked, that Shakespeare preceded Newton. Buckle
-pays a glowing tribute to the usefulness of the imagination. He says,
-“Shakespeare and the poets sowed the seed which Newton and the
-philosophers reaped.... They drew attention to nature, and thus became
-the real founders of all natural science. They did even more than this.
-They first impregnated the mind of England with bold and lofty
-conceptions. They taught the men of their generation to crave after the
-unseen.”
-
- [1] “At Ellerslie, the birthplace of Wallace, exists an oak which is
- celebrated as having been a remarkable object in his time, and which
- can scarcely, therefore, be less than seven hundred years old. Near
- Staines there is a yew-tree older than Magna Charta (1215), and the
- yews at Fountains Abbey, in Yorkshire, are probably more than twelve
- hundred years old. Eight olive-trees still exist in the Garden of
- Olives at Jerusalem which are known to be at least eight hundred years
- old.”--“Vegetable Physiology.” By William B. Carpenter, M.D., F.R.S.,
- F.G.S. London: Bell and Daldy. 1865. p. 78.
-
-Disraeli, in his matchless biography of Lord George Bentinck, in summing
-up the character of a great English statesman is equally emphatic in
-praise of the imagination as a practical quality. He says,
-
-“Thus gifted and thus accomplished, Sir Robert Peel had a great
-deficiency--he was without imagination. Wanting imagination, he wanted
-prescience. No one was more sagacious when dealing with the
-circumstances before him; no one penetrated the present with more
-acuteness and accuracy. His judgment was faultless, provided he had not
-to deal with the future. Thus it happened through his long career, that
-while he always was looked upon as the most prudent and safest of
-leaders, he ever, after a protracted display of admirable tactics,
-concluded his campaigns by surrendering at discretion. He was so adroit
-that he could prolong resistance even beyond its term, but so little
-foreseeing that often in the very triumph of his manœuvres he found
-himself in an untenable position.”
-
-The timid boy has imagination; if he has application and the logical
-faculty he may become an inventor, or he may become an artist--an
-engraver or a designer of works of art--or he may become a man of
-letters. To the man of vivid imagination and industry all avenues are
-open; Disraeli’s wonderful career offers a striking illustration of the
-truth of this proposition. The true purpose of education is the
-harmonious development of the whole being, and the purpose of this
-turning laboratory is to educate these twenty-four boys, not to make
-turners of them.
-
-The laboratory is a labyrinth of belts, large and small, of wheels, big
-and little, of pulleys and lathes. A student, at a word from the
-instructor, moves a lever a few inches, and the breath of life is
-breathed into the complicated mass of machinery. The throbbing heart of
-the engine far away sends the currents of its power along shafting and
-pulleys. The dull, monotonous whir of steam-driven machinery salutes the
-ear, and the twenty-four students take their places at the lathes. They
-are from fourteen to seventeen years of age, and range in height from
-undersize to “full-grown.” They look like little men. Their faces are
-grave, showing a sense of responsibility. They are to handle edge-tools
-on wood rapidly revolved by the power of steam. There is peril in an
-uncautious step, and death lurks in the shafting. Of these dangers they
-have been repeatedly warned; and there is in their bearing that
-manifestation of wary coolness which we call “nerve,” and which in an
-emergency develops into a lofty heroism capable of sublime
-self-sacrifice.
-
-This is the very essence of education, its informing spirit. The student
-no longer thinks merely of becoming an expert turner; he thinks of
-becoming a man! All the powers of his mind are roused to vigorous
-action; imagination illumes the path, and reason, following with firm
-but cautious step, drives straight to the mark. Rapid development
-results from the combination of practice with theory--rapid because
-orderly, or natural. The knowledge acquired is at once assimilated, and
-becomes a mental resource, subject to draft like a bank account. But
-unlike a bank account it increases in the ratio of the frequency with
-which drafts are made upon it, and the result is the student leaves
-school at seventeen years of age with the reasoning experience of an
-ordinarily educated man of forty.
-
-The lesson has been announced by the instructor, its chief points stated
-and analyzed, its place in the scale (so to speak) of the art of turnery
-defined, its educational value to the mind, the hand, and the eye shown,
-and the points of difficulty involved so emphasized as to lead to
-painstaking care in the execution of crucial parts. The new tool
-required by the lesson is handled in presence of the waiting class by
-the instructor; the time of its invention stated; the name of its
-inventor given; the method of its manufacture described; and how to
-sharpen, take care of, and use it explained with such minuteness of
-detail as to insure the making of a permanent impression upon the minds
-of students.
-
-[Illustration: COURSE IN THE WOOD-TURNING AND PATTERN LABORATORY.]
-
-The wood-turner’s case contains more than a hundred tools, perhaps a
-hundred and fifty, but not more than a score of them are fundamental;
-the others are subsidiary, and require very little if any explanation.
-
-The lesson may be one in simple turning, as a table-leg, the round of a
-chair, or parts of a section of a miniature garden-fence; or it may be a
-set of pulleys, or patterns for various forms of pipe. The pieces of
-wood to be wrought or manipulated lie at the feet of the student, and
-the working drawing (drawn by the student himself) lies on the bench
-before him. The piece of wood to be turned first is adjusted, the
-student touches a lever over his head which sets the lathe in motion,
-takes the required tool in hand, and the work begins. Guided by the
-automatic slide-rest, the sharp point of the tool chips away the
-revolving wood until it assumes the form of the drawing lying under the
-eye of the operator. Thus the lesson proceeds to the end of the
-prescribed period--two hours. The master watches every step of its
-progress. If a student is puzzled he receives prompt assistance, so that
-no time may be lost. Indeed the relations between instructor and
-students are such, or ought to be such, that the question is asked
-before the puzzled mind falls into a rut of profitless speculation
-through revolving in a circle. But if the true sequential method of
-study is followed the student rarely fails, from the vantage ground of a
-step securely taken, to comprehend the nature of the next step in the
-regular order of succession. This is the Russian system, and it is the
-method of the wood-turnery as well as of every department of the Manual
-Training School. Hence a certain tool having been mastered, the next
-tool in the regular order of succession is more easily understood,
-because (1) each tool contains a hint of the nature of its successor,
-and (2) each addition to the student’s stock of knowledge confers an
-increased capability of comprehension.
-
-When the lesson is concluded the whir of the machinery ceases, and a
-great silence falls upon the class as the students assemble about the
-instructor, each presenting his piece of work. This is the moment of
-friendly criticism. The instructor handles each specimen, comments upon
-the character of the workmanship, points out its defects, and calls for
-criticisms from the class. These are freely given. There is an animated
-discussion, involving explanations on the part of the instructor of the
-various causes of defects, and suggestions as to suitable methods of
-amendment. Then the pieces of work are marked according to the various
-degrees of excellence they exhibit, and the class is dismissed.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-THE FOUNDING LABORATORY.
-
- The Iron Age. -- Iron the King of Metals. -- Locke’s Apothegm. -- The
- Moulder’s Art is Fundamental. -- History of Founding. -- Remains of
- Bronze Castings in Egypt, Greece, and Assyria. -- Layard’s
- Discoveries. -- The Greek Sculptors. -- The Colossal Statue of Apollo
- at Rhodes. -- The Great Bells of History. -- Moulding and Casting a
- Pulley. -- Description of the Process, Step by Step. -- The Furnace
- Fire. -- Pouring the Hot Metal into the Moulds. -- A Pen Picture of
- the Laboratory. -- Thus were the Hundred Gates of Babylon cast. --
- Neglect of the Useful Arts by Herodotus. -- How Slavery has degraded
- Labor. -- How Manual Training is to dignify it.
-
-
-As we enter the Founding Laboratory we recall Locke’s apothegm: “He who
-first made known the use of that contemptible mineral [iron] may be
-truly styled the father of arts and the author of plenty.” We reflect,
-too, that the mineral that has given its name to an age of the
-world--our age--is worthy of careful study.
-
-The Founding Laboratory, like all the laboratories of the school, is
-designed for twenty-four students. There are twenty-four
-moulding-benches, combined with troughs for sand, and a cupola furnace
-where from five hundred to one thousand pounds of iron may be melted.
-
-The students we lately parted from in the Wood-turning Laboratory are
-here. Their training has been confined to manipulations in wood; they
-are now to be made acquainted with iron--iron in considerable masses.
-They should know something, in outline, of the history of the king of
-metals in the Founding Laboratory. The instructor speaks familiarly to
-them, somewhat as follows:
-
-The art of the founder is fundamental in its nature. The arts of
-founding and forging are, indeed, the essential preliminary steps which
-lead to the finer manipulations entering into all metal constructions.
-Whether forging preceded founding or founding forging is immaterial;
-both arts are as old as recorded history--much older indeed. Moulding,
-which is the first step in the founder’s art, should be among the oldest
-of human discoveries, since man had only to take in his hand a lump of
-moist clay to receive ocular evidence of his power to give it any
-desired form.
-
-Moulding for casting is closely allied to the potter’s art. The potter
-selects a clay suitable for the vessel he desires to mould, and the
-founder prepares a composition of sand and loam of the proper
-consistency to serve as a matrix for the vessel he desires to cast.
-
-The art of founding was doubtless first applied to bronze. The ruins of
-Egypt and Greece abound in the remains of bronze castings, an analysis
-of which reveals about the same relative proportions of tin and copper
-in use now for the best qualities of statuary bronze. The bronze
-castings of the Assyrians show a high degree of art. Many specimens of
-this fine work of the Assyrian founder have been rescued from the ruins
-of long-buried Nineveh--buried so long that Xenophon and his ten
-thousand Greeks marched over its site more than two thousand years ago
-without making any sign of a knowledge of its existence, and Alexander
-fought a great battle in its neighborhood in apparent ignorance of the
-fact that he trod on classic ground. But there, delving beneath the
-rubbish and decayed vegetation of four thousand years or more, Layard
-found great treasures of art in the palaces of Sennacherib and other
-Assyrian monarchs--vases, jars, bronzes, glass-bottles, carved ivory
-and mother-of-pearl ornaments, engraved gems, bells, dishes, and
-ear-rings of exquisite workmanship, besides arms and a variety of tools
-of the practical arts.
-
-In Greece, in the time of Praxiteles, bronze was moulded into forms of
-rare beauty and grandeur. The colossal statue of Apollo at Rhodes
-affords an example of the magnitude of the Greek castings. It was cast
-in several parts, and was over one hundred feet high. About fifty years
-after its erection it was destroyed by an earthquake. Its fragments lay
-on the ground where it fell, nearly a thousand years; but when the
-Saracens gathered them together and sold them, there was a sufficient
-quantity to load a caravan consisting of nine hundred camels. One of the
-finest existing specimens of ancient bronze casting is that of a statue
-of Mercury discovered at Herculaneum, and now to be seen in the museum
-at Naples.
-
-During the era of church bells the founder exercised his art in casting
-bells of huge dimensions. Early in the fifteenth century a bell weighing
-about fifty tons was cast at Pekin, China. This bell still exists, is
-fourteen and a half feet in height and thirteen feet in diameter. But
-the greatest bell-founding feat was, however, that of 1733, in casting
-the bell of Moscow. This bell is nineteen feet three inches in height
-and sixty feet nine inches in circumference, and weighs 443,772 pounds.
-The value of the metal entering into its construction is estimated at
-$300,000. It long lay in a pit in the midst of the Kremlin, but Czar
-Nicholas caused it to be raised, mounted upon a granite pedestal, and
-converted into a chapel. The methods of casting employed by the founder
-of this king of bells are not known. The bell has outlived the Works
-where it was cast. The melting and handling of two hundred and twenty
-tons of bronze metal certainly required appointments, mechanical and
-otherwise, of the most stupendous character; and the existence of such
-Works presupposes an intimate acquaintance with the most minute details
-of the founder’s art, since the natural order of development is from the
-less to the greater. That is to say, the founder who could manipulate
-scores of tons of metal in a single great casting could doubtless
-manipulate a few pounds of metal; or, the founder who could cast a bell
-weighing two hundred and twenty tons, could cast pots and kettles and
-hundreds of other little useful things. What we hope to do in this
-school Founding Laboratory is to gain a correct conception of great
-things by making ourselves thoroughly familiar with many forms of little
-things in moulding and casting.
-
-The lesson of the day is the moulding and casting of a plain pulley. In
-the Pattern Laboratory each student has already executed a pattern of
-the pulley to be cast, and the pattern lies before him on his
-moulding-bench. Now the instructor, at the most conspicuous bench in the
-room, proceeds to execute the first part of the lesson, which consists
-of moulding. Taking from the trough a handful of sand, he explains that
-it is only by the use of sand possessing certain properties, as a degree
-of moisture, but not enough to vaporize when the metal is poured in, and
-a small admixture of clay, but not enough to make of the compound a
-loam, that the mould can be saved from ruin through vaporization, and,
-at the same time, given the essential quality of adhesiveness and
-plasticity. In the course of this explanation he remarks that the sand
-used in some parts of the mould is mixed with pulverized bituminous
-coal, coke, or plumbago, in order to give a smoother surface. Now he
-takes the “flask”--a wooden apparatus containing the sand in which the
-mould is made--and explains its construction and use. From this
-point--the sifting of facing sand on the turn-over board, to the final
-one of replacing the cope and securing it with keys or clamps--every
-step of the process is carefully gone through with and explained.
-
-[Illustration: THE FOUNDING LABORATORY.]
-
-Meantime, before the moulding lesson has proceeded far, a fire is
-kindled in the furnace and it is “charged;” that is to say, filled with
-alternate layers of coal and pig-iron, with occasional fluxes of
-limestone. During the process of charging the furnace the instructor
-explains the principle of its construction, and shows how it operates.
-At every subsequent rest in moulding the students surround the furnace
-to witness the progress of the fire, the position of the layers of coal,
-and the state of combustion. They pass the furnace in procession, and
-each peeps in through the isinglass windows upon the glowing fire, asks
-a question, or a dozen questions, perhaps, and gives place to the next
-student in line. In the intervals of these visits to the furnace the
-work of making twenty-four moulds goes on under the eye of the
-instructor, the students explaining each step in advance. He is
-omnipresent, answering a question here, preventing a fatal mistake
-there, cheering, inspiring, and guiding the whole class, but never
-insisting upon a slavish adherence to strict identity in processes. And
-it is to be noted that there is in moulding more latitude for
-independence than in almost any other mechanical manipulation. Certain
-essentials there are, of course, but these being secured, the student
-may exercise his ingenuity in the execution of many minor details. That
-there is considerable individuality in the class may be seen by
-observation of the different methods employed by the several young
-moulders to compass various details of the same general process.
-
-The moulds are nearly completed. The instructor assists a student who is
-found to be a little behind in his work, and interposes a warning
-against haste at the critical moment. Within a period of ten minutes the
-twenty-four patterns are “tapped,” loosened, and lifted from their beds,
-imperfections are carefully repaired with the trowel, or some other
-tool, channels to the pouring holes are cut in the surfaces, the pieces
-remaining in the copes are removed, the particles of loose sand are
-blown from the surfaces of the moulds, and the twenty-four copes are
-replaced, and secured in their correct positions with keys or clamps.
-
-A final visit is now made to the furnace. The fusion is found to be
-complete; the “pigs” are converted into a molten pool. It only remains
-to pour the hot metal into the moulds. The instructor seizes an iron
-ladle lined with clay, holds it under the spout of the furnace reservoir
-until it is nearly filled with the glowing fluid, lifts and carries it
-carefully across the room, and pours the contents into a mould. Then the
-students, in squads, after having been cautioned as to the deadly nature
-of the molten mass they are to handle, follow the example of their
-instructor. At this moment the laboratory appeals powerfully to the
-imagination. The picture it presents is weird in the extreme. From the
-open furnace door a stream of crimson light floods the room. The
-students wear paper caps and are bare-armed; their faces glow in the
-reflected glare of the furnace-fire; they march up to the furnace one by
-one, each receiving a ladleful of steaming hot metal, and countermarch
-to their benches, where they pour the contents of their ladles into the
-moulds.
-
-[Illustration: COURSE IN THE FOUNDING LABORATORY.]
-
-Still holding his empty ladle in his hand, the instructor watches the
-progress of the lesson with keen interest until the last stream of metal
-has found its way into the throat of the last mould. He recalls the
-story of Vulcan, the God of Fire, and of all the arts and industries
-dependent upon it, and wonders why he was not depicted pouring tons of
-molten metal, in the foundery, rather than sledge in hand at the forge.
-Then he regards the class with a benignant expression of pride, begs for
-silence, and says, “Thus were the hundred brazen gates of ancient
-Babylon cast long before the beginning of the Christian era.” Herodotus
-did not think to tell us much of the state of the useful arts in the
-early time of which he wrote, but the brazen gates attracted his
-attention, and he described them: “At the end of each street a little
-gate is found in the wall along the river-side, in number equal to the
-streets, and they are all made of brass, and lead down to the edge of
-the river.” Could Herodotus have foreseen what a deep interest his
-readers of this remote time would take in the history of the useful
-arts, he would have written less about the walls, palaces, and temples
-of Babylon, and more about the artificers. He would have begged
-admission to the forges and founderies of the city; he would have
-visited the Assyrian founder at his work, questioned him about his
-processes, and set down his answers with painstaking care. Then he would
-have sought an introduction to the smithy, and from the grimy forger
-learned what he could tell of his art and of kindred arts. So the father
-of history might have made an enduring record of the real things which
-throughout all time have contributed to the advancement of the human
-race, rather than of events growing out of the ambitions and passions of
-men--the rise and fall of kingdoms and empires, the varying fortune of
-battle, the treacheries, crimes, and brutalities of rulers, and the
-cringing submission of millions of subjects. But, alas, the founders and
-smiths, and all the other cunning artificers of the vast empire of
-Syria, were slaves! and through their ancestry for unnumbered
-generations the stigma of slavery had attached to labor. Ay, on the bare
-backs of the founders of Babylon’s brazen gates the popular scorn of
-labor had doubtless left its livid brand.
-
-With these pariahs of Assyrian society, these outcasts of the social
-circle, the great Greek historian could not even speak. Descended from a
-long line of noble Halicarnassian families, Herodotus felt all the
-prejudices of the hereditary aristocracy of his country. Hence he
-dilates upon the wonders of Babylon, but is silent as to its architects
-and artisans. He describes with great minuteness of detail the tower of
-Jupiter Belus, but gives no hint of the name of its designer and
-builder. He declares that Babylon was adorned in a manner surpassing any
-city of the time, but in regard to the artificers through whose
-ingenuity and skill such pleasing effects were produced he gives no
-sign.
-
-The silence of Herodotus on the subject of the useful arts in Babylon
-does not indicate a want of appreciation of their value, but merely
-shows contempt of the Assyrian artisan, and this not because he was an
-artisan, but because he was a slave. The story of Solon and Crœsus,
-which antedates Herodotus, whether true or a myth, shows that iron and
-artisanship were appreciated by both Greeks and barbarians. When Crœsus
-had exhibited to the Greek sage his vast hoard of treasures, Solon
-said, “If another comes that hath better iron than you he will be master
-of all this gold.” Here is a recognition of the immense value of the
-arts of smelting and forging, coupled with a contemptuous silence
-regarding as well the smelter and the smith as the rank and file of the
-armies who should wield the swords and spears drawn by science from the
-recesses of the earth, and by art wrought and tempered at the forge.
-Through all the early ages the brand and scorn of slavery adhered to
-labor, while the arts, the products of labor, were often deified. Thus
-the Scythian, who from a grinning skull drank the warm blood of his
-captive, regarded with superstitious awe as a god the iron sword with
-which he cut off his captive’s head.
-
-It was only with the revival of learning, after the intellectual and
-moral gloom of the Dark Ages, that labor began slowly to lift its bowed
-head and assert itself. But it does not yet stand erect. It still stoops
-as if in the presence of a master. Every now and then it winces and
-cringes as if the sound of the descending lash smote its ear. It remains
-for you, students in this school of the arts--all the arts that make
-mankind good and great--it remains for you to brush away from the
-tear-stained face of labor all the shadows accumulated there through all
-the dead ages of oppression and slavery. It remains for you to make
-labor bold by making it intelligent. It remains for you to dignify and
-ennoble labor by bestowing upon it the ripest scientific and artistic
-culture, and devoting to its service the best energies of body and
-mind.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-THE FORGING LABORATORY.
-
- Twenty-four manly-looking Boys with Sledge-hammer in Hand -- their
- Muscle and Brawn. -- The Pride of Conscious Strength. -- The Story of
- the Origin of an Empire. -- The Greater Empire of Mechanics. -- The
- Smelter and the Smith the Bulwark of the British Government. -- Coal
- -- its Modern Aspects; its Early History; Superstition regarding its
- Use. -- Dud. Dudley utilizes “Pit-coal” for Smelting -- the Story of
- his Struggles; his Imprisonment and Death. -- The English People
- import their Pots and Kettles. -- “The Blast is on and the Forge Fire
- sings.” -- The Lesson, first on the Black-board, then in Red-hot Iron
- on the Anvil. -- Striking out the Anvil Chorus -- the Sparks fly
- whizzing through the Air. -- The Mythological History of Iron. -- The
- Smith in Feudal Times. -- His Versatility. -- History of Damascus
- Steel. -- We should reverence the early Inventors. -- The Useful Arts
- finer than the Fine Arts. -- The Ancient Smelter and Smith, and the
- Students in the Manual Training School.
-
-
-This is the Forging Laboratory. It is only a few steps from the
-laboratory for founding, where we lately saw twenty-four students taking
-off their leather aprons after a two hours’ lesson in moulding and
-casting. Here we find, also, twenty-four students, but not the
-twenty-four we saw in the laboratory for founding. This class is more
-advanced. The boys are a trifle taller; they show more muscle, more
-strength, and bear themselves with a still more confident air.
-
-In the Forging Laboratory there are twenty-four forges with all
-essential accessories, as anvils, tubs, and sets of ordinary
-hand-tools.
-
-[Illustration: THE FORGING LABORATORY.]
-
-The students, with coats off and sleeves rolled above their elbows, in
-pairs, as smith and helper, stand, sledge and tongs in hand, at twelve
-of the forges. They are manly-looking boys. Their feet are firmly
-planted, their bodies erect, their heads thrown a little back. Their
-arms show brawn; the muscles stand out in relief from the solid flesh.
-Their faces express the pride of conscious strength, and their eyes show
-animation.
-
-As we regard the class with a sympathetic thrill of satisfaction, the
-story of the origin of the Turkish Empire is recalled: “A race of
-slaves, living in the mountain regions of Asia, are employed by a
-powerful Khan to forge weapons for his use in war. A bold chief
-persuades them to use the weapons forged for a master to secure their
-own deliverance. For centuries after they had thus conquered their
-freedom, the Turkish people celebrated their liberation by an annual
-ceremony in which a piece of iron was heated in the fire, and a smith’s
-hammer successively handled by the prince and his nobles.”
-
-The greatest empire in the world to-day is the empire of the art of
-mechanism, and its most potent instrument is iron. Once the perpetuity
-of governments depended upon the mere possession of the dingy ore. When
-Elizabeth came to the throne, in the middle of the sixteenth century,
-England was almost defenceless, owing to the short supply of iron.
-Spain, much better equipped, hence relied confidently upon her ability
-to subdue the English. But the Virgin Queen, comprehending the nature of
-the crisis, imported iron from Sweden and encouraged the Sussex forges,
-and the Spanish Armada was defeated. Thus the smelter and the smith
-became the bulwark of the British government.
-
-But at an earlier period the fraternity of smiths gave direction to the
-course of empire. The secret of the easy conquest of Britain by the
-Normans was their superior armor. They were clad in steel, and their
-horses were shod with iron. The chief farrier of William became an earl;
-and he was proud of his origin, for his coat of arms bore six
-horseshoes.
-
-Iron and civilization are terms of equivalent import. Iron is king, and
-the smelter and smith are his chief ministers. It is not known when, by
-whom, or how the art of smelting iron was discovered. As well ask by
-whom and how fire was discovered? These are secrets of the early morning
-of human life--of that time when man made no record of his struggles.
-
-In lieu of history the instructor resorts to tradition, repeating the
-following legend: “While men were patiently rubbing sticks to point them
-into arrows, a spark leapt forth and ignited the wood-dust which had
-been scraped from the sticks, and so fire was found.”
-
-Now the “helper” looks to his “blast” with keen interest; for the
-management of the forge-fire is one of the niceties of the smith’s art.
-He stirs the fire a little impatiently. The instructor heeds the act,
-but not the movement of impatience. On the contrary he seizes the
-occasion to introduce the subject of coal. Question follows question in
-rapid succession, and the answers are prompt and satisfactory, touching
-all modern aspects of the subject, namely, the magnitude of the annual
-“output,” the localities of heaviest production, the cost of mining; the
-uses, respectively, to which different qualities are applied, demand and
-supply, and market value or price. Here the instructor remarks that the
-mining, transportation, and sale of coal are conducted in this country
-by a number of large corporations, with an aggregate capitalization and
-bonded indebtedness of six or seven hundred million dollars, and that
-through combinations between these corporations the price is often
-arbitrarily advanced. “But,” he concludes, “the discussion of that
-branch of the subject belongs more properly to the class in political
-economy.”
-
-The history of coal in its relation to iron smelting and manufacture
-forms a curious chapter in the vicissitudes of the useful arts. One
-hundred and fifty years ago not only all the smith’s fires but the
-smelter’s fires were kept up with charcoal. The forests of England were
-literally swept away, like chaff before the wind, to feed the yawning
-mouths of the iron mills. To make a ton of iron required the consumption
-of hundreds of cords of wood. To save the timber restrictive legislation
-was adopted, and the mills were gradually closed for want of fuel,
-until, in 1788, there was not one left in Sussex, and only a small
-number in the kingdom. Meantime the English iron supply came from
-Sweden, Spain, and Germany. England seemed to be following in the
-footsteps of the Roman Empire. The Romans accomplished in iron smelting
-and forging just what might be expected of a warlike people. They
-required iron for arms and armor, and in smelting skimmed the surface.
-This is proved by the cinder heaps, rich in ore, which they left in
-Britain. Archæologists trace the decline of Rome in her monuments, which
-show a steady deterioration in the soldier’s equipment. Alison
-attributes this decline to the exhaustion of her gold and silver mines.
-A far more plausible conjecture is found in the waste of timber in fuel
-for smelting purposes, and the resulting failure of the iron supply.
-
-The fall of the Roman Empire may be accounted for by her neglect of the
-useful arts. The nation that converts all her iron into swords and
-spears shall surely perish. Had the city of Seven Hills possessed seven
-men of mechanical genius like Watt, Stephenson, Maudslay, Clement,
-Whitney, Neilson, and Nasmyth, her fall might have been averted, or if
-not averted, it need not have involved the practical extinction of
-civilization, thus imposing upon mankind the shame of the Dark Ages.
-
-At the beginning of the seventeenth century there was much ignorant
-prejudice against the use of mineral coal. It was believed to be
-injurious to health. All sorts of diseases were attributed to its
-supposed malignant influence, and at one time to burn it in dwellings
-was made a penal offence. But this prejudice did not extend to its use
-in smelting iron, and whatever there was of inventive genius was devoted
-to a solution of the problem of its adaptation to such purposes. Mr.
-Samuel Smiles has collected the names of the most prominent of these
-Dutch and German mechanics, namely, Sturtevant, Rovenzon, Jordens,
-Francke, and Sir Philibert Vernatt, and given each a niche in the temple
-of fame. Some of them had a true conception of the required processes,
-but they all failed to render the application practically available.
-
-It remained for Dud. Dudley to succeed in making a thoroughly practical
-application of mineral coal to iron-smelting purposes, and then
-curiously enough to fail of success in introducing it into general use.
-Dudley was born in 1599, in an iron-manufacturing district. His father
-owned iron-works near the town of Dudley, which was a collection of
-forges and workshops where “nails, horseshoes, keys, locks, and common
-agricultural tools” were made. Brought up in the neighborhood of
-“twenty thousand smiths and workers in iron,” young Dudley “attained
-considerable knowledge of the various processes of manufacture.” At
-twenty years of age he was taken from college and placed in charge of a
-furnace and two forges in Worcestershire, where there was a scarcity of
-wood but an abundance of mineral coal. He began immediately to
-experiment, with a view to the substitution of the latter for the
-former, and in a year succeeded in demonstrating “the practicability of
-smelting iron with fuel made from pit-coal, which so many before him had
-tried in vain.” But the charcoal iron-masters combined to resist the new
-method because it cheapened the product. They instigated mobs to destroy
-Dudley’s furnaces one after another, as soon as they were completed,
-harassed him with lawsuits, and finally beggared and drove him to
-prison. Then they tried to wring his secret from him. To this attempt
-Cromwell, who was interested in furnaces in the Forest of Dean, is said
-to have been a party. But all these efforts failed, and Dudley died in
-1684 carrying his secret with him to the grave, and there the secret
-slumbered nearly one hundred years.
-
-The story of Dud. Dudley, as told by Mr. Smiles in his “Iron-workers and
-Tool-makers,” is one of surpassing interest. It is worthy the careful
-perusal not only of every school-boy but of the philosophic student in
-search of the lessons of history, for it affords fresh evidence of the
-truth of the proposition that the progress of civilization depends upon
-progress in invention and discovery.
-
-Under the influence of ignorance, prejudice, and superstition the iron
-industry of England continued to decline until the beginning of the
-eighteenth century, when the British people imported their pots and
-kettles. Fifty years later, at the Coalbrookdale iron-works in
-Shropshire, when the furnaces had consumed all the wood in the
-neighborhood and a fuel famine was imminent, smelting with mineral coal
-was successfully resumed, and in 1766 two workmen of the “works”--the
-brothers Cranege--invented the reverberatory furnace, which added
-immensely to the application of coal to smelting purposes.
-
-But while we are discussing the history of coal we are consuming coal to
-little purpose, for the blast is on and the furnace fires glow like
-miniature volcanic craters. Let us to work. Before the black-board,
-chalk in hand, the instructor stands and gives out the lesson. He
-presents it in the form of drawings, complete and in detail. It may
-involve only the single process of “drawing,” or it may involve several
-processes, as “drawing,” “bending,” and “welding.” The first sketch, for
-example, represents a flat bar of iron, the counterpart of the bars
-resting against the several forges. The second sketch shows the bar
-wrought into the form of a cylinder. The third sketch shows it “drawn”
-or lengthened, and hence reduced in size. The fourth sketch presents two
-rods the united lengths of which equal the length of the original rod.
-The fifth sketch represents the two rods “bent” into the form of
-chain-links, and a sub-sketch shows the proper shape of the ends of the
-links for “welding.” The sixth sketch shows the two links joined and
-welded.
-
-The black-board illustrations may be omitted if the school is provided
-with a complete set of samples. The school of mechanic arts of the
-Massachusetts Institute of Technology has a hundred samples representing
-the successive steps in blacksmithing manipulation, including welding,
-and the welding samples consist of two parts, the first representing the
-details of the piece prepared for welding, and the second the welded
-piece. These samples are part of a collection of three hundred and
-twenty pieces of exquisite workmanship, covering every department of a
-complete manual training course, presented to the Institute in 1877 by
-the Emperor of Russia.
-
-[Illustration: COURSE IN THE FORGING LABORATORY.]
-
-The black-board illustrations or the samples having been exhibited and
-explained as clearly as is possible in words, the instructor takes his
-place at one of the forges, and, surrounded by the class, goes through
-with the successive steps of any manipulation contained in the lesson
-which has not been actually wrought out in some previous lesson.
-
-If the manipulation is a simple one the silence is only broken by the
-sound of the blast and the stroke of the hammer--the students understand
-every turn of the iron and every blow struck by the instructor--but if
-the manipulation is complicated, involving a fresh principle, the
-instructor is saluted by a volley of questions, and he often pauses to
-answer them. It is the time for questions; the more questions now, the
-fewer questions when all the blasts shall be on, and all the sledges
-flying through the air and making music on the anvils. A question now
-may lead to the enlightenment of twenty-four students; a question later
-is sure to cost the time of twenty-four students, and the answer to it
-may enlighten only one student.
-
-At last the instructor drops the sledge, straightens up to his full
-height, and wipes the sweat from his brow. If the students respect the
-instructor they will respect labor, and they will respect the instructor
-if he is worthy of respect.
-
-Now the school-room is a smithy and yet it is not. It is neither very
-hot nor very smoky, for there is an exhaust fan in operation which
-vitalizes the circulation. But the atmosphere resounds with the
-clangorous strokes of a dozen sledges, mingled with the sullen roar of
-as many forge-fires; and there are traces of soot on the walls, and pale
-smoke-wreaths creep along the ceilings, and hide in corners, and circle
-about columns in fantastic shapes. It is a smithy, but a smithy adapted,
-by its extraordinary neatness, to the manufacture of watch-springs,
-palate-arbors, and Damascus blades.
-
-The faces of the students are aglow with the flush of health-giving
-exercise; their brows are “wet with honest sweat,” their heart-beats are
-full and strong, and the crimson life-currents surge hotly through every
-vein to their very finger-tips. They strike out the anvil chorus in all
-the keys and in every measure of the scale, and the burning sparks fly
-whizzing through the air.
-
-At a sign from the instructor there is a pause. The students stand at
-ease and the work is inspected. This is the time for more questions if
-any student is in doubt; and the rest of five minutes affords
-opportunity for a brief lecture on the subject of the early history of
-the fraternity of smiths.
-
-Mythology gives the highest place in its pantheon to Vulcan, the God of
-Fire. For notwithstanding he is represented as bearded, covered with
-dust and soot, blowing the fires of his forges and surrounded by his
-chief ministers, the cyclops, he is given Venus to wife and made the
-father of Cupid. Among the Scythians the iron sword was a god. When
-Jerusalem was taken by the Babylonians they made captives of all the
-smiths and other craftsmen of the city--a more grievous act than the
-thousand million dollar tribute levied upon France by Germany at the
-close of the war of 1870. For to be deprived of the use of iron is to be
-relegated to a state of barbarism.
-
-The vulgar accounted for the keenness of the first sword-blades on the
-score of magic, and the praises of the smiths who forged were sung with
-the chiefs of chivalry who wielded them. So highly was this mysterious
-power regarded by Tancred, the crusader, that in return for the present
-of King Arthur’s sword, Excalibar, by Richard I., he paid for it with
-“four great ships and fifteen galleys.”
-
-The smith was a mighty man in England in the early time. “In the royal
-court of Wales he sat in the great hall with the king and queen, and was
-entitled to a draught of every kind of liquor served.” His person was
-sacred; his calling placed him above the law. He was necessary to the
-feudal state; he forged swords “on the temper of which life, honor, and
-victory in battle depended.” The smith, after the Norman invasion,
-gained in importance in England. He was the chief man of the village,
-its oracle, and the most cunning workman of the time. His name descended
-to more families than that of any other profession--for the origin of
-the name Smith is the hot, dusty, smoky smithy, and however it may be
-disguised in the spelling, it is entitled to the proud distinction which
-its representatives sometimes seek to conceal.
-
-Mr. Smiles draws the following graphic picture of the versatility of the
-smith of the Middle Ages:
-
-“The smith’s tools were of many sorts, but the chief were his hammer,
-pincers, chisel, tongs, and anvil. It is astonishing what a variety of
-articles he turned out of his smithy by the help of these rude
-implements. In the tooling, chasing, and consummate knowledge of the
-capabilities of iron he greatly surpassed the modern workman. The
-numerous exquisite specimens of his handicraft which exist in our old
-gate-ways, church doors, altar railings, and ornamented dogs and
-andirons, still serve as types for continual reproduction. He was,
-indeed, the most ‘cunning workman’ of his time. But besides all this he
-was an engineer. If a road had to be made, or a stream embanked, or a
-trench dug, he was invariably called upon to provide the tools, and
-often to direct the work. He was also the military engineer of his day,
-and as late as the reign of Edward III. we find the king repeatedly
-sending for smiths from the Forest of Dean to act as engineers for the
-royal army at the siege of Berwick.”
-
-But the most signal triumph of the art, both of the smelter and the
-smith, is found in the famous swords of Damascus, whose edge and temper
-were so keen and perfect that they would sever a gauze veil floating in
-the air, or crash through bones and helmets without sustaining injury.
-These Damascus blades, long renowned in the East, but first encountered
-by Europeans during the crusades, in the hands of the followers of
-Mahomet, were made of Indian steel or “wootz.” This steel, produced in
-the form of little cakes weighing about two pounds each, in the
-neighborhood of the city of Golconda, in Hindostan, was transported on
-the backs of camels two thousand miles to the city of Damascus, and
-there converted into swords, sabres, and scimitars.
-
-This smith’s work has never been excelled, if equalled. Millions of
-dollars have been expended in efforts to produce the equal of Indian
-steel. Among the investigators of the subject the most noted was a
-Russian general, Anossoff, who died in 1851. His experiments were of a
-very elaborate and exhaustive character. They occupied a lifetime, and
-resulted in the establishment of works in the Ural Mountains, on the
-Siberian border, for the production of Damascus steel by a process of
-his own invention. After General Anossoff’s death the quality of the
-steel produced at his works deteriorated.
-
-We should treat with reverence these obscure hints of the triumphs of
-the ancients in certain departments of art as suggestive of like great
-achievements in other directions, for without a knowledge of types they
-could neither teach the many what the few knew, nor preserve what they
-had acquired for the instruction of future ages. All art is the product
-of a sequential series of ideas, each idea containing the germ of the
-next; hence the preservation of each idea is essential to progress. The
-art of printing alone enables man to preserve such a record. It follows
-presumptively that the art of printing constitutes the predominant
-feature of difference between the civilization of the moderns and that
-of the ancients. And it is important to observe that the art of printing
-is far more necessary to progress in the useful arts than in the
-so-called fine arts. The ancient temples with their sculptured
-splendors--the Parthenon, the Jupiter Olympius, and scores of
-others--remained long to testify to the genius of Phidias, Praxiteles,
-and their gifted colleagues of the chisel. These souvenirs of Greek
-genius still serve as models for the architect and the sculptor. It
-needs no chronicle to prove that they mark the culmination of the fine
-arts. If the moderns have failed to excel, or even equal them, it is not
-because their conception, design, or construction involved occult
-processes. It is rather because there is a limit to the development of
-the so-called fine arts, and that limit in architecture and sculpture
-was reached in Greece more than two thousand years ago.
-
-But with the Damascus blade, which typifies the useful arts, it is
-entirely different. It, too, is in itself a triumph of genius not less
-pronounced than the Athena of Phidias. But above and beyond this the
-arts of smelting and forging are so subtile as almost to elude the grasp
-of analysis. Not only the method of the fabrication of the Damascus
-blade but the processes involved in the production of the steel entering
-into its composition--all these are shrouded in impenetrable mystery. It
-follows that the useful arts are finer than the so-called fine arts.
-Their processes are more intricate, and hence more difficult of
-comprehension. To a solution of the questions presented in the course of
-their study an extended acquaintance with the sciences is essential. The
-highest departments of the fine arts, so-called, require only a study of
-the features, figure, and character of man, and of certain visible forms
-of nature, while the useful arts make incessant demands upon the
-resources of natural philosophy. The chemist toils in his laboratory,
-and the botanist and the geologist explore forest, field, and mine in
-search of new truths, with the single purpose of enlarging the sphere of
-the useful arts, and so of ministering more effectively to the ever
-increasing needs of man. Hence there can be no limit to the development
-of the useful arts except the limit to be found in the exhaustion of the
-forces of nature.
-
-We should, then, venerate the artisan rather than the artist. Let us
-invoke the shade of the dusky Indian smelter. See him in the dark
-recesses of the forest, bending in rapt attention over his furnace, or
-holding aloft a little lump of his matchless steel. Alas, he is dumb!
-His secret perished with him. But the Indian smelter and the Damascus
-smith are kin to all the inventors and discoverers of all the ages.
-Across continents and seas, over trackless wastes of history--epochs
-during which ignorance and superstition prevailed and the intellect of
-man slumbered--the ancient smelter and the ancient smith extend their
-shadowy hands to the students in this school of the nineteenth
-century--extend them in token of the fellowship of a common struggle and
-a common hope of triumph--the struggle after truth[E2], and the hope of
-the triumph of industry.
-
-The instructor raps on the black-board, and the school-room is at once
-transformed into a smithy. Again the forge-fires roar, and again the
-anvils resound under the stroke of the hammer. For half an hour the
-lesson goes on, and then comes the wind-up, and the several tests of
-excellence are applied to the completed task of each student. Form,
-dimensions, finish--these are the tests. The instructor marks the
-several pieces of work, makes a record of the result, reads the record,
-and is on the point of dismissing the class when an idea occurs to his
-mind and he enjoins silence. Taking in his hand a heavy sledge, and
-resting it on the anvil before him, he says, “This is a baby-hammer, and
-all the forging we do here is baby-forging. I hope soon to have an
-opportunity to take you to the great works of Mr. Crane, in this city,
-and there show you a steam-hammer which weighs a ton striking fifty to
-one hundred blows a minute--blows, too, that shame the fabled power of
-Vulcan, the God of Fire. At Pittsburg, Pa., there is an anvil of 150
-tons weight which serves for forging with a 15-ton hammer. But the
-monster steam-hammer is to be found in Krupp’s cast-steel works at
-Essen, Germany. The hammer-head is 12 feet long, 5¹⁄₂ feet wide, 4 feet
-thick, weighs 50 tons, and has a stroke of 9 feet. The depth of the
-foundation is 100 feet, consisting of three parts, masonry, timber, and
-iron, bolted together. Four cranes, each capable of bearing 200 tons,
-serve the hammer with material.”
-
-The steam-hammer was invented in 1837 by James Nasmyth, of England, in
-response to a demand for a hammer that would forge a steamship
-paddle-shaft of unprecedented size. The nature of the emergency being
-presented to his mind, Mr. Nasmyth conceived the idea of the
-steam-hammer instantaneously, as it were, and at once proceeded to
-sketch the child of his brain on paper. He was too poor to defray the
-cost of patenting his invention; nor was he able to procure the
-necessary funds for that purpose until he had seen in France a hammer
-made from his own original sketch in operation.
-
-The steam-hammer came rapidly into use, superseding all others of the
-ponderous sort, increasing the quantity of products and reducing the
-cost of manufacture by fifty per cent. It was through the steam-hammer
-only that the fabrication of the immense wrought-iron ordnance and the
-huge plates for covering ships-of-war of modern times became possible.
-In the hands of the giant, steam, Mr. Nasmyth’s hammer, even if it weigh
-fifty tons, is susceptible of more accurate strokes than the tack-hammer
-in the hands of the upholsterer, or the sledge in the hands of the most
-skilled blacksmith. It crushes tons of iron into a shapeless mass at one
-blow, and at the next drives a tack, or cracks an egg-shell in an
-egg-cup without injuring the cup.
-
-Mr. Nasmyth, in 1845, applied the steam-hammer principle to the
-pile-driver. With this wonderful machine the “driving-block,” weighing
-several tons, descends eighty times a minute on the head of the pile,
-sending it home with almost incredible rapidity. The saving of time as
-compared with the old method is in the ratio of 1 to 1800; that is, a
-pile can be driven in four minutes that before required twelve hours.
-
-The course in the Forging Laboratory extends from the making and care of
-forge-fires to case-hardening iron and hardening and tempering steel;
-and competent and experienced instructors declare that the student in
-the educational smithy gains as much skill in a day as the smith’s
-apprentice gains in a year in the ordinary shop.
-
- [E2] “The inquiry of truth, which is the love-making or wooing of it;
- the knowledge of truth, which is the presence of it; and the belief of
- truth, which is the enjoying of it--is the sovereign good of human
- nature.”--Essays of Francis Bacon--“Truth,” p. 2. London: Henry G.
- Bohn, 1852.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-THE MACHINE-TOOL LABORATORY.
-
- The Foundery and Smithy are Ancient, the Machine-tool Shop is Modern.
- -- The Giant, Steam, reduced to Servitude. -- The Iron Lines of
- Progress. -- They converge in the Shop; its triumphs from the
- Watchspring to the Locomotive. -- The Applications of Iron in Art is
- the Subject of Subjects. -- The Story of Invention is the History of
- Civilization. -- The Machine-maker and the Tool-maker are the best
- Friends of Man. -- Watt’s Great Conception waited for Automatic Tools;
- their Accuracy. -- The Hand-made and the Machine-made Watch. -- The
- Elgin (Illinois) Watch Factory. -- The Interdependence of the Arts. --
- The Making of a Suit of Clothes. -- The Anteroom of the Machine-tool
- Laboratory. -- Chipping and Filing. -- The File-cutter. -- The Poverty
- of Words as compared with Things. -- The Graduating Project. -- The
- Vision of the Instructor.
-
-[Illustration: THE MACHINE-TOOL LABORATORY.]
-
-The transition from the laboratories for founding and forging to the
-Machine-tool Laboratory symbolizes a mighty revolution in the practical
-arts--a revolution so stupendous as to defy description, and so
-far-reaching as to appall the spirit of prophecy. The foundery and the
-smithy date back to the dawn of history; the machine-tool shop is a
-creation of yesterday. About the early manipulations of iron mythology
-wove a web of fancy: Vulcan forged Jove’s thunderbolts, the iron sword
-of the savage was a god, and even far down the course of time, late in
-the Middle Ages, Tancred, the crusader, paid an almost fabulous sum for
-King Arthur’s famous sword Excalibar--but the modern machine-tool shop
-is a huge iron automaton, without sentiment, and possessing no poetry
-except the rhythmic harmony of motion. In this shop steam is reduced to
-servitude, and compelled with giant hands to bore, mortise, plane,
-polish, fashion, and fit great masses of iron, and, anon, with delicate
-fingers to spin gossamer threads of burnished steel. With the hot steam
-coursing through its steel-ribbed veins the brain of this automaton
-thinks the thoughts foreordained by its inventor; its hands do his
-bidding, its arms fetch and carry for him, its feet come and go at his
-beck and nod. This automaton feeds on iron, steel, copper, and brass,
-and produces the watch-spring and the locomotive, the revolver and the
-Krupp gun, the surgeon’s lancet and the shaft of a steamship, the steel
-pen and the steam-hammer, the vault-lock and the pile-driver, the
-sewing-machine and the Corliss engine. The lever which wakens this
-automaton to life, which endows its brain with genius and its fingers
-with cunning, is the rod of empire. All the lines of modern development
-converge in the machine-tool shop, and they are all lines of iron,
-whether consisting of a fine wire strung on poles in mid-air or of huge
-bars resting on the solid earth. Iron is the king of metals but the
-slave of man. Its magnetic quality guides the mariner on the sea, and
-its tough fibre and density sustain the weight of the locomotive on the
-land. It constitutes the foundation of every useful art, from the plough
-of the husbandman to the Jacquard loom of the weaver. But it is only in
-the machine-tool shop that the great steam-driven machines of commerce
-and manufacture can be produced. The ancients possessed iron, which they
-cast in the foundery and forged in the smithy; they knew the power of
-steam, and the magicians of the time amused the populace with
-exhibitions of it, but they had no machine-tool shops in which steam
-could be harnessed for the journey across continents and seas. The
-thousand and one modern applications of iron to the needs of man have
-originated in the machine-tool shop. It is through these applications of
-iron, not through iron itself, that human pursuits have been so widely
-diversified, and human powers so richly developed and enlarged.
-
-The contrasts presented by the development of the useful arts during the
-last hundred years are startling: The toilsome journey of a day reduced
-to an hour with the maximum of comfort; the few yards of fabric
-painfully woven by hand expanded into webs of cotton, linen, woollen,
-and silk cloths, rolling from thousands of steam-driven looms; the
-stocking once requiring hours to make, now dropping second by second
-from the iron fingers of the knitting-machine; the nails, screws, pins,
-and needles, forged one by one in the old village smithy, now flying
-from the hands of automatic machines by the thousand million; the
-numberless stitches of the sewing-machine as compared with the few of
-the olden time, which made the fingers and the hearts of women ache; the
-vast crop of cereals planted, cultivated, and gathered into barns with
-iron hands in contrast with the toilsome processes of even fifty years
-ago. These are only a few of the many illustrations that might be given
-of progress in the useful arts, and they all emanate from the
-machine-tool shop.
-
-At the threshold of the most important inquiry that ever occupied the
-mind of man stand the twenty-four students we have followed, with more
-or less regularity, through the various laboratories which constitute
-the preliminary steps in the manual training course. It is the most
-important inquiry that ever engaged the attention of man, because it
-touches modern civilization at more points than any other. It consists
-of an investigation into the subject of the diversity of the
-applications of iron in art, a study both of the minute and the
-ponderous in iron tools and machines, and it is by these tools and
-machines that the bulk of the great enterprises of the men of modern
-times are carried forward. These students are familiar with the details
-of the laboratories for founding and forging, but the manipulations of
-those branches of iron manufacture are coarse and heavy as compared with
-those of the Machine-tool Laboratory. In a word, the difference between
-the iron manipulations of the Machine-tool Laboratory and those of the
-founding and forging laboratories is the exact measure of the difference
-between the modern and the ancient systems of civilization.
-
-The ancient civilizations culminated in that of Rome. The Romans
-possessed iron, but confined their manipulations of it to the foundery
-and the smithy. Under the Roman empire the enterprises of
-man--commercial, manufacturing, and industrial generally--reached the
-limit marked by the applications of iron to the useful arts. It is not
-important in this connection to inquire why inventions and discoveries
-ceased. It is enough that they ceased. There was a pause; man, risen to
-a giddy height, looked backward instead of forward and upward; the
-struggle to advance came to an end, ambition died out of life, and a
-saturnalia of bloody crime and savage brutality ensued. Exhaustion
-followed, then stagnation, moral and intellectual, and then the decay of
-all the arts. The world stood still, and in that state of quiescence
-remained until printing was invented and America discovered. Still it
-waited two hundred and fifty years before receiving the first hint of
-steam-driven machines and the machines and the machine tool-shop, and
-during all that time progress was painfully slow. Something was required
-to give to human ambition a grand impulse, and to open to human energy
-and industry a broad field. That something did not come until the middle
-of the eighteenth century, and it should never be forgotten
-that it came then through the humble men of the workshop. To their
-inventive genius mankind owes more than to all the philosophers,
-_litterateurs_, professors, and statesmen of all time. These men of the
-workshop--Huntsman, Cort, Roebuck, Watt, Fulton, Mushet, Hargreaves,
-Neilson, Whitney, Bramah, Maudslay, Clement, Murray, Roberts, the
-Stephensons, father and son, and Nasmyth--invented machines which seem
-to rival human intelligence, and in fact far excel human precision in
-the execution of their work. In endowing iron with the cunning of genius
-and the terrific power of the fabled cyclops, the modern mechanic has
-revolutionized the field of human effort, transferring it from the
-foundery and the smithy to the machine-tool shop. It is here, and here
-alone, that steam-driven machines can be made. They may be conceived in
-the mind of a Watt or a Stephenson, but they can be made only by the
-automatic tools of a Maudslay, a Clement, a Bramah, or a Nasmyth. Man
-was helpless without steam-driven machines, and he could not have
-steam-driven machines until machine-made tools had been devised with
-which to make them. The experience of Watt strikingly illustrates this
-point. When he had completed his invention of the steam-engine, he found
-it nearly impossible to realize his idea in a working machine, owing to
-the incompetency of the workmen of that time. In reply to the inquiry of
-Dr. Roebuck, “What is the principal hinderance in erecting engines?” he
-responds, “It is always the smith-work.” His first cylinder, made of
-hammered iron soldered together by a whitesmith, was a complete failure.
-But even such workmen were so scarce that upon the death of this
-“white-iron man” Watt was reduced almost to a state of despair. “His
-next cylinder was cast and bored at Carron, but it was so untrue that it
-proved next to useless. The piston could not be kept steam-tight,
-notwithstanding the various expedients which were adopted of stuffing it
-with paper, cork, putty, pasteboard, and old hats.” Smeaton, the best
-workman of the time, “expressed the opinion, when he saw the engine at
-work, that notwithstanding the excellence of the invention it could
-never be brought into general use because of the difficulty of getting
-its various parts manufactured with sufficient precision.” Watt
-constantly complained of “villanous bad workmanship.” “Machine-made
-tools were unknown, hence there were no good tools. Attempting to run an
-engine of the old regime, the foreman of the shop gave it up in despair,
-exclaiming, “I think we had better leave the cogs to settle their
-differences with one another; they will grind themselves right in time.”
-Contrast with this clumsy machine of the hand-tool era the Corliss
-engine of the present day, whose every movement possesses the noiseless
-grace of a woman and the conscious power of a giant; and this giant
-springs full-armed from the machine-tool shop as Minerva sprang from the
-brain of Jupiter. Mr. Smiles says, “When the powerful oscillating
-engines of the _Warrior_ were put on board that ship, the parts,
-consisting of some five thousand separate pieces, were brought from the
-different workshops of the Messrs. Penn & Sons, where they had been made
-by workmen who knew not the places they were to occupy, and fitted
-together with such precision that so soon as the steam was raised and
-let into the cylinders the immense machine began as if to breathe and
-move like a living creature, stretching its huge arms like a new-born
-giant; and then, after practising its strength a little, and proving its
-soundness in body and limb, it started off with the power of above a
-thousand horses, to try its strength in breasting the billows of the
-North Sea.”
-
-The great and small tools, the automata of the machine-shop, are no less
-triumphs of mechanical genius than the “powerful oscillating engines of
-the _Warrior_.” The prime difficulty of the hand-worker was to make two
-things exactly alike, then followed the impossibility of making _many_
-things--the narrow limit of human capacity to produce. At that point the
-inventor appeared with a machine which would make a thousand things in
-the time the hand-worker required to make one, and each one of them the
-exact counterpart of every other.
-
-A hundred years ago John Arnold, the inventor of the chronometer,
-accomplished a marvel of patience and ingenuity in the form of a watch
-the size of twopence and the weight of sixpence. The workmanship was so
-delicate that he was compelled not only to fashion every part with his
-own hand, but to design and make the tools employed in its construction.
-The watch was presented to George III., of England, who showed his
-appreciation of Arnold’s mechanical skill in a present of five hundred
-guineas. The Emperor of Russia offered Arnold $5000 for a duplicate of
-the wonderful little time-piece, which offer was, however, declined. It
-was so difficult for the expert watch-maker of a century ago to make two
-things exactly alike, that Arnold could not afford to undertake to make
-another miniature watch even for the exorbitant price of $5000. But for
-ten dollars the Elgin (Illinois) National Watch Company will supply the
-Emperor of Russia with a machine-made watch more nearly perfect than
-Arnold’s masterpiece, and on the same day turn out one thousand others
-exactly like it. Imagine yourself now in the watch factory of the Elgin
-Company; observe that artisan holding in his hand a coil of fine steel
-wire weighing a pound. He approaches a machine, places one end of the
-wire in its iron fingers, presses a lever, and in a few minutes the coil
-is converted into two hundred thousand minute screws, each and every one
-as perfect as the best that Arnold made for his George III. gem.
-
-It is with the greatest effort of painstaking care that the expert
-sewing-woman draws two stitches closely resembling each other, yet while
-she is making the toilsome exertion of her utmost skill the
-sewing-machine sets hundreds of stitches so exactly alike that a
-microscopic examination would fail to detect the least dissimilarity.
-
-The sewing-machine affords an admirable illustration of the
-interdependence of the practical arts. The sewing-woman was able to keep
-pace with the slow and toilsome processes of the distaff and loom, but
-upon the application of steam-power to spinning and weaving the demand
-for sewing was augmented a thousand-fold. If the sewing-machine has not
-emancipated woman from the drudgery so pathetically depicted by Tom
-Hood, it has multiplied the production of garments almost beyond the
-power of figures to express. Note this instance illustrative of the
-triumph of automatic machinery in its application to manufactures. “The
-Emperor of Austria was lately presented with a suit of clothes
-possessing this remarkable history: The wool from which the garments
-were made was clipped from the sheep only eleven hours before the suit
-was completed. At 6.08 in the morning the sheep were sheared; at 6.11
-the wool was washed; at 6.37 dyed; at 6.50 picked; at 7.34 the final
-carding process was finished; at eight o’clock it was spun; at 8.15
-spooled; at 8.37 the warp was in the loom; at 8.43 the shuttles were
-ready; at 11.10 seven and three-fourth ells of cloth were completed; at
-12.03 the cloth was fulled; at 12.14 washed; at 12.17 sprinkled; at
-12.31 dried; at 12.45 sheared; at 1.07 napped; at 1.10 brushed; and at
-1.15 prepared and ready for the shears and needle. At five o’clock the
-suit, consisting of a hunting-jacket, waistcoat, and trousers, was
-finished.”
-
-There is a sort of anteroom to the Machine-tool Laboratory with which
-the students are thoroughly familiar. It is called the Chipping, Filing,
-and Fitting Laboratory, has twenty-four vises, a great assortment of
-cold-chisels and files, and is devoted to vise work. The course in the
-Chipping Filing and Fitting Laboratory consists of a score or more
-lessons involving various file and chisel manipulations, as, “filing to
-line,” “dovetailing,” “parallel fitting tongues and grooves,” “ring-work
-and free-hand filing,” “chipping bevels,” “ward-filing and key-fitting,”
-“screw-filing,” “scraping,” etc., each lesson being so devised as to
-insure the introduction of variously shaped tools, and their application
-to the forms of work for which they are designed.
-
-This anteroom to the Machine-tool Laboratory is like most anterooms
-plain in its appointments, and it is also like the conventional
-anteroom, a place where the student does not desire to remain long. The
-witchery of the great laboratory beyond has already cast its spell over
-the boy at the vise. But there is excellent hand and eye training work
-in the Chipping, Filing, and Fitting Laboratory.
-
-[Illustration: THE CHIPPING, FILING, AND FITTING LABORATORY.]
-
-The file is a humble tool, but it is older than history, dating back to
-the Greek Mythological period. “From the smallest mouse-tail file used
-in the delicate operations of the watch and philosophical instrument
-maker, to the square file for the smith’s heaviest work, there is a
-multifarious diversity in shape, size, and gauge of cutting.” Some of
-the files made by the Swiss for the watch-maker “are of so fine a cut
-that the unaided eye cannot discern the ridges.”
-
-In no department of the useful arts did the hand-worker attain to
-greater dexterity than in file-cutting. With a sharp-edged chisel the
-file-cutter made from one hundred and fifty to two hundred “burs” a
-minute, and they were so fine as to be traced by the sense of touch
-alone, but as straight as though ruled by a machine. The hand-working
-file-cutter held his ground until 1859, when a Frenchman, M. Bernot,
-invented a file-cutting machine which superseded the old method of
-manufacture, except in cases requiring delicacy of manipulation,
-reducing the cost of files to one-eighth of their former price.
-
-The lessons in the Machine-tool Laboratory will not be described in
-detail as in the other laboratories. The processes are so delicate and
-so intricate, and the resulting products in machines so closely approach
-the marvellous, as to beggar description. The poverty of words as
-compared with things asserts itself with unexampled force in the
-presence of a great variety of tools, each of which seems to be endowed
-with the power of reflection, and each of which, instead of whispering a
-word in your ear, drops into your hand a thing of use to man.
-
-The laboratory is silent, the tools are dumb, but how eloquently they
-proclaim the era of comfort and luxury! They have no tongue, but through
-their lips you shall speak across continents and under seas. They have
-no legs, but through their aid you shall, in a race round the world,
-outstrip Mercury. The machines they make shall bear all your burdens;
-with their brawny arms they lift a thousand tons, and with their fingers
-of fairy-like delicacy pick up a pin; with the augur of Hercules they
-bore a channel through the mountain of granite, and with a Liliputian
-gimlet tunnel one of the hairs of your head.
-
-These ingenious tools are worthy of careful inspection both on account
-of the marvels they perform and the delicacy of their construction and
-adjustments. One of them, a screw-engine lathe, for example, is taken to
-pieces, and each piece described in order that the students may be made
-familiar with the construction of the tool, and so rendered capable of
-taking good care of it. During this inspection the instructor outlines
-the history of the tool. The main feature is the slide-rest, invented by
-Maudslay while in the employ of Bramah, the lock-maker. It is not too
-much to say that two things exactly alike, or near enough alike,
-practically, to serve the same purpose very well, were never produced on
-the old-fashioned turning lathe. This the instructor endeavors to make
-clear to the class. He also explains precisely how Maudslay’s
-improvement remedied the defects of the old-fashioned lathe. Still there
-remained something to be done to make it perfect, and putting the pieces
-together the instructor shows where Maudslay’s work ended and that of
-Clement began. Clement made two improvements in the slide-rest, one
-involving the principle of self-correction, for which he received the
-gold Isis medal of the Society of Arts in 1827, and the other
-consisting of the “self-adjusting double-driving centre check,” for
-which he was awarded the silver medal of the same society in 1828. Thus
-improved or perfected, the slide-lathe became the acknowledged king of
-machine-tools, the self-adjusting two-armed driver taking the strain
-from the centre and dividing it between the two arms, and so correcting
-all tendency to eccentricity in the work.
-
-The Machine-tool Laboratory contains a great variety of tools, of which
-the chief are lathes, drills, and planers; but there are many auxiliary
-tools, and in the advanced stages of the course a single lesson often
-affords opportunity for the introduction of several of them. And, as in
-the other school laboratories, each tool, upon its first presentation to
-the class, forms the subject of a brief lecture--a practical lecture
-too, for the instructor uses the tool while he sketches its history and
-perhaps that of its inventor, shows what place it holds in the order of
-machine-tool development, and how admirably it is adapted to its
-particular work, and makes suggestions as to its care. Sometimes a
-lesson involves the use of a drawing made by the students a year before,
-and the piece of iron in which it is wrought is the product of a
-previous lesson in forging; and it may also have been manipulated with
-the file or the cold-chisel, or both, in the Chipping, Filing, and
-Fitting Laboratory.
-
-From the first lesson in the room devoted to drawing, to the last lesson
-in the Machine-tool Laboratory, the course of training is orderly,
-consecutive. Each step contains a hint of the nature of the next step,
-and each succeeding step consists of a further application of the
-principles and processes of the last preceding step. In a word, the
-students follow their drawings through all the laboratories till the
-designs “are brought out in a finished state either in cast or wrought
-iron.”
-
-The lathe is the fundamental machine-tool, but a completely equipped
-machine-tool laboratory includes a great variety of supplementary or
-auxiliary tools, a thorough knowledge of which is essential to a good
-mechanical education. It does not follow, because these tools are in a
-large degree automatic, that skill may be dispensed with in their use.
-Many of them are very complicated in design and construction, and they
-can no more be made to do efficient service under an unskilled hand than
-a locomotive can be made to accomplish a series of successful “runs” by
-an unskilled “driver.” Hence every tool in the laboratory is made the
-subject of an exhaustive study. The principle of mechanics involved in
-its construction is expounded, a practical illustration of its method of
-operation is given, its peculiar liability to injury is explained, and
-rules for its care are carefully formulated, and frequently repeated.
-
-There is a prevalent theory that the wide application of so-called
-automatic tools to mechanical work largely decreases the legitimate
-demand for skilled mechanics, but it is fallacious. In the first place a
-thousand things are now made where one thing was made fifty years ago.
-In the second place the extensive use of steam and electricity greatly
-enlarges the sphere wherein accurate work becomes absolutely essential
-to human safety, and hence extends the field of operations of the
-inventive faculty. In the third place the cost of machine-tool made
-products having been greatly reduced, competition is proportionately
-intensified, thus narrowing the margin of profit, and so rendering any
-injury to machinery through want of skill in the operator relatively
-more disastrous. As a matter of fact a fine machine-tool is more liable
-than a watch to get out of order through careless handling, and it no
-more than a watch, can be properly repaired by a bungler. It follows
-that skill in the use of machine-tools is as essential to a successful
-mechanical career now, as skill in the use of hand-tools was formerly.
-
-[Illustration: COURSE IN THE MACHINE-TOOL LABORATORY.]
-
-But another conclusion follows more irresistibly, namely--that the
-mechanical engineer who devotes his attention to the construction and
-management of massive machinery, such as pumps, hydraulic and lever
-presses, looms, and steam-engines, whether locomotive, marine, or other,
-must, in order to be master of his profession, be thoroughly familiar
-with every step of their construction; and such familiarity can only be
-acquired by a course of practical study in the machine-tool shop. It is
-the province of the mechanical engineer to utilize certain forces of
-nature in the service of man, and it is only through the machine-tool
-shop that such utilization can be effected. It hence follows that a
-practical acquaintance with the manipulations of the machine-tool shop
-is an essential prerequisite to a successful career in the field of
-higher mechanics. The man who aspires to construct any great mechanical
-engineering work, like the Brooklyn Bridge, for example, must know the
-exact mechanical power of every piece of machinery he employs, as also
-the exact mechanical value of every piece of iron that enters into the
-structure; and these things he cannot know unless he is familiar with
-the entire series of iron manipulations, from those of the foundery to
-those of the machine-tool shop.
-
-The aspect of the Machine-tool Laboratory when in repose, so to speak,
-is dull and uninteresting, not to say repellant. There are twenty-four
-engine-lathes, as many adjustable vises, a milling machine, and a
-variety of auxiliary tools. The lathes are supported by dingy-looking
-cast-iron frames, and under each lathe there is a chest of drawers
-containing a set of tools. Overhead there is a wilderness of pulleys and
-shafting, which seems to the untrained eye to have very little relation
-to the machines below. The working parts of the lathes show burnished
-steel surfaces, which reflect coldly the glare of yellow sunlight
-flooding the room. If it were moonlight instead of sunlight one might
-summon the ghosts of those daring men who hundreds and thousands of
-years ago dreamed audaciously of the future of applied mechanics. Roger
-Bacon must have had a vision of the machine-tool shop when he said, “I
-will now mention some of the wonderful works of art and nature in which
-there is nothing of magic, and which magic could not perform.
-Instruments may be made by which the largest ships, with only one man
-guiding them, will be carried with greater velocity than if they were
-full of sailors; chariots may be constructed that will move with
-incredible rapidity without the help of animals; a small instrument may
-be made to raise or depress the greatest weights; an instrument may be
-fabricated by which one man may draw a thousand men to him by force and
-against their will; as also machines which will enable men to walk at
-the bottom of seas or rivers without danger.”
-
-When steam is “turned on” the aspect of the Machine-tool Laboratory is
-completely changed. Steam is, indeed, the arch-revolutionist; it
-breathes the breath of life into inanimate things--makes them think,
-speak, and act. The low hum of unused machinery first salutes the ear;
-then the students take their places. They are three years older than
-when we encountered them in the engine-room. They are from seventeen to
-twenty years of age. They are no longer boys; they are young
-men--robust, hearty-looking young men. Their bearing is very
-resolute--remarkably resolute; their attitude is erect. They are
-full-chested, muscular-armed, frank-faced young men. In the three years’
-course now drawing to a close they have learned how to do many things,
-and hence they show a good degree of confidence. But the dominant
-expression on all the interesting young faces is, after all, one of
-modesty; so true is it that every acquisition of knowledge, and
-especially useful knowledge, not only stimulates desire to learn more,
-but enlightens perception as to the magnitude of the field of further
-inquiry. As the addition of a useful thing to the world’s stock of
-things creates a demand for a score more of useful things, so the
-addition of a fact to the student’s stock of facts not only creates a
-desire for more facts, but strengthens the mind for further
-investigation.
-
-It may be that there are vain statesmen, philosophers, priests, and
-kings, but we should as little expect to find a vain mechanic as a vain
-scientist.
-
-These twenty-four students may go out into the world to-morrow to make
-their way. Some of them will enter upon the stage of active life, others
-will continue their studies in higher schools of literature, science,
-and art; but whether they go or stay, if they have made the most of
-their opportunities in the Manual Training School they will have learned
-the lesson of modesty, and learned to respect labor, not only as a means
-of earning one’s daily bread, but as the most powerful and the most
-healthful mental and moral stimulant.
-
-Steam is on, and the students standing at the lathes are impatient to
-begin. It is not a lesson in the ordinary sense. Each student works
-independently of special direction, for each is engaged in making a
-machine--the graduating project. The instructor is at hand, not to
-dictate but to advise, if requested. From his fund of experience as the
-elder scholar he will answer questions propounded by his younger
-fellow-students. In front of the students, parts of the working drawings
-may be seen. It is plain that there is to be variety in the exhibit of
-“projects.” There are several steam-engines, differing in model; there
-is a steam-pump, a punching machine, a lathe, an electric machine, and a
-steam-hammer.
-
-At a sign work commences--a dozen varieties of work, emitting a dozen
-tones of buzzing and whizzing. The instructor’s face lights up with a
-pleased expression as he notes the progress of the work. There is no
-sign of hesitation in the class; no questions are asked; the students
-seem to be driving straight to the mark. The instructor’s heart swells
-with pride; he can trust “his boys!” He has been regarding them with an
-expression of affection, but now his eyes wander--they have a far-away
-look. He no longer sees the students, he is looking beyond them. He
-drops into a reclining attitude, sighs, falls into a reverie, and
-dreams. In his dream he sees naked savages, emerging from caves, armed
-with clubs, pursuing animals. These are succeeded by men bearing rude
-stone implements--axes and hammers--and these in turn by men armed with
-bows and arrows, but half-clothed with skins of beasts, and crouching
-and shivering beneath the shelter of the branches of a tree pulled
-downward and secured by clods of earth. This picture disappears, and is
-replaced by a pastoral scene--a vast plain covered with flocks and
-herds. In the foreground stands the shepherd, and in the distance his
-tent, consisting of skins of beasts stretched on poles, and in the tent
-door a woman sits pounding a fleece into felt. The shepherd, his flocks
-and herds, his tent, and the woman in the tent door, vanish like the
-mists of morning, and where the shepherd was, the husbandman is seen
-harvesting the golden grain; and in the shadow of the cottage which has
-replaced the tent a woman is grinding corn. The scene again changes--the
-plain has become the site of a great city. The city is protected by
-thick, high walls, surmounted with frowning battlements. Sentinels pace
-back and forth along the parapet. Huge helmets protect their heads, and
-their bodies are clothed in armor. Quivers full of bronze-tipped arrows
-depend from their shoulders; in their hands they carry long bows, and
-the clank, clank of their broad, two-edged, bronze swords breaks the
-dull, monotonous routine of their march. A brazen gate swings back
-noiselessly on brazen hinges, and, bowing to the sentinel, the dreamer
-as noiselessly glides into the city. Suddenly he feels the hot breath of
-the foundery furnace-fire, and is blinded by a glare of red light.
-Shading his eyes he sees dusky forms hurrying to and fro with ladles
-full of molten metal. Turning away he hears the heavy stroke of the
-sledge, and looking, beholds a dusty, smoky smithy. The stalwart smith
-drops the sledge at his side, rests one foot on the anvil-block, and
-wipes the sweat from his brow; the helper thrusts the cooling metal into
-the coals, bends to the bellows, and the forge-fire sings. At the sound
-of a bell the dreamer starts, the old Assyrian city falls into ruins,
-the ruins crumble into dust, and on this dust another city rises,
-flourishes, falls, and piles the dust of its ruins. Over a waste of
-years--twenty centuries--the dreamer’s thought flashes, and he stands in
-the presence of the Alexandrian mechanic-philosopher. He sees Hero in
-the public street, gazing abstractedly at his condensed-air fountain,
-and follows him into his shop or laboratory, and observes him curiously
-as he toys with the model of a queer little steam-engine. “This is the
-Iron Age, but in its infancy,” he exclaims under his breath, as his eyes
-wander from a fine Damascus blade hanging against the wall to some poor
-hand-tools lying on the working-bench. “I will speak to this old man,”
-he continues, “and ask him to step into my Machine-tool Laboratory, and
-see my boys make steam-engines; it will be a revelation to him. Come,
-old friend--there--look!” And the dreamer looks. Does he see double? The
-laboratory is unchanged; steam is still on; the whir of machinery and
-the buzzing sound of steam-driven tools salute the ear, and the students
-are all busy at their benches finishing parts of “projects” and
-adjusting them in their places, But there are twenty-four other
-men--shades of men--in the laboratory. Most of them are old; some are in
-working clothes, others in full dress, wearing ribbons and orders of
-merit. Over each student one of these shades bends with an air of
-absorbing attention. The dreamer recognizes Papin, Fulton, Watt, and
-Stephenson shadowing the students engaged in the construction of
-engines. They beckon Hero, and he joins the group, threading his way
-timidly between the lines of lathes, and looking askance at the rapidly
-revolving wheels and flying belts. Over the shoulders of other students
-are seen the faces of Maudslay, Bramah, Clement, Roberts, Whitney,
-Nasmyth, Huntsman, Cort, Murray, Dudley, Yarranton, Roebuck, and
-Whitworth, besides several unfamiliar faces. Suddenly they all gather
-about a nearly completed project--a stationary engine. They witness the
-forcing home of the last screw; they see the miniature machine made fast
-to the bench. Steam is let into the cylinders. The student’s flushed
-face is in sharp contrast with the colorless faces of the group of old
-men by whom he is surrounded. The piston-rod moves languidly--the
-machine trembles as if awaking from slumber, the shaft oscillates
-slowly, then faster, then regularly, like a strong pulse-beat. The
-project is a success--the first one completed! The student’s face turns
-pale--as pale as the white faces of the old men at his side. They open
-their lips as if to cheer him, but no sound escapes them. He breathes
-quick--almost gasps; his heart beats loudly; he tries to shout but
-cannot utter a word. At last he claps his hands! The instructor starts
-from his chair, rubs his eyes, and stares round the laboratory. All the
-students are there, gathered in a group about the finished “project,”
-but the ghostly shades of the old inventors have vanished like the
-unsubstantial fabric of a vision.
-
-The “projects” are not all finished on the same day. Some of them are
-far more complicated than others, and some students are more skilled
-than others. All are very busy. It is not improper to ask questions
-relating to work on the graduating projects; the instructor is at hand
-to answer such questions. But it is a point of honor not to ask a
-question if the difficulty can possibly be otherwise overcome. Hence
-very few questions are asked.
-
-The last week of the term is a very trying one to all concerned. The
-students are reticent and unusually silent; all are anxious, some are
-timid--the nervous tension is extreme. The instructor becomes taciturn
-under a painful sense of compulsory isolation from his class, towards
-all the members of which he has, for three years, sustained fraternal
-rather than dictatorial relations. But as the projects are, one by one,
-completed, the atmosphere clears. When the student realizes that his
-project is certain to be a success, his face brightens and he is pleased
-to discuss its “points” with the instructor. The instructor is delighted
-to resume his former relations with the class, the feeling of constraint
-is dispelled, and the graduation-day exercises are contemplated with
-confidence.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-MANUAL AND MENTAL TRAINING COMBINED.
-
- The new Education is all-sided -- its Effect. -- A Harmonious
- Development of the Whole Being. -- Examination for Admission to the
- Chicago School. -- List of Questions in Arithmetic, Geography, and
- Language. -- The Curriculum. -- The Alternation of Manual and Mental
- Exercises. -- The Demand for Scientific Education -- its Effect. --
- Ambition to be useful.
-
-
-We have now passed in review all the school laboratories, from the
-engine-room, or laboratory where power is generated, to the Machine-tool
-Laboratory where power is utilized, or harnessed, and compelled to do
-the work of man. We have observed the student, in his first effort over
-the drawing-board, struggling laboriously to make a straight line, and
-in the Laboratory of Carpentry, trying with varying success to make a
-tenon fit the mortise, and we have stood by his side in the Machine-tool
-Laboratory in the moment of his triumph exhibiting his graduating
-“project”--a miniature engine throbbing under the pressure of steam, and
-doing its work with admirable precision. But we have seen only the
-manual side of the curriculum. The mental side is still to be shown. The
-claim made in behalf of the new education is that it is better balanced
-than the old, that it is all-sided, that it produces a harmonious
-development of the whole being, that it makes of the student a man fully
-furnished for the battle of life, mentally, morally, and physically.
-Accordingly the curriculum of the Manual Training School combines with
-the laboratory exercises a variety of mental exercises of quite a
-comprehensive character; and first, certain mental requirements are
-necessary to admission, as witness the following from the first
-catalogue of the Chicago Manual Training School:
-
-“Candidates for admission to the Junior year must be at least fourteen
-years of age, and must present sufficient evidence of good moral
-character. They must pass a satisfactory examination in reading,
-spelling, writing, geography, English composition, and the fundamental
-operations of arithmetic as applied to integers, common and decimal
-fractions, and denominate numbers. Ability to use the English language
-correctly is especially desired.”
-
-The following questions were used at the first examination for admission
-to the Chicago school.
-
-
-ARITHMETIC.
-
-Transcribe work sufficient to show processes. No credit given for
-results alone.
-
- 1. Change to decimals and find the sum of ⁴⁄₅, ⁵⁄₈, ¹¹⁄₁₆, ⁹⁄₂₀,
- ⁴¹⁄₅₀.
-
- 2. Divide the product of 28⁵⁄₇ and 13⁴⁄₉ by the difference of 8⁵⁄₁₂
- and 4⁴⁄₅.
-
- 3. Divide .00875 by 12¹⁄₂.
-
- 4. Reduce .395 of a mile to integers.
-
- 5. If a locomotive move ⁵⁄₈ of a mile in ¹¹⁄₁₂ of an hour, what is its
- speed per hour?
-
- 6. A man invested ¹⁄₅ of his money in land, .125 of it in stocks,
- $12,000 in a vessel, and had $55,500 remaining. How much did he invest
- in land?
-
- 7. Bought a square mile of land at $75 an acre. I reserved 160 acres
- of it for streets and alleys, and divided the remainder into lots each
- 66 feet front by 200 feet deep, all of which I sold for $15 per front
- foot. The expense of surveying, etc., was $2000. What did I gain?
-
- 8. How many balls, each ¹⁄₄ of an inch in diameter, are equal in
- weight to a ball of the same material 1 foot in diameter?
-
- 9. Find cost of material for making box, inside measurement 4 by 2 by
- 3 feet, of inch lumber, worth $30 per M., ¹⁄₂₅ of the lumber purchased
- being wasted. Include in the cost 7 dozen screws at $1.80 per gross.
-
-[Illustration: THE STUDENTS WITH THEIR BOOKS.]
-
- 10. What is the height of a rectangular cistern capable of containing
- 600 gallons, the bottom of which is 7 by 11 feet, inside measurement?
-
-
-GEOGRAPHY.
-
- 1. Name the five most populous cities of the United States in order of
- population. On what water is St. Petersburg? Dublin? Rome? Calcutta?
- Cairo?
-
- 2. Locate the principal coal fields and iron regions of the United
- States. What minerals occur in Illinois?
-
- 3. Draw map of Illinois, showing by what States and by what waters
- bounded. Locate the capital and the largest city of Illinois.
-
- 4. Name the outlet of Lake Erie; of Lake Champlain; of Great Salt
- Lake; of the Black Sea; of Lake Victoria Nyanza.
-
- 5. Compare the latitude and climate of Spain and Illinois.
-
- 6. How does the island of Great Britain compare in area with the
- United States, or with any one of the United States which you may
- mention?
-
- 7. How do the Alps compare in height with the Rocky Mountains? Name
- the highest peak in Europe; in North America; in South America; in the
- world.
-
- 8. How does climate vary with altitude above the sea level? Illustrate
- by an example.
-
- 9. What is the cause of day and night? Of changes of seasons? What is
- latitude? Longitude?
-
- 10. When it is 11 A.M. by “Central Time” in Chicago, what is the hour
- by “Eastern Time” in New York City? What is the hour in London? Is
- “Central Time” in Chicago the true time? Why?
-
- Or, in place of the last question: What are the termini of the
- Illinois and Michigan Canal? What waters are connected by the Suez
- Canal? Of what water route does the Suez Canal take the place?
-
-
-LANGUAGE.
-
- 1. Correct in every particular, and give reason for each correction:
-
- _a._ The man which was sick has went to his work.
-
- _b._ Every person should attend to their own affairs.
-
- _c._ Such expressions sound harshly.
-
- _d_. Between you and I, this is a real easy examination.
-
- _e_. The cause of the tides were not wholly unknown to the ancients.
-
- 2. “Pleasantly rose next morning the sun on the village of Grand Pré.”
-
- How is the idea of the rising of the sun modified?
-
- 3.
-
- “Flashed all their sabres bare,
- Flashed as they turned in air,
- Sab’ring the gunners there,
- Charging an army, while
- All the world wondered.”
-
- Change to good prose.
-
- 4. State the meaning of each prefix and suffix in the following words:
- Emigrate; Immigrate; Illegally; Admissible; Thoughtlessness; Affixing.
-
- 5.
-
- _a_. Why is the final e of “service” retained in “serviceable?”
-
- _b_. Write the present participle of “befit;” of “benefit.” What
- difference in spelling? Why?
-
- _c_. Define Ancient; Venerable; Obsolete.
-
-6. Write an essay on Chicago, mentioning the rapid growth of the city;
-its land and water communications; its commerce and manufactures; its
-public buildings; its institutions of learning and charity, and any
-other items which may occur to you.
-
-Having passed the ordeal of the foregoing battery of questions the
-student of the Ideal School finds his mental exercises alternated with
-manual exercises throughout the entire course in something like the
-following order, namely:
-
- =Junior Year.=--(1.) _Mathematics_--Arithmetic; Algebra. (2.)
- _Science._--Physiology; Physical Geography. (3.) _Language._--English
- Language and Literature; or Latin Reader. (4.) _Drawing._--Freehand
- Model and Object; Projection; Machine; Perspective. (5.)
- _Shopwork._--Carpentry, Joinery, Wood-Turning, Pattern-Making, Proper
- Care and Use of Tools.
-
- =Middle Year.=--(1.) _Mathematics._--Geometry. (2.)
- _Science._--Physics. (3.) _Language._--General History and Literature;
- or Cæsar. (4.) _Drawing._--Orthographic Projection and Shadows; Line
- and Brush Shading; Isometric Projection and Shadows; Details of
- Machinery; Machine from Measurement. (5.) _Shopwork._--Molding,
- Casting; Forging, Welding, Tempering; Soldering, Brazing.
-
- =Senior Year.=--(1.) _Mathematics._--Plane Trigonometry; Mechanics;
- Book-keeping. (2.) _Science._--Chemistry; or Descriptive Geometry and
- Higher Algebra. (3.) _Language, etc._--English Literature, Civil
- Government, Political Economy; or Cicero, or French. (4.)
- _Drawing._--Machine from Measurement; Building from Measurement;
- Architectural Perspective. (5.) _Machine Shopwork._--Such as Chipping,
- Filing, Fitting, Turning, Drilling, Planing, etc. Study of Machinery,
- including the Management and Care of Steam Engines and Boilers.
-
-Latin and French may be taken instead of English Language, Literature,
-and History. Instruction will be given each year in the properties of
-the materials--wood, iron, brass, etc.--used in that year.
-
-Throughout the course, one hour per day, or more, will be given to
-drawing, and not less than two hours per day to laboratory work. The
-remainder of the school day will be devoted to study and recitation.
-Before graduating, each pupil will be required to construct a machine
-from drawings and patterns made by himself. A diploma will be given on
-graduation.
-
-The new education is a blending of manual and mental training. It
-recognizes the fact that science discovers and art utilizes, and that
-these two forces move the modern world.
-
-At present the Manual Training School is a missionary enterprise. Its
-purpose is to create in the public mind an imperative demand for the
-incorporation of its scientific methods into the public-school course of
-instruction.
-
-A vast majority of our people are employed in the useful arts, and
-distinction in every department of labor now depends upon scientific
-education. Without technical education or manual training the laborer of
-the future cannot hope to rise above the grade of a piece of automatic
-machinery. He falls into the routine of the shop like a cog or lever
-moved by steam. To avert this dire misfortune our common schools must be
-made institutions for manual as well as intellectual training. They must
-inculcate the dignity of labor not by precept merely, but by example.
-It is not enough that schools of technology, polytechnic institutes, and
-manual training schools are being established here and there by private
-subscription. The supply of these classes of education is only a drop in
-the bucket to the public demand. Technical and manual training must be
-made part of the general public educational system. In our city
-high-schools we now fit boys for college. In those schools we must
-hereafter fit them for the colleges of art. When this shall have become
-the fashion in education there will be thousands of high-school
-graduates with a grand passion for mechanical pursuits--boys with more
-curiosity on the subject of the expansive force of steam than on the
-subject of “Greek roots;” with more ambition to invent something useful
-to man than to learn how to draw a bill in chancery; with a stronger
-desire to discover a new secret in electricity than to carry off a prize
-for the best Latin oration.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-THE INTELLECTUAL EFFECT OF MANUAL TRAINING.
-
- Intelligence is the Basis of Character. -- The more Practical the
- Intelligence the Higher the Development of Character. -- The use of
- Tools quickens the Intellect. -- Making Things rouses the Attention,
- sharpens the Observation, and steadies the Judgment. -- History of
- Inventions in England, 1740-1840. -- Poor, Ignorant Apprentices become
- learned Men. -- Cort, Huntsman, Mushet, Neilson, Stephenson, and Watt.
- -- The Union of Books and Tools. -- Results at Rotterdam, Holland; at
- Moscow, Russia; at Komotau, Bohemia; and at St. Louis, Mo. -- The
- Consideration of Overwhelming Import.
-
-
-The quality of all civilizations depends upon intelligence and
-character, or morality, in the order stated; for morality springs from
-intelligence, not intelligence from morality. This is an axiomatic
-deduction of historic analysis.[2] Nor would it be difficult to prove
-that practical intelligence is more conducive to a high development of
-morals than mere theoretical intelligence. For is it not true that the
-nations most skilled in the useful arts are most highly cultured in
-morals? And if it be true, it constitutes a potential argument in
-support of joining to intellectual instruction in the schools a course
-of training in the elements of the useful arts. And of the fact which
-forms the basis of this argument there is a logical explanation.
-
- [2] “But if we contrast this stationary aspect of moral truths with
- the progressive aspect of intellectual truths, the difference is,
- indeed, startling.... These are to every educated man recognized and
- notorious facts, and the inference to be drawn from them is
- immediately obvious. Since civilization is the product of moral and
- intellectual agencies, and since that product is constantly changing,
- it evidently cannot be regulated by the stationary agent; because when
- surrounding circumstances are unchanged, a stationary agent can only
- produce a stationary effect. The only other agent is the intellectual
- one, and that this is the real mover may be proved in two distinct
- ways: first, because being, as we have already seen, either moral or
- intellectual, and being, as we have also seen, not moral, it must be
- intellectual; and secondly, because the intellectual principle has an
- activity and a capacity for adaptation which, as I undertake to show,
- is quite sufficient to account for the extraordinary progress that,
- during several centuries, Europe has continued to make.”--Buckle’s
- “History of Civilization,” Vol. I., p. 130. D. Appleton & Co., 1864.
-
-Nothing stimulates and quickens the intellect more than the use of
-mechanical tools. The boy who begins to construct things is compelled at
-once to begin to think, deliberate, reason, and conclude. As he proceeds
-he is brought in contact with powerful natural forces. If he would
-control, direct, and apply these forces he must first master the laws by
-which they are governed; he must investigate the causes of the phenomena
-of matter, and it will be strange if from this he is not also led to a
-study of the phenomena of mind. At the very threshold of practical
-mechanics a thirst for wisdom is engendered, and the student is
-irresistibly impelled to investigate the mysteries of philosophy. Thus
-the training of the eye and the hand reacts upon the brain, stimulating
-it to excursions into the realm of scientific discovery in search of
-facts to be applied in practical forms at the bench and the anvil.
-
-The history of invention and discovery in England affords a striking
-confirmation of the truth of the proposition that mechanical
-investigation, with tools in hand, stimulates the intellectual faculties
-to the highest point of activity and excellence. The germs of nearly
-all the great inventions in mechanics, the benefit of which the world is
-now enjoying in such ample measure, are directly traceable to the
-workshops of Great Britain during the period 1740-1840.
-
-England had then no popular system of education, and the apprentices in
-her shops were poor, obscure, and, at the start, illiterate. But to
-those poor apprentices the honor of the great inventions and discoveries
-of that age is almost wholly due. And it is a notable fact that in the
-struggle to invent tools and machines, to master the art of mechanism,
-to steal from Nature her secret forces, and harness and use them for the
-benefit of man, the toiling workers not infrequently became highly
-educated, intellectual giants, familiar not alone with special studies,
-but masters of many branches of learning.
-
-In 1770 the Russian Government, aware of the inferiority of English
-iron, and deeming Russian iron essential to England, directed the price
-of iron for export to be raised three hundred per cent. This arbitrary
-act stimulated invention. Henry Cort, the son of a brick-maker, entered
-upon a series of experiments, with a view to the improvement of English
-iron. They occupied several years, and were of a very expensive
-character--so expensive as eventually to bankrupt the man who made them.
-They were, however, so successful as to constitute a splendid epoch in
-the history of metallurgy. In 1786 Lord Sheffield declared that Cort’s
-improvements in iron, and the steam-engine of Watt, were of more value
-to Great Britain than the thirteen colonies of America; and in 1862 it
-was estimated that those improvements had added three thousand million
-dollars to the wealth of England alone, to say nothing of the rest of
-the world of iron manufacture throughout which they had been applied.
-But the only estate secured by this great man as a reward of his genius
-and a life of toil, as his biographer pathetically remarks, was “the
-little domain of six feet by two in which he lies buried in Hampstead
-churchyard.”
-
-In 1715 Sheffield contained two thousand inhabitants, of whom one-third
-were beggars. Its manufactures consisted of jews-harps, tobacco-boxes,
-and knives. Sheffield is now the chief seat of the steel manufacture of
-the world. The initial step in this great transformation scene was taken
-by Benjamin Huntsman. He was born in 1704, and bred to a mechanical
-calling. The early years of his life were spent in the occupation of
-clock making and repairing. He was shrewd, observant, and practical, and
-he gradually extended the scope of his profession to repairing, and
-finally to making hand-tools. In this branch of his trade he detected
-defects in the German steel in common use. He removed from Doncaster to
-Sheffield, and there in the privacy of his cottage studied metallurgy,
-and for years labored in secret over the furnace and the crucible. His
-numerous failures were subsequently found chronicled in masses of metal,
-in various stages of imperfection, buried in the earth. But when he
-emerged from his long seclusion he offered to his fellow-mechanics a
-piece of cast-steel so hard that they declined to work it. He sent the
-product of his works to France, and the French knives and razors made
-from it and imported into England drove the Sheffield cutlery from the
-market. Then the Sheffield cutlers sought to have the export of steel
-prohibited. Failing in that they stole Huntsman’s secret. This was
-possible, since the process had not been patented. The story of the
-theft is told in a little work entitled “The Useful Metals and their
-Alloys.” It is in substance that one Walker, an iron-founder, “disguised
-himself as a tramp, and feigning great distress and abject poverty,
-appeared shivering at the door of Huntsman’s foundery late one night
-when the workmen were about to begin their labors at steel-casting, and
-asked for permission to warm himself by the furnace-fire.” He was
-permitted to enter, and when he left he carried away the secret of the
-inventor of cast-steel.
-
-Huntsman was a member of the Society of Friends, and it was doubtless on
-that account that he declined a membership of the Royal Society tendered
-to him in honor of his great discovery or invention of cast-steel.
-
-David Mushet’s discovery of the extraordinary value of black-band
-iron-stone in 1801 made Scotland a first-class iron-producing country;
-and Neilson’s invention of the hot-blast in 1828 revolutionized the
-processes of iron manufacture by vastly cheapening them. Both these men
-sprang from the labor class, and both were self-educated. Through almost
-superhuman efforts they rose from poverty and obscurity to fame.
-Mushet’s “Papers on Iron and Steel,” in the language of Smiles, “are
-among the most valuable original contributions to the literature of iron
-manufacture that have yet been given to the world;” and Neilson was made
-a member of the Royal Society in recognition of his distinguished
-ability and the great services he rendered in the cause of the useful
-arts.
-
-George Stephenson rose from the coal-mine to the summit of renown as a
-theoretical and practical mechanic. While employed in various collieries
-as “fireman” and “plugman,” he acquired a thorough knowledge of the
-engines then in use, taking them apart, repairing, and putting them
-together again. At eighteen years of age he could not read. In the
-course of two years attendance at night-schools he learned to read,
-write, and cipher.[3] Continuing to work in collieries, he employed his
-leisure hours in studying mechanics and engineering, and in mending
-clocks and shoes. When thirty-one years of age he was appointed
-“enginewright” at Killingworth Colliery, at a salary of £100 a year.
-From this point of time dates his career as an inventor. His first
-locomotive was completed in 1814, and the “Rocket” made its trial trip
-in 1829. During the intervening fifteen years Stephenson was largely
-engaged in the engineering department of railway enterprises as well as
-in the prosecution of experiments for the perfecting of locomotive
-engines. The most eminent engineers of the time doubted the
-practicability of the locomotive, and continued to recommend stationary
-engines, while Stephenson was leading up to the “Rocket.” The success of
-the “Rocket” made its inventor the most famous mechanic in the world.
-For the next fifteen years he was the leading spirit in all the great
-railway enterprises of England, besides being called repeatedly to
-Belgium and Spain as consulting engineer. He was offered a fellowship of
-the Royal Society, also one in the Civil Engineers’ Society, also
-knighthood by Sir Robert Peel. All these empty honors he declined. “I
-have to state,” he said, in reply to a request for his “ornamental
-initials,” “that I have no flourishes to my name, either before or
-after, and I think it will be as well if you merely say George
-Stephenson.” He may justly be styled the founder of the existing railway
-system of the world, which undoubtedly exerts more influence upon
-civilization than any other one cause or set of allied causes; and to
-have risen from the humblest station in a colliery to the dignity of
-founding such a system is sufficient evidence of a gigantic intellectual
-growth.
-
- [3] “In conclusion, we are of opinion that special instruction which
- can be applied to the material would be at once more fruitful in good
- results and more attractive if the pupil could go from the class-room
- to the workshop (laboratory) to practically demonstrate the theories
- to which he has just been listening. In support of this opinion we
- might add the observations made in our own evening-schools, where the
- most noteworthy and rapid progress is made in those cases where the
- pupil has occasion to put into actual practice on the material itself
- the instruction which he has received in the drawing-class.”--“Report
- of Committee of Council of Arts and Manufactures of the Province of
- Quebec, created to Inquire into the Question of Practical Schools.”
-
-James Watt was an extremely fragile child, and hence unable to join in
-the rude sports of robust children. Thus confined within-doors he early
-amused himself by drawing “with a pencil upon paper, or with chalk upon
-the floor.” He was also supplied with a few tools from his father’s
-carpenter’s shop, “which he soon learned to handle with considerable
-expertness.” Mr. Smiles, in his biography of Watt, says, “The mechanical
-dexterity he acquired was the foundation upon which he built the
-speculations to which he owes his glory, nor without this manual
-training is there the least likelihood that he would have become the
-improver and almost the creator of the steam-engine.”[4] In the
-parrot-power of learning or memorizing Watt was a dull boy, and he left
-the grammar-school of his native town at an early age, never to return
-to the “halls of learning.” But while engaged in humble mechanical
-employments he perfected his education, studying after work-hours. He
-nearly starved his body, but constantly added to his intellectual
-stores. He mastered the principles of engineering, civil and military,
-studied natural history, criticism, art, and acquired several modern
-languages. In a word, without the aid of the schools, but under the
-stimulating influence of mechanical investigation and work, Watt became
-an accomplished and scientific man. When nearly eighty years of age he
-and Sir Walter Scott met. Referring to the occasion, and speaking of
-Watt, Sir Walter is reported to have said, “The alert, kind, benevolent
-old man had his attention alive to every one’s question, his information
-at every one’s command. His talents and fancy overflowed on every
-subject. One gentleman was a deep philologist--he talked with him on the
-origin of the alphabet as if he had been coeval with Cadmus; another a
-celebrated critic--you would have said the old man had studied political
-economy and belles-lettres all his life; of science it is unnecessary to
-speak--it was his distinguished walk.”
-
- [4] “I believe that well-advised practice in any of the constructive
- arts involving not more than one-third of the student’s time will
- yield as much mental improvement as will result if the whole time be
- devoted to study from text-books.”--Prof. Wm. F. M. Goss, six years
- Director of the Department of Practical Mechanics of Purdue
- University.
-
- “And reflect that he will learn more by one hour of manual labor than
- he will retain from a whole day’s verbal instructions.”--“The Emilius
- and Sophia” of J. J. Rousseau, Vol. II., p. 64. London: 1767.
-
- “The things themselves are the best explanations. I can never enough
- repeat it, that we make words of too much consequence; with our
- prating modes of education we make nothing but praters.”--Ibid., p.
- 46.
-
-These examples of remarkable intellectual development in connection
-with tool-practice are not phenomenal. From the annals of invention and
-discovery numerous instances might be cited in support of the
-proposition of this chapter, that tool-practice stimulates intellectual
-growth.
-
-In the Artisan’s School at Rotterdam, Holland, an experience of seven
-years has demonstrated that “boys who are occupied one-half the day with
-books in the school, and the remaining half with tools in the
-laboratories, make about as rapid intellectual progress as those of
-equal ability who spend the whole day in study and recitation.” The
-testimony of Dr. Woodward, director of the St. Louis (Mo.) Manual
-Training School, is to the same effect. And in one of his reports he
-says, “Success in drawing or shop-work has often had the effect of
-arousing the ambition in mathematics and history, and _vice versa_....
-The habit of working from drawings and to nice measurements has given
-the students a confidence in themselves altogether new. This is shown in
-the readiness with which they undertake the execution of small
-commissions in behalf of the school.... In fact, the increased
-usefulness of our students is making itself felt, and in several
-instances the result has been the offer of business positions too
-tempting to be rejected.”
-
-Of the results achieved by the Imperial Technical School, Moscow,
-Russia, M. Victor Della-Vos, director, speaks with the utmost
-confidence. He says, “And now (1878) we present our system of
-instruction, not as a project, but as an accomplished fact, confirmed by
-the long experience of ten years of success in its results.” The methods
-of instruction of the school at Moscow were introduced into all the
-technical schools of Russia in 1870.
-
-A similar degree of success has attended the Royal Mechanic Art School
-at Komotau, Bohemia. The management says, “The school has shown the most
-brilliant proofs of usefulness, and the ends gained have been
-acknowledged at home and abroad. One proof is that in spite of the hard
-times all the pupils from Komotau have found occupation in different
-manufacturing establishments; and another that England, a country
-unsurpassed in the manufactures of iron and steel, has already sent some
-students to the school.”
-
-If the pupil in the Manual Training School makes as rapid progress
-intellectually as the pupil in the public or private school of
-corresponding grade, it follows that whatever skill in the use of tools
-is acquired, and whatever knowledge of practical mechanics is
-gained--these stand for the net gain of the pupil of the new system of
-education. But much more follows by implication. For if the few pupils
-of the world’s few manual training schools are making equal intellectual
-progress with the many pupils of the many schools of the old _régime_,
-and making such progress in a little more than half the study-hours, the
-consideration of overwhelming import is the loss sustained by the
-millions of pupils being trained under the old system.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-THE EDUCATION OF WOMEN A NECESSITY.
-
- The Difference between Ancient and Modern Systems of Education. --
- Plato Blinded by Half-truths. -- No place in the present order of
- things for Dogmatisms. -- Education commences at Birth. -- The
- Influence of Woman extends from the Cradle to the Grave. -- The Crime
- of Crimes. -- Neglect to educate Woman. -- The Superiority of Women
- over Men as Teachers. -- Froebel discovered it. -- Nature designed
- Woman to Teach; hence the Importance of Fitting her for her Highest
- Destiny.
-
-
-This, from the lips of Plato, was the theory of the ancients: “The earth
-is the common mother of the human race, but it has pleased the gods to
-mix gold in the composition of some, silver in that of others, iron and
-copper in that of others.”[5] On this divinely established principle of
-caste all the ancient educational systems were founded. They were
-limited to the development of the few in whose composition gold was
-supposed to be mixed.
-
- [5] “The Republic of Plato,” p. 114. London: Macmillan & Co., 1881.
-
-The idea of a universal education is modern, and all other differences
-between the ancients and moderns combined are as nothing to this one
-fundamental difference between the two civilizations. Plato’s ideal
-republic was based upon the assumption that the “guardians” might be
-made just and wise by educating them; but that the other classes might
-also be made just and wise by education, and the State be so rendered
-absolutely secure, did not occur to the great philosopher.
-
-Plato was blinded by half-truths, as Rousseau was two thousand years
-later, when he said, “The poor stand in no need of education; that of
-their station is confined, and they cannot obtain any other.”[6] That
-men are created unequal intellectually is only a half-truth in an
-educational view; the whole truth is that every child is susceptible of
-the developing influence of education, and hence the obligation of the
-State to educate relates to all children. Plato’s simile of the gold,
-the silver, and the iron shows how autocratically even the greatest mind
-is controlled by its environment, and limited by the facts which
-constitute the basis of its generalizations. Were Plato teaching here,
-now, he would transpose the order of statement in his simile, since
-iron, not gold, is the king of metals. Each generation increases the
-world’s stock of facts; hence there is no place in the modern order of
-things for the dogmatist--the dogmatisms of yesterday become apt themes
-for the satires of to-day, subjecting their authors to ridicule. This
-fact should impress upon professional teachers, and upon all persons
-engaged in seeking to promote the cause of education, the importance of
-a reverently studious habit of mind touching the progress of events. The
-tyranny of tradition is an ever-present, potent influence, and only the
-growing mind can resist it.
-
- [6] “Emilius and Sophia,” Vol. I, p. 40. London: 1767.
-
-But there are certain principles upon which not only ancient and modern
-educators agree, but about which there is no dispute between existing
-rival schools, as, for example, this proposition of Plato--
-
-“The beginning is the most important part, especially in dealing with
-anything young and tender, for that is the time when any impression
-which one may desire to communicate is most readily stamped and
-taken.”[7]
-
- [7] “The Republic of Plato,” p. 65. London: Macmillan & Co., 1881.
-
-And this proposition of Rousseau--
-
-“The education of a man commences at his birth; before he can speak,
-before he can understand, he is already instructed.... Trace the
-progress of the most ignorant of mortals from his birth to the present
-hour and you will be astonished at the knowledge he has acquired.”[8]
-
- [8] “Emilius and Sophia,” Vol. I., p. 54. London: 1767.
-
-And this further proposition, also of Rousseau--
-
-“The common profession of all men is humanity; and whoever is well
-educated to discharge the duties of a man cannot be badly prepared to
-fill up any of those offices that have a relation to him.”[9]
-
- [9] Ibid., Vol. I., p 13.
-
-The truth of these propositions being admitted, some conception may be
-formed of the tremendous influence exerted by woman upon the destinies
-of the human race. It extends literally from the cradle to the grave.
-All other influences combined are less potent, less comprehensive than
-this single, persistent force that creates the very atmosphere in which
-the infant mind develops, holding the ground alone and undisturbed until
-the child’s plastic character has been formed, receiving ineradicable
-impressions. What a crime, then, was the neglect of the people of past
-ages to educate woman! It is in vain that the education of man is
-attempted if that of woman is neglected. It was Rousseau who in despair
-exclaimed:
-
-“How can a child be properly educated by one who has not been properly
-educated himself?”
-
-Since, therefore, the education of the man begins while he lies helpless
-in his mother’s arms, and since the first steps in this direction are
-the most important, and since some sort of education proceeds with
-almost inconceivable rapidity through all the early years of life, it
-follows that the kindergarten fills a place in the educational field
-entirely unoccupied until the time of Froebel. He first applied the
-ideas of Rousseau to school life. But when the kindergarten receives the
-child, three or four of the most precious educational years have already
-passed away, and at the still tender age of seven the child is
-surrendered to a very different system of training. The kindergarten is
-therefore only a brief episode in the educational period of the child’s
-life. But if it be the true education, it is susceptible of universal
-application. Throughout all nature the order of development is constant
-and harmonious, and the child-nature cannot in reason constitute an
-exception to this rule. Froebel said, “The end and aim of all our work
-should be the harmonious growth of the whole being.” If his principle is
-the true one, his method is susceptible of such modification and
-expansion as to render it applicable to the whole educational period.
-All mothers should therefore be trained in the principles and methods of
-the new education--the kindergarten system should prevail in all
-schools, and the kindergarten curriculum should be extended and adapted
-to all ages and grades of pupils.
-
-Several great minds, separated by considerable intervals of time, have
-united in condemning the old systems of education--Bacon, Comenius,
-Rousseau, Pestalozzi, and Froebel. Bacon, himself a university man,
-said, “They learn nothing at the universities but to believe;” and he
-proposed that a college be appropriated to the discovery of new truth,
-“to mix like a living spring with the stagnant waters.” Three of these
-great men--Comenius, Pestalozzi, and Froebel--were professional
-teachers. Theoretically they were in accord with and followers of Bacon,
-and in practice they were substantially agreed. Comenius said, “Let
-things that have to be done be learned by doing them.” Pestalozzi said,
-“Education is the generation of power,” and Froebel said, “The end and
-aim of all our work should be the harmonious growth of the whole being.”
-
-These are very high authorities, and they are buttressed by seemingly
-impregnable educational propositions. The record of Froebel’s life is
-worthy of great weight in support of his theory. His devotion to the
-cause of education was absolute. He never knew a selfish aim. He
-struggled for the race, not for self. He was the victim of many
-misfortunes, but none disturbed the serenity of this great soul devoted
-to the greatest of great causes--the cause of education. And education
-to his apprehension was the thorough training of every faculty of the
-mind and every power of the body for the duties of actual practical
-life. His love embraced the world in its entirety and in all its parts.
-Dying, he said, “I love flowers, men, children, God! I love everything!”
-It was his profoundly philosophic conception of the innate lovableness
-of every natural object that made him shudder at the cruel distortion
-wrought in the natures of little children by false methods of education.
-Hence his intense devotion to the subject of infant training, and hence
-the excellence of the system which bears his name.
-
-Froebel’s most subtile discovery was the fact of the superiority of
-women over men, as teachers. Only an honest, brave soul could have made
-this discovery, for tradition stood like a lion in the way, and
-prejudice discouraged investigation. But Froebel sought truth for
-truth’s sake, fearlessly defying tradition and ignoring prejudice; and
-years of experiment convinced him that the greatest measure of success
-in infant training was surely attainable through women. That this
-discovery, so simple, yet so big with grand possibilities, was not made
-earlier is due to the fact that there is so little really independent
-thought, so little investigation free from the trammels of prejudice.
-Now that a great mind has pointed the way it is obvious that Nature,
-having designed that the years of early childhood should be spent with
-the mother, must have also designed that women should be the chief
-educators of children. And it follows, of course, that the education of
-women is more important than that of men, since it is from them that
-children receive their first impressions, and since first impressions
-are indelibly stamped upon the infant mind, giving it form, color, and
-substance.
-
-In confiding to women this great trust, Froebel imposed upon them an
-incalculable weight of responsibility. It comprehends the destiny of the
-human race, involving the problem of its progress or retrogression.
-
-A common first conception of the kindergarten is--a convenient asylum
-for the children of mothers who desire to be relieved of their care. A
-more thoughtful study reveals its poetry and sentiment, the innocent joy
-of the assembly of pupils, the harmony of song, and the grace of motion
-in the games and dances. A final, large view discloses the true
-educational principle. The kindergarten is more clearly comprehended
-after studying the manual training school--moving from the effect to
-the cause; for as the child is father of the man, so the kindergarten is
-father of the manual training school. The kindergarten comes first in
-the order of development, and leads logically to the manual training
-school. The same principle underlies both. In both it is sought to
-generate power by dealing with actualities. The corner-stone of both is
-object-teaching--teaching through things instead of through signs of
-things. This principle, common to both, is the concrete as opposed to
-the abstract. The theory of both is that, in teaching, ideas should
-never be isolated from the objects they represent.[E3] The kindergarten
-and the manual training school, being one in principle, should have
-common methods of instruction, varied sufficiently to adapt them to the
-whole range of school life.
-
- [E3] “This method of object teaching is perhaps the greatest service
- which the naturalistic school has rendered to the cause of education.
- Hinted at by Rabelais and Locke, still more largely developed by
- Rousseau, it has received, in the last century, a more accurate and
- scientific form, and is probably destined to become the source of a
- new curriculum in which literature will only hold a secondary
- place.”--“Educational Theories,” p. 109. By Oscar Browning, M.A. New
- York: Harper & Brothers, 1885.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-THE MORAL EFFECT OF MANUAL TRAINING.
-
- Mental Impulses are often Vicious; but the Exertion of Physical Power
- in the Arts is always Beneficent -- hence Manual Training tends to
- correct vicious mental Impulses. -- Every mental Impression produces a
- moral Effect. -- All Training is Moral as well as Mental. --
- Selfishness is total Depravity; but Selfishness has been Deified under
- the name of Prudence. -- Napoleon an Example of Selfishness. -- The
- End of Selfishness is Disaster; but Prevailing Systems of Education
- promote Selfishness. -- The Modern City an Illustration of
- Selfishness. -- The Ancient City. -- Existing Systems of Education
- Negatively Wrong. -- Manual Training supplies the lacking Element. --
- The Objective must take the Place of the Subjective in Education. --
- Words without Acts are as dead as Faith without Works.
-
-
-Education, or training, has two immediate and continuous effects--the
-development of innate mental qualities or aptitudes and the formation of
-character. In an orderly logical system of training the development
-would be harmonious, and the resulting formation of character
-symmetrical. These are, however, ideal conditions requiring a perfect
-system of training, and students free from the perversions and
-deformities growing out of the law of heredity. But under any system of
-training there is progress--development and character formation. The
-aphorism, “An idle brain is the devil’s workshop,” expresses only a
-half-truth. What it means is this: if the mind is not well employed it
-will be ill employed; or if it is not occupied with good thoughts it
-will be occupied with evil thoughts. The mind of man is never at rest,
-in equilibrium, even in a state of barbarism. Indeed this is obvious,
-since all civilizations are growths from states of savagery. But the
-barbaric line once passed, development is greatly accelerated, assuming
-with the evolution of the ages the form of a geometrical progression.
-The distinguishing characteristic of modern civilization is action. In
-so far as this action, which may be called the impulsive force of the
-spirit of the age, is natural and orderly, it constitutes an aid to the
-processes of education; if otherwise, it is obstructive, hindering them.
-
-The law of mental development is not the exact correlative of the law of
-physical development. The direct aim of physical training is muscular
-power; of mental training the aim is mental power and rectitude.
-Physical power is not intrinsically vicious; it becomes vicious only
-when exerted under a vicious intellectual impulse. But this is not
-necessarily true of mental power; for mental power may be gained quite
-apart from the element of rectitude, in which event it is vicious, and
-may be exerted in scorn of the accepted standards of right, truth, and
-justice. As a matter of fact it is often so exerted, and the fact that
-it is so exerted accounts for the crimes of individuals, the faults of
-society, and the errors of governments. The constitution of mental power
-is, then, complex, while that of physical power is simple. If mental
-power consists of sense perception, or understanding, and moral
-perception, or rectitude, in due proportion, the issue is a noble
-character; but if rectitude is wanting, the issue is an evil character.
-If, on the other hand, there is no interference with the orderly
-development of physical power, the issue of its exertion is always
-skill--skill applied in innumerable forms to the uses of man. Only
-through a mental impulse rendered vicious by the absence of the element
-of rectitude can physical power be diverted from its naturally
-beneficent mission.
-
-It follows that most of the evils of civilization flow from an
-ill-balanced mental constitution--a mental constitution wanting the
-essential element of rectitude. Since, then, mental development, under
-certain widely prevailing conditions, is so prolific of evil, and
-physical development or skill so universally prolific of good, it is
-obvious that the beneficent influence of the latter should, if
-practicable, be brought to bear upon the former in educational systems.
-In a word, may not the two systems of training be so connected in the
-schools as to cause the manual to react upon the mental, with the effect
-of greatly stimulating the ethical side of the mind?
-
-It is not essential to our purpose to inquire whether a perfect system
-of education, and hence an ideal state of society, is possible. It will
-be sufficient if we are able to show wherein prevailing systems of
-education can be improved.
-
-In a former chapter we sought to show that the use of mechanical tools
-stimulates the intellect; in the present chapter it is our purpose to
-endeavor to show that manual training tends to the promotion of
-rectitude, to the up building of character.
-
-For purposes of culture the mind consists of divisions, as the body
-consists of members. It is susceptible of development in the line of the
-application of mental training, as any member of the body is susceptible
-of development through physical training or use. For example, the memory
-may be invigorated by the constant application of certain kinds of
-mental training, as the arm is strengthened by the constant use of the
-sledge-hammer. But if the mental training which stimulates the memory
-is applied to the neglect of other lines of training, the memory will be
-strengthened at the expense of some other faculty of the mind, as the
-excessive use of the sledge-hammer strengthens the arm at the cost of
-other members of the body. In the one case the mind, and in the other
-the body will be deformed. In the case of the sledge-hammer training the
-muscles of the arm will stand out like whip-cords, while those of the
-legs will shrivel and become attenuated. In the case of the training of
-the memory that faculty will show an abnormal development, while some
-other faculty, as the power of ratiocination, probably, will become
-weak.
-
-It is not necessary in this connection to inquire into the origin of
-moral sentiments, or to consider the rival theories on the subject.
-However men may differ as between the two schools of moral
-philosophers--the sentimentalists and the utilitarians--they will agree
-that the moral side of the mind, so to speak, consists of divisions like
-the mental side; that these divisions are the source, respectively, of
-good and evil tendencies, and that these tendencies are susceptible of
-cultivation; that the evil may be restrained and the good developed, and
-_vice versa_. Nor will it be disputed that there is such a blending of
-the moral with the mental nature in the mind of man as to render any
-consideration of the subject irrational and incomplete which does not
-comprehend both, and treat them, practically, as one and the same. Man
-is so constituted, and his relations to society are such, that every
-mental impression he receives produces a moral effect, the character of
-which is, of course, largely dependent upon the accepted standards of
-right, truth, and justice. Hence all scholastic training is both mental
-and moral. It is moral as well as mental, whether the instructor will
-it so or not; and that it is moral is well, since it is obviously true,
-as Galton pertinently remarks, that “Great men have usually high moral
-natures, and are affectionate and reverential, inasmuch as mere brain
-without heart is insufficient to achieve eminence.”
-
-Selfishness is the arch enemy of virtue; from it all forms of immorality
-spring, and its last analysis is total depravity. But literature, which
-is the fruitage of education, is full of maxims in honor of selfishness.
-Said the Dauphin to the French king, “Self-love, my liege, is not so
-vile a sin as self-neglecting.” Said Herbert, “Help thyself and God will
-help thee.” “A penny saved is as good as a penny earned,” said Franklin;
-and the grasping “Yankee” stretches the maxim a point in saying to his
-son, “Make money honestly if you can, but make money.”
-
-The following, also, are current maxims: “Every man is the architect of
-his own fortune;” “Every tub must stand upon its own bottom;” “In the
-race of life the devil takes the hindmost;” “Look to the main chance;”
-and, “Keep what you have got, and catch what you can.” To the same
-purpose is the famous old aphorism of which Napoleon the First was so
-fond, “God always favors the heaviest battalions.” Emerson declared that
-Napoleon represented “the spirit of modern commerce, of money, and
-material power,” and he certainly was the very incarnation of
-selfishness.[10] He had a hand of iron, and he laid it heavily on all
-who opposed him. If it became necessary to imprison his enemies he
-imprisoned them; if it became necessary to kill them he cut off their
-heads. When charged with the commission of great crimes, he retorted,
-“Men of my stamp do not commit crimes!” “I have always marched with the
-opinion of great masses and events,” he exclaimed, with the insolence of
-a butcher exhibiting his bloody hands. Old-fashioned codes of morals
-were for those who opposed his plans, not for him. But the end of
-selfishness is disaster. It is as dangerous to assume to rise above
-moral laws as to sink below them; in the one case they crush, and in the
-other they undermine. “The half” is, after all, “more than the whole,”
-for “the half” may be retained, but “the whole” is sure to slip from the
-fingers of grasping avarice. Napoleon, who defied all mankind, expiated
-his crimes on a rock in mid-ocean. There, whining, protesting, and
-prating of injustice, he died miserably, a colossal example of the folly
-of selfishness.
-
- [10] “‘God has granted,’ says the Koran, ‘to every people a prophet in
- its own tongue.’ Paris, and London, and New York, the spirit of
- commerce, of money, and material power, were also to have their
- prophet; and Bonaparte was qualified and sent. Every one of the
- million readers of anecdotes, or memoirs, or lives of Napoleon
- delights in the page, because he studies in it his own
- history.”--“Representative Men,” p. 221. Boston: Phillips, Sampson &
- Co., 1858.
-
- It would be impossible more severely to arraign existing educational
- methods; for men are what education makes them.
-
-Selfishness seeks to wring from society a support without giving to it
-an equivalent return. What industry creates and saves to society,
-selfishness seeks to misappropriate to its own use; hence selfishness is
-in conflict with the true spirit of civilization, which is the compact
-of all to protect each in his rights. Selfishness caused the destruction
-of all the governments of ancient times, and it has been the cause of
-all the revolutions of modern times. There can be no stability in
-government until altruism takes the place of selfishness in the world’s
-code of ethics. The sole condition of the stability of the State is a
-disposition on the part of its people to conform to justice and correct
-moral principles in all social relations.
-
-Any system of education that does not tend to produce a state of morals
-conformable to this high standard is not merely defective; it is
-radically wrong, and therefore positively vicious. The true purpose of
-education is the harmonious development of all the powers of the
-man--mental, moral, and physical. But harmony in a selfish character is
-impossible, for selfishness is blind of one eye, so to speak; it
-considers only one side of a cause--the side that relates to its
-interest, regardless of all other interests. Let not prudence be
-confounded with selfishness. Prudence and selfishness are as wide apart
-as the poles. Extreme prudence is perfectly consistent with entire
-rectitude, while extreme selfishness is the synonym of depravity; hence
-the first step in education is to eliminate selfishness from the mind,
-and the next step is to put rectitude in its place.
-
-Prevailing systems of education no doubt promote the spirit of
-selfishness:[11] witness the character of the struggle for
-self-aggrandizement. It is more intense and more widely extended than at
-any period of the world’s history. That it is more intense is shown by
-the more and more rapid concentration of populations in cities, where
-the struggle assumes its most intense form, and exhibits itself in its
-most threatening aspect.
-
- [11] “In small, undeveloped societies, where for ages complete peace
- has continued, there exists nothing like what we call Government; no
- coercive agency, but mere honorary headship, if any headship at all.
- In these exceptional communities, unaggressive, and from special
- causes unaggressed upon, there is so little deviation from the virtues
- of truthfulness, honesty, justice, and generosity, that nothing beyond
- an occasional expression of public opinion by informally assembled
- elders is needful.”--“Political Institutions,” ¶¶ 437, 573; “The Sins
- of Legislators,” in “The Man _versus_ the State,” p. 44. By Herbert
- Spencer. New York: D. Appleton & Co.
-
-Cities have always been plague-spots on the body politic, and they are
-not less so now than in ancient times. It is in cities that all dangers
-to the State originate; and the sole, fundamental reason why cities are
-a standing menace to the integrity of the social compact is the fact
-that they are dominated by selfishness. It is in cities that the
-unnatural, unwholesome desire to live without labor, to live by
-speculative enterprises, becomes a consuming passion, inoculating with a
-deeper and darker degree of selfishness an ever-widening circle of
-people; and selfishness at last inevitably leads to anarchy. It leads to
-anarchy and chaos because both classes of society become depraved--the
-rich and powerful through indolence and sensual indulgence, and the poor
-and wretched through ignorance and privation and their attendant mean
-vices.
-
-The modern city is the despair of the political economist. It grows
-relatively faster in population than the rural district, and it would be
-the extreme of optimism to declare that it grows better.[E4] It does not
-matter that the city is the centre of learning, the nursery of all the
-active intelligences which are achieving fresh triumphs daily in every
-department of science, literature, and art. It is also the centre of
-vice, and the nursery of every variety of crime.
-
-The difficulty--nay, the despair--of the situation is not relieved or
-mitigated by the undisputed fact that the ancient city was much worse
-morally and politically than the modern city, and hence that as between
-Rome and Chicago there is an immense moral and political advantage in
-favor of the latter. If Chicago is retrograding morally and politically,
-what is to prevent it from sinking to the moral and political status of
-Rome under the infamous emperors of the period of its decadence? If the
-modern American city is rapidly degenerating, both as a moral force and
-a political institution, what is to arrest its downward progress? What
-influence is to intervene to reverse the order and nature of its
-development?
-
-Rome, in the very agonies of political dissolution, possessed all the
-then known arts, a splendid literature, and a school of philosophy whose
-ethical code was more lofty, if less human, than that of the new system
-which was struggling to replace the old. That the inconceivably
-atrocious gladiatorial games should have developed into such huge
-proportions in conjunction with the sublime moral teachings of Seneca,
-Plutarch, Marcus Aurelius, and a score of others, is the despair of
-students of Roman history. While they taught, emperors and people alike
-feasted their eyes on bloody orgies of men and beasts, on scenes of the
-most horrible barbarity. Caligula took special delight in watching the
-countenances of the dying, “for he had learned to take an artistic
-pleasure in observing the variations of their agony.” Criminals dressed
-in the skins of wild beasts were thrown to bulls which were maddened
-with red-hot irons. “Four hundred bears were killed in a single day
-under Caligula; three hundred on another day under Claudius. Under Nero,
-four hundred tigers fought with bulls and elephants; four hundred bears
-and three hundred lions were slaughtered by his soldiers. In a single
-day, at the dedication of the Colosseum by Titus, five thousand animals
-perished. Under Trajan the games continued for one hundred and
-twenty-three successive days. Lions, tigers, rhinoceroses, hippopotami,
-giraffes, bulls, stags, even crocodiles and serpents, were employed to
-give novelty to the spectacle.”
-
-And yet the civilization that produced these games gave to the world,
-forever, the moral precepts of the stoics and philosophers. Cicero had
-maintained the doctrine of the universal brotherhood of man. “Nature
-ordains,” he says, “that a man should wish the good of every man,
-whoever he may be, for this very reason: that he is a man.” Menander
-maintained that “man should deem nothing human foreign to his interest.”
-Lucan looked forward to the time when “the human race will cast aside
-its weapons, and all nations learn to love.” In a letter on the death of
-his slaves Pliny exhibited feelings of strong human affection, and
-Plutarch, in a letter of consolation to his wife on the death of his
-daughter, left a touching record of the tenderness of his heart in the
-recital of a simple trait of the child: “She desired her nurse to press
-even her dolls to the breast. She was so loving that she wished
-everything that gave her pleasure to share in the best that she had.”
-Says Seneca, “The whole universe which you see around you, comprising
-all things both divine and human, is one. We are members of one great
-body.” And Epictetus, “You are a citizen and a part of the world. The
-duty of a citizen is in nothing to consider his own interest distinct
-from that of others.”
-
-The contrast between these noble moral sentiments and the actual life of
-the Roman people is truly startling.[E5] It is plain that the profession
-of lofty moral sentiments by a class, the possession of high literary
-attainments, and an extensive acquaintance with the arts, do not always
-afford protection against national degradation and decay. Nor is it by
-any means certain that the Christian religion is destined to effect more
-in this regard than the pagan code of morals. Rome embraced religion,
-but its conversion was powerless to avert political and commercial
-destruction.
-
-The modern city has for guides the example of all the ancient
-civilizations and political and moral systems, and in addition it has,
-in its most vital form, the Christian system of morals and faith. But
-notwithstanding all these helps it is politically corrupt and morally
-depraved. Its streets are the scenes of vice scarcely less revolting
-than those of ancient Rome. It harbors an army of criminals which grows
-with its growth, and is without any systematized effort either to reform
-or abolish it. Indeed this army of criminals is constantly reinforced in
-an increasing ratio to the whole population from the ranks of the rising
-generation, which is to a degree enforced to ignorance by the inadequacy
-of educational facilities.[12] Its power to accumulate wealth is
-increasing, but this power is confined to relatively fewer hands, and
-this is one of the most alarming features of the situation. For the
-increase of ignorance, vice, and crime is sure to keep pace with the
-abnormal growth of estates, stimulated to the highest degree by
-dishonest business practices and gigantic schemes of speculation.
-
- [12] In support of the truth of these propositions it is sufficient
- merely to allude to the late disclosures by the _Pall Mall Gazette_ of
- the prevalence of revolting crimes in London, England. It is also
- pertinent to remark the attitude of hostility maintained by the higher
- classes (so called) of the English people towards the editor of the
- journal in which the disclosures were made, as significant of an
- alarming degeneration of the moral sense of the British public.
-
-It does not follow because prevailing methods of education promote the
-spirit of selfishness, and hence contain the seeds of social and moral
-decay, that they are wholly vicious; but it does follow, if they are not
-positively wrong, that they are negatively wrong. Let us assume that
-they are only negatively wrong, that they lack an essential element in
-all mental and moral training--the manual element; and let us try to
-discover what would be the effect of the incorporation of this element
-into the curriculum of the schools.
-
-A system of education consisting exclusively of mental exercises
-promotes selfishness because such training is subjective. Its effects
-flow inward; they relate to self. All mental acquirements become a part
-of self, and so remain forever, unless they are transmuted into things
-through the agency of the hand.
-
-It is through the hand alone that the mind finally impresses itself upon
-matter. In other words, thought and speech must be incarnate in things
-or they are dead. The orator appeals to the people to strike for their
-rights; the people rend the air with shouts and subside into silence.
-The orator cries, “To Arms!” Again the people shout, and again subside
-into silence. The orator’s thoughts are of carnage, his words of flames,
-but they are as dead as if never uttered because no hand is raised to
-embody them in deeds.
-
-Manual training, on the other hand, promotes altruism because it is
-objective. Its effects flow outward; they relate not to self but to the
-human race. The skilled hand confers benefits upon man, and each benefit
-so conferred exerts the natural reflex moral influence of a good act
-upon the mind of the benefactor.[E6]
-
-Morality is not a mere sentiment, a barren ideality. It is true there is
-a negative morality which consists in refraining from the commission of
-wrongful acts. But the morality of the great ethical teachers is
-positive; it consists in doing. Christ said, “Inasmuch as ye have done
-_it_ unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done _it_ unto
-me.” Words without acts are as dead as faith without works. Paul said,
-“Though I have all faith, so that I could remove mountains, and have not
-charity, I am nothing.”
-
-Morality is a vital principle whose exemplification consists in doing
-justice; and justice is that virtue “which consists in giving to every
-one what is his due; practical conformity to the laws and to principles
-of rectitude in the dealings of men with each other; honesty, integrity
-in commerce or mutual intercourse.” It follows that morality can no more
-be acquired by memorizing a series of maxims than the art of using tools
-can be acquired by studying the laws of mechanics and of mechanism.
-
- [E4] “No city was ever so deeply disgraced by its municipal government
- as the city of New York. Fourteen years ago the exposure of the Tweed
- Ring revealed a corruption in that government which had mastered
- Legislatures and courts, and was plotting to control the national
- administration; and as we write, all of the living ex-members of the
- late Board of Aldermen, except two, are held for trial for bribery and
- corruption, or are in hiding.
-
- “Such a shame is unprecedented. It is in itself a sharp satire upon
- popular elections, as well as upon the character and public spirit of
- New York; and the worst of it is that, bad as it is, no citizen
- probably feels himself to be humiliated, or is conscious of any
- personal responsibility. To the most stupid man, however, such facts
- forecast a constant deterioration of the situation.”--“Harper’s
- Weekly,” April 24, 1886.
-
- [E5] The morality of the present age, like that of the Romans, is a
- mere theory, entirely destitute of vital force. Selfishness is still,
- as it always has been, the controlling element in human conduct, and
- selfishness and morality are utterly incompatible. Moral precepts are
- inculcated in a perfunctory way, as Greek is taught because it is the
- fashion, but with no more idea that they will be adopted as the rule
- of life, than that the language of Homer will again be used as the
- instrument of speech. The contempt in which morality is commonly held
- is well shown by the remark of a popular lecturer, who said of Peter
- the Great, that, “viewed morally he was a monster, and by the gauge of
- decency, a brute, but a giant from the lofty heights of statesmanship
- and civilization.” How vain is the hope of reform while leaders of men
- deem it possible for statesmanship to be rendered lofty by a moral
- monster, or that the cause of civilization may be advanced by a brute!
-
- [E6] “The artisan stands between every man, woman, and child and the
- crude materials embodied in the three kingdoms of Nature, and by the
- magic of his skill they are transformed into means serviceable for
- use. The wood in the forest, the marble in the quarry, the clay in the
- bank, the metal in the mine pass through his hands, take on the form
- of his thought, become arranged by his intelligence, and the product
- is the modern dwelling. Is there any fancy in fairy tale more
- wonderful than this? By the skill of the tanner and the shoemaker the
- raw skin is transformed into the useful shoe. Do you ever think of
- your indebtedness to these humble toilers for your protection and
- comfort? Do they ever think of the service they are rendering you?--a
- service which cannot be compensated by dollars and cents. The jewels
- which sparkle in royal crowns and add lustre to queenly beauty, the
- silks and precious stuffs which clothe and give new charms to the
- loveliness of women, owe their beauty, their lustre, their value to
- the artisan. He stands between the worm, the mine, and the wearer; and
- by the transforming power of his skill and patient labor they become
- robes of beauty and gems of light. But of far greater importance is
- the service he is rendering to our common humanity. He takes the
- material which our Heavenly Father has provided in such abundance,
- puts his thought, his intelligence, and he has every conceivable
- motive for putting his love and good-will toward men, into them and
- passing them on as tokens of his love and fidelity to human good.
- Everything he touches becomes a message not only of his knowledge and
- his skill but a fit embodiment of his regard for his
- fellow-men.”--“Mechanical Employments as Means of Human Culture.” Rev.
- Chauncey Giles. Eleventh Series Tracts, p. 15. Philadelphia: New
- Church Tract and Publication Society.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-THE MIND AND THE HAND.
-
- The Mind and the Hand are Allies; the Mind speculates, the Hand tests
- its Speculations in Things. -- The Hand explodes the Errors of the
- Mind -- it searches after Truth and finds it in Things. -- Mental
- Errors are subtile; they elude us, but the False in Things stands
- self-exposed. -- The Hand is the Mind’s Moral Rudder. -- The Organ of
- Touch the most Wonderful of the Senses; all the Others are Passive; it
- alone is Active. -- Sir Charles Bell’s Discovery of a “Muscular
- Sense.” -- Dr. Henry Maudsley on the Muscular Sense. -- The Hand
- influences the Brain. -- Connected Thought impossible without
- Language, and Language dependent upon Objects; and all Artificial
- Objects are the Work of the Hand. -- Progress is therefore the Imprint
- of the Hand upon Matter in Art. -- The Hand is nearer the Brain than
- are the Eye and the Ear. -- The Marvellous Works of the Hand.
-
-
-A purely mental acquirement is a theorem--something to be proved. As to
-whether the theorem is susceptible of proof is always a question until
-the doubt is solved by the act of doing. Hence Comenius’s definition of
-education--“Let those things that have to be done be learned by doing
-them”--is profoundly philosophical, since nothing can be fully learned
-without the final act of doing, owing to the fact of the incompleteness
-of all theoretical knowledge.
-
-The mind and the hand are natural allies. The mind speculates; the hand
-tests the speculations of the mind by the law of practical application.
-The hand explodes the errors of the mind, for it inquires, so to speak,
-by the act of doing, whether or not a given theorem is demonstrable in
-the form of a problem. The hand is, therefore, not only constantly
-searching after the truth, but is constantly finding it.[13] It is
-possible for the mind to indulge in false logic, to make the worse
-appear the better reason, without instant exposure. But for the hand to
-work falsely is to produce a misshapen thing--tool or machine--which in
-its construction gives the lie to its maker. Thus the hand that is false
-to truth, in the very act publishes the verdict of its own guilt,
-exposes itself to contempt and derision, convicts itself of
-unskilfulness or of dishonesty.
-
- [13] “In other cases, even by the strictest attention, it is not
- possible to give complete or strict truth in words. We could not, by
- any number of words, describe the color of a ribbon so as to enable a
- mercer to match it without seeing it. But an ‘accurate’ colorist can
- convey the required intelligence at once, with a tint on paper.”--“The
- Laws of Feesole,” Vol. I., p. 7. By John Ruskin, LL.D. New York: John
- Wiley & Sons, 1879.
-
-There is no escaping the logical conclusion of an investigation into the
-relations existing between the mind and the hand. The hand is scarcely
-less the guide than the agent of the mind. It steadies the mind. It is
-the mind’s moral rudder, its balance-wheel. It is the mind’s monitor. It
-is constantly appealing to the mind, by its acts, to “hew to the line,
-let the chips fly where they may.”
-
-Dr. George Wilson says, “In many respects the organ of touch, as
-embodied in the hand, is the most wonderful of the senses. The organs of
-the other senses are passive; the organ of touch alone is active.... The
-hand selects what it shall touch, and touches what it pleases. It puts
-away from it the things which it hates, and beckons towards it the
-things which it desires.... Moreover, the hand cares not only for its
-own wants, but when the other organs of the senses are rendered useless
-takes their duties upon it.... The blind man reads with his hand, the
-dumb man speaks with it; it plucks the flower for the nostril, and
-supplies the tongue with objects of taste. Not less amply does it give
-expression to the wit, the genius, the will, the power of man. Put a
-sword into it and it will fight, a plough and it will till, a harp and
-it will play, a pencil and it will paint, a pen and it will speak. What,
-moreover, is a ship, a railway, a light-house, or a palace--what indeed
-is a whole city, a whole continent of cities, all the cities of the
-globe, nay the very globe itself, so far as man has changed it, but the
-work of that giant hand with which the human race, acting as one mighty
-man, has executed his will.”[14]
-
- [14] “The Five Gateways of Knowledge,” p. 121. By George Wilson, M.D.,
- F.R.S.E. London: Macmillan & Co., 1881.
-
-There is a philosophical explanation of the versatility of the hand so
-graphically portrayed in the foregoing passage, and it is found in Sir
-Charles Bell’s great discovery of a “muscular sense.” The principle of
-this discovery is that “there are distinct nerves of sensation and of
-motion or volition--one set bearing messages from the body to the brain,
-and the other from the brain to the body.”
-
-In his work on the hand, after reviewing the line of argument which led
-to his discovery, Sir Charles says, “By such arguments I have been in
-the habit of showing that we possess a muscular sense, and that without
-it we could have no guidance of the frame. We could not command our
-muscles in standing, far less in walking, leaping, or running, had we
-not a perception of the condition of the muscles previous to the
-exercise of the will. And as for the hand, it is not more the freedom of
-its action which constitutes its perfection, than the knowledge which we
-have of these motions, and our consequent ability to direct it with the
-utmost precision.”[15]
-
- [15] “The Hand: its Mechanism and Vital Endowments as Evincing
- Design,” p. 151. By Sir Charles Bell, K.G.H., F.R.S., L. and E. Harper
- & Brothers, 1864.
-
-On the influence of the muscular sense, Dr. Henry Maudsley has these
-pertinent observations:
-
-“Those who would degrade the body, in order, as they imagine, to exalt
-the mind, should consider more deeply than they do the importance of our
-muscular expressions of feeling. The manifold shades and kinds of
-expression which the lips present--their gibes, gambols, and flashes of
-merriment; the quick language of a quivering nostril; the varied waves
-and ripples of beautiful emotion which play on the human countenance,
-with the spasms of passion that disfigure it--all which we take such
-pains to embody in art--are simply effects of muscular action.... Fix
-the countenance in the pattern of a particular emotion--in a look of
-anger, of wonder, or of scorn--and the emotion whose appearance is thus
-imitated will not fail to be aroused. And if we try, while the features
-are fixed in the expression of one passion, to call up in the mind a
-quite different one, we shall find it impossible to do so.... We
-perceive, then, that the muscles are not alone the machinery by which
-the mind acts upon the world, but that their actions are essential
-elements in our mental operations. The superiority of the human over the
-animal mind seems to be essentially connected with the greater variety
-of muscular action of which man is capable; were he deprived of the
-infinitely varied movements of hands, tongue, larynx, lips, and face, in
-which he is so far ahead of the animals, it is probable that he would be
-no better than an idiot, notwithstanding he might have a normal
-development of brain.”[16]
-
- [16] “Body and Mind,” p. 32. By Henry Maudsley, M.D. New York: D.
- Appleton & Co., 1883.
-
-It is through the muscular sense that the hand influences the brain.
-According to Sir Charles the hand acts first. It telegraphs, for
-example, that it is ready to grasp the chisel or the sledge-hammer, or
-seize the pen, whereupon the brain telegraphs back precise directions as
-to the work to be done. These messages to and fro are lightning-like
-flashes of intelligence, which blend or fuse all the powers of the man,
-both mental and physical, and inform and inspire the mass with vital
-force.[17]
-
- [17] The goldsmith’s art was one of the finest among the ancients, and
- so continued far into the Middle Ages. The cutting of cameos, for
- example, required the highest skill and produced the most exquisite
- results. Mr. Ruskin calls attention to the fact that “all the great
- early Italian masters of painting and sculpture, without exception,
- began by being goldsmiths’ apprentices;” and that “they felt
- themselves so indebted to, and formed by, the master craftsman who had
- mainly _disciplined their fingers_, whether in work on gold or marble,
- that they practically considered him their father, and took _his_ name
- rather than their own.”--“Fors Clavigera,” Part III., p. 291. By John
- Ruskin. LL.D. New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1881.
-
-Through constant use the muscular sense is sharpened to a marvellous
-degree of fineness, and the hand, permeated by it, forms habits which
-react powerfully upon the mind. If, now, during the period of childhood
-and youth, the hand is exercised in the useful and beautiful arts, its
-muscular sense will be developed normally, or in the direction of
-rectitude, and the reflex effect of this growth upon the mind will be
-beneficent.
-
-It is thus that the trained hand comes at last to foresee, as it were,
-that a false proposition is surely destined to be exploded. The habit of
-rectitude gives it prescience. It invariably discovers, sooner or later,
-that a false proposition, when embodied in wood or iron, becomes a
-conspicuous abortion, involving in disgrace both the designer and the
-maker. A false proposition in the abstract may be rendered very
-alluring; a false proposition in the concrete is always hideous. One of
-the chief effects of manual training is, then, the discovery and
-development of truth; and truth, in its broadest signification, is
-merely another name for justice; and justice is the synonym of morality.
-
-It has been shown that thought and speech are dead unless embodied in
-things. It may also be asserted with confidence that man would lose the
-power of speech almost wholly if his words should cease to be realized
-in things. Mr. Darwin declares that “a complex train of thought can no
-more be carried on without the aid of words, whether spoken or silent,
-than a long calculation without the use of figures or algebra.”[18] And
-Dr. Maudsley says, “But neither these instances nor the case of Laura
-Bridgman can be used to prove that it is possible to think without any
-means of physical expression. On the contrary the evidence is all the
-other way. The deaf and dumb man invents his own signs, which he draws
-from the nature of objects, seizing the most striking outline, or the
-principal movement of an action, and using them afterwards as tokens to
-represent the objects. The deaf and dumb gesticulate also as they think;
-and Laura Bridgman’s fingers worked, making the initial movements for
-letters of the finger alphabet, not only during her waking thoughts, but
-in her dreams. If we substitute for ‘names’ the motor intuitions, or
-take care to comprise in language all the modes of expressing thoughts,
-whether verbal, vocal writing, or gesture language, then it is
-unquestionable that thought is impossible without language.”[19]
-
- [18] “The Descent of Man,” p. 88. By Charles Darwin, M.A. New York: D.
- Appleton & Co., 1881.
-
- [19] “Physiology of the Mind,” p. 480. By Henry Maudsley, M.D. New
- York: D. Appleton & Co., 1883.
-
-As connected thoughts are impossible without words, or signs of words,
-so words are dependent upon objects for their existence. Says Dr.
-Maudsley, “Words cannot attain to definiteness save as living outgrowths
-of realities.”[20] And Heyse says, “Thought is not even present to the
-thinker till he has set it forth out of himself.”
-
- [20] “I therefore declare my conviction,” says Max Müller, “whether
- right or wrong, as explicitly as possible, that thought in one sense
- of the word, _i. e._, in reasoning, is impossible without
- language.”--“Physiology of the Mind,” p. 480. By Henry Maudsley, M.D.
- New York: D. Appleton & Co., 1883.
-
-It follows that language has its origin not less in external objects
-than in the mind. Objects make impressions upon the mind through the
-senses, and words serve as the means of preserving a record of such
-impressions and of communicating them to other minds. If, now, the mind
-should cease to receive impressions, language would no longer be
-required, since there would be nothing to express; and the occasion for
-the use of language ceasing to exist, the power of speech would
-ultimately be lost. The power of speech, then, depends upon a
-continuous succession of impressions made upon the mind by its contact,
-through the senses, with matter in its various forms, whether in nature
-or in art.
-
-It may also be claimed that the power of speech depends almost entirely
-upon the endless succession of fresh objects presented to the mind by
-the hand. These form the subject as well as the occasion of speech. If
-the hand should cease to make new things, new words would cease to be
-required. The principal changes in language arise out of new discoveries
-in science and new inventions in art, each fresh discovery of science
-giving rise to many new things in art. Art and science react upon each
-other.[21] The growth of a State, its advance in the scale of
-civilization, depends upon progress in the practical arts. Hence the
-fact that, when a State ceases to advance, its language ceases to grow,
-becomes stationary, stagnates. In such a State there would be no
-occasion for new words. If a constantly diminishing number of objects
-were presented to the mind, speech would become less and less necessary.
-If no new objects were presented, no fresh impressions upon the mind
-would be made, and speech would degenerate into a mere iteration. If the
-hands should cease to labor in the arts, should cease to make things,
-should cease to plant and gather, the scope of speech would be still
-further restricted, would be confined to an expression of the wants of
-savages subsisting on the native fruits of field and forest.
-
- [21] “And the great advances in science have uniformly corresponded
- with the invention of some instrument by which the power of the senses
- has been increased, or the range of action extended.”--“Physiology of
- the Mind,” p. 8. By Henry Maudsley, M.D. New York: D. Appleton & Co.,
- 1883.
-
-It comes to this, that progress can find expression only in the
-concrete. Guttenberg had an idea that he could employ movable types in
-the production of books. Suppose he had been content with the mere
-promulgation of his theory in words, and that those who came after him
-had been similarly content? There would have been no printing-presses
-down to the present time. Suppose that Watt and Stephenson and Fulton
-had been content with the declaration, in words, of the discoveries they
-made in regard to the application of the power of steam to useful
-purposes, and that those who came after them had been similarly content?
-There would have been neither railways, nor steamships, nor steam-driven
-machinery of any kind down to the present time.
-
-As words are essential to the processes of thought, so objects are
-essential to words or living speech. And as all objects made by man owe
-their existence to the hand, it follows that the hand exerts an
-incalculable influence upon the mind, and so constitutes the most potent
-agency in the work of civilization. It was not without good reason that
-Anaxagoras characterized man as the wisest of animals because of his
-having hands. And what is it to be wise? To be wise is “to have the
-power of discerning and judging correctly, or of discriminating between
-what is true and what is false; between what is fit and proper and what
-is improper.” The hand is used as the synonym of wisdom because it is
-only in the concrete that the false is sure of detection, and it is
-through the hand alone that ideas are realized in things.[22] Again we
-have the hand as the discoverer of truth.
-
- [22] “Let him [the youth] once learn to take a straight shaving off a
- plank, or draw a fine curve without faltering, or lay a brick level in
- its mortar, and he has learned a multitude of other matters which no
- lips of man could ever teach him.”--“Time and Tide,” p. 145. By John
- Ruskin, LL.D. New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1883.
-
-The assertion of the majesty of the hand by the Ionic philosopher of the
-fifth century B.C. contained the germ of the manual training idea of
-this latter part of the nineteenth century. Anaxagoras was
-unconsciously, no doubt, struggling toward the light, toward the
-inductive method of investigation, toward the sole avenue through which
-it is possible to study the mind, namely, through the body. The
-ignorance of the ancients on the subject of physiology was so dense as
-to leave them no resource save speculative philosophy. The progress made
-in the study of anatomy, and organic and inorganic chemistry at
-Alexandria, was, however, considerable. The foundations of a systematic
-physiology were being securely laid by Hippocrates, Herophilus, and
-their compeers of the medical profession, and the way was thus being
-opened to an intelligent study of the mind. It is highly probable that
-this growing disposition to investigate things, together with the
-increasing importance to civilization of the useful arts, would soon
-have reacted destructively upon the speculative philosophy of the time
-had not a series of national disasters, involving the fall of Greece and
-Rome, overwhelmed both arts and philosophy in one common ruin.
-
-From the fall of Rome to the time of Bacon speculative philosophy
-dominated the world. Progress dates from the beginning of the
-seventeenth century, but it was very slow until within a hundred years.
-Philosophy has now, however, found a scientific basis. Instead of
-speculating about the “theory of vitality,” it concerns itself with “the
-natural phenomena of living bodies, so far as they are appreciable by
-the human senses and intelligence.”
-
-But the schools have not moved forward with events. Their methods are
-unscientific; they are still dominated by the mediæval ideas of
-speculative philosophy. One of the ablest educators in this country has
-well observed that “there has been very little change in the ideas which
-have controlled our methods of education, and these ideas were formed
-something like four hundred years ago. Like nearly all the great
-agencies of modern civilization, the established system of education
-dates from the Renaissance, and the direction given to the schools at
-that time has been followed with but slight modification ever
-since.”[23]
-
- [23] Mr. James MacAlister, Superintendent of Schools of the City of
- Philadelphia, before the American Institute of Instruction at
- Saratoga, July 13, 1882.
-
-The justice of this arraignment of the schools for extreme conservatism
-is shown by the remark of a prominent educator who opposes the
-incorporation of manual training in the curriculum of the public
-schools. He says, “Some even go so far as to regard the fingers as a new
-avenue to the brain, and think that great pedagogic advantages will be
-given by the new method, so that boys may make equal attainments in
-arithmetic, reading, and grammar in less time.... They [teachers] will
-still find the eye and ear nearer to the brain than the hand.” No
-assumption could be more false than this, that the eye and the ear are
-more important organs than the hand because they are located,
-physically, nearer the brain. The attribute of mobility with which the
-hand is endowed confers upon it not only the potency of the closest
-possible proximity, but each of the countless positions it may assume,
-together with its flexibility and adaptability, multiplies its powers in
-the order of a geometrical ratio.
-
-This disposition to undervalue the hand is an inheritance from the
-speculative philosophy of the Middle Ages, which was based on contempt
-of the body and all its members. The effect of this false doctrine has
-been vicious in the extreme. Contempt for the body has generated a
-feeling of contempt for manual labor, and repugnance to manual labor has
-multiplied dishonest practices in the course of the struggle to acquire
-wealth by any other means than manual labor, and so corrupted society.
-
-That man should feel contempt for the most efficient member of his own
-body is, indeed, incomprehensible, since contempt for the hand leads
-logically to contempt for its works, and its works comprise all the
-visible results of civilization. To enumerate the works of the hand
-would be to describe the world as it at present exists in
-contradistinction to the world in a state of nature. Everywhere we
-behold with admiration and wonder the marvellous triumphs of the hand,
-from the iron bridge that spans the torrent of Niagara to the steel
-micrometer that measures the millionth part of an inch. It matters not
-whether the hand is nearer or farther from the brain than the eye and
-the ear, it is able to afford powerful aid to them.
-
-Man would explore the planetary system; he lifts his longing eyes to the
-starry vault, but in vain; it is a sealed book! The hand fashions the
-telescope, adjusts it, places it at a convenient angle, and the milky
-way is resolved into millions of stars, “scattered like glittering dust
-on the black ground of the general heavens,” the lunar mountains are
-measured, and the spots on the sun revealed. Man would study the anatomy
-and habits of the myriads of insects in which the teeming earth abounds.
-Impossible! The mechanism of the eye is not adapted to such a delicate
-operation. But the hand presents the microscope, and a world of hitherto
-unknown minute existences is revealed with a distinctness which permits
-the most exhaustive investigation. Thus, through the aid of the hand,
-the eye now contemplates with philosophic interest the ever-changing
-aspect of the spots on the sun at a distance of ninety million miles,
-and now imprisons the red ant, measuring only ⁶⁄₁₀₀ of an inch in
-length, and studies its physiology, counting its pulsations, classifying
-its nerves and muscles, and weighing its brain. Man would speak with his
-friend or business correspondent miles away. Neither the voice nor the
-ear is adapted to the task. But the hand fashions and presents the
-telephone, and the conversation proceeds even in a whisper. It will be
-said that the mind devises the telescope, the microscope, and the
-telephone. True, but their construction would be impossible without the
-hand. And is it at all probable that the mind would have devised these
-admirable instruments if man had been made without hands?[24]
-
- [24] “The hand is the most marvellous instrument in the world; it is
- the necessary complement of the mind in dealing with matter in all its
- varied forms. It is the hand that ‘rounded Peter’s dome;’ it is the
- hand that carved those statues in marble and bronze, that painted
- those pictures in palace and church, which we travel into distant
- lands to admire; it is the hand that builds the ships which sail the
- sea, laden with the commerce of the world; it is the hand that
- constructs the machinery which moves the busy industries of this age
- of steam; it is the hand that enables the mind to realize in a
- thousand ways its highest imaginings, its profoundest reasonings, and
- its most practical inventions.”--Mr. James MacAlister, Superintendent
- of Schools of the City of Philadelphia, before the American Institute
- of Instruction at Saratoga, July 13, 1882.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-THE POWER OF THE TRAINED HAND.
-
- The Legend of Adam and the Stick with which he subdued the Animals. --
- The Stick is the Symbol of Power, and only the Hand can wield it. --
- The Hand imprisons Steam and Electricity, and keeps them at hard
- Labor. -- The Destitution of England Two Hundred Years ago: a Pen
- Picture. -- The Transformation wrought by the Hand: a Pen Picture. --
- It is due, not to Men who make Laws, but to Men who make Things. --
- The Scientist and the Inventor are the World’s Benefactors. -- A
- Parallel between the Right Honorable William E. Gladstone and Sir
- Henry Bessemer. -- Mr. Gladstone a Man of Ideas, Mr. Bessemer a Man of
- Deeds. -- The Value of the latter’s Inventions. -- Mr. Gladstone
- represents the Old Education, Mr. Bessemer the New.
-
-
-It has been remarked that man is the wisest of animals because he has
-hands. It is equally true that he is the most powerful of animals
-because he has hands. It is with the hand that man has subdued all the
-animals. There is a legend to the effect that on the day when Adam
-revolted against his Maker, the animals, in their turn, revolted against
-him, and ceased to obey him. “Adam called on the Lord for help, and the
-Lord commanded him to take a branch from the nearest tree and make of it
-a weapon, and strike with it the first animal that should refuse to obey
-him. Adam took the branch, the leaves fell from it of their own accord,
-and he found himself furnished with a stick proportioned to his height.
-When the animals saw this weapon in the hands of the man they were
-seized with an instinctive fear mingled with wonder, and they did not
-dare to attack him. A lion alone, bolder than the rest, leaped upon him
-to devour him, but Adam, who stood upon his guard, swift as lightning
-whirled his stick and felled him to the earth with a single blow! At
-this sight the terror of the other animals was so great that they
-approached him trembling, and in token of their submission licked the
-stick that he held in his hand.”[25]
-
- [25] “The Story of the Stick,” p. 2. Translated and Adapted from the
- French of Antony Réal [Fernand Michel]. New York: J. W. Bouton, 1875.
-
-Throughout all the early ages the stick was both the symbol and the
-instrument of power; and it is only the hand that can grasp and wield
-the stick. The early kings reigned by virtue of the strong arm and the
-supple hand. They claimed to be descended from Hercules, and their
-emblem of power was a knotty stick. Nor does empire depend less upon the
-hand now than it did in the morning of time.
-
-The hand no longer grasps the knotty stick; it no longer menaces
-mankind. But it wields the mechanical powers. It imprisons steam and
-electricity, and keeps them at hard labor. It makes ploughs, planters,
-harvesters, sewing-machines, locomotives, and steamships. It digs
-canals, opens mines, builds bridges, makes roads, erects mills and
-factories, constructs harbors and docks, reclaims waste lands, and
-covers the globe with tracks of steel over which the commerce of the
-world is borne.
-
-Two hundred years ago England was destitute of most of these things. It
-had then no good dirt roads even, no good bridges, no canals, no public
-works worth mentioning, and scarcely any manufactories of importance.
-The post-bags were carried on horseback once a week. The highways were
-besieged by robbers. One-fifth of the community were paupers. Mechanics
-worked for from sixpence to a shilling a day. The chief food of the poor
-was rye, barley, or oats. The people were ignorant and brutal--masters
-beat their servants, and husbands beat their wives. Teachers used the
-lash as the principal means of imparting knowledge. The mob rejoiced in
-fights of all kinds, and shouted with glee when an eye was torn out or a
-finger chopped off in these savage encounters. Executions were favorite
-public amusements. The prisons were full, and proved to be fruitful
-nurseries of crime.
-
-From little better than a wilderness, and almost a state of savagery,
-England has been transformed into a fruitful field, and its people
-raised in the scale of civilization. Its public works are the admiration
-of the world; its coffers are full of gold; its strong boxes are piled
-high with evidences of the indebtedness of other nations; its ships
-plough the billows of every sea, and bear the commerce of every land;
-and its manufactories, of vast extent, are monuments of inventive
-genius, industry, perseverance, and skill, more imposing far than the
-pyramids of Egypt or the temples of Greece and Rome.
-
-To whom do the people of England and of the world owe this national
-progress, this progress in the useful arts on a scale so colossal as, by
-comparison, to dwarf the achievements of all the earlier epochs of
-history? Not to statesmen or legislators. They neither dig canals, open
-mines, build railways, lay ocean cables, nor erect factories. The pen in
-their hands may be mightier than the sword; but it is no match for the
-plough and the reaper, the electric battery and imprisoned steam.
-Legislators make laws but mechanics make things. On this subject, after
-an exhaustive investigation, Buckle says, “Seeing, therefore, that the
-efforts of government in favor of civilization are, when most
-successful, altogether negative, and seeing, too, that when these
-efforts are more than negative they become injurious, it clearly follows
-that all speculations must be erroneous which ascribe the progress of
-Europe to the wisdom of its rulers. This is an inference which rests not
-only on the arguments already adduced, but on facts which might be
-multiplied from every page of history.... We have seen that their laws
-in favor of industry have injured industry, that their laws in favor of
-religion have increased hypocrisy, and that their laws to secure truth
-have encouraged perjury.... But it is a mere matter of history that our
-legislators, even to the last moment, were so terrified by the idea of
-innovation that they refused every reform until the voice of the people
-rose high enough to awe them into submission, and forced them to grant
-what, without much pressure, they would by no means have conceded.”[26]
-
- [26] “History of Civilization in England,” Vol. I., pp. 204, 205, 361.
- By Henry Thomas Buckle. New York: D. Appleton & Co.
-
-It is, then, clearly not to the men who make laws that we are indebted
-for progress in civilization, but to the men who make things. The
-scientist who discovers a new principle in physics is a public
-benefactor. The inventor who devises a new machine helps forward the
-cause of progress. Whitney’s cotton-gin trebled the value of the
-cotton-fields of the South. The mechanic who constructs a machine that
-will make ten or a hundred things in the time before required to make
-one thing is in the front rank of the civilizers of the human race.[27]
-
- [27] “Your wealth, your amusement, your pride, would all be alike
- impossible, but for those whom you scorn or forget.... The sailor
- wrestling with the sea’s rage; the quiet student poring over his book
- or his vial; the common worker, without praise, and nearly without
- bread, fulfilling his task as your horses drag your carts, hopeless,
- and spurned of all: these are the men by whom England lives.”--“Sesame
- and Lilies,” p. 68. By John Ruskin, LL.D. New York: John Wiley & Sons,
- 1884.
-
-Inventors, not statesmen, rule the world through their machines, which
-augment the powers of man and sharpen his senses. Steam has made all
-civilized countries prosperous and great by vastly increasing man’s
-powers--by making him hundred-handed.[28]
-
- [28] “The causes which most disturbed or accelerated the normal
- progress of society in antiquity were the appearance of great men; in
- modern times they have been the appearance of great
- inventions.”--“History of European Morals,” Vol. I., p. 126. By
- William Edward Hartpole Lecky, M.A. New York: D. Appleton & Co.
-
-In 1809 there was born to a distinguished baronet of Liverpool, England,
-a son. The boy was educated at Eton and Christ Church College, Oxford,
-graduating in 1831. In 1832 the young man entered parliament. In 1834 he
-took office under Sir Robert Peel. The name of the young man who
-commenced life under such auspicious circumstances was William Ewart
-Gladstone. For nearly half a century Mr. Gladstone was a prominent
-figure in English politics and administration. During that long period
-of time he was in the eye of the world, so to speak. He moulded the laws
-of an empire, repealed old statutes and made new statutes, largely
-influenced both the domestic and the foreign policy of a great nation,
-and exerted a considerable degree of control over the international
-affairs of the continent of Europe.
-
-In 1813, four years after the birth of Mr. Gladstone, at Charlton, in
-Hertfordshire, England, Henry Bessemer was born. His father, Anthony
-Bessemer, had fled to England in 1792, a refugee from France. Henry
-Bessemer’s early training consisted of the rudiments of an ordinary
-education received in the parish school of the neighboring town of
-Hitchin. His father was a skilled mechanic and inventor, and Henry
-inherited the inventive faculty. He studied and practised the art of
-wood-turnery, producing, before arriving at the age of manhood, the most
-difficult patterns known to the art.
-
-At the age of eighteen, in the year 1831--the year in which Mr.
-Gladstone completed his education--young Bessemer appeared in London, an
-obscure, unknown stranger. He, however, secured employment as a modeller
-and designer. His attention was soon directed to the imperfections of
-government stamps, in which there had been no improvement since the time
-of Queen Anne. He was informed by Sir Charles Persley, of the
-Stamp-office, that the frauds in stamps probably aggregated one hundred
-thousand pounds per annum. In the evenings of a few months he invented
-and made an improved stamp which obviated the objections to the one then
-in use. The invention was at once adopted by the Stamp-office, and in
-lieu of a stipulated sum in payment therefor, young Bessemer was asked
-“whether he would be satisfied with the position of superintendent of
-stamps, with five hundred or six hundred pounds per annum?” The
-suggested appointment he agreed to accept. Meantime, before the
-contemplated change occurred in the Stamp-office, the young inventor
-devised a further improvement in the new stamp, which not only made it
-much more perfect, but rendered it unnecessary for the government to
-employ a superintendent of stamps. In perfect good faith young Bessemer
-exhibited to the chief of the Stamp-office his new stamp, which was so
-palpably an improvement on the other that it was at once preferred and
-promptly adopted. What is more, the government not only declined to
-appoint the inventor to a place, but declined to give him a penny for
-his invention. This was in 1834, the year in which Mr. Gladstone began
-his long career as a representative of the British Crown. As young Mr.
-Gladstone entered the Treasury, its “junior lord,” young Mr. Bessemer
-retired from it an unsuccessful suitor for the just reward of genius and
-toil. He says, “Thus sad and dispirited, and with a burning sense of
-injustice overpowering all other feelings, I went my way from the
-Stamp-office, too proud to ask as a favor that which was indubitably my
-right.”[29]
-
- [29] “The Creators of the Age of Steel,” p. 20. By W. T. Jeans. New
- York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1884.
-
-From this point, both of time and event, there is a very wide divergence
-in the lives of these great men. The one is a man of ideas, the other a
-man of deeds. Mr. Gladstone thinks, talks, makes treaties and laws. He
-is constantly in the public eye, and his name ever on the public tongue.
-He is regarded as a great financier; he is certainly a great orator. He
-sways the multitude with his eloquence. He takes distinguished part in
-the wordy contests which occur every now and then in Parliament. These
-debates are much talked of. At the conclusion of one of them there is a
-vote of want of confidence, and Mr. Gladstone goes out of office and Mr.
-Disraeli comes in. At the conclusion of another of them there is a vote
-of want of confidence, and Mr. Disraeli goes out of office and Mr.
-Gladstone comes in. But whether Mr. Gladstone goes out and Mr. Disraeli
-comes in, or Mr. Disraeli goes out and Mr. Gladstone comes in, makes
-very little difference with the trade and commerce of the kingdom. The
-railway traffic continues in the one event or the other; the steamers
-continue to cross and recross the ocean; the “post” comes and goes; the
-electric current continues to act as messenger-boy; the telephone brings
-us face to face with our business correspondent or friend. There is,
-indeed, no reason why a vote of want of confidence in Mr. Gladstone or
-Mr. Disraeli should imply a want of confidence in steam or electricity,
-because neither Mr. Gladstone nor Mr. Disraeli ever had anything to do
-with the application of these great forces to the uses of man. They were
-entirely absorbed, the one in promoting the advancement of Liberalism,
-and the other in promoting the advancement of Toryism. And it is a
-curious fact, as showing the mutability of political opinion, that Mr.
-Disraeli entered public life as a Liberal, and subsequently became a
-great Tory leader; and Mr. Gladstone entered public life as a Tory, and
-subsequently became a great Liberal leader.
-
-For twenty-two years after he retired empty-handed from the government
-Stamp-office Mr. Bessemer continued his career as an inventor and
-manufacturer, without, however, attracting any great share of public
-attention. But in 1856 he announced that he had made a discovery of vast
-importance in the process of steel making.[30] For a hundred years
-previously the Huntsman process had held the field. It yielded
-excellent steel but was very expensive. Mr. Bessemer announced that he
-could produce splendid cast-steel at about the cost of making iron! The
-announcement was received with much incredulity; but the “Bessemer
-converter” was exhibited, the new process shown, and the result seemed
-to confirm the verity of the claim of the inventor. Practical
-difficulties, however, postponed its complete success till 1860, when
-the new process supplanted all others.
-
- [30] “The first patent of Sir H. Bessemer in which air is mentioned as
- the oxidizing agent is dated October 17, 1855, and other three months
- were spent in experimenting before the idea of introducing the air
- from the bottom of a large converter struck him. The patent embodying
- the latter idea is dated February 11, 1856.”--“The Creators of the Age
- of Steel,” note to p. 38. By W. T. Jeans. New York: Charles Scribner’s
- Sons, 1884.
-
-Mr. Bessemer now stood at the head of the inventors of the world, and
-Mr. Gladstone, as Chancellor of the Exchequer under Lord Palmerston, had
-come to be regarded as one of the most skilful governmental financiers
-in Europe, which meant that he was an adept in devising schemes of
-taxation calculated to yield the most revenue with the least popular
-discontent. When it is considered that it is necessary for the English
-Minister of Finance to draw from the British people more than a million
-dollars every morning of the year, including Sundays, before either the
-English lord or the English peasant can indulge in a free breakfast, the
-extreme delicacy of the duties devolving upon him will be understood and
-appreciated. If he proposes the repeal of the soap tax in order to
-extinguish the slave-trade, he must impose an additional penny in the
-pound on malt liquors in order to put an end to the vice of drunkenness.
-He is constantly between Scylla and Charybdis--in keeping off the one
-he is in danger of being swallowed up in the other. And if he can, at
-the end of the fiscal year, find a million dollars to apply to the
-liquidation of the public debt, he is extremely fortunate. From 1836,
-about the time Mr. Gladstone began his public career, down to 1877, the
-several chancellors of the English Exchequer, including Mr. Gladstone,
-contrived to save, in the aggregate, about twelve million pounds
-sterling for this purpose.
-
-Let us recur a moment to the subject of the invention of Mr. Bessemer.
-It went into operation in 1860. The temptation to reproduce Mr.
-Bessemer’s own description of his process, which revolutionized the
-manufacture of steel, is irresistible. It is as follows:
-
-“The converting vessel is mounted on an axis at or near its centre of
-gravity. It is constructed of boilerplates, and is lined either with
-fire-brick, road-drift, or gannister, which resists the heat better than
-any other material yet tried, and has also the advantage of cheapness.
-The vessel, having been heated, is brought into the requisite position
-to receive its charge of melted metal, without either of the tuyeres (or
-air-holes) being below the surface. No action can therefore take place
-until the vessel is turned up (so that the blast can enter through the
-tuyeres). The process is thus in an instant brought into full activity,
-and small though powerful jets of air spring upward through the fluid
-mass. The air, expanding in volume, divides itself into globules, or
-bursts violently upward, carrying with it some hundredweight of fluid
-metal, which again falls into the boiling mass below. Every part of the
-apparatus trembles under the violent agitation thus produced; a roaring
-flame rushes from the mouth of the vessel, and as the process advances
-it changes its violet color to orange, and finally to a voluminous pure
-white flame. The sparks, which at first were large, like those of
-ordinary foundery iron, change into small hissing points, and these
-gradually give way to soft floating specks of bluish light as the state
-of malleable iron is approached. There is no eruption of cinder as in
-the early experiments, although it is formed during the process; the
-improved shape of the converter causes it to be retained, and it not
-only acts beneficially on the metal, but it helps to confine the heat,
-which during the process has rapidly risen from the comparatively low
-temperature of melted pig-iron to one vastly greater than the highest
-known welding heats, by which malleable iron only becomes sufficiently
-soft to be shaped by the blows of the hammer; but here it becomes
-perfectly fluid, and even rises so much above the melting point as to
-admit of its being poured from the converter into a founder’s ladle, and
-from thence to be transferred to several successive moulds.”[31]
-
- [31] “The Creators of the Age of Steel,” p. 71. By W. T. Jeans. New
- York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1884.
-
-What is the value of this process? What is the extent of the service
-rendered by Mr. Bessemer to man? It is estimated that in the twenty-one
-years first elapsing after the successful working of the Bessemer
-process, the production of steel by it, notwithstanding its necessarily
-slow progress, amounted to twenty-five million tons. At $200 a ton, the
-alleged saving in cost as compared with the old process, this represents
-an aggregate saving of $5,000,000,000. In 1882 the world’s production
-was four million tons, which at the rate named yielded a saving of the
-enormous aggregate of $800,000,000 in a single year.[E7] These sums seem
-almost fabulous, especially so since they result from simply blowing air
-through crude melted iron for a quarter of an hour! But the radical
-character of the change wrought in the metal by the air-blowing process
-is shown by the fact that a steel rail is worth as much as twenty iron
-rails.[32]
-
- [32] “At the Birmingham meeting of the British Association in 1865,
- Sir Henry Bessemer explained that at Chalk Farm steel rails were laid
- down on one side of the line and iron rails on the other, so that
- every engine and carriage there had to pass over both steel and iron
- rails at the same time. When the first face was worn off an iron rail
- it was turned the other way upward, and when the second face was worn
- out it was replaced by a new iron rail. When Sir Henry exhibited one
- of these steel rails at Birmingham only one face of it was nearly worn
- out, while on the opposite side of the line eleven iron rails had in
- the same time been worn out on both faces. It thus appeared that one
- steel rail was capable of doing the work of twenty-three iron
- ones.”--“The Creators of the Age of Steel,” p. 93. By W. T. Jeans. New
- York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1884.
-
-All the governments of Europe honored Mr. Bessemer for his great
-invention, some by medals and orders of merit, and others by
-appropriating without compensation his process of steel-making. Of these
-latter Prussia stood in the front rank. England alone stood aloof. “A
-prophet is not without honor save in his own country and among his own
-kin.” From 1860 to 1872 England continued to load Mr. Gladstone and Mr.
-Disraeli with honors, but not until the latter year did the government
-recognize Mr. Bessemer, when the Prince of Wales presented him with the
-Albert gold medal, and in 1879 he was knighted by the Queen.
-
-A comparison between the lives and services to man of two of the most
-distinguished statesmen of England, with the life and services, to man,
-of Sir Henry Bessemer, cannot fail to be of great value to every young
-man who possesses the power of just discrimination. But can just
-discrimination be expected of any young man entering upon the stage of
-active life when such discrimination is not possessed by the public at
-large? For example: The question being propounded, What is the value of
-the combined services to man of Mr. Gladstone and Mr. Disraeli, as
-compared with those of Sir Henry Bessemer? ninety-nine out of a hundred
-men of sound judgment would doubtless say, “The value of the services of
-the two statesmen is quite unimportant, while the value of the services
-of Mr. Bessemer is enormous, incalculable.” But how many of these
-ninety-nine men of sound judgment could resist the fascination of the
-applause accorded to the statesmen? How many of them would have the
-moral courage to educate their sons for the career of Mr. Bessemer
-instead of for the career of Mr. Disraeli or of Mr. Gladstone?* Not many
-in the present state of public sentiment. It will be a great day for
-man, the day that ushers in the dawn of more sober views of life, the
-day that inaugurates the era of the mastership of things in the place of
-the mastership of words.
-
-Mr. Gladstone stands for politics and statesmanship at their best, and
-his career is the product of the old system of education at its best.
-Mr. Bessemer stands for science and art united, and his career is the
-product of the new education.
-
- [E7] But the pecuniary value of Mr. Bessemer’s discovery is not the
- consideration of chief import. Its social influence extends to the
- remotest bounds of civilization, and includes the whole human race,
- because it abridges the period of labor necessary to the production of
- a given quantity of useful things, thereby enhancing the sum of life’s
- comforts and pleasures.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-THE INVENTORS, CIVIL ENGINEERS, AND MECHANICS OF ENGLAND, AND ENGLISH
-PROGRESS.
-
- A Trade is better than a Profession. -- The Railway, Telegraph, and
- Steamship are more Potent than the Lawyer, Doctor, and Priest. --
- Book-makers writing the Lives of the Inventors of last Century. -- The
- Workshop to be the Scene of the Greatest Triumphs of Man. -- The Civil
- Engineers of England the Heroes of English Progress. -- The Life of
- James Brindley, the Canal-maker; his Struggles and Poverty. -- The
- Roll of Honor. -- Mr. Gladstone’s Significant Admission that English
- Triumphs in Science and Art were won without Government Aid. --
- Disregarding the Common-sense of the Savage, Legislators have chosen
- to learn of Plato, who declared that “The Useful Arts are Degrading.”
- -- How Improvements in the Arts have been met by Ignorant Opposition.
- -- The Power wielded by the Mechanic.
-
-
-The young man with a mechanical trade is better equipped for the battle
-of life than the young man with a learned profession. The prizes may not
-be so dazzling, but they are more numerous, and they are within reach.
-The skilled mechanic, with industry and prudence, is sure of a cottage,
-and the cottage may grow into a mansion, while the man of letters
-struggles so often in vain to mount the steps of a palace. The railroad,
-the telegraph, and the steamship exert a more potent influence upon the
-destinies of mankind than the lawyer, the doctor, and the priest. The
-giants, steam and electricity, which bear the great burdens of commerce,
-have to be harnessed to enable them to do their work; and to make this
-harness, the furnace, the forge, and the shop are brought into
-requisition. The railroad alone taxes to the utmost nearly every
-department of the useful arts. To the construction of the
-passenger-coach, for instance, more than a hundred trades contribute the
-varied cunning and skill of their workmanship.
-
-This is the age of steel, and he who knows how to mould the king of
-metals into puissant forms has his hand nearest the rod of empire. Who
-would not rather be able to construct a Corliss engine than learn the
-trick of drawing a bill in chancery?
-
-There was a time, not long ago, when inventors and discoverers were
-little recognized and poorly compensated for their splendid
-achievements. But that time is past. The book-makers of to-day are
-groping about the old shops where the inventors of last century worked,
-and the cottages where they lived, in order to tell the simple story of
-their lives, and write their names in the temple of fame. Huntsman, who
-emerged from long seclusion over the furnace and crucible, and presented
-to his fellow-workmen a piece of steel which rivalled that of old
-Damascus, and drove from the British markets all other steels--how
-resplendent his name is now! How every incident in the life of Watt is
-sought for--his struggles, his disappointments, and his final success!
-And so of Mushet, Neilson, Bramah, Maudslay, Clement, Murray, Nasmyth,
-Stephenson, and Fulton. When Watt had devised his engine he found no
-workmen expert enough to make it. Then Maudslay, Clement, and Murray
-invented automatic iron hands and fingers, and endowed them with almost
-human intelligence, and far more than human precision, and Watt’s
-difficulty was removed.
-
-The “greasy mechanics” did more to hasten the world’s progress in a
-century--1740 to 1840--than had been accomplished up to that time by
-all the statesmen of all the dead ages. But those heroes of the workshop
-had none of the opportunities afforded by the manual training school of
-the present age. They toiled many hours each day for a shilling or two,
-and lived in stuffy hovels, and puzzled over the _a_ _b_ _c_ of
-mechanics by the light of a tallow-candle. Some of them gained fortunes,
-while others were robbed of the fruits of genius, and slept in unknown
-graves; but all their names are treasured and honored now. The world
-moves, and in this age it moves always toward a higher appreciation of
-the value of the useful arts. This country is destined to become a vast
-workshop, and in this workshop the best energies, the strongest vital
-forces of the American people are eventually to be exerted. How
-necessary, then, to educate the hands as well as the brain of the youth
-of the country.[E8]
-
-Mr. Smiles, in his “Lives of the Engineers,” has shown us the true
-springs of English greatness. In telling the story of the struggles and
-triumphs of the canal-makers, the bridge-builders, the coal-miners, the
-millwrights, the road-makers, the harbor and dock makers, the
-ship-builders, the iron and steel makers, and the railway-builders--in
-telling this story of persistence, of nerve, and “pluck,” he has
-sketched the career of the real heroes of English progress. A brief
-sketch of the life of James Brindley will serve to show how these noble
-men wrought, how they suffered, and how they conquered.
-
-James Brindley was born in 1716. His parents were poor. His father was a
-ne’er-do-well. His mother taught him to be honest and industrious. James
-worked as a common laborer till he was seventeen years of age. In 1733
-he became a millwright’s apprentice--bound for seven years. He was a
-dull boy, learning slowly, but before the end of his “bound” term he
-became the best workman in the neighborhood. He helped the now
-celebrated Wedgwoods out of a difficulty by inventing and constructing
-flint-mills for their works. He invented and constructed pumps for
-clearing the Clifton coal-mines of water--an entirely new device that
-opened coal chambers which had long been completely drowned out. His
-compensation for this class of work--the work of genius--was two
-shillings a day!
-
-In 1755 he built a silk-mill, in which he made several important
-improvements in machinery, etc. But this man, who possessed inventive
-genius of a high order and large executive ability, could neither write
-legibly nor spell correctly, and his charge for almost inestimable
-services was still, in 1757, only two to four shillings a day. His
-struggles to improve the steam-engine form a curious chapter in the
-story of his life. It was to him that the Duke of Bridgewater owed his
-success in canal-making.
-
-The duke was born in 1736. He was a weak and sickly child, his mental
-capacity being apparently defective to a degree sufficient to debar him
-from his inheritance of the family title and estates. An affair of the
-heart which resulted unfavorably rendered him morose, and changed his
-whole course of life. He abruptly quitted the race-track, where he had
-condescended even to play the rôle of “jockey,” and turned his attention
-to the improvement of his estates. They contained coal deposits, which
-he undertook to develop through cheapening transportation, and Brindley
-became his engineer. His first canal, consisting largely of aqueducts,
-was called “Brindley’s castle in the air,” and his “river hung in the
-air.” It was this “river hung in the air”--the first English
-canal--that made the Manchester of to-day possible. Another canal
-enterprise of the duke cost more than a million dollars--that connecting
-Liverpool with Manchester. This latter canal yielded £80,000 per annum
-income, and it was constructed by Brindley at a salary of 3_s._ 6_d._ a
-day!
-
-Brindley was obstinate, and often quarrelled with his employer about the
-methods of construction of great works; and what is more, the duke
-always yielded. He humbly submitted to every demand made by his engineer
-except a demand for compensation. Brindley’s “wage” rate during the many
-years occupied in the duke’s great canal enterprises was 3_s._ 6_d._ per
-day. This, at all events, is the price named by Smiles in his life of
-Brindley. In a note to the work it is, however, stated that his
-stipulated pay was a guinea a day. It is agreed on all hands, however,
-that whatever the rate agreed upon was, Brindley was not paid, and that
-his heirs were begging unsuccessfully for his just dues long after his
-death. In a word, Brindley’s honor as an engineer being at stake, and it
-being dearer to him than any money consideration, he worked for nothing
-rather than allow the enterprise to fail. And the duke was parsimonious
-enough to take the engineer’s services for nothing, and his heirs were
-mean enough to refuse payment for such services when demanded by his
-widow.
-
-In a literary point of view Brindley was ignorant, but in no other
-respect. This was said of him by one of his contemporaries:
-
-“Mr. Brindley is one of those great geniuses whom Nature sometimes rears
-by her own force, and brings to maturity without the necessity of
-cultivation. His whole plan is admirable, and so well calculated that he
-is never at a loss; for if any difficulty arises he removes it with a
-facility which appears so much like inspiration that you would think
-Minerva was at his fingers’ ends.”[33]
-
- [33] “Lives of the Engineers.” By Samuel Smiles. London: John Murray,
- 1862. Vol. I., “Life of James Brindley.”
-
-The life of Brindley is typical of a score of biographies presented in
-the “Lives of the Engineers,” among which the following are especially
-worthy of mention: William Edwards, John Metcalf, John Perry, Sir Hugh
-Myddelton, Cornelius Vermuyden, Andrew Yarranton,[34] Andrew Meikle,
-John Rennie, John Smeaton, Thomas Telford, William Murdock, Dr. D.
-Papin, Thomas Savery, Dud Dudley, Matthew Boulton, and William
-Symington. These, and their natural coadjutors, the discoverers of new
-forces in nature and the inventors of new things in art, the
-iron-workers and tool-makers--these are _the_ great names in English
-history. They are the names without which there would have been no
-English history worth writing. Mr. Gladstone once said of them, naming
-Brindley, Metcalf, Smeaton, Rennie, and Telford, “These men who have now
-become famous among us had no mechanics’ institutes, no libraries, no
-classes, no examinations to cheer them on their way. In the greatest
-poverty, difficulties, and discouragements their energies were found
-sufficient for their work, and they have written their names in a
-distinguished page of the history of their country.”
-
- [34] “He was the founder of English political economy, the first man
- in England who saw and said that peace is better than war, that trade
- is better than plunder, that honest industry is better than martial
- greatness, and that the best occupation of a government is to secure
- prosperity at home, and let other nations alone.”--“Elements of
- Political Science.” By Patrick Edward Dove. Edinburgh: 1854.
-
-The admission of Mr. Gladstone that the great achievements of these
-heroes of invention and discovery were won without any aid whatever,
-either from the government or the people of England, is a pregnant fact.
-It is the key-note of this work, the reason why it is written and
-published.
-
-The neglect of the useful arts by all the governments of the world, from
-the dawn of civilization down to the present time, is an impeachment of
-the common-sense of mankind as shown in the conduct of public affairs.
-The civilized man might have learned wisdom from the savage, who is
-taught to fight, to hunt, and to fish, the brain, the hand, and the eye
-being trained simultaneously. But he chose to learn of Plato, who in the
-“Republic” says to Glaucon, “All the useful arts, I believe, we thought
-degrading.” And further in the same work: “We shall tell our people, in
-mythical language, you are doubtless all brethren as many as inhabit the
-city, but the God who created you, mixed gold in the composition of such
-of you as are qualified to rule, which gives them the highest value,
-while in the auxiliaries he made silver an ingredient, assigning iron
-and copper to the cultivators of the soil and the other workmen.
-Therefore, inasmuch as you are all related to one another, although your
-children will generally resemble their parents, yet sometimes a golden
-parent will produce a silver child, and a silver parent a golden child,
-and so on, each producing any. The rulers, therefore, have received this
-in charge first and above all from the gods, to observe nothing more
-closely, in their character of vigilant guardians, than the children
-that are born, to see which of these metals enters into the composition
-of their souls; and if a child be born in their class with an alloy of
-copper or iron, they are to have no manner of pity upon it, but giving
-it the value that belongs to its nature, they are to thrust it away into
-the class of artisans or agriculturists. And if, again, among these a
-child be born with an admixture of gold or silver, when they have
-assayed it they are to raise it either to the class of guardians or to
-that of auxiliaries, because there is an oracle which declares that the
-city shall then perish when it is guarded by iron or copper.”[35]
-
- [35] “The Republic of Plato,” p. 114. London: Macmillan & Co., 1881.
-
-So ingrained in the public mind has this contempt for the artisan and
-laborer become in the course of ages, that notwithstanding the fact of
-the admitted kingship of iron among metals, and notwithstanding the fact
-that without iron the world would almost sink into a state of barbarism,
-still the opposition to the introduction of tool practice into the
-public schools is violent, and most violent among those classes who
-would be most benefited by it. Pending consideration of a bill by the
-Massachusetts Assembly in 1883, providing for the admission of manual
-training to the public-school curriculum, an opponent of the measure
-said: “The introduction of the use of tools is only another attempt to
-deprive the poorer classes of a good education. It is simply an attempt
-to overload the course of studies in the schools so that children shall
-not learn anything; so that the poor may be made poorer, while the
-children of the rich having a good time in the public schools may have
-their thought and health preserved for higher or special education.”
-
-This is a repetition of the old answer of the Inquisition to Galileo
-upon the announcement and defence of his great discovery. He was
-summoned to Rome, and “accused of having taught that the earth moves,
-that the sun is stationary, and of having attempted to reconcile these
-doctrines with the Scriptures.” Bruno had been driven to and fro over
-the face of the civilized world, and finally burned in the year 1600 for
-teaching the system of Copernicus. Having the fear of Bruno’s fate
-before his eyes, Galileo recanted, and promised neither to publish nor
-defend his theories. But his love of science overcame his fear of
-oppression, and in 1632 he published his “System of the World.” Again he
-was summoned before the Inquisition, which was destined forever after to
-torment and persecute him. He was driven to his knees before the
-cardinals, consigned to prison, and tortured to blindness. After his
-death in a prison of the Inquisition at the age of seventy-seven years,
-his right to make a will was disputed, his body was denied burial in
-consecrated ground, and his friends were prohibited the privilege of
-raising a monument to his memory in the Church of Santa Croce in
-Florence.
-
-Eighteen hundred years ago a Roman emperor refused to sanction the use
-of improved machinery in the prosecution of a great public work, on the
-ground that it would deprive the poor of employment.
-
-In 1663 a Dutchman erected a saw-mill in England, but the hostility of
-the workmen compelled its abandonment. More than a hundred years elapsed
-before the second saw-mill was put in operation in England, and that was
-destroyed by hand-sawyers.
-
-The Flemish weavers who introduced improved weaving machinery into
-England in the seventeenth century were met by protests. One of these
-protests, addressed to Parliament, represented that the Flemish weavers
-had “made so bould as to devise engines for working of tape, lace,
-ribbin, and such like, wherein one man doth more among them than seven
-Englishe men can doe, so as their cheap sale of commodities beggereth
-all our Englishe artificers of that trade and enricheth them.”
-
-A little more than a hundred years ago, in England, when the Sankey
-Canal, six miles long, was authorized, it was upon the express condition
-that the boats plying upon it should be drawn by men only.
-
-Illustrations of the _vis inertiæ_ of ignorance might be multiplied
-indefinitely. Ignorance reverences the past. Ignorance never doubts.
-Ignorance is content; perfectly satisfied with its own knowledge, if the
-paradox may be allowed, it never seeks to increase it. But it is
-suspicious. In every effort to enlighten it discovers a conspiracy to
-undermine. Incapable of the intellectual effort of inquiry, it
-stagnates, and regards as a deadly enemy those who seek to disturb the
-serenity of its muddy pool.
-
-When labor was only another name for a state of slavery, to teach men to
-labor skilfully was merely to raise them to a little higher grade of
-servitude. Hence it is only at a very recent period that it has occurred
-to mankind to teach skilled labor in the schools. All educational
-systems, our own among the rest, seem to have been intended to make
-lawyers, doctors, priests, statesmen, _littérateurs_, poets. But this is
-the age of steel, the age of machines and machinery. Tremendous forces
-in nature have been discovered and utilized, and these discoveries and
-their utilization have so multiplied vast enterprises that the
-importance of the mere ornamental branches of learning is dwarfed in
-their presence. “This is the practical age, and an educational system
-which is not practical is nothing. We shall still have our Tennysons,
-and our Longfellows, and our doctors of abstract philosophy; but there
-is little time to sentimentalize with the poets or speculate with the
-philosophers. There is work to do.[E9] The mine is to be explored and
-its treasures brought to the surface; more and more powerful machines
-are to be constructed to bear the burdens of commerce; new elements of
-force are to be discovered and applied to the constantly increasing
-wants of mankind.[36]
-
- [36] “To know the ‘use’ either of land or tools you must know what
- useful things can be grown from the one and made with the other. And
- therefore to know what is useful, and what useless, and be skilful to
- provide the one, and wise to scorn the other, is the first need for
- all industrious men. Wherefore, I propose that schools should be
- established wherein the use of land and tools shall be taught
- conclusively--in other words, the sciences of agriculture (with
- associated river and sea culture), and the noble arts and exercises of
- humanity.--“Fors Clavigera,” p. 302. Part. III. By John Ruskin, LL.D.
- New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1881.
-
-On the subject of the demand for a more comprehensive educational
-system, Col. Augustus Jacobson says, with great force, “Youth is the
-expensive period of man’s existence. Youth produces nothing and eats all
-the time. If the youth is not trained there can hardly be a profit to
-mankind on his existence. As mankind is liable for, and bound to pay,
-his expenses, he should be so trained that he may repay them. He can
-only become a profitable investment by training. If he is left
-unskilled, the money spent on him is wasted. There is no profit on a
-whole generation of Spaniards or Turks. Mankind should be wise enough to
-reap the profit there always is in finishing raw material, by making
-human raw material into a highly finished product.”
-
-There are millions of intelligent little children in the public schools
-of the United States, receiving, doubtless, excellent intellectual or
-mental training. But they are not being trained for the actual duties of
-life as the savage child is taught to fight, to fish, and to hunt. They
-are not taught to labor with their hands, either skilfully or
-unskilfully. They are not given instruction in any department of the
-useful arts, notwithstanding the fact that in the case of a vast
-majority of them the alternative of earning their bread by the labor of
-their unskilled hands, or resorting to their wits for a support, will be
-presented immediately on their entrance upon the stage of active life.
-The apprentice system gave skilled mechanics to England, and her
-splendid manufacturing establishments are the result. The trained
-English apprentice became an inventor, and his inventions and art
-discoveries studded the island with workshops filled with automatic
-product-multiplying machinery.
-
-The savage of Australia in Captain Cook’s time could kill a pigeon with
-a spear at thirty yards, but he couldn’t count the fingers on his right
-hand. The Southern Esquimau turns a somersault in the water in his boat
-with ease. But his more Northern brother has no canoe, and is ignorant
-of the existence of a boat; he has no use for a boat, because the sea in
-the latitude of his home is frozen the entire year. The savage is taught
-what he needs to know in his condition, and is taught nothing else;
-hence his skill in the few avocations he pursues.
-
-The civilized boy in school is taught many theories, but is not required
-to put any of them in practice; hence he enters upon the serious duties
-of life unprepared to discharge any of them.[37] It may be said that he
-is in real danger of the penitentiary until he learns a profession or a
-trade. “Of four hundred and eighty-seven convicts consigned to the State
-Prison for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania in 1879, five-sixths had
-attended public schools, and the same number were without trades.” It is
-noticeable also that during the same period “not five were received who
-were what are called mechanics.” In the penitentiary of the State of
-Illinois four out of five of the convicts have no handicraft. The fact
-that the skilled workman is far more likely than the common laborer to
-keep out of the penitentiary is a powerful argument in favor of joining
-manual training to the mental exercises of our common schools.
-
- [37] Discussion of the subject of technical education at a meeting of
- the Society of Arts, London, England, 1885.
-
- Dr. Gladstone, F.R.S.: “It should be their aim in [elementary schools]
- to give such a notion of the value of materials and the use of tools
- as could afterwards be turned to use in any required direction. There
- were two great difficulties in the way of doing this. The first and
- greatest was the inveterate notion that education consisted of
- book-learning.... Another difficulty was the ignorance of teachers in
- this respect. If an endeavor were made to introduce some knowledge of
- science into schools, they generally found that the teachers had some
- kind of theoretical knowledge, but it had been obtained mainly from
- books; and what was chiefly wanted was that things should be taught as
- well as words and before words.”
-
- Prof. Guthrie, F.R.S.: “This method of bringing the hand and the mind
- to work together really lay at the basis of all true technical
- instruction; where the mind alone was employed the knowledge acquired
- passed away, but when the mind and the hand had been educated together
- the knowledge was never forgotten.”
-
-The general adoption of a comprehensive system of mechanical education
-in the public schools would quickly dispel the unworthy prejudice
-against labor which taints the minds of the youth of the country. The
-splendid career which this age opens to the educated mechanic should be
-made clear to the vision of every boy in the land, and he will see, in
-the tools he is taught to handle, the key not only to fair success, but
-to wealth and fame. Professor Thurston, President of the American
-Society of Mechanical Engineers, thus sums up the mighty power wielded
-by the mechanic:
-
-“The class of men from whose ranks the membership of this society is
-principally drawn direct the labors of nearly three millions of
-prosperous people in three hundred thousand mills, with $2,500,000,000
-capital; they direct the payment of more than $1,000,000,000 in annual
-wages; the consumption of $3,000,000,000 worth of raw material, and the
-output of $5,000,000,000 worth of manufactured products. Fifty thousand
-steam-engines, and more than as many water-wheels, at their command turn
-the machinery of these hundreds of thousands of workshops that
-everywhere dot our land, giving the strength of three million horses
-night or day.”[38]
-
- [38] Inaugural address, as President of the American Society of
- Engineers, New York, November 4, 1880.
-
- [E8] “Deeds are greater than words. Deeds have such a life, mute but
- undeniable, and grow as living trees and fruit-trees do; they people
- the vacuity of Time, and make it green and worthy.”--“Past and
- Present,” p. 139. By Thomas Carlyle. London: Chapman & Hall.
-
- [E9] “Natural science is the point of interest now, and I think it is
- dimming and extinguishing a good deal that was called poetry. These
- sublime and all-reconciling revelations of nature will exact of poetry
- a correspondent height and scope, or put an end to it.”--Letter of R.
- W. Emerson to Anna C. L. Botta, “Memoirs of --. By her friends,” 8vo,
- pp. 459. J. Selwin, Tait & Sons.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-POWER OF STEAM AND CONTEMPT OF ARTISANS.
-
- A few Million People now wield twice as much Industrial Power as all
- the People on the Globe exerted a Hundred Years ago. -- A Revolution
- wrought, not by the Schools and Colleges, but by the Mechanic. -- The
- Union between Science and Art prevented by the Speculative Philosophy
- of the Middle Ages. -- Statesmen, Lawyers, Littérateurs, Poets, and
- Artists more highly esteemed than Civil Engineers, Mechanics, and
- Artisans. -- The Refugee Artisan a Power in England, the Refugee
- Politician worthless. -- Prejudice against the Artisan Class shown by
- Mr. Galton in his Work on “Hereditary Genius.” -- The Influence of
- Slavery: it has lasted Thousands of Years, and still Survives.
-
-
-What the civil engineers and mechanics of England have done for that
-country the same classes here have done for America. It is by these
-classes that all civilized countries have been made prosperous and
-great. And the agent through which the power of man has been augmented a
-thousand-fold is steam. “In the manufactures of Great Britain alone, the
-power which steam exerts is estimated to be equal to the manual labor of
-four hundred millions of men, or more than double the number of males
-supposed to inhabit the globe.”[39] This is the most significant fact of
-all time, namely, that a few millions of people in a small island now
-wield twice as much industrial power as all the people on the globe
-exerted one hundred years ago. And it is a fact of the utmost
-significance that the public educational institutions of England
-contributed scarcely anything to this industrial revolution, whose
-influence now comprehends all civilized countries. The men by whom it
-was wrought came not from the classic shades of the universities, but
-from the foundery, the forge, and the machine-shop. There has been very
-little change in educational methods since the time when Bacon said,
-“They learn nothing at the universities but to believe.” He proposed
-that a college be established and devoted to the discovery of new truth.
-No such college has, however, been established, but many new truths have
-been discovered. Suppose all the universities of England, of the United
-States, and of all other highly civilized countries had, from the time
-of Bacon, been conformed to his ideas, and devoted to the discovery of
-new truths? Such a course would have united science and art, and insured
-vastly greater progress, no doubt, than that which has actually taken
-place. The union of science with art has thus far been rendered
-impossible by reason of the wide prevalence of purely speculative views.
-The speculative philosophy of the Middle Ages still projects its baleful
-influence over our institutions of learning. Abstract ideas are still
-regarded as of more vital importance than things. Statesmen, lawyers,
-littérateurs, poets, and artists are more highly esteemed than civil
-engineers, machinists, and artisans. Mr. Smiles, in his excellent work
-on the Huguenots, has shown that England owes to the French and the
-Flemish immigrants “almost all her industrial arts and very much of the
-most valuable life-blood of her modern race.”[40] Commenting upon this
-fact in his work on “Hereditary Genius,” Mr. Francis Galton says,
-
-“There has been another emigration from France of not unequal magnitude,
-but followed by very different results, namely, that of the revolution
-of 1789. It is most instructive to contrast the effects of the two. The
-Protestant emigrants were able men, and have profoundly influenced for
-good both our breed and our history; on the other hand, the political
-refugees had but poor average stamina, and have left scarcely any traces
-behind them.”[41]
-
- [39] “Brief Biographies: James Watt,” p. 1. By Samuel Smiles. Chicago:
- Belford, Clark & Co., 1883.
-
- [40] “In short, wherever the refugees settled they acted as so many
- missionaries of skilled work, exhibiting the best practical examples
- of diligence, industry, and thrift, and teaching the English people in
- the most effective manner the beginnings of those various industrial
- arts in which they have since acquired so much distinction and
- wealth.”--“The Huguenots,” p. 107. By Samuel Smiles. New York: Harper
- & Brothers, 1867.
-
- [41] “Hereditary Genius,” p. 360. By Francis Galton, F.R.S., etc. New
- York: D. Appleton & Co., 1880.
-
-This is the testimony of a distinguished student of biology; and it is
-to the effect that the refugee artisan is of immense value to the
-country where he finds an asylum, while the refugee politician is of no
-value at all. We should naturally say, our author having made this
-important discovery will enlarge upon it. First of all, he will deduce
-the conclusion that if the refugee politician is of no value to the
-country where he finds an asylum, the home politician is an equally
-unimportant factor in the social problem. Then he will make an
-exhaustive study of the industrial class as the chief basis of his
-propositions and speculations on the subject of the science of life. Not
-at all. Mr. Galton, in his work on “Hereditary Genius,” offers another
-striking illustration of the repressive force of habit and the influence
-of popular prejudice. In his classifications of men according to their
-professions, with a view to the inquiry whether “genius, talent, or
-whatever we term great mental capacity, follows the law of organic
-transmission--runs in families, and is an affair of blood and breed”--in
-such classifications Mr. Galton forgets for the time being that there is
-an industrial class. He runs through the entire social scale, from “the
-judges of England between 1660 and 1865,” not omitting Lord Jeffreys,
-down through statesmen, commanders, literary men, poets, musicians, men
-of science, painters, divines, the boys in Cambridge, oarsmen, and
-wrestlers of the North Country, but has no word to say of the civil
-engineers, or of the inventors--those immortal men whose monuments in
-stone and iron exist in every corner of England.
-
-Buckles’s caustic remark, “the most valuable additions made to
-legislation have been enactments destructive of preceding legislation,
-and the best laws which have been passed have been those in which some
-former laws have been repealed,” does not apply to the works of the
-civil engineers, inventors, and mechanics of England or of any other
-country. Their works live after them and never fail to reflect honor
-upon them. The “acts” of the inventor may be amended but they are never
-repealed. Each inventive step, however short and apparently unimportant,
-constitutes a substantial link in the chain of progress; and it is a
-substantial link, because it invariably contains a hint of the next
-sequential step.
-
-Mr. Galton is an original thinker of great power, and an untiring
-investigator. In contrasting the politician with the artisan he
-discriminates admirably. He finds that the politician is of no value,
-practically, to the community, while the artisan is of almost
-inestimable value; and this conclusion he states curtly, without
-appearing to care a rush for the public sentiment which reverences
-politics and so-called statesmanship. But when he “makes up his jewels,”
-so to speak, on the subject of “hereditary genius,” Mr. Galton, as
-already remarked, forgets that it is worth while to consider the class
-of men who in the last hundred years have literally almost created a new
-world. Why is this? The late Mr. Horace Mann answered the question long
-ago, and he answered it so well that his answer is here reproduced _in
-extenso_: “Mankind had made great advances in astronomy, in geometry,
-and other mathematical sciences, in the writing of history, in oratory
-and in poetry, in painting and in sculpture, and in those kinds of
-architecture which may be called regal or religious, centuries before
-the great mechanical discoveries and inventions which now bless the
-world were brought to light; and the question has often forced itself
-upon reflecting minds why there was this _preposterousness_, this
-inversion of what would appear to be the natural order of progress? Why
-was it, for instance, that men should have learned the courses of the
-stars and the revolution of the planets before they found out how to
-make a good wagon-wheel? Why was it that they built the Parthenon and
-the Coliseum before they knew how to construct a comfortable, healthful
-dwelling-house? Why did they build the Roman aqueducts before they
-framed a saw-mill? Or why did they achieve the noblest models in
-eloquence, in poetry, and in the drama before they invented movable
-types? I think we have arrived at a point where we can unriddle this
-enigma. The labor of the world has been performed by ignorant men, by
-classes doomed to ignorance from sire to son; by the bondmen and the
-bondwomen of the Jews, by the helots of Sparta, by the captives who
-passed under the Roman yoke, and by the villeins and serfs and slaves of
-more modern times.”
-
-When the great educational reformer of Massachusetts thus graphically
-pointed out slavery as the cause of the contempt in which the useful
-arts had been held from the dawn of history, four millions of men were
-kept in bondage, and compelled to toil under the lash by one of the most
-enlightened nations of the earth. Later thirteen millions of people
-pledged “their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honor” to the
-perpetuation of slavery, and half a million soldiers marched repeatedly
-to battle to do or die in behalf of the right (?) of one man to buy and
-sell the bodies of his fellow-men.
-
-There is, then, a logical reason for Mr. Galton’s neglect of the artisan
-class. Slavery in its most odious form not only existed in the heart of
-a so-called “free” nation twenty-five years ago, but dared Liberty to a
-deadly contest. Nor were the upholders of slavery without moral support
-among the governments and peoples of the world. The government of
-England, of which Mr. Galton is a subject, under cover of a pretended
-neutrality aided the American slaveholders’ Confederacy in sweeping
-Freedom’s ships from the sea; and the great families of England, the
-families cited by Mr. Galton in support of his proposition that genius
-“is an affair of blood and breed”--those great families were well
-pleased when Freedom’s ships went down and Freedom’s armies retreated
-before the assaults of the slave confederacy.
-
-This somewhat extended reference to Mr. Galton is not intended to impugn
-his good faith as an author. Its design is simply to show that the
-influence of slavery is not yet extinct; that it still moulds ideas,
-controls habits of thought, inspires literary men, and permeates
-literature. In a word, the cause of the contempt in which the useful
-arts were held in Babylon in the time of Herodotus was in full force in
-this country down to the date of the issuance of Mr. Lincoln’s
-proclamation of emancipation; and it is scarcely necessary to observe
-that the British Constitution grew out of the feudal system, which was
-only another name for slavery. It is a proverb in England to this day
-that it is safer to shoot a man than a hare; and the sentiment of the
-proverb is a complete justification of human bondage, since it implies
-that property rights are more sacred than the rights of man. Thus
-slavery has kept its brand of shame upon the useful arts for thousands
-of years, and the mind of man has been so deeply impressed thereby that
-it does not react now that slavery is extinct. Like the slave released
-from bondage, who still feels the chain, still winces and shrinks from
-the imaginary scourge, the mind of man continues to revolve
-automatically in the old channels.[E10]
-
- [E10] “It is related of the Scythians that they became involved in a
- contest with the descendants of certain of their slaves, who
- successfully resisted them in several battles, whereupon one of them
- said: ‘Men of Scythia, what are we doing? By fighting with our slaves,
- both we ourselves by being slain become fewer in number, and by
- killing them we shall hereafter have fewer to rule over. Now,
- therefore, it seems to me that we should lay aside our spears and
- bows, and that everyone, taking a horsewhip, should go directly to
- them; for so long as they saw us with arms, they considered themselves
- equal to us, and born of equal birth; but when they shall see us with
- our whips instead of arms, they will soon learn that they are our
- slaves, and being conscious of that will no longer resist.’ The
- Scythians, having heard this, adopted the advice; and the slaves,
- struck with astonishment at what was done, forgot to fight and
- fled.”--Herodotus, “Melpomene,” IV. §§ 3, 4. New York: Harper &
- Brothers, 1882.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-AUTOMATIC CONTRASTED WITH SCIENTIFIC EDUCATION.
-
- The Past tyrannizes over the Present by Interposing the Stolid
- Resistance of Habit. -- Habits of Thought like Habits of the Body
- become Automatic. -- There is much Freedom of Speech but very little
- Freedom of Thought: Habit, Tradition, and Reverence for Antiquity
- forbid it. -- The Schools educate Automatically. -- A glaring Defect
- of the Schools shown by Mr. John S. Clark, of Boston. -- The Automatic
- Character of the Popular System of Education shown by the Quincy
- (Mass.) Experiment. -- Several Intelligent Opinions to the same
- Effect. -- The Public Schools as an Industrial Agency a Failure. -- A
- Conclusive Evidence of the Automatic and Superficial Character of
- prevailing Methods of Education in the Schools of a large City. -- The
- Views of Colonel Francis W. Parker. -- Scientific Education is found
- in the Kindergarten and the Manual Training School. -- “The
- Cultivation of Familiarity betwixt the Mind and Things.” -- Colonel
- Augustus Jacobson on the Effect of the New Education.
-
-
-All reforms must encounter the stolid resistance of habit. It is not
-less tyrannical because it is a negative force. It braces itself and
-holds back with all its might. It is in this manner that the past
-dominates the present.[E11] This automatic habit of mind is precisely
-like certain automatic habits of the body which operate quite
-independently of any act of volition. For example: “When we move about
-in a room with the objects in which we are quite familiar, we direct our
-steps so as to avoid them, without being conscious what they are or what
-we are doing; we _see_ them, as we easily discover if we try to move
-about in the same way with our _eyes_ shut, but we do not _perceive_
-them, the mind being fully occupied with some train of thought.”[42] In
-the same way the mind under certain conditions becomes an automaton,
-constantly revolving old thoughts after the causes that gave rise to
-them have ceased to operate. Piano-forte playing affords an excellent
-illustration of this automatic action of the mind. “A pupil learning to
-play the piano-forte is obliged to call to mind each note, but the
-skilful player goes through no such process of conscious remembrance;
-his ideas, like his movements, are automatic, and both so rapid as to
-surpass the rapidity of succession of conscious ideas and
-movements.”[43]
-
- [42] “Body and Mind,” p. 22. By Henry Maudsley, M.D. New York: D.
- Appleton & Co., 1883.
-
- [43] Ibid., p. 26.
-
-Freedom of speech and freedom of thought are catch-penny phrases. There
-is much of the former, but very little of the latter. Speech is
-generally the result of automatic thought rather than of ratiocination.
-Independent thought is of all mental processes the most difficult and
-the most rare; habit, tradition, and reverence for antiquity unite to
-forbid it, and these combined influences are strengthened by the law of
-heredity. The tendency to automatic action of the mind is still further
-promoted by the environment of modern life. The crowding of populations
-into cities, and the division and subdivision of labor in the factory
-and the shop, and even in the so-called learned professions, have a
-tendency to increase the dependence of the individual upon the mass of
-society. And this interdependence of the units of society renders them
-more and more imitative, and hence more and more automatic both mentally
-and physically.
-
-Another powerful influence contributes to the same end. The schools
-educate automatically. They train the absorbing powers of the brain, but
-fail to cultivate the faculties of assimilation and re-creation, and
-neglect almost wholly to develop the power of expression. Mr. John S.
-Clark, of Boston, has made this point of the failure of the schools to
-train the brain-power of expression to its utmost, so plain that it is
-here reproduced in full, as follows:
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Five senses.
-
- Tongue.
-
- Hand.
-
-Fig. 1.]
-
-“Studying the functions of the brain, we find that for educational
-purposes it may be likened to an organism with a threefold form of
-working, an organism with a power of absorption, a power of assimilation
-and re-creation, and a power of expressing or giving out. The force or
-character of a brain is measured entirely by its expressing power, by
-what comes out of it. Examining a little closer, we find that the brain
-absorbs through all the five senses, while for expressing purposes it
-makes use of but two of these senses, or rather of but two organs of
-these senses--the tongue and the hand. _Fig._ 1 is a simple diagram
-representing a brain with the five senses placed on one side, as means
-of absorbing power, while on the other side the tongue and the hand are
-placed as organs of expressing power. The other function of the brain,
-that of assimilation and re-creation, cannot of course be graphically
-represented. It may, however, be said to be the result of the action of
-the other two functions. Now, the equipping of a brain, or the healthy
-education of a brain, consists in giving it expressing power through
-the tongue and the hand, coextensive with the power of absorption and
-the power of re-creation.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Reading. }
- Mathematics. }
- Geography. } Five Senses.
- Grammar. } Tongue.
- History. } Speech.
- Languages. }
- Physiology. } Hand.
- Literature. } Writing.
- Natural History. }
- Theoretical Sciences.}
-
-Fig. 2.]
-
-“Applying our popular schemes of education to the brain, and especially
-those based on the 3-R idea of education, we find what is indicated in
-_Fig._ 2, that provision has been made for greatly distending the
-absorbing side of the brain, while for the expressing side, the
-practical side, provision has been limited to the use of the tongue in
-speech and to the hand in writing. If now we follow the result of this
-brain equipment into practical life, we find that speech and writing, as
-means for expressing thought, have their applications mainly in the
-commercial and financial employments and the professions, and only
-incidentally in the industrial and mechanical employments. With such an
-inadequate and one-sided brain equipment it is not possible in any
-broad, practical way to bring thought or brain-power to the service of
-industry. The fact so generally admitted, that we are getting so few
-intelligent artisans or mechanics from our scheme of public education,
-that we turn out pupils of both sexes with a decided repugnance to
-industrial labor, is an attestation to the truth of this statement. The
-simple fact is that our education is not broad enough on the expressing
-side of the brain, that too much attention has been given to the
-absorbing side of this organ, that no adequate provisions have been
-made whereby it can discharge its power in work connected with the
-industries.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Reading. }
- Mathematics. }
- Geography. } Five Senses.
- Grammar. }
- History. } Tongue.
- Languages. } Speech.
- Physiology. }
- Literature. } {Writing.
- Natural History. } Hand. {Drawing.
- Theoretical Sciences.} {Manual Arts.
- Practical Sciences. }
-
-Fig. 3.]
-
-“In _Fig._ 3 a remedy for this defect is indicated in the addition of
-the study of graphic and æsthetic art, through drawing, and of training
-in the manual arts, to the previous brain equipment. Observe where these
-features come in the scheme--on the expressing side of the brain and in
-the service of the hand, thus giving the brain ample power to discharge
-thought in its most complete form for use or for beauty. With these
-features added to the brain equipment its power of expressing thought in
-all practical directions will be coextensive with its absorbing and
-re-creating powers; and just as soon as the public can clearly see that
-in the outcome of our public education there is no respecting of persons
-or of classes, that pupils are trained for honest labor with their hands
-as well as to living by their wits, are taught to produce something, to
-_create values_ by the action of their brain through the work of their
-hands, a much deeper interest in public education will not only be
-manifested, but generous provisions for its support will also be
-given.”[44]
-
- [44] Address delivered before the Philadelphia Board of Trade and the
- Franklin Institute, June 6, 1881.
-
-The charge that the schools educate automatically rather than
-rationally is of such vital importance that it should be sustained by
-the best attainable proof. Strong proof is at hand in the history of the
-so-called Quincy (Mass.) experiment.
-
-In 1878 doubt of the efficiency of the schools of Norfolk County, long
-indulged, culminated in action by the Association of School Committees
-and Superintendents. It was insisted by certain members of the committee
-that the existing methods were “about as good as human intelligence
-could devise,” and by others that the people were getting “no adequate
-returns for the money expended under the system in general use.” It was
-resolved to institute a searching investigation, and the standard for
-the measurement of the acquirements of pupils adopted was, “a reasonable
-degree of ability to read, to write legibly, correctly, and
-grammatically, and to deal readily with simple mathematics after about
-eight years of schooling.”
-
-The association selected Mr. George A. Walton, an experienced educator,
-to make the examination of the schools of the county, and the number of
-pupils examined exceeded three thousand. In their preface to Mr.
-Walton’s report the gentlemen of the association say:
-
-“Publicity, discussion, and discontent are wholesome things to apply to
-school management in Massachusetts. That this is a fair sample of the
-results now accomplished cannot be questioned. But though they may not
-be flattering to our pride, we yet believe that they are as good as can
-be obtained in any other county in Massachusetts, or, indeed, of any
-other State where similar tests are applied in a similar manner. If any
-school authorities elsewhere doubt the truth of this statement, let the
-experiment be tried in the schools of their county.
-
-“The questions naturally arise, What is the cause of this lamentable
-ignorance? and what is the remedy? The answer to the former suggests the
-reply to the latter. Too much has been attempted in the schools. There
-has been a slavish adherence to text-books, and no room given for
-freedom and originality of thought. Rules have been memorized, and the
-children taught to recite from the text-book, while they have not had
-the slightest conception of the true meaning of the subject....
-
-“The rules and exceptions in grammar are faithfully committed to memory,
-and most intricate sentences can be successfully analyzed, the phrases
-separated, and the modifiers named in true grammatical style, while the
-pupils who have undergone such severe training in this respect are
-unable to present their own thoughts concisely or clearly, or even
-_correctly_, upon paper. The _memory_ is cultivated, and the _reason_
-allowed to slumber.
-
-“In arithmetic the pupils show a readiness to solve a problem when they
-are able to fit it to some rule that they have learned; but when they
-are given a simple question out of the regular course, they are like a
-ship at sea without rudder or compass.”
-
-This is the severest and most sweeping criticism ever passed upon our
-American common-school system, and it emanates from its friends and the
-friends of universal education.
-
-Mr. Walton says of reading, as taught in the Norfolk County schools, “As
-for any systematic analysis by which the pupil learns to make a careful
-and independent study of his piece, it is but little practised in the
-schools even of the grammar grade;” and he declares that reading,
-without comprehending the ideas of which the words are mere signs, “is
-not merely useless, but dangerous, just in proportion to the facility
-with which the words are called.”
-
-Of the results of his examinations in penmanship Mr. Walton says, “Most
-of the faults in the writing indicate imperfect teaching.” Of his
-examinations in spelling he says that “the commonest words are
-misspelled when used in sentences or composition, while words of
-difficult orthography are spelled with accuracy when dictated for
-spelling.” For example, he says, “The words ‘whose,’ ‘which,’ and
-‘father,’ when spelled orally, were generally correct, but when written
-in sentences they were frequently, in many schools, in a majority of
-cases, erroneous.” No test could more clearly demonstrate the purely
-mechanical character of the methods of instruction than this of a
-comparison between the pupils’ oral and written spelling. The average of
-excellence in spelling the three simple words “which, whose, scholar,”
-of the primary grade for the whole county of Norfolk, as found by Mr.
-Walton, was the exceedingly low one of 55.9, the basis being 100.
-
-The ingenuity in bad spelling of this grade of pupils, who had been at
-least four years in school, is well illustrated by the example of the
-word “carriage,” written as follows: “Carage, carrage, craidge, caradg,
-carege, carriag, carrige;” and of the word “sleigh,” written “saly,
-slay, slaig, slaigh, slagh, slaw, sleig, sleugh, sleight, sligh, sley,
-slew, slave, sleygh;” and of the word “Tuesday,” written “Tusgay,
-tuestay, toesday;” and of the word “Wednesday,” written “wanesday,
-wedenyday, Wedernsday, wednest, Wenday, Wendsday, wensday, wenesday,
-wensdaw, wenze, Wenzie, Wendsstay, wenstday, Wesday, Whensday, winday,
-Windday, Winsday,” etc.
-
-The word “scholar” presented one hundred and sixty different erroneous
-spellings; that of “depot” fifty, among which were the following:
-“Deappow, deppowe, deaphow, deapohoe, teapot, doopo,” and “bepo.” An
-exercise in spelling by both grades of pupils, the “primary,” composed
-of pupils from eight and a half to ten and a half years old, and the
-“grammar,” composed of pupils from twelve and a half to fifteen and a
-half years old, showed errors of which the following are examples:
-_Any_, spelled ane and enny; _along_, aloud and alon; _amongst_, amunt;
-_animals_, anables; _arithmetic_, rithmes; _asked_, asted; _beautiful_,
-beuful; _been_, ben, bene, and bin; _by-and-by_, bimeby; _coat_, coot,
-coth, cote, goat, and coate; _Boston_, bostone; _boy_, poy, and bou;
-_city_, sitty; _eggs_, ages; _custard-pie_, custed puy; _coming_, comin,
-commun, gomming, and comming.
-
-An exercise in composition developed the following specimen errors: “The
-was two boys; They was two boys; How is all the boys? Things that was
-good; They is not many here I know; He come to school; I see him
-yesterday; He asked cyrus what he done that day; I had saw him; he had
-wore a coat,” etc.
-
-The examinations in mathematics yielded similar results to those
-developed in reading, writing, spelling, and composition. Mr. Walton
-says, “If instead of this [the routine method of the school] the pupil
-should be compelled to deal with real things, and to find his answer by
-studying the conditions of his problem, the fiction which arithmetic now
-is to most pupils would become to them a reality.”[45]
-
- [45] “The New Departure in the Common Schools of Quincy,” by Charles
- F. Adams, Jr., and the “Report of Examination of Schools in Norfolk
- County, Mass.,” by George A. Walton. Boston: Estes & Lauriat, 1881.
-
-The prime difficulty is here stated. The schools deal in “fictions.” In
-the language of the Norfolk County committee, “The _memory_ is
-cultivated and the _reason_ allowed to slumber.” Now, if to every fact
-memorized the pupil were required to apply the test of reason to analyze
-it and find out its relation to other facts, and fix it with all its
-relations in his mind, he would possess certain solid information of an
-ascertained practical value. It is very simple. It is making the pupil
-think for himself by showing him how to think for himself instead of
-thinking for him. Of course this is object-teaching. In the
-reading-lesson the pupil is required to know the meaning of the words of
-which it is composed in order to read with correct expression. When
-required to spell a word orally he is also required to write it. In the
-study of arithmetic he is shown certain objects, blocks of cubical and
-other forms, and required to apply the rules of the book to the
-ascertainment of their contents. In grammar the analysis of the sentence
-is followed by the writing of it, and the construction of other
-sentences involving similar principles in the art of composition, and so
-on.
-
-This is the kindergarten system now rapidly coming into high favor as an
-essential preliminary step in education. It is also the system of the
-manual training school. Under this system the pupil is not merely told
-that the saw is a thin, flat piece of steel with teeth used for cutting
-boards and timbers; a saw is placed in his hand and he is taught to use
-it: and so of all the hand and machine tools of the trades. He stands at
-the forge, bends over the moulding-form, shoves the plane in the
-carpenter-shop, presides at the turning-lathe, that ingenious invention
-of Maudslay--an automaton truer than the human eye, more cunning and
-more accurate than the human hand; executes plans for patterns and then
-makes the patterns, and finally, from the faint lines he has traced on
-paper, constructs a machine, breathes the breath of life (steam) into
-its veins, and with it moves mountains!
-
-In further support of the charge that the schools educate automatically,
-and hence superficially, the following intelligent opinions are cited:
-
-Charles Francis Adams, Jr., remarks that the common schools of
-Massachusetts cost $4,000,000 a year; and adds, “The imitative or
-memorizing faculties only are cultivated, and little or no attention is
-paid to the thinking or reflective powers. Indeed it may almost be said
-that a child of any originality or with individual characteristics is
-looked upon as wholly out of place in a public school.... To skate is as
-difficult as to write; probably more difficult. Yet in spite of hard
-teaching in the one case and no teaching in the other, the boy can skate
-beautifully, and he cannot write his native tongue at all.”[46]
-
- [46] “Scientific Common-school Education.”--_Harper’s Magazine_,
- November, 1880 (see note [E12] at end of chapter).
-
-Mr. Edward Atkinson says, “We are training no American craftsmen, and
-unless we devise better methods than the old and now obsolete apprentice
-system, much of the perfection of our almost automatic mechanism will
-have been achieved at the cost not only of the manual but also of the
-mental development of our men. Our almost automatic mills and
-machine-shops will become mental stupefactories.”[47]
-
- [47] “Elementary Instruction in the Mechanic Arts.”--_Scribner’s
- Monthly_, April 1881, p. 902.
-
-Prof. Barbour, of Yale College, says, “Our schools are suffering from
-congestion of the brain: too much thought and too little putting it in
-practice.”
-
-An English observer of our public schools says, “They teach apparently
-for information, almost regardless of development. This system develops
-no special individuality or power, forms few habits of observation,
-benefits little except the memory, and herein lies its great weakness.”
-
-The late Mr. Wendell Phillips said, “Our system stops too short, and as
-a justice to boys and girls as well as to society it should see to it
-that those whose life is to be one of manual labor should be better
-trained for it.”
-
-Mr. Wickersham, late Superintendent of Public Instruction for the State
-of Pennsylvania, says, “It is high time that something should be done to
-enable our youth to learn trades and to form industrious habits and a
-taste for work.”
-
-Dr. Runkle, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, says, “Public
-education should touch practical life in a larger number of points; it
-should better fit all for that sphere in life in which they are destined
-to find their highest happiness and well-being.”
-
-Opinions of this character might be multiplied almost indefinitely. They
-reflect the general sentiment that, as an industrial agency, the public
-school is a failure; but its value as an enlightening and civilizing
-agency is not therefore underestimated. It was not established as an
-industrial agency; it was established as a bulwark of liberty, and nobly
-did it fulfil its mission. The colonial fathers had a horror of
-ignorance, and as a barrier against it they raised the public school.
-But they were without industrial interests in the higher departments of
-skilled labor, and without commerce in a large way. Lord Sheffield said
-that the American colonies were founded with the sole view of securing
-to England a monopoly of their trade, and Lord Chatham declared that
-they had no right to manufacture even a nail or a horseshoe. Even after
-the Revolution, in 1784, the commerce of the country was so
-insignificant that eight bales of cotton shipped from South Carolina
-were seized by the customs authorities of England on the ground that so
-large a quantity could not have been produced in the United States!
-
-These humble conditions no longer exist, and to object to the expansion
-of the public-school system to meet the requirements of new exigencies
-is to ignore the logic and march of events. The nations are running an
-industrial race, and the nation that applies to labor the most thought,
-the most intelligence, will rise highest in the scale of civilization,
-will gain most in wealth, will most surely survive the shocks of time,
-will live longest in history. In the race for industrial supremacy we
-are not at the front. It is a fact to be pondered that we are exchanging
-the products of unskilled for skilled labor with the nations of Europe.
-In the course of a year, for example, England exports of raw material
-and food only about $150,000,000 in value, while her exports of
-manufactures aggregate about $850,000,000 in value. On the other hand,
-our exports consist almost entirely of raw material and food, their
-annual value being about $800,000,000, while of manufactures we export
-only a beggarly $75,000,000 worth, and our imports of manufactures are
-of the annual value of about $250,000,000. In crude, uneducated,
-unskilled labor capacity, we have grown much more rapidly than in the
-departments of educated, skilled labor; and in the exact ratio of this
-growth of unskilled over skilled labor, we are behind the age. We are
-industrially ill-balanced. We are selling brawn and buying
-thought--cunning, invention, genius; exhausting our physical manhood and
-impoverishing a virgin soil. We are suffering from a paucity of skilled
-labor, and we hesitate to apply the needed and obviously adequate
-remedy--the training of the youth of the country in the elements of the
-useful arts, in the public schools.
-
-A final and conclusive evidence of the verity of the charge that
-prevailing methods of education are automatic, and hence superficial in
-their character, is found in an examination test recently made in one of
-the public schools in a large American city, in the department of
-mathematics. The superintendent begins to distrust his own system of
-abstract instruction, and resolves to test the acquirements of certain
-classes of pupils ranging from ten to twelve years of age. He submits a
-series of questions in number, which are promptly solved either orally
-or in chalk on the black-board, showing a complete mastery of the
-subject from the abstract side, or point of view. To test the practical
-value of the knowledge thus exhibited the superintendent repeats his
-series of questions, applying them to things. For example: He passes six
-cards to a pupil, and requests that one-half of them be returned. This
-question having been promptly and correctly answered by the return of
-three of them, and the six cards being again placed in the hands of the
-pupil, the second question is propounded, namely, “Please give me
-one-third of one-half of the cards in your hand.” The pupil is puzzled;
-he fumbles the cards nervously, blushes, and returns a wrong number or
-becomes entirely helpless and “gives it up.” This question, or some
-other question of similar general import, is submitted to each member
-of the class with a like unfavorable result in eight or nine cases in a
-total of ten cases. The superintendent is astonished; he is more than
-astonished, he is deeply chagrined; for he knows that the kindergarten
-child of six or seven years of age, with the blocks, would answer his
-series of questions correctly eight or nine times in a total of ten.
-
-It is impossible to conceive of a more striking illustration of the
-prime defects of automatic education than is afforded by the foregoing
-described experiment. It sustains and justifies the severe criticism of
-the schools by Mr. Charles Francis Adams, Jr., in his magazine article
-of 1880, in the course of which he says,
-
-“From one point of view children are regarded as automatons; from
-another, as india-rubber bags; from a third, as so much raw material.
-They must move in step and exactly alike. They must receive the same
-mental nutriment in equal quantities and at fixed times. Its
-assimilation is wholly immaterial, but the motions must be gone through
-with. Finally, as raw material, they are emptied in at the primaries,
-and marched out at the grammar grades--and it is well!”[48]
-
- [48] “Scientific Common-school Education.”--_Harper’s New Monthly
- Magazine_, November, 1880, p. 937.
-
-The testimony of Col. Francis W. Parker, of the Cook County (Illinois)
-Normal School, is to the same effect. He says,
-
-“The most important work of to-day is to collect, reconcile, and apply
-all the principles and methods of education that have been discovered in
-the past, into one science and art of teaching. This would certainly
-radically change all our school work in this country. When this is done
-the ground will be made ready for new advances in the incomplete science
-of education. Because a complete science has not yet been discovered is
-a very poor reason for not applying what we already know. What specific
-changes would the application of known mental laws, in teaching about
-which all psychologists are in agreement, bring about? For it is only by
-a sharp comparison of what is now done according to tradition and custom
-in our schools, with that which can be done by the application of the
-simplest principles of teaching, that the value of the true art of
-instruction may be in some degree appreciated.
-
-“To illustrate this it may be mentioned that little children have been
-taught to read, in the past, and a great majority of them are now
-taught, by a method that is utterly opposed to a mental law, about which
-there can be no dispute among those who know anything of the science of
-teaching. I refer to the A B C method. Nearly three hundred years ago
-Comenius discovered a rule of teaching which may be said to embrace all
-rules in its category--‘Things that have to be done should be learned by
-doing them.’ This rule is so simple and plain that every one, except the
-teachers, has adopted and used it since man has lived upon the earth. If
-I am not very much mistaken, the school-master for the last fifty years
-has been incessantly inventing ways of doing things in the school-room
-by doing something else. We try to teach the English language by rules,
-definitions, analyses, diagrams, and parsing. Before the poor innocent
-child can write a single sentence correctly, we teach the painful
-pronunciation of words without the grasping of thought as reading. We
-vainly endeavor to give children a knowledge of number by teaching
-figures, the signs of number. We cram our victim’s mind full of empty,
-meaningless words, instead of inspiring and developing it by the sweet
-and strong realities of thought. This futile struggle to do things by
-doing something else is to-day costing the people of this country
-millions and millions of hard-earned dollars; and it is much to be
-feared that it will one day cost their children the blessings of free
-government. This is a serious charge.
-
-“The three hundred thousand teachers of this country are as faithful,
-honest, and earnest as any other class of active workers. If, then,
-these great truths in education be at the doors of our educators, why do
-they not acquire and use them? The answer is not far to seek. Not one
-teacher in five hundred ever makes a practical, thorough study of the
-_history_ of education, to say nothing of the science.
-
-“The tremendous projecting power of tradition stands stubbornly in the
-way of progress in education. It can only be met and overcome by the
-most thorough searching and indefatigable study of the child’s nature,
-and of the means by which the possibilities for good in God’s greatest
-creation may be realized.”[49]
-
- [49] Letter to the author under date of April, 1883, and by him
- reproduced in a communication published in the _Chicago Tribune_,
- April 23, 1883.
-
-The change from automatic to scientific education ought not to be very
-difficult. It has been made in the kindergarten. It consists in
-substituting things in place of signs of things. The boys should be
-taught to read in school as he will be required to read; to write as he
-will be required to write; and to cipher as he will be required to
-cipher, when he becomes a man.
-
-In teaching chemistry, for example, there should be a laboratory with
-the necessary illustrative apparatus. In teaching geography, in addition
-to the books and the globe, the form of the continent should be moulded
-in sand, with coast lines, mountain ranges, rivers, canals, harbors,
-cities, etc. In teaching number the pupil should have the things and
-parts of things, represented by signs, in his hands. In teaching
-mechanics the pupil should handle the saw, the plane, the file, the
-hammer, and the chisel, and stand at the bench, the forge, and the
-turning-lathe. It is in this way only that the pupil can be taught the
-power of expressing, as Mr. Clark puts it, “what has been absorbed on
-the receptive side.”
-
-Mr. MacAlister illustrates the force of Mr. Clark’s diagrams in a
-sentence: “We must not close our eyes to the fact that by far the larger
-number of men in every civilized community are workers to whom a skilled
-hand is quite as important as a well filled head.”[50] The prevailing
-methods of teaching fill the head but do not provide for assimilation,
-re-creation, and expression. Now to assimilate, to reduce to practical
-value and put to use facts memorized, and to create, the power of
-expression is an essential prerequisite; creating is expressing ideas in
-concrete form. But under the old _régime_ of education only two modes of
-expression are provided--speech and writing. A third mode--drawing--has
-been very generally adopted. Drawing, however, is only the first step,
-an incomplete step, so to speak, of expression. It is a sign, an
-outline, of a thing. What we want is the thing itself. That thing can
-only be produced at the forge, the bench, or the lathe; and this is
-manual training in the arts.
-
- [50] Mr. James MacAlister, Superintendent of Schools of the City of
- Philadelphia, Pa., at the meeting of the American Institute of
- Instruction, Saratoga, N. Y., July 13, 1882.
-
-What manual training will do for the pupil is expressed in the following
-terse paragraph by Col. Augustus Jacobson:
-
-“The boy leaving school should carry with him mechanical, business, and
-scientific training, fitting him for whatever it may become necessary
-for him to do in the world. I would secure for society the advantage of
-all the brain capacity that is born and all the training it can take. It
-is possible and practicable to let every child of fair capacity start in
-life from his school a skilled worker, with the principal tools of all
-the mechanical employments, an athlete with the maximum of health
-possible to him, and thoroughly at home in science and literature. The
-child so trained would, when grown, be to the ordinary man of to-day
-what Jay-Eye-See is to an ordinary plough-horse.”
-
- [E11] “Fortunately the past never completely dies for man. Many may
- forget it, but he always preserves it within him. For, take him at any
- epoch, and he is the product, the epitome, of all the earlier epochs.
- Let him look into his own soul, and he can find and distinguish these
- different epochs by what each of them has left within him.”--“The
- Ancient City,” p. 13. By Fustel De Coulanges. Boston: Lee & Shepard,
- 1882.
-
- [E12] “In fact, memory comes from interest. What children are deeply
- interested in they will never forget. A boy who can never say his
- lesson by heart will remember every detail of the cricket or football
- matches in which his heart really lives.”--“Educational Theories,” p.
- 116. By Oscar Browning, M.A. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1885.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-AUTOMATIC CONTRASTED WITH SCIENTIFIC EDUCATION--_Continued_.
-
- The Failure of Education in America shown by Statistics of Railway and
- Mercantile Disasters. -- Shrinkage of Railway Values and Failures of
- Merchants. -- Only Three Per Cent. of those entering Mercantile Life
- achieve Success. -- Business Enterprises conducted by Guess: Cause,
- Unscientific Education. -- Savage Training is better because
- Objective. -- Mr. Foley, late of the Massachusetts Institute of
- Technology, on the Scientific Character of Manual Education -- Prof.
- Goss, of Purdue University, to the same Effect -- also Dr. Belfield,
- of the Chicago Manual Training School. -- Students love the Laboratory
- Exercises. -- Demoralizing Effect of Unscientific Training. -- The
- Failure of Justice and Legislation as contrasted with the Success of
- Civil Engineering and Architecture.
-
-
-A striking illustration of the defective character of both public and
-private systems of education, in the United States, is afforded by the
-statistics of commercial, railway, and other business failures. In 1877
-a careful compilation of figures in regard to the shrinkage of railway
-values showed the following result:
-
-“In round numbers, _eighteen hundred millions of dollars_, or
-thirty-eight per cent. of the capital reported as invested in two
-hundred of our railway companies alone, is wholly unproductive to the
-investors, and the greater part is wholly lost to them. This is
-sufficiently appalling, but when we consider how many companies that
-have managed to keep up the interest on their bonds have wholly, or
-almost, ceased to pay any interest on their capital stock, which stock,
-in turn, has shrunk to seventy-five, fifty, twenty-five, ten, in some
-cases _five_ per cent. of its par value, it will seem to be a reasonable
-conclusion that the actual shrinkage and loss to _somebody_ on the face
-value of railway investments in the United States has been fully fifty
-per cent.!”[51]
-
- [51] _The Chicago Railway Age._
-
-In view of this startling exhibit it is evident that in the projection,
-construction, and management of the railways of the United States there
-has been gross incompetency.
-
-In 1881 Messrs. R. G. Dun & Co., the well-known commercial agents,
-showed that of the wholesale merchants doing business in the city of
-Chicago in 1870 fifty per cent. had failed, suspended, or compromised
-with their creditors.
-
-Forty years ago Gen. Dearborn, a prominent citizen of Chicago, declared
-that not more than three per cent. of the individuals who embark in
-trade end life with success. The success meant, doubtless, is unbroken
-solvency during the business experience of the merchant, and the final
-accumulation of a competence. The mercantile ranks in the United States
-afford many instances of individual merchants and firms who have settled
-or compromised with their creditors several times, and finally
-succeeded--succeeded at the expense of their creditors. But this is not
-the success meant by Gen. Dearborn. This statistical information,
-furnished by Messrs. R. G. Dun & Co., tends to confirm, approximately,
-the verity of the common remark that in trade not one in a hundred
-succeeds.
-
-Let us suppose that three merchants in a hundred so conduct their
-business as never to ask their creditors for a favor, never to “settle”
-for 50 or 25 cents, but always pay “dollar for dollar,” and come out in
-the end rich. This is strictly legitimate success. It would be very
-interesting to learn what becomes of the other ninety-seven merchants.
-Most of them go down after a few years, never again to emerge above the
-surface of commercial affairs. They live on salaries, enter the ranks of
-the speculative class, or become genteel paupers. But doubtless seven at
-least of the ninety-seven “compromise” and “settle” themselves over the
-breakers, and finally achieve success. So that of the ten successful
-merchants out of a hundred those who succeed at the expense of their
-creditors are as seven to three of those who win success by the highest
-degree of mercantile merit.
-
-With ninety utter failures, seven successes which involve the misfortune
-or wreck of others, and only three untarnished successes in a hundred,
-the general ambition to enter mercantile life is simply unaccountable.
-Of course the small number of successful merchants have to calculate
-upon the failures which will inevitably occur. They must discount the
-losses they are sure to incur through those failures--provide for them
-by increasing the otherwise sufficient profit of each transaction. In
-this way the public pays the cost of each failure. In other words, the
-consumer is taxed to pay the expense of ninety complete failures, and
-seven partial failures, in every hundred mercantile experiments. This
-expense aggregates scores of millions of dollars in this country alone,
-every year. The sum of losses by the failure of merchants in good
-seasons is very large, and in seasons of commercial depression it is
-vast.
-
-It is evident that ninety-seven in every hundred merchants mistake their
-avocation. Only three in a hundred are exactly fitted for the business
-they undertake. They are morally the “fittest” who survive by virtue of
-ability and integrity; the seven who survive by levying contributions on
-their creditors may also be regarded as the “fittest” according to the
-Darwinian theory. Of the ninety who go down without even a struggle to
-“settle” or “compromise,” they answer to the received definition of
-dirt--“matter out of place.”
-
-The investigation made by Messrs. R. G. Dun & Co., which resulted in the
-statistical information here reproduced and commented upon, was brought
-about by the assertion in 1881 of a life-insurance agent that fifty per
-cent. of the wholesale merchants doing business in the city of Chicago
-in 1870 had meantime failed, suspended, or compromised with their
-creditors. Out of this investigation the question logically springs, “Is
-not failing in business made too easy?”[52] If “compromises,”
-“settlements,” and “failures” carry with them no disgrace, it is but
-natural that thousands should take the risk of them in the contest for
-the great prizes which are the reward of success. The distinction in the
-public mind between the three merchants in a hundred who succeed
-legitimately and the seven who succeed by questionable “compromises” or
-“settlements” is very slight; and too many of the ninety who fail
-utterly retire with large sums of money which belong honestly to their
-creditors. Doubtless the life-insurance agent, in depicting the perils
-of mercantile ventures, urged the propriety of the merchant fortifying
-himself against disaster by insuring his life for the benefit of his
-family. This is a legitimate argument when addressed to the merchant in
-solvent condition; but the life-insurance agent’s intimate acquaintance
-with the shaky finances of nine-tenths of the commercial community
-teaches him that a large share of the money he receives in premiums,
-comes not from the merchant, but from the merchant’s creditors, who will
-soon be called upon, in the natural course of events, to consent to a
-composition of his claim, while the shaky merchant will retire with a
-paid-up policy of insurance in favor of his family.
-
- [52] “Mercantile honor is held so high in some countries that the
- calamity of bankruptcy drives men mad. In France there are numerous
- instances of almost superhuman struggles on the part of ruined
- merchants to regain, by patient effort and pinching economy, their
- lost station in the business community. César Birotteau, Balzac’s hero
- of such a struggle, dies from excess of emotion in the hour of his
- triumph. ‘Behold the death of the just!’ the Abbé Loraux exclaims, as
- he regards, with lofty pride, the expiring merchant.”--“Ten-minute
- Sketches,” p. 220. By Charles H. Ham. Chicago and New York: Belford,
- Clark & Co., 1884.
-
-It is quite plain that in nine cases out of ten the merchant who carries
-a large policy of insurance on his life actually pays for it out of his
-creditors’ instead of his own money. To be sure, it may be said that the
-nine merchants hope and expect to succeed, as well as the one. But is
-not it the duty of the merchant who owes large sums of money to think
-more of providing means for the payment of his immediate debts than of
-laying up a support for himself and family in the event of failure? Some
-disgrace ought to attach to failure in business; that is to say,
-disgrace enough to make the merchant cautious and economical, with a
-view, not to his own protection in the event of failure, but to the
-protection of his creditors, and of his own reputation as a business
-man.
-
-These failures, on so vast a scale, of railway enterprises, and the
-almost total wreck of mercantile ventures, show that the business of
-this country is done, as a Yankee might say, “by guess,” or as the
-mechanic of the old _régime_ would say, “by the rule of thumb.” The
-conclusion is hence irresistible that the youth of the United States are
-not so educated as to fit them for the conduct, to a successful issue,
-of great business enterprises. And this is an impeachment of what is
-regarded, on the whole, as the best system of popular education in
-operation in the world. A system of education which turns out
-ninety-three or ninety-seven men who fail, to three or seven men who
-succeed in business, must be very unscientific. If the savage system of
-education were not better adapted to the savage state, the savage would
-perish from the earth in the process of civilization. The savage bends
-his ear to the ground and robs the forest of its secrets, not three
-times in a hundred, but ninety and nine times. Ninety-nine times in a
-hundred he traces the footsteps of his enemy in the tangled mazes of the
-pathless wood.
-
-In “Aborigines of Australia”[53] Mr. G. S. Lang states that “one day
-while travelling in Australia he pointed to a footstep and asked whose
-it was. The guide glanced at it without stopping his horse, and at once
-answered, ‘Whitefellow call him Tiger.’ This turned out to be correct;
-which was the more remarkable as the two men belonged to different
-tribes, and had not met for two years.” Among the Arabs it is asserted
-that some men know every individual in the tribe by his footstep.
-Besides this, every Arab knows the printed footsteps of his own camels,
-and of those belonging to his immediate neighbors. He knows by the depth
-or slightness of the impression whether a camel was pasturing, and
-therefore not carrying any load, or mounted by one person only, or
-heavily loaded. The Australian will kill a pigeon with a spear at a
-distance of thirty paces. The Esquimau in his kayak will actually turn
-somersaults in the water. After giving many illustrations of the skill
-of various races of savages, Sir John Lubbock says,
-
-“What an amount of practice must be required to obtain such skill as
-this! How true, also, must the weapons be! Indeed it is very evident
-that each distinct type of flint implement must have been designed for
-some distinct purpose.” He adds, “The neatness with which the
-Hottentots, Esquimaux, North American Indians, etc., are able to sew is
-very remarkable, although awls and sinews would in our hands be but poor
-substitutes for needles and thread. As already mentioned (in page 332),
-some cautious archæologists hesitated to refer the reindeer caves of the
-Dordogne to the Stone Age, on account of the bone needles and the works
-of art which are found in them. The eyes of the needles especially, they
-thought, could only be made with metallic implements. Prof. Lartet
-ingeniously removed these doubts by making a similar needle for himself
-with the help of flint; but he might have referred to the fact stated by
-Cook in his first voyage, that the New Zealanders succeeded in drilling
-a hole through a piece of glass which he had given them, using for this
-purpose, as he supposed, a piece of jasper.”[54]
-
- [53] “Aborigines of Australia,” p. 24.
-
- [54] “Prehistoric Times,” pp. 544, 548. By Sir John Lubbock, Bart.,
- M.P. New York: D. Appleton & Co., 1875.
-
-The education which enables the savage to make these extremely nice
-adjustments of means to ends is scientific. The observation, for
-example, of the Arab who draws such accurate conclusions from the
-“printed footstep of the camel,” if applied to the problems of civilized
-life, would result in success, not failure.
-
-The excellence of this savage training consists in its practical
-character, in its perfect adaptation to the end in view. For example,
-the Esquimau boy is not instructed in the theory of turning somersaults
-in the water, in his kayak. He sees his father perform the feat; he is
-given a kayak and required to perform it also. The result is early and
-complete success. So of the Arab. In traversing the desert it is
-important for him to read every sign, to translate every mark left in
-the sand. Upon the accuracy of his observation his life may often
-depend. The print of the camel’s footstep may tell him whether he is,
-soon or late, to meet friend or foe. Hence from early childhood his
-faculty of observation is trained until it soon becomes as delicate and
-nice as the sense of touch of a blind, deaf mute. Sir John Lubbock
-thinks that a great amount of practice must be required to achieve so
-much skill; but the results are due, probably, more to the nature, than
-to the extent, of the practice. It is the excellence of the training
-that produces results which excite wonder and admiration. The savage is
-indolent; he works only that he may eat, and he works well, simply
-because he has been taught objectively, instead of subjectively.
-
-The difference in results between the best and the poorest methods of
-instruction is very great, as witness the testimony of Mr. Thomas Foley,
-late instructor in forging, vise-work, and machine-tool work in the
-school of mechanic arts of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He
-says,
-
-“It is a great waste of time to spend two or three years in acquiring
-knowledge of a given business, profession, or trade, that can be
-acquired in the short space of twelve or thirteen days, under a proper
-course of instruction. Twelve days of systematic school-shop instruction
-produces as great a degree of dexterity as two or more years’
-apprenticeship under the adverse conditions which prevail in the
-trade-shop.”[55] The manual training methods are the same as those which
-enable the savage to perform such feats of skill. They are the natural
-and hence most efficient methods of imparting instruction.
-
- [55] Report on “The Manual Element in Education,” p. 30. By John D.
- Runkle, Ph.D., LL.D., Walker Professor of Mathematics, Institute of
- Technology, Boston, Mass.
-
-The manual training school is a kindergarten for boys fourteen years of
-age. Miss S. E. Blow, in formulating the theory of the kindergarten,
-describes the methods of the savage’s school, and those of the manual
-training school, as follows:
-
-“It is a truth now universally recognized by educators that ideas are
-formed in the mind of a child by abstraction and generalization from the
-facts revealed to him through the senses; that only what he himself has
-perceived of the visible and tangible properties of things can serve as
-the basis of thought; and that upon the vividness and completeness of
-the impressions made upon him by external objects, will depend the
-clearness of his inferences and the correctness of his judgments. It is
-equally true, and as generally recognized, that in young children the
-perceptive faculties are relatively stronger than at any later period,
-and that while the understanding and reason still sleep, the sensitive
-mind is receiving those sharp impressions of external things which, held
-fast by memory, transformed by the imagination, and finally classified
-and organized through reflection, result in the determination of thought
-and the formation of character.
-
-“These two parallel truths indicate clearly that the first duty of the
-educator is to aid the perceptive faculties in their work by supplying
-the external objects best calculated to serve as the basis of normal
-conceptions, by exhibiting these objects from many different
-stand-points--that variety of interest may sharpen and intensify the
-impressions they make upon the mind, and by presenting them in such a
-sequence that the transition from one object to another may be made as
-easy as possible.”[56]
-
- [56] “The Kindergarten. An address, delivered April 3, 1875, before
- the Normal Teachers’ Association, at St. Louis, Mo.”
-
-This admirable exposition of the theory of scientific education solves
-the mystery which has always enveloped savage skill. It also affords a
-philosophic explanation of the fact discovered by Mr. Foley, namely,
-that the student of the manual training school acquires as much
-knowledge in one hundred and twenty hours as the apprentice of the
-machine-shop does in two years. In a word, it shows exactly why
-scientific education is so incomparably superior to automatic education.
-Mr. Foley asserts, in substance, that the scientific methods of the
-manual training school are twenty times as valuable to the student as
-the unscientific methods of the trade-shop are to the apprentice.
-
-In a familiar letter to the author, Prof. Goss[57] shows why the methods
-of the manual training school are so very valuable. He says:
-
-“In such a school, or course, a student is taught to perform a series
-of operations, involving practice with a variety of tools, on pieces of
-suitable material. It is not to be supposed that his ability to make a
-certain piece is directly valuable, for the experience of a lifetime may
-never require him to make it again. It is not expected that while making
-the piece he will learn a number of formulated facts relating to his
-work, and its application to other work, for that is not the best way to
-learn. Nor can we expect him to acquire a high degree of hand skill
-(accuracy and rapidity of movement combined), for this his limited time
-will not permit. But he does this: he works out a practical mechanical
-problem with every piece he makes. He sees how the tool should be
-handled, and how the material operated on behaves. He comes to
-understand why the tool cuts well in some directions and not so well in
-others; and all the time he queries to himself where it was that he saw
-a joint like the one he is making. He is an investigator--as much so as
-a student in chemistry. His mind must always guide his hand; his
-reasoning opens new fields of thought with every stroke of the chisel.
-
- [57] Prof. William F. M. Goss, a graduate of the school of mechanic
- arts of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and at present
- instructor in the mechanic arts department of the Purdue University.
-
-“A boy ten years old, who was a member of a class under my direction in
-Indianapolis in 1883, is reported to have said, ‘Why, mother, I never
-looked at the doors and windows so much in all my life as I have since I
-began at the wood-working school.’
-
-“I tell my students how to go to work, when they are likely to make
-mistakes, and how mistakes may be avoided. In operating along the line
-directed they thoroughly understand what they are doing, and why they do
-it. They see on all sides of their work.
-
-“If I have several different tools for doing work of the same
-character, I frequently give a student first one and then another, until
-he has tried them all. Then I ask him which he likes best, and why.
-Suppose we are to make a drawing-board. The class having already been
-made familiar with the principles governing the shrinkage and warping of
-woods, is asked in what way the cleats, to prevent warping, may best be
-fastened to the ends. The question is left open for a day or two, and
-sketches are submitted and views exchanged on the subject.
-
-“I frequently ask my students to pass to me, in writing, as many facts
-(not in the form of a composition) as they can think of regarding
-certain stated features of their work--not facts to be obtained from
-books, but from things they have seen and with which they are familiar.
-The replies are often remarkable for accuracy and force of statement....
-
-“The manual training school that does not by its work inspire thought
-and encourage investigation is poor indeed; the school that assumes its
-work to be _mind training by hand practice_ is the ideal school, and the
-school that will succeed....
-
-“My answer to your second and third questions is already evident. I
-consider an hour in the shop as valuable for its intellectual training
-as an hour of book-study, and two hours in the shop as valuable as two
-hours of study. I do not think that a student can take two hours of
-shop-work in addition to a full course of outside study; but I am
-convinced that two hours in the shop can be made to take the place of
-one hour of study without extra burden to the student. Therefore, this
-being done, the student will get as much again intellectual benefit from
-the shop as he would get if the shop-work equivalent in time were given
-to book-study.”
-
-This description of the mental operations which accompany the laboratory
-exercises of the manual training school shows the intimacy of the
-relations existing between the brain and the hand. It shows how they act
-and react upon each other, and affords an explanation of the remark of
-Dr. Belfield,[58] that the laboratory exercises are in fact a great
-strain upon the mental constitution of the student. This observation of
-Dr. Belfield, one of the most distinguished teachers of the old _régime_
-in the United States, entirely justifies the claim made in behalf of the
-scientific character of manual training as an educational agency, for it
-shows that such training is in no sense automatic. If manual training is
-a great strain upon the mental faculties, it must be because the use of
-tools stimulates such faculties to great activity. And if this is true,
-the mental discipline derived from manual training must be
-proportionally great. This is a pivotal point; for if the observation of
-Dr. Belfield is well founded in fact and reason, it proves to a
-demonstration the high educational value of manual training--proves its
-superiority over all the methods of the old _régime_.
-
- [58] Henry H. Belfield, A.M., Ph.D., Director of the Chicago Manual
- Training School.
-
-Prof. Goss says, “The manual training school student is an
-investigator--as much so as a student in chemistry. His mind must always
-guide his hand, his reasoning opens new fields of thought with every
-stroke of the chisel. He sees on all sides of his work.”[59] And Dr.
-Belfield says that these varied operations of the mind cause a severe
-mental strain. It would be difficult to find a better exemplification of
-scientific education than a course of training which exercises
-simultaneously the powers of both body and mind, a course which with
-every fresh burden put upon the mind puts new vitality into the body.
-This is, indeed, the very opposite of automatic education, and we may
-well call it scientific education.
-
- [59] “No extent of acquaintance with the meanings of words can give
- the power of forming correct inferences respecting causes and effects.
- The constant habit of drawing conclusions from data, and then of
- verifying those conclusions by observation and experiment, can alone
- give the power of judging correctly.”--“Education,” p. 88. By Herbert
- Spencer. New York: D. Appleton & Co., 1883.
-
-Another leaf from the experience of Dr. Belfield is worthy of
-reproduction here. On the 20th of February, 1884, he took the sense of
-the students in his school on the question whether or not they should
-indulge in a vacation on Washington’s birthday anniversary. Somewhat to
-his surprise the vote was almost unanimous in the affirmative. He
-acceded to the wishes of the students, but no sooner was the
-announcement made, than he was besieged with applications from nearly
-all of them for permission to convert the holiday into a work-day in the
-laboratories! Dr. Belfield has been compelled to post a peremptory order
-against the occupancy of the school laboratories by the students on
-Saturdays, which are regular vacation days.
-
-Natural training is scientific training. The fondness of the student for
-the manual training school is evidence of its scientific character. He
-is fond of it because it is natural. Miss Blow says of the child: “Only
-what he himself has perceived of the visible and tangible properties of
-things can serve as the basis of thought, and upon the vividness and
-completeness of the impressions made upon him by external objects will
-depend the clearness of his inferences and the correctness of his
-judgments.” This is the education both of the kindergarten and the
-manual training school, and it brightens, stimulates, and develops,
-while automatic education stupefies.
-
-Mr. Foley, formerly of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
-declares, as the result of his experience, as already stated, that the
-scientific methods of the manual training school are twenty times as
-valuable to the student as the unscientific methods of the trade-shop
-are to the apprentice. But we have shown in a former chapter that the
-training of the trade-shops of England, during the past one hundred and
-fifty years, has been better than that of the English schools and
-universities; in a word, that England is more indebted for her greatness
-to her apprentice system than to her school system. It follows that the
-school system of England must have been almost indescribably poor.
-
-That the system of popular education in the United States, which is much
-more comprehensive, and presumably better, than that of England, is very
-poor indeed in results, is shown by the statistics of railway and
-mercantile disasters; and it is scarcely necessary to remark that these
-disasters show prevailing methods of education to be as defective
-morally as they are mentally. The reason of this is that, being
-automatic, they lead neither to the discovery of truth nor to the
-detection of error. It is easy to juggle with words, to argue in a
-circle, to make the worse appear the better reason, and to reach false
-conclusions which wear a plausible aspect. But it is not so with things.
-If the cylinder is not tight the steam-engine is a lifeless mass of iron
-of no value whatever. A flaw in the wheel of the locomotive wrecks the
-train. Through a defective flue in the chimney the house is set on fire.
-A lie in the concrete is always hideous; like murder, it will out.
-Hence it is that the mind is liable to fall into grave errors until it
-is fortified by the wise counsel of the practical hand.
-
-It is obvious that the reason of the demand for the manual element in
-education is not so much that industrial interests require to be
-promoted, as that mental operations may be rendered more true, and hence
-more scientific. What we need more than we need a better class of
-mechanics is a better class of men--men of a higher grade both morally
-and intellectually. The study of things so steadies and balances the
-mind that the attention being once turned in that direction great
-results soon follow, as witness, the history of discovery and invention
-in England.
-
-The world moves very fast industrially, but very slow morally and
-intellectually. Mechanics stand the test of scrutiny far better than
-merchants. Civil engineers and architects are more competent than
-railway presidents, lawyers, judges, and legislators. The reason of this
-fact is that mechanics, civil engineers, and architects are educated
-practically in the world’s shops and the world’s technical schools. They
-are trained in things, while merchants, railway presidents, lawyers,
-judges, and legislators have only the automatic word-training of the
-schools. It is notorious that criminals are not punished in this
-country. Suppose there were such a failure of bridges as there is of
-justice. That is to say, suppose nine-tenths of the bridges constructed,
-whether for railway or other purposes, should fall within a few months
-of their completion. What would be thought of the technical schools
-whence the civil engineers graduate?
-
-Ninety-seven merchants in a hundred fail. Suppose ninety-seven buildings
-in a hundred, constructed under the direction of architects, should
-tumble down over the heads of their occupants six months after their
-erection. The education of the architects would no doubt be regarded as
-defective.
-
-Buckle says of English legislation, “The best laws which have been
-passed have been those by which some former laws were repealed.”[60] It
-will be admitted that the same is true of American legislation.[61] In
-other words, the average legislator is wiser in the statutes he repeals
-than in the bills he enacts. What if the incompetency of the legislator
-were paralleled by that of the machinist? Suppose ninety-seven in every
-one hundred locomotives should break down on the “trial-trip,” and be
-returned to the builder’s shop for remanufacture. Such a result would be
-an impeachment of the education of the locomotive builder.
-
- [60] “History of Civilization in England,” Vol. I, p. 200. By Henry
- Thomas Buckle. New York: D. Appleton & Co., 1864.
-
- “In a paper read to the Statistical Society in May, 1873, Mr. Janson,
- Vice-president of the Law Society, stated that from the statute of
- Merton (20 Henry III.) to the end of 1872 there had been passed 18,110
- public acts, of which he estimated that four-fifths had been wholly or
- partially repealed. He also stated that the number of public acts
- repealed wholly or in part, or amended, during the three years
- 1870-71-72 had been 3532, of which 2759 had been totally repealed. To
- see whether this rate of repeal has continued I have referred to the
- annually issued volumes of the ‘Public General Statutes’ for the last
- three sessions. Saying nothing of the numerous amended acts, the
- result is that in the last three sessions there have been totally
- repealed, separately or in groups, 650 acts _belonging to the present
- reign_, besides many of preceding reigns....
-
- “Seeing, then, that bad legislation means injury to men’s lives, judge
- what must be the total amount of mental distress, physical pain, and
- raised mortality which these thousands of repealed Acts of Parliament
- represent.”--“The Man _versus_ the State,” pp. 50, 51. By Herbert
- Spencer. New York: D. Appleton & Co.
-
- [61] “So thoroughly have the conscience and intelligence of the North
- apprehended these facts [neglect to educate and enlighten the
- freedmen], that while the Nation has done nothing they have given in
- private charity, intended to remedy this evil, nearly a million
- dollars a year for nearly twenty years. This is the instinct of a
- people _versus_ the stupidity of their legislators.... Of the true
- character of the South he [the author] was, like all his class,
- profoundly ignorant, almost as ignorant as the men who made the
- Nation’s laws.”--“An Appeal to Cæsar,” pp. 52, 56. By A. W. Tourgée.
-
-Ninety-seven in every hundred boys who graduate from the public schools
-and embark in mercantile pursuits fail. Suppose ninety-seven in every
-hundred watches made in the American watch factories should prove to be
-worthless. The watch companies would, no doubt, soon be in the hands of
-the sheriff. But, as a matter of fact, the Elgin National Watch Company,
-for example, makes twelve hundred watches a day, and each and every one
-of them is an almost perfect time-keeper.
-
-There is, then, no such failure of the arts as there is of justice; no
-such failure of mechanics as of merchants; no such failure of
-locomotives and watches as of legislation. It follows that the education
-of artisans is better, more scientific, than that of merchants, judges,
-lawyers, and legislators. And this is a very significant fact when it is
-considered that the State does much for education in _belles-lettres_
-and scarcely anything for education in the arts and sciences.[62]
-
- [62] The reason why statutes fail more frequently than steam-engines
- and bridges is not wholly because the legislator has to deal with
- human nature and the mechanic with inanimate matter. Steam and
- electricity are subtle forces, but man has quickly mastered them and
- successfully applied them to a variety of uses.
-
- It is not to the interest of any one that the machinist should make a
- defective locomotive, for example; but it is often to the interest of
- some one that the legislator should enact vicious laws. Vicious
- statutes are enacted with a design to injure the public in order that
- certain individuals may be benefited thereby.
-
- If the mind should act as honestly in legislation as the hand does in
- construction, statutes would not have to be repealed yearly.
-
- We have fallen into the habit of regarding education as a polite
- accomplishment having very little to do with the real business of
- life; but this is not the fact. Education begins in the cradle and
- continues through life; and it makes the man what he is. If he goes to
- the penitentiary it is his education that sends him there. If he is
- sent to the General Assembly of the State or to the Congress of the
- Nation, and there helps to enact vicious laws, it is his education
- that is responsible for such laws. If the man as a citizen sells his
- franchise at the polls, or his vote in the legislative hall, for
- money, it is the education he has received that is responsible for his
- baseness.
-
- It will be said that the explanation of the greater apparent accuracy
- of the work of the hand is to be found in the fact that it operates
- upon matter while the mind deals with metaphysical subtilties. The
- contention will not be that mind is less plastic than matter, but that
- it is more difficult of comprehension. But how do we know this to be
- the fact? Where has the experiment been tried of honest contact mind
- with mind? It was not tried by the ancients. It is not on trial in any
- part of the world to-day. There is, hence, no place in which to seek
- evidence as to how mind would act upon mind if treated honestly, as
- matter is treated by the hand. But if the quality of selfishness is
- eliminated, there will be no difficulty in bringing all minds to an
- agreement, as the parts of a watch are brought into harmonious and
- useful action. And it is through the hand that this beneficent union
- is destined to be effected; for the hand is the source of wisdom,
- which is simply the power of discriminating between the true and the
- false.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-
-AUTOMATIC CONTRASTED WITH SCIENTIFIC EDUCATION--_Continued_.
-
- The Training of the Merchant, the Lawyer, the Judge, and the
- Legislator contrasted with that of the Artisan. -- The Training of the
- Merchant makes him Selfish, and Selfishness breeds Dishonesty. --
- Professional Men become Speculative Philosophers, and test their
- Speculations by Consciousness. -- The Artisan forgets Self in the
- Study of Things. -- The Search after Truth. -- The Story of Palissy.
- -- The Hero is the Normal Man; those who Marvel at his Acts are
- abnormally Developed. -- Savonarola and John Brown. -- The New England
- System of Education contrasted with that of the South. -- American
- Statesmanship -- its Failure in an Educational Point of View. -- Why
- the State Provides for Education; to protect Property. -- The British
- Government and the Land Question. -- The Thoroughness of the Training
- given by Schools of Mechanic Art and Institutes of Technology as shown
- in Things. -- Story of the Emperor of Germany and the Needle-maker. --
- The Iron Bridge lasts a Century, the Act of the Legislator wears out
- in a Year. -- The Cause of the Failures of Justice and Legislation. --
- The best Law is the Act that Repeals a Law; but the Act of the
- Inventor is never Repealed. -- Things the Source and Issue of Ideas;
- hence the Necessity of Training in the Arts.
-
-
-There is a cause for the failure of the merchant, the lawyer, the judge,
-and the legislator, as well as for the success of the artisan. And the
-cause must be sought in the courses of training, respectively, of the
-two classes. Let us assume that the artisan and the merchant, the
-lawyer, the judge, and the legislator, graduate at the same time from
-the public high school, or from Harvard or Yale. The merchant at once
-begins to trade, to buy and sell. He concerns himself with things only
-as they have a value, either naturally arising from the law of demand
-and supply, or arbitrarily imposed by circumstances. His consideration
-of the relations of things is confined to the single question of the
-percentage of profit which may accrue to him from traffic in them. These
-are subjective processes of thought, and the merchant becomes absorbed
-in them to the exclusion of all other topics. It goes without saying
-that he becomes intensely selfish. The struggle is one of mercantile
-life or death--ninety-three to ninety-seven in a hundred die; three to
-seven survive.
-
-Among merchants there is, hence, very little thought of the subject of
-justice, and no effort to discover truth. There must, at the end of the
-year, be a favorable balance on the right side of the ledger, or the
-balance on the wrong side unerringly points the way to ruin. This is the
-post-school training of the merchant. That neither it nor his previous
-education renders him skilful we know, since he fails ninety-three to
-ninety-seven times in a hundred trials. That subjective training does
-not and never can promote rectitude has been shown in a former chapter
-of this work. That merchants who compromise with their creditors, and
-subsequently accumulate fortunes, very rarely repay the debt formerly
-forgiven is a notorious fact. A Chicago merchant who himself repaid such
-a composition debt early in his career, states, at the end of
-twenty-five years’ experience, that of compromises involving several
-hundred thousand dollars, made by him in favor of debtors, not one
-dollar has ever been repaid.
-
-Upon leaving school or college the lawyer, the judge, and the legislator
-at once apply themselves to books; their subsequent training is
-exclusively subjective. Their ideas receive color from, and are verified
-only by reference to, consciousness. Subjective truths have no
-relations to things, and hence are susceptible of verification only
-through consciousness. They are, therefore, mere speculations after all,
-often ingenious but always problematical. The result of such training is
-selfishness--selfishness of a very intense character; and, as has been
-already shown, selfishness is merely another name for injustice.
-
-On the other hand the artisan devotes himself to things. His training is
-exclusively objective. His ideas flow outward; he studies the nature and
-relations of things. In this investigation he forgets self because his
-life becomes a grand struggle in search of truth; and the discovery of
-truth in things, if not easy, is ultimately sure of attainment, since
-harmony is its sign, and its opposite, the false, is certain of exposure
-through its native deformity; for however alluring a lie may be made to
-appear in the abstract, in the concrete it is a monster unmasked.
-
-From the false the artisan intuitively shrinks. He can only succeed by
-finding the truth, and embodying it in some useful or beautiful thing
-which will contribute to the comfort or pleasure of man. Hence his
-watchword is utility, or, beauty in utility. Of the engrossing character
-of this struggle the story of Bernard Palissy affords a splendid
-illustration. Palissy was an artist, a student, and a naturalist, but
-poor, and compelled to follow the profession of surveying to support his
-family. At the age of thirty he saw an enamelled cup, of Italian
-manufacture, which fired his ambition. Ignorant of the nature of clays,
-he nevertheless resolved to discover enamel, and entered upon a
-laborious course of investigation and experiment with that end in view.
-After many years of Herculean effort and indescribable privation, which
-beggared and estranged his family, and rendered him an object of
-ridicule among his neighbors, he achieved a grand success. At a critical
-period of his experiments, in the face of the indignant protests of his
-almost starving family, having exhausted his credit to the last penny,
-he consigned to the flames of his furnace the chairs, tables, and floors
-of his humble cottage, and continued to watch his chemicals with
-all-absorbing attention, while his wife in despair rushed through the
-streets making loud proclamation of the scandal.
-
-But Palissy was more than a potter; he was a Christian, a philosopher,
-and an austere reformer. Notwithstanding he had been petted and
-patronized as an ingenious artisan by the royal family of France, he was
-finally cast into prison under charge of heresy. It was there that the
-remarkable interview with King Henry III. occurred, which immortalized
-Palissy as a hero. “My good man,” said the king, “you have been
-forty-five years in the service of the queen, my mother, or in mine, and
-we have suffered you to live in your own religion, amid all the
-executions and the massacres. Now, however, I am so pressed by the Guise
-party and my people that I have been compelled in spite of myself to
-imprison these two poor women and you.” “Sire,” answered the old man,
-“the count came yesterday on your part, promising life to these two
-sisters upon condition of the sacrifice of their virtue. They replied
-that they would now be martyrs to their own honor as well as for the
-honor of God. You have said several times that you feel pity for me; but
-it is I who pity you, who have said, ‘I am compelled!’ That is not
-speaking like a king. These girls and I, who have part in the kingdom of
-heaven--we will teach you to talk royally. The Guisarts, all your
-people, and yourself, cannot compel a potter to bow down to images of
-clay!”[63] And Palissy the potter and heretic, at the age of seventy,
-died in the Bastile, proudly defying a king.
-
- [63] “Palissy the Potter,” Vol. II., pp. 187, 188. By Henry Morley.
- Boston: Ticknor, Reed & Fields, 1853.
-
-The more absorbing the struggle for the discovery of truth the less room
-there is in the mind for selfishness; and as selfishness recedes,
-justice assumes its appropriate place as the controlling element in
-human conduct. The hero is an honest man, that’s all,--
-
- “Though love repine, and reason chafe,
- There comes a voice without reply;
- ’Tis man’s perdition to be safe,
- When for the truth he ought to die.”
-
-If all men were heroes--honest--there would be no occasion for heroism.
-If all education can be made scientific, all men can be made honest. The
-struggle to find truth is more natural than the struggle to succeed
-regardless of, or against, truth. The reason why what we call heroism
-appears so grand is this: the standards of public judgment have become
-so perverted by long custom in the abuse of truth, that normal conduct
-appears strange.
-
-When Palissy burned his chairs and tables in the cause of art, his
-family and his neighbors derided him, and denounced him as a madman, and
-in prison the king urged him, as a friend, to save himself from death by
-recanting his assertion of the right of freedom of religious opinion.
-Palissy was a hero neither to his family, his friends, nor his king;[64]
-but he was right, and his discovery and his firmness rendered him
-immortal. We now know, three hundred years farther down the course of
-time, that Palissy’s struggle over the furnace in the cause of art was
-mentally and morally normal, while the opposition he encountered was
-abnormal; and that his defiance of the king was mentally and morally
-normal, while his persecution was abnormal and cruel.
-
- [64] “I had nothing but reproaches in the house; in place of
- consolation, they gave me maledictions. My neighbors, who had heard of
- this affair [the failure of an experiment], said that I was nothing
- but a fool, and that I might have had more than eight francs for the
- things that I had broken; and all this talk was brought to mingle with
- my grief.”--“Palissy the Potter,” Vol. I., p. 190. By Henry Morley.
- Boston: Ticknor, Reed & Fields, 1853.
-
-Palissy’s mind was trained naturally in the direction of rectitude,
-while the minds of the millions of men who permitted him to die
-unfriended, a prisoner in the Bastile, were developed unnaturally. Their
-education was unscientific, and their characters were hence deformed.
-The one symmetrical character was that of Palissy, the lover of truth,
-who was ready to starve, if need be, for his art, and ready to die for
-his faith. The thin ranks of the so-called heroes of the ages of history
-constitute the measure of the poverty of the systems of education that
-have prevailed among mankind. These so-called heroes are merely normally
-developed men--men who search for the truth, and having found it, honor
-it always and everywhere. They are peculiar to no clime, to no country,
-to no age. They are cosmopolitan, and the fact that they are honored,
-after death, by succeeding ages is proof positive of the world’s
-progress, or rather of the progress of moral ideas.
-
-The civilization of Italy in the middle of the fifteenth century
-presents the most violent possible contrast to that of America in the
-last half of the nineteenth century. But the one produced Savonarola,
-the hater of abuses in the Roman Catholic Church, and the other John
-Brown, the stern, uncompromising hater of human bondage. Four hundred
-years is a long period in the history of civilization; but the priest of
-the fifteenth century, and the farmer of the nineteenth, are as near of
-kin in spirit, as if they had been born of the same mother, and reared
-in the same moral atmosphere.
-
-The true hero is always inexorable--as Savonarola in the presence of the
-majesty of a dying, remorse-stricken, half-repentant prince, and John
-Brown in the presence of his exultant but half-terrified captors. When
-Lorenzo di Medici lay terror-stricken, on his death-bed, Savonarola
-demanded of the dying prince, as the price of absolution, a restoration
-of the liberties of the people of Florence; and this being refused, the
-priest departed without one word of peace.
-
-When John Brown, wounded and bleeding, lay a captive at Harper’s Ferry,
-listening to the taunts of angry Virginians, he said, calmly and firmly,
-“You had better--all you people of the South--prepare yourselves for a
-settlement of this question. It must come up for settlement sooner than
-you are prepared for it, and the sooner you commence that preparation
-the better for you. You may dispose of me very easily--I am nearly
-disposed of now--but this question is still to be settled--this negro
-question, I mean. The end of that is not yet.”[65]
-
- [65] “The Public Life of Captain John Brown.” p. 283. By John Redpath.
- Boston: Thayer & Eldridge, 1860.
-
-There is nothing grander in history, whether real or mythological, than
-the picture of the humble priest of the fifteenth century, with no power
-except the justice of his cause, shaking thrones and making proud
-prelates, and even the Pope himself, tremble with fear! And the exact
-parallel of this picture is found, four hundred years down the stream of
-time, in the person of the farmer, John Brown, defying the Constitution,
-law, and public sentiment of his country in the interest simply of the
-cause of justice.
-
-It has been shown through citations from the Walton report, as well as
-by the opinions of many competent witnesses, that the New England system
-of education, whether correct in theory or not, is, in actual operation,
-very defective. But at the time of its establishment it was the best
-system in existence. To it this country owes the quality of its
-civilization. The neglect of education by the Government of the United
-States is the most astonishing fact of its history. It is
-incomprehensible how, with a comparatively excellent educational system
-in operation, and in full view in the New England, Middle, and Western
-States, the National Government could calmly and inactively contemplate
-the almost entire neglect of popular education in the States of the
-South, and ignore, from year to year, the steadily accumulating horrors
-of ignorance and vice which were destined to lead to such deplorable
-political and social results.
-
-The difference between the civilization of New England and that of South
-Carolina, for example, is exactly measured by the difference between
-their respective educational systems. New England undertook, at a very
-early day, to educate every class of its citizens; South Carolina made a
-monopoly of education, confining it to a single class.
-
-It must be admitted that the American statesmanship of the whole period
-of our history has been scarcely less short-sighted than that of England
-under the Georges, which resulted in saddling upon her people a debt
-that they can never pay. If England had provided a comprehensive and
-scientific system of popular education at the beginning of the
-eighteenth century, who doubts that the wars through which her debt was
-incurred would have been averted? If the Government of the United States
-had compelled the adoption of a scientific educational system by the
-States of the South, who doubts that slavery would have peaceably passed
-away, and the occasion for war passed away with it?
-
-The conspicuous failure of American statesmanship consists in a failure
-to appreciate the value of scientific education, it shows that good
-citizenship is impossible without good education--for good education and
-good citizenship are convertible terms. And it is easy to show, by the
-past, that to hesitate on the subject of education is to be lost.[66]
-
- [66] “If you examine into the history of rogues, you will find that
- they are as truly manufactured articles as anything else, and it is
- just because our present system of political economy gives so large a
- stimulus to that manufacture that you may know it to be a false one.
- We had better seek for a system which will develop honest men than for
- one which will deal cunningly with vagabonds. Let us reform our
- schools, and we shall find little reform needed in our
- prisons.”--“Unto This Last,” p. 50. By John Ruskin. New York: John
- Wiley & Sons, 1883.
-
-Why do we provide for popular education? Is it out of pure generosity
-that the rich citizen consents to be taxed to pay for the education of
-his poor neighbor’s children? Does the man who has no children willingly
-surrender a portion of his estate for the education of the children of
-others, as an act of benevolence? Not at all. There is no security for
-property in a community devoid of education and consequent intelligence.
-Intelligence alone confers upon property a sacred character. In one of
-two ways only can property be rendered secure in the owner’s hands. It
-may be protected by a hired soldiery, through the force of arms,[E13] or
-through the force of public sentiment enlightened by education. The
-reason why the poor but educated citizen would not lay violent hands on
-the rich citizen’s property is the fact that he indulges the intelligent
-hope of himself acquiring property. Besides, the morals of a community
-are in the ratio of its intelligence. The indulgence of hope promotes
-self-esteem, and self-respect, and these qualities react ethically.
-
-It should be borne in mind that while one of the main purposes of all
-governments is to preserve property rights, nearly all the governments
-of history have been shattered in pieces in the effort to fulfil this
-function of their existence. It may be said that there is never anything
-sacred about property unless it is honestly acquired. All the force of
-our own government was exerted in a vain effort to protect property in
-slaves. England has been compelled to disturb the property rights of the
-Irish landlords, and this is only the prelude to an attack upon the
-property rights of her own landlords. It was the ignorance of the
-English people hundreds of years ago that permitted the establishment of
-a land system which is now about to crumble in pieces, and in its fail
-wreck certain property rights.
-
-There is nothing sacred about property unless it is honestly acquired
-and honestly held; and property can only be honestly acquired and
-honestly held, in communities intelligent enough to guard its
-acquisition, and continued possession, by just and adequate laws. It
-follows that education is the sole bulwark of the State, and so of
-property.
-
-The question of the first consequence is, therefore, always, What is
-the best system of education? It is obvious, also, that the subject of
-cost should not enter into the discussion; that the best education is
-the cheapest, is an indisputable proposition. We have seen that the New
-England system of education, which has spread over the whole country, is
-very much better than the system which prevailed in those States of the
-Union where slavery continued to exist down to 1864. But we have seen,
-also, that that system is very defective; that it is automatic, and
-hence not natural, not practical, not scientific. It does not produce
-great merchants, great lawyers, great judges, or great legislators. That
-it does not, is abundantly shown by the fact that in mercantile life
-there are ninety-three to ninety-seven failures in every one hundred
-experiments; by the fact that there is notoriously a general failure of
-justice; and by the fact that here, as in Great Britain, the chief
-business of statesmen is the undoing of vicious legislation.
-
-There is a system of training which produces a much higher average of
-culture than that of the public schools and the universities. We allude
-to the training received by the students of special mechanical and
-technical institutions, and by the apprentices in trade-shops. The proof
-of this is found in the world’s railways, ships, harbors, docks, canals,
-bridges, telegraph and telephone lines, and in a thousand and one other
-manifestations of skill in art. In the adaptation of means to an end,
-and in nicety of construction, the mechanic and the civil engineer show,
-in innumerable ways, with what thoroughness both their minds and their
-hands have been trained. If mercantile operations were governed by such
-excellent rules in projection, and by such precision in execution,
-ninety-seven merchants in a hundred would not go to the wall.
-
-A story has lately gone the round of the public prints to the effect
-that, during a visit to a needle factory by the Emperor of Germany, a
-workman begged a hair of his head, bored an eye in it, threaded it, and
-handed it back to the monarch, who had expressed surprise that eyes
-could be bored in the smaller sizes of needles. It does not matter
-whether or not this story is literally true; it illustrates the delicacy
-of modern mechanical operations. Hundreds of similar illustrations might
-be given, showing how marvellously skilful the hand has become.
-
-It is not claimed that the hand is a nicer instrument than the mind. As
-a matter of fact, in drilling the hole in the hair the mind and the hand
-work together--the mind directs the hand, we will say. The mind devises
-or invents a watch--every wheel, pinion, screw, and spring--and directs
-the hand how to make it, and how to set it up, and it ticks off the
-time. Why does the mind succeed so admirably when it employs the hand to
-execute its will, but so ill when it devises and attempts, itself, to
-execute? How is it that the mind invents a watch which, being made by
-the hand, records the hour to a second, ninety-nine times in a hundred,
-but fails ninety-three to ninety-seven times in a hundred to devise and
-carry into execution a mercantile venture? How is it that the mind
-invents a steam-engine consisting of a hundred pieces, so that, each
-piece being made by a different hand, the machine shall, when set up,
-ninety-nine times in a hundred, at once perform the work of five hundred
-horses without strain or friction, but when it grapples with law and
-fact in the chair of lawyer or judge produces a most pitiable wreck of
-justice? How is it that the mind devises and the hand executes with such
-nice adaptation of means to the end in view, a bridge, that resembles a
-spider’s web, and yet bears thousands of tons and endures for ages, but
-when it undertakes to legislate evolves statutes that wear out in a
-year? The first iron bridge constructed spanned the Severn, in England.
-It was opened to traffic a hundred years ago, but it is still a stanch
-structure likely to stand for centuries. Where are the English statutes
-of that time? Repealed to give place to a long line of others which in
-turn have been repealed. When the famous iron bridge across the Severn
-was constructed, English legislators were passing bills to compel the
-American colonies to trade only with the mother country, and to tax them
-without their consent. Lord Sheffield said, with charming frankness,
-that the colonies were founded with the sole view of securing to England
-a monopoly of their trade; and Lord Chatham declared that they would not
-be permitted to make even a nail or a horseshoe.
-
-In 1516 Sir Thomas More denounced the criminal law of England, declaring
-that “the loss of money should not cause the loss of man’s life.”[67]
-But this humane and enlightened sentiment had so little weight that
-during the reign of Henry VIII. seventy-two thousand thieves were
-hanged--at the rate of two thousand a year. In 1785 twenty men were
-executed in London at one time for thefts of five shillings. The Lord
-Chief-justice and the Lord Chancellor agreed that it would be dangerous
-to repeal the law punishing pilfering by youths. In 1816 the Commons
-passed a bill abolishing capital punishment for shoplifting--stealing
-the value of five shillings--but the Lords defeated it, Lord
-Ellenborough, Chief-justice, observing, peevishly, “They want to alter
-these laws which a century has proved to be necessary, and which are now
-to be overturned by speculation and modern philosophy.”[68]
-
- [67] “The History of England,” Vol. II., p. 83. By Harriet Martineau.
- Philadelphia: Porter & Coates.
-
- [68] “The History of England,” Vol. II., p. 85. By Harriet Martineau.
- Philadelphia: Porter & Coates.
-
-The cause of these failures--of mercantile ventures, of justice, and of
-legislation--is this: Subjective mental processes are automatic, and
-hence they neither generate power nor promote rectitude; they enfeeble
-rather than energize the brain. Men whose characters are formed by such
-educational processes never originate anything. They become selfish,
-they venerate the past, their eyes are turned backward; hence, if they
-sometimes make a feeble effort to move forward they stumble. The lawyer,
-the judge, and the legislator are examples of this class. Their
-guide-books are musty folios in a dead language; they look for
-“precedents” in an age whose civilization perished with its language,
-and whose maxims and rules of life were long ago exploded. Such men can
-be compelled to move forward only by the lash of public opinion. Buckle,
-speaking of the reforms extorted from the legislators of England, says,
-
-“But it is a mere matter of history that our legislators, even to the
-last moment, were so terrified by the idea of innovation that they
-refused every reform until the voice of the people rose high enough to
-awe them into submission, and forced them to grant what without such
-pressure they would by no means have conceded.”[69]
-
- [69] “History of Civilization,” Vol. I., p. 361. By Henry Thomas
- Buckle. New York: D. Appleton & Co., 1864.
-
-On the other hand, the inventor, the discoverer, and the artisan are
-always in the advance, and always moving forward. They never look back
-except to catch the vital principle of the invention or discovery of
-yesterday for utilization in the improved machine of to-day. Their acts
-are never repealed because they never become odious. They never become
-odious because they contain the germs of imperishable truth. They are
-never false; they are suitable to their time and the stage of
-development; they constitute links in the chain of progress. While the
-legislator is horrified at the thought of innovation, the inventor, the
-discoverer, and the artisan are electrified by the discovery of a new
-principle in physics, and delighted at its application in a new
-invention, and its practical operation in a new and useful machine.
-
-The difference in effects upon the mental and moral nature, between
-purely mental training and mental and manual training combined, is
-susceptible of logical explanation. It is only in things that the truth
-stands clearly revealed, and only in things that the false is sure of
-exposure.[70] Hence exclusively mental training stops far short of the
-objective point of true education. For if it be true that the last
-analysis of education is art, progress can find expression only in
-things--in the work of men’s hands. And it is true; for ideas are mere
-vain speculations until they are embodied in things. Nor is this
-materialism unless all civilization is material; for the prime
-difference between barbarism and civilization consists in the presence,
-in a state of civilization, of more things of use and beauty than are
-found in a state of barbarism. To exalt things is not materialistic;
-they are both the source and issue of ideas, and the measure of
-civilization. Ideas and things are hence indissolubly connected; and it
-follows that any system of education which separates them is radically
-defective.[71] Exclusively mental training does not produce a
-symmetrical character, because at best it merely teaches the student how
-to think, and the complement of thinking is acting. Before thoughts can
-have any influence whatever upon the world of mind and matter external
-to the mind originating them they must be expressed. They may be
-expressed feebly, through the voice, in words; more durably, and
-therefore more forcibly, with the pen, on paper; more forcibly still in
-drawing--pictures of things; and, with the superlative degree of force,
-in real things.
-
- [70] “To know the truth it is necessary to do the truth.”...
-
- “We rightly seek the meaning of the abstract in the concrete, because
- we cannot _act_ in relation to the abstract, which is only a
- representative sign; we must give it a concrete form in order to make
- it a clear and distinct idea; until we have done so we do not know
- that we really believe--only believe that we believe it. A truth is
- best certified to be a truth when we live it and have ceased to talk
- about it.”--“Body and Will,” p. 49. By Henry Maudsley, M.D. New York:
- D. Appleton & Co., 1884.
-
- [71] “Prof. Huxley seems to hold that zoology cannot be learned with
- any degree of sufficiency unless the student practises dissection. In
- support of this position there are strong reasons. In the first place,
- the impression made on the mind by the actual objects, as seen,
- handled, and operated upon, is far beyond the efficacy of words or
- description. And not only is it greater, but it is more faithful to
- the fact. While diagrams have a special value in bringing out links of
- connection that are disguised in the actual objects, they can never
- show the things exactly as they appear to our senses; and this full
- and precise conception of actuality is the most desirable form of
- knowledge; it is truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.
- Moreover, it enables the student to exercise a free and independent
- judgment upon the dicta of the teacher.”--“Education as a Science,” p.
- 303. By Alexander Bain, LL.D. New York: D. Appleton & Co., 1884.
-
-The object of education is the generation of power. But to generate and
-store up power, whether mental or physical, or both, is a waste of
-effort, unless the power is to be exerted. Why generate steam if there
-is no engine to be operated? Steam may be likened to an idea which finds
-expression through the engine--a thing. Why store the mind with
-facts--historical, philosophical, or mathematical--which are useless
-until applied to things, if they are not to be applied to things? And if
-they are to be applied to things, why not teach the art of so applying
-them? As a matter of fact, the system of education which does not do
-this is one-sided, incomplete, unscientific. Rousseau says, “Education
-itself is certainly nothing but habit.” If this be true, it will be
-conceded that the habit of expressing ideas in things should be formed
-in the schools, because the chief way in which man is benefited is
-through the expression of ideas in things. The system of education which
-tends to form this habit is that of the kindergarten and that of the
-manual training school. These systems are one in principle. They are not
-new; they at least date back to Bacon, who declared that he would
-“employ his utmost endeavors towards restoring or cultivating a just and
-legitimate familiarity betwixt the mind and things.” The kindergarten
-and the manual training school exactly realize Bacon’s idea. The idea of
-the manual training school was in the mind of Comenius when he said,
-“Let things that have to be done be learned by doing them.” It was in
-the mind of Pestalozzi when he said, “Education is the generation of
-power.” It was in the mind of Froebel, not less than the kindergarten,
-when he said, “The end and aim of all our work should be the harmonious
-growth of the whole being.”
-
-These are excellent definitions of education, and they are sequential.
-If things that have to be done are learned by doing them, there will be
-in the course of the process a wholesome exercise of both body and mind,
-and this exercise will result in the generation of power--power to think
-well, and to do well; and the process being continued, the result cannot
-fail to be the harmonious growth of the whole being. This is scientific,
-as opposed to automatic, education.[72]
-
- [72] “Intellectual progress is of necessity from the concrete to the
- abstract. But regardless of this, highly abstract subjects such as
- grammar, which should come quite late, are begun quite early.
- Political geography, dead and uninteresting to a child, and which
- should be an appendage of sociological studies, is commenced betimes,
- while physical geography, comprehensible and comparatively attractive
- to a child, is in great part passed over. Nearly every subject dealt
- with is arranged in abnormal order--definitions and rules and
- principles being put first, instead of being disclosed, as they are in
- the order of nature, through the study of cases. And then, pervading
- the whole, is the vicious system of rote learning--a system of
- sacrificing the spirit to the letter....
-
- “A leading fact in human progress is that every science is evolved out
- of its corresponding art. It results from the necessity we are under,
- both individually and as a race, of reaching the abstract by way of
- the concrete, that there must be practice and an accruing experience
- with its empirical generalizations before there can be
- science.”--“Education,” pp. 61, 124. By Herbert Spencer. New York: D.
- Appleton & Co., 1883.
-
- [E13] But the protection to property afforded by arms is only
- temporary. An increase of the standing army involves an increase of
- ignorance and poverty, and the last analysis of ignorance and poverty
- is anarchy. The anarchists of Chicago [1886] were of foreign birth.
- They came to the United States from the standing-army-ridden countries
- of Europe. They were the product, the victims, of the European
- governmental system. Hence, the proposal to adopt arms as a remedy for
- anarchy is a proposal to abandon the American idea of government for
- that of Europe. To preserve the society of to-day from violent
- dissolution, it is necessary to shoot the anarchist. But to assure the
- permanence of society it is necessary to educate the child of the
- anarchist.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-
-EDUCATION AND THE SOCIAL PROBLEM--HISTORIC.
-
-_EGYPT AND GREECE._
-
- Fundamental Propositions. -- Selfishness the Source of Social Evil;
- Subjective Education the Source of Selfishness and the Cause of
- Contempt of Labor; and Social Disintegration the Result of Contempt of
- Labor and the Useful Arts. -- The First Class-distinction -- the
- Strongest Man ruled; his First Rival, the Ingenious Man. --
- Superstition. -- The Castes of India and Egypt -- how came they about?
- -- Egyptian Education based on Selfishness. -- Rise of Egypt -- her
- Career; her Fall; Analysis thereof. -- She Typifies all the Early
- Nations: Force and Rapacity above, Chains and Slavery below. -- Their
- Education consisted of Selfish Maxims for the Government of the Many
- by the Few, and Government meant the Appropriation of the Products of
- Labor. -- Analysis of Greek Character -- its Savage Characteristics.
- -- Greek Treachery and Cruelty. -- Greek Venality. -- Her Orators
- accepted Bribes. -- Responsibility of Greek Education and Philosophy
- for the Ruin of Greek Civilization. -- Rectitude wholly left out of
- her Scheme of Education. -- Plato’s Contempt of Matter: it led to
- Contempt of Man and all his Works. -- Greek Education consisted of
- Rhetoric and Logic; all Useful Things were hence held in Contempt.
-
-
-It is a fundamental proposition of this work that selfishness is the
-essence of depravity, and hence the source of all social evil; and in
-previous chapters it has been shown, argumentatively, that exclusively
-subjective processes of education tend, in a high degree, to promote
-selfishness. Another fundamental proposition of this work is that the
-useful arts are the true measure of civilization, and that, as they are
-the product of labor, contempt of the laborer leads inevitably to social
-disintegration and the destruction of the State. If these propositions
-are true, the solution of all social problems is to be sought through a
-radical change in educational methods. If they are true, it is of the
-first importance that they be proved, not only by argument, but by the
-citation of such facts of history as bear upon the subject. Civilization
-is the product of education.[E14] If the education is good the product
-will be good, if evil the product will be evil. The purpose of this and
-the four following chapters is, therefore, to trace the progress of
-civilization, to sketch in bold outline the social history of man.
-
-The aphorism, all men are created equal, is a fine phrase, but its truth
-is reserved for realization by the civilization of the future. A
-tendency to the formation of class-distinctions in human society,
-whether savage or civilized, is disclosed by all history.
-
-The first class-distinction sprang from the physical superiority of one
-savage over his fellows. He whose powerful frame and commanding eye
-enabled him best to cope with the beasts of field and forest became
-chief of the tribe. He held the first place by virtue of his brawny arm,
-and the less athletic, and more timid, became his subjects. But he was
-not long without rivals. His first rival was the dwarf, or hunchback,
-who, struggling to overcome the misfortune of his deformity, in the
-seclusion of his mud hut, invented the stone hatchet and stone-pointed
-arrow-head. His next rival was the puny, pale-faced youth who converted
-pantomimic signs and rude gestures into a language of sounds, and so
-armed communities with the power of combination for mutual protection.
-Those who soonest mastered the first alphabet took high rank in the
-social circle, while those who could still only make themselves
-understood by grimaces and gestures fell to the grade of ciphers in the
-body politic, and came to be looked upon as dunces in society.
-Thereafter the women, who had previously been won as wives by personal
-prowess, were more equally parcelled out. The savage who had invented
-the bow and the arrow was exempted from the toils of the chase, and from
-the general contention at the courting season; a wife was assigned to
-him, and his tent was supplied with game in the hope that he would
-invent some other useful thing. Thus mind began to assert its empire
-over matter, the division of labor commenced, and a class-distinction
-was formed. Doubtless the youth who invented language cultivated
-superstition among the ignorant, and so, increasing his already
-considerable influence, secured the first social rank. Hence the castes
-of India and Egypt, consisting, in their order, of the priesthood, the
-army, the mercantile class, and, at the bottom of the scale, the servile
-laborer.
-
-Of the long period of social progress from a state of savagery to the
-proud civilization of historic Egypt the record is faint and
-fragmentary. Ages passed, during which men struggled, and died, and left
-no sign--neither hieroglyphic character, monument, nor buried city.
-Through what mental alchemy was the savage chief transformed, in the
-course of hundreds of generations, into the learned, accomplished, and
-astute Egyptian priest, from whose courtly lips Herodotus received the
-chronicles of the Egyptian kings and the romantic story of the residence
-in Egypt of Helen of Troy?[73] How were the members of the savage tribe
-converted, one into an obedient soldier, another into an adroit,
-self-seeking merchant, and another into a cringing slave? These are
-secrets of antiquity, destined, doubtless, to remain forever unrevealed.
-We do know, however, that the civilization of Egypt, like all other
-civilizations, was the product of training or education; and the nature
-of the education may be inferred from the character and fate of the
-civilization.
-
- [73] “Herodotus, ‘Euterpe,’” II., §§ 112-116. New York: Harper &
- Brothers, 1882.
-
-Of the Egyptian system of education selfishness was the basis. Given
-chains and slavery for the lowest class and there were force and
-rapacity in the highest class.[74] Before the free-born savage was
-reduced to slavery and made to toil under the lash, whole hecatombs of
-lives were sacrificed. Before the mind of the savage was degraded to the
-baseness of slavery, his body, hacked and hewn, bent submissively to the
-scourge. For the Egyptian boy there was, doubtless, a “Poor Richard’s
-Almanack,” which taught him that he must “look to the main chance;” that
-“in the race of life the devil takes the hindmost;” and that
-“self-preservation is the first law of nature.” Thus trained he entered
-the ranks of the priesthood, one of his brothers took a commission in
-the army, and the others embarked in mercantile life. For the servile
-class there was no education beyond their several occupations. Each man
-was compelled to follow the trade of his father, to marry within his own
-class, to die as he was born.
-
- [74] “The Martyrdom of Man,” p. 18. By Winwood Reade. New York:
- Charles P. Somerby, 1876.
-
-Ruled by the priests, and the army, Egypt grew rich. Her commerce,
-conducted by means of caravans, embraced the whole civilized world and
-included all its products. She became a great military and naval power,
-her armies overrunning Asia, and her fleets sweeping the Indian Ocean.
-Her victorious campaigns opened new markets to her commerce, and through
-these channels wealth poured into the empire. In the track of the wheels
-of the Egyptian war-chariots the Egyptian merchant quickly followed. At
-the point of the arrows of her archers she offered her linen goods to
-conquered peoples, as England, at the point of the bayonet, subsequently
-offered her cotton goods to prostrate India.
-
-In Egypt all the learning of the time was concentrated. It was the
-university of Greece. Every intellectual Greek made a voyage to Egypt;
-it was regarded as a part of education, as a pilgrimage to the
-cradle-land of their mythology.[E15] The possession of great wealth led
-to habits of luxury. The house of the Egyptian gentleman was a palace
-adorned with the triumphs of art, and devoted to pleasure. Its walls,
-its floors, and its furniture reflected the skill, not to say genius, of
-slaves--for all the manual labor of Egypt was performed by slaves. At
-the end of the fashionable dinner, given in the palace by its rich
-master, a mummy, richly painted and gilded, was presented to each guest
-in turn by a servant, who said, “Look on this; drink and enjoy thyself,
-for such as it is now so thou shalt be when thou art dead.”[75]
-
- [75] “Herodotus, ‘Euterpe,’” II., p. 78. New York: Harper & Brothers,
- 1882.
-
-One day when the priests were sacrificing in the temples, and the chief
-officers of the army were dining with a contractor for army supplies, a
-band of mountaineers rushed out of the recesses of Persia and swept like
-a wind across the plains. They were dressed in leather; they had never
-tasted fruit nor wine; they had never seen a market; they knew not how
-to buy or sell. They were taught three things--to ride on horseback, to
-hurl the javelin, and to speak the truth.[76] All Asia was covered with
-blood and flames. The allied kingdoms fell at once, and India and Egypt
-were soon afterwards added to the Persian empire.
-
- [76] “Herodotus, ‘Clio,’” I., §§ 71, 136, 153. New York: Harper &
- Brothers, 1882.
-
-Egypt typifies all the early nations. In its rise, progress, and fall,
-the course of the others may be traced. First there is a band of hardy
-men whose prowess renders them irresistible. They are inured to toil;
-they practise all the manly virtues; they are trained to labor with
-their hands; they are taught to speak the truth. They lay the
-foundations of the State in industry[E16] and prudence; their children
-develop its resources; their children’s children, through many
-generations, gradually accumulate wealth. The arts flourish, and
-luxuries are multiplied. There are many great estates, and those who
-inherit them cease to labor, and, ceasing to labor, they become a charge
-upon the public; for the value of an estate created one hundred years
-ago, or one year ago, can be maintained in no other way than by the
-labor of to-day.[77] The idlers increase in number, and the struggle for
-existence, of the workers, becomes more intense. Idleness breeds vice,
-and the public morals are debauched.[E17] We see this class at the feast
-of Belshazzar and at the dinner of the Egyptian _bon vivant_. On the
-wall of every such banqueting room there is an ominous handwriting,
-provided, only, that there is a Daniel to interpret it. It means that
-the nation that degrades labor, tolerates idleness, and deifies vice, is
-ripe for annihilation. If, now, there is on the frontier of the effete
-nation a virile people, it is only a question of time and opportunity,
-when they will make slaves of the revellers, and spoil of their
-inherited estates. The worn-out, exhausted nation disappears in blood
-and flames. The rich idler, the poor sycophant, the rulers and the
-ruled, the slave and his master, the priest, the soldier, the merchant,
-and the laborer, all go to destruction together.
-
- [77] “It is not equitable that what one man hath done for the public
- should discharge another of what it has a right to expect from him;
- for one, standing indebted in himself to society, cannot substitute
- anything in the room of his personal service. The father cannot
- transmit to his son the right of being useless to his
- fellow-creatures.... The man who earns not his subsistence, but eats
- the bread of idleness, is no better than a thief.... To labor, then,
- is the indispensable duty of social or political man. Rich or poor,
- strong or weak, every idle citizen is a knave.”--“Emilius and Sophia,”
- Vol. II., pp. 92, 93. By J. J. Rousseau. London: 1767.
-
-In the ancient nations there was always force and rapacity above, and
-chains and slavery below. Education was confined to a small class, and
-consisted of selfish maxims for the government of the many, and
-government was only another name for the appropriation of the products
-of their labor. Selfishness bred injustice, and the practice of
-injustice undermined the State. Whether the State survived or fell was a
-matter of indifference to the slave. A slave he remained in any
-event--if not of the Egyptian then of the Persian. But the importance of
-labor is shown by those bloody revolutions. The battles of antiquity
-were contests for the possession of the labor class. Which
-nationality--the Egyptian or the Persian--should drive the toilers to
-their daily tasks; which should reap the fruit of the sweat of their
-brows; which should buy and sell them; which scourge them to their
-dungeons? These were the questions which agitated the minds of ancient
-rulers. They were the questions which agitated the mind of Xerxes when
-he invaded Greece, with millions of followers, to encounter defeat at
-the hands of a few thousand men of a superior type.
-
-The Greek civilization sprung from mythology and ended in anarchy. In
-the East the Greeks were called the people of youth. Their religion was
-of the savage type. Their gods were immortalized men; they loved and
-hated, transgressed and suffered; they resorted to stratagems to compass
-their ends; they were a kind of exalted but unscrupulous aristocracy.
-
-Greek patriotism was narrow; each city was politically independent, and
-the citizen of one city was an alien and a stranger in the territory of
-every other. The Greeks were superstitious. If the omens were
-unfavorable the general refused to give battle; the plague was a visible
-sign of the wrath of the gods; the priests sacrificed perpetually; the
-oracle of Apollo outlived Grecian independence hundreds of years.[E18]
-
-Grecian national festivals were childish, consisting of wrestling,
-boxing, running, jumping, and chariot-racing. But the victor in those
-games conferred everlasting glory upon his family and his country, and
-was rewarded with distinguished honors.
-
-Like savages, the Greeks were treacherous. The destiny of Greece was
-controlled by renegades. There was disloyalty in every camp, a Greek
-deserter in every opposing army, and a traitor, or a band of traitors,
-in every besieged Greek city.[E19] They were cruel; of their captives
-they butchered the men and enslaved the women, and they stripped and
-robbed the bodies of the slain, on the battle-field. Like savages they
-assassinated ambassadors, and like savages surrendered prisoners to
-their personal enemies to be massacred.[E20] Their sense of honor was
-dull. Xenophon, after winning imperishable renown, in conducting the
-famous retreat of the “Ten Thousand,” led a detachment of them on a
-pillaging expedition, and so amassed a fortune. “My patriotism,” says
-Alcibiades, “I keep not at a time when I am being wronged.” “For there
-was neither promise that could be depended on, nor oath that struck them
-with fear,” exclaims Thucydides.[78]
-
- [78] “The History of the Peloponnesian War,” Vol. I., p. 210. London:
- George Bell & Sons.
-
-Venality was the predominating trait in Greek character, and venality
-unrestrained is savagery. In the Greek Pantheon the highest niche was
-reserved for the God of Gain. The early Greeks were pirates; they
-plundered one another; they sometimes actually sold themselves into
-slavery, so great was their lust of gold. The richest cities ruled the
-poor cities. Pericles boasted that he could not be bribed, but he robbed
-all Greece to embellish Athens, and was accused of peculation, tried,
-convicted, and fined. The Athenians declared that the Spartans were
-taught to steal, and the Spartans retorted that the best Athenians were
-invariably thieves. When Persia could no longer fight she defended her
-territory against Greek invasion with gold coins.
-
-The Greek orators never refused a bribe, and oratory ruled Greece.[E21]
-Greek oratory was very persuasive. A discriminating writer declares
-that, with their fine phrases and rhetorical expressions, the Greek
-orators swindled history, obtaining a vast amount of admiration under
-false pretences.[79]
-
- [79] “The Martyrdom of Man,” p. 88. By Winwood Reade. New York:
- Charles P. Somerby, 1876.
-
-For these defects in Greek character, and for the resulting decay of
-Greek civilization, Greek philosophy and Greek education must be held
-responsible. Metaphysics and rhetoric ruined Greece. It was in the
-schools of rhetoric that the young Greeks received their training for
-the duties of public life. There they were taught the art of oratory;
-there they learned how to make the worse appear the better reason. There
-they were taught, not to expound the truth, but to indulge in the arts
-of sophistry. It was in those schools that the young Greek was trained
-to be eloquent, to win applause in the courts of law, not to convince
-the judgments of judge, or juror; for judicial decisions were
-notoriously subjects of the most shameful traffic.
-
-The element of rectitude was wholly left out of the Greek system of
-education, and hence wholly wanting in Greek character. The Greeks had a
-profound distrust of one another. They were dishonest; they were
-treacherous; they were cruel; they were false; and all these vices are
-peculiar to a state of savagery.[E22] In ethics they never emerged from
-the savage state, and hence in politics their failure was complete; for
-the prime condition of the most simple form of civil society is mutual
-confidence. But the mutual distrust of the Greeks, based on want of
-integrity, was so absolute that political unity was impossible, and the
-failure to combine the several cities under one government led,
-eventually, to the destruction of Greek civilization.
-
-To this result Greek philosophy also contributed. Plato’s contempt for
-matter was so profound that he regarded the soul’s residence in the body
-as an evil. He taught that the philosopher should emancipate himself
-from the illusions of sense, devoting his life to reflection, and
-surrendering his mind “to communion with its kindred eternal
-essences.”[E23] Contempt of matter led logically to contempt of the
-physical man, and hence to contempt of things, the work of man’s hands.
-Such a philosophy was necessarily “in the air.” It afforded no aid to
-the sciences; for science is the product of generalizations from matter.
-It scorned art; for the arts are applications of the sciences in useful
-things. With the Greek school-master rhetoric was the chief part of
-education; with the Greek philosopher dialectics was the science _par
-eminence_.
-
-Thus the Greek system of education was confined to rhetoric and
-logic--the art of speaking with propriety, elegance, and force, and the
-power of deducing legitimate conclusions from assumed premises.[E24] In
-the Greek schools of rhetoric there was no struggle to find the truth;
-in the schools of philosophy there was no respect for the evidence of
-the senses. The Greek orator harangued the jury eloquently while his
-client bargained with the court for the price of justice! The Greek
-philosopher confounded his audience with the force of his unanswerable
-logic, and appealed to his inner consciousness in support of the
-soundness of his premises!
-
-The explanation of Greek duplicity is found in Greek metaphysics. To
-scorn things is to disregard facts, and disregard of facts is contempt
-of the truth. Greek education was confined to a consideration of the
-subject of the nature and relations of abstract ideas, while the subject
-of the nature and relations of things was wholly neglected. Such a
-system of education led logically to selfishness, and out of selfishness
-grew inordinate ambition and greed; and these passions led, through
-treachery and dishonesty, to factional contests, which, eventuating in
-bloodshed, could only end in anarchy. Distracted by the jealousies and
-rivalries of States constantly in hostile conflict, and enfeebled by the
-never-ending strife between the rich and the poor, Greece fell a prey to
-the rapacity, and lust of power, of her unscrupulous Roman neighbor.
-
- [E14] “All the happiness of families depends upon the education of
- children, and houses rise or sink according as their children are
- virtuous or vicious.”--Plato’s “Divine Dialogues,” p. 262. London: S.
- Cornish & Co., 1839.
-
- [E15] “The Egyptians were, in the opinion of the Greeks, the wisest of
- mankind.”--Herodotus, “Euterpe,” II., § 160. New York: Harper &
- Brothers, 1882.
-
- “For my part, I think that Melampus, being a wise man, both acquired
- the art of divination, and having learned many other things in Egypt,
- introduced them among the Greeks, and particularly the worship of
- Bacchus.”--Ibid, “Euterpe,” II., § 49.
-
- “And indeed the names of almost all the Gods came from Egypt into
- Greece.”--Ibid, “Euterpe,” II., § 50.
-
- “The manner in which oracles are delivered at Thebes in Egypt and at
- Dodona, is very similar; and the art of divination from victims came
- likewise from Egypt.”--Ibid, “Euterpe,” II., § 57.
-
- “The Egyptians were also the first who introduced public festivals,
- processions, and solemn supplications: And the Greeks learned these
- from them.”--Ibid, “Euterpe,” II., § 57.
-
- To the same effect, see also:
-
- Ibid, “Euterpe,” II., § 64.
- „ „ „ § 109.
- „ „ „ § 123.
- „ „ „ § 160.
- „ „ „ §§ 164-166.
- „ „ „ § 171.
-
- And Ibid, “Melpomene,” IV., § 180.
-
- [E16] “Amasis it was who established the law among the Egyptians that
- every Egyptian should annually declare to the governor of his district
- by what means he maintained himself; and if he failed to do this, or
- did not show that he lived by honest means, he should be punished with
- death. Solon, the Athenian, having brought this law from Egypt,
- established it at Athens; and that people still continue to observe
- it, as being an unobjectionable regulation.”--Herodotus, “Euterpe,”
- II., § 177. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1882.
-
- [E17] “Lysimachus, son of Aristides the Just, and Melesias, son of
- Thucydides, to the Athenian generals, Nicias and Laches:
-
- “Both he and I have entertained our children with thousands of brave
- actions done by our fathers both in peace and war, while they headed
- the Athenians and their allies; but to our great misfortune we can
- tell them no such thing of ourselves. This covers us with shame; we
- blush for it before our children, and are forced to cast the blame
- upon our fathers; who, after we grew up, suffered us to live in
- effeminacy and luxury; while they were employing all their care for
- the interest of the public.”--Plato’s “Divine Dialogues,” p. 256.
- London: S. Cornish & Co., 1839.
-
- [E18] “After the encounter between the cavalry had taken place,
- Agesilaus, on offering sacrifice the next day with a view to
- advancing, found the victims inauspicious and in consequence of this
- indication turned off and proceeded toward the coast.”--Xenophon,
- “Hellenics,” p. 369. London: George Bell & Sons, 1881.
-
- See, also, Thucydides, Vol. II., p. 348. London: George Bell & Sons,
- 1880.
-
- And Ibid, Vol. II., p. 484.
-
- And, “Plutarch’s Lives [Timoleon],” p. 177. New York: Harper &
- Brothers, 1850.
-
- [E19] Alcibiades to the Lacedæmonians: “And now, I beg that I may not
- be the worse thought of by any among you, because I am now strenuously
- attacking my country with its bitterest enemies, though I formerly had
- a reputation for patriotism.”--Thucydides, Vol. II., p. 439. London:
- George Bell & Sons, 1880.
-
- Of Pausanias and Themistocles, who were both traitors, Thucydides
- says: “Such was the end of Pausanias the Lacedæmonian and Themistocles
- the Athenian, _who had been the most distinguished of all the Greeks
- in their day_.”--“History of the Peloponnesian War,” Vol. I., pp.
- 75-83.
-
- See also Ibid, Vol. I., p. 288.
- „ „ „ pp. 292-293.
- „ „ „ p. 304.
- „ „ „ pp. 306-307.
- „ „ „ p. 241.
- „ „ Vol. II., p. 510.
-
- See also Herodotus, “Melpomene,” IV., § 142. New York: Harper &
- Brothers, 1882.
-
- [E20] “When the Corcyræans had got possession of them [prisoners
- surrendered by their allies the Athenians] they shut them up in a
- large building, and, afterward taking them out by twenties, led them
- through two rows of heavy-armed soldiers posted on each side; the
- prisoners being bound together were beaten and stabbed by the men
- ranged in the lines, _whenever any of them happened to see a personal
- enemy_; while men carrying whips went by their side, and hastened on
- the way those that were proceeding too slowly.”--Thucydides, Vol. I.,
- pp. 256-257. London: George Bell & Sons, 1880.
-
- Ibid, Vol. I., p. 62.
- „ II., p. 376.
- „ II., p. 468.
- „ II., p. 495.
- „ II., pp. 510-511.
- „ II., p. 523.
-
- See also Herodotus, “Terpsichore,” V., § 6.
-
- Ibid, “Terpsichore,” V., § 21.
- Ibid, “Urania,” VII., §§ 104, 105, 106.
-
- See also Xenophon, “Hellenics,” p. 328. London: George Bell & Sons,
- 1882.
-
- See also “Plutarch’s Lives [Lycurgus],” p. 42. New York: Harper &
- Brothers, 1850.
-
- [E21] “For the Grecians in old time, ... turned to piracy, ... and
- falling upon towns that were unfortified, ... they rifled them, and
- made most of their livelihood by this means.”... “For through desire
- of gain the lower orders submitted to be slaves to their betters; and
- the more powerful, having a superabundance of money, brought the
- smaller cities into subjection.”--Thucydides, Vol. I., pp. 3, 4, 5.
- London: George Bell & Sons, 1880.
-
- “Yet that the boys might not suffer too much from hunger, Lycurgus,
- _though he did not allow them to take what they wanted without
- trouble_, gave them leave to steal certain things to relieve the
- cravings of nature; _and he made it honorable to steal as many cheeses
- as possible_.”--Xenophon’s “Minor Works,” p. 208. London: George Bell
- & Sons, 1882.
-
- “Demosthenes could not resist the temptation; it made all the
- impression upon him that was expected; he received the money, like a
- garrison into his house, and went over to the interest of Harpalus.
- Next day he came into the Assembly with a quantity of wool and
- bandages about his neck; and when the people called upon him to get up
- and speak, he made signs that he had lost his voice, upon which some
- that were by said, ‘it was no common hoarseness that he got in the
- night; it was a hoarseness occasioned by swallowing gold and
- silver.’”--“Plutarch’s Lives [Demosthenes],” pp. 594-595. New York:
- Harper & Brothers, 1850.
-
- See also, “Plutarch’s Lives [Agesilaus],” p. 431. New York: Harper &
- Brothers, 1850.
-
- Ibid [Demosthenes], p. 591.
- „ [Aristides], p. 232.
-
- “And Plato, among all that were accounted great and illustrious men in
- Athens, judged none but Aristides worthy of real esteem.”--“Plutarch’s
- Lives [Aristides],” p. 243. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1850.
-
- But it was Aristides who said of a public measure: “It is not just,
- but it is expedient.”
-
- “As to the proceedings in courts of law they [the Athenians] have less
- regard to what is just than to what is profitable to
- themselves.”--Xenophon’s “Minor Works,” pp. 235-236. London: George
- Bell & Sons, 1882.
-
- Ibid, pp. 243, 244.
-
- When Mardonius the Persian consulted with the Thebans how to subdue
- Greece, they said: “Send money to the most powerful men in the cities,
- and by sending it you will split Greece into parties, and then, with
- the assistance of those of your party, you may easily subdue those who
- are not in your interest.”--Herodotus, “Calliope,” IX., § 2. New York:
- Harper & Brothers, 1882.
-
- Ibid, “Urania,” VIII., §§ 128-134.
- „ “Calliope,” IX., § 44.
-
- See also “Plutarch’s Lives [Pericles],” p. 123. New York: Harper &
- Brothers, 1850.
-
- Ibid, “Pericles,” p. 118.
- „ “Pericles,” p. 115, _note_.
-
- “Accordingly, as the Athenians state, these men while staying at
- Delphi, prevailed on the Pythian by money, when any Spartans should
- come thither to consult the oracle, either on their own account or
- that of the public, to propose to them to liberate Athens from
- servitude.”--Herodotus, “Terpsichore,” V., § 63. New York: Harper &
- Brothers, 1882.
-
- Ibid, “Erato,” VI., §§ 72, 100.
-
- [E22] Euripides makes Andromache say: “O, ye inhabitants of Sparta,
- most hated of mortals among all men, crafty in counsel, king of liars,
- concoctors of evil plots, crooked and thinking nothing soundly, but
- all things tortuously, unjustly are ye prospered in Greece. And what
- evil is there not in you? Are there not abundant murders? Are ye not
- given to base gain? Are ye not detected speaking ever one thing with
- the tongue but thinking another? A murrain seize you!”--“The Tragedies
- of Euripides [Andromache],” Vol, II., p. 138. New York: Harper &
- Brothers, 1857.
-
- [E23] “Is it not by reasoning that the soul embraces truths? And does
- it not reason better than before when it is not encumbered by seeing
- or hearing, by pain or pleasure? When shut up within itself it bids
- adieu to the body, and entertains as little correspondence with it as
- possible; and pursues the knowledge of things without touching
- them.... Is it not especially upon this occasion that the soul of a
- philosopher despises and avoids the body and wants to be by itself?...
- Now, the purgation of the soul, as we were saying just now, is only
- its separation from the body, its accustoming itself to retire and
- lock itself up, renouncing all commerce with it as much as possible,
- and living by itself, whether in this or the other world, without
- being chained to the body.”--Plato’s “Divine Dialogues,” pp. 180, 181,
- 182. London: S. Cornish & Co., 1839.
-
- [E24] “During most of the flourishing age of Hellenistic culture the
- rhetor was the acknowledged practical teacher; and his course, _which
- occupied several years_, with the interruption of the summer holidays,
- comprised first a careful reading of classical authors, both poetical
- and prose, with explanations and illustrations. This made the student
- acquainted with the language and literature of Greece. But it was only
- introductory to the technical study of expression, of eloquence based
- on these models, and of accurate writing as a collateral branch of
- this study. When a man had so perfected himself, he was considered fit
- for public employment.”--“Old Greek Education,” p. 137. By J. P.
- Mahaffy, M. A. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1882.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII.
-
-EDUCATION AND THE SOCIAL PROBLEM--HISTORIC.
-
-_ROME._
-
- Vigor of the Early Romans -- their Virtues and Vices; their Rigorous
- Laws; their Defective Education; their Contempt of Labor. -- Slavery:
- its Horrors and Brutalizing Influence. -- Education Confined to the
- Arts of Politics and War; it transformed Courage into Cruelty, and
- Fortitude into Stoicism. -- Robbery and Bribery. -- The Vices of
- Greece and Carthage imported into Rome. -- Slaves construct all the
- great Public Works; they Revolt, and the Legions Slaughter them. --
- The Gothic Invasion. -- Rome Falls. -- False Philosophy and
- Superficial Education promoted Selfishness. -- Deification of
- Abstractions, and Scorn of Men and Things. -- Universal Moral
- Degradation. -- Neglect of Honest Men and Promotion of Demagogues. --
- The Decline of Morals and Growth of Literature. -- Darwin’s Law of
- Reversion, through Selfishness, to Savagery. -- Contest between the
- Rich and the Poor. -- Logic, Rhetoric, and Ruin.
-
-
-In the city of the Seven Hills there was no statue to Pity, as at
-Athens. In the long line of Roman conquerors there was no one possessing
-the title to fame, of which, on his death-bed, Pericles boasted, namely,
-that “no Athenian had ever worn mourning on his account.”
-
-The dominion of Rome was logical. In the legend of Romulus and Remus,
-suckled by the she-wolf, there is a hint of the rugged vigor which
-characterized the Roman people, and distinguished them from the earlier
-nationalities. In all the civilizations anterior to that of Rome there
-was an element of pliability or softness which belongs to the youth of
-man. But from the day on which Romulus, with the brazen ploughshare,
-drew a furrow around the Palatine, both the sinews and the souls of his
-followers hardened into maturity. The rising walls of the city, so the
-legend runs, were moistened with the life-drops of Remus, whose derisive
-remark and act cost him his life, his slayer exclaiming, haughtily, “So
-perish all who dare to climb these ramparts.” The rape of the Sabines,
-the conflicts which ensued with that outraged people, their
-incorporation with the conquerors, their subsequent joint conquests, and
-the shrewdness displayed in the conservation of the fruits of
-victory--these events show that man had attained his majority. Under the
-shadow of the walls of the Eternal City all the great races were
-associated and mingled--Latins, Trojans, Greeks, Sabines, and Etruscans.
-The Roman civilization was the product of all that had gone before, as
-it was destined to be the father of all that should follow it. The Roman
-had no peer either in courage or fortitude. Aspiring to universal
-dominion, he toughened himself to achieve it. Dooming his enemy to death
-or slavery, he was not less self-exacting, his own life, through the cup
-of poison, the sword, or the opened vein, becoming the forfeit equally
-of misfortune and shame. The tragic fate of Lucretia, the resulting
-revolution, the banishment of the Tarquins, and the abolition of the
-kingly government show the swiftness of Roman retribution and the
-terrible force of Roman resolution. Roman persistence in the path of
-conquest for many centuries is typified by Cato in his invocation of
-destruction upon Carthage. The masculine character of the Roman vices
-finds illustration in the struggle of Appius, the Decemvir, to possess
-the person of Virginia by wresting the law from its true purpose, the
-conservation of justice, and converting it into a shield for lust; and
-the vigor of Roman virtue is exemplified in the act of Virginius
-plunging the knife into the heart of his beloved daughter to save her
-honor. The rigorous laws of Rome testify to the stamina of her people.
-The father to whom a deformed son was born must cause the child to be
-put to death, and any citizen might kill the man who betrayed the design
-of becoming king.
-
-A scientific system of education would have conserved and developed the
-noble and eliminated the ignoble traits of Roman character. But neither
-Roman education, philosophy, nor ethics inculcated either respect for
-labor or reverence for human rights; and hence the laborer was reduced
-to slavery, and the slave made the victim of every known atrocity.
-Slavery became the corner-stone of the Roman State, and slavery and
-labor were synonymous terms. The Roman supply of laborers was maintained
-by depopulating conquered countries. In the train of the legions,
-returning to Rome in triumph, there were not only statues, paintings,
-and other works of art, but thousands of men, women, and children
-destined to slavery. And the laws in regard to slaves were terrible, as
-laws touching slavery must always be--for a state of slavery is a state
-of war. It was a law of Rome that if a slave murdered his master the
-whole family of slaves should be put to death; and Tacitus relates an
-instance of the execution of four hundred slaves for the murder of a
-citizen, their master. In the course of the servile rebellion in Sicily
-a million slaves were killed; and it should be borne in mind that they
-were valuable laborers--many of them skilled artisans. Vast numbers of
-them were exposed to wild beasts in the arena, for the popular
-amusement. The rebellion of the gladiators was put down only by a resort
-to awful atrocities, among which was the crucifixion of prisoners. The
-revolt of the allies was quelled at the cost of half a million lives.
-But slaves were plenty, for Rome had her bloody hand at the throat of
-all mankind, and her hoarse cry was, “Your life or your liberty!”
-
-Every Roman freeman was a soldier, and the cultivation of the land,
-manufactures, and all the pursuits of industry, were carried on by
-slaves. Slave labor was cheaper than the labor of animals; cattle were
-taken from the plough and slaughtered for beef that slaves--men--might
-take their places. Labor fell to the lowest degree of contempt, and the
-laborer was a thing to be spurned--for the free citizen to labor with
-his hands was more disgraceful than to die of starvation. Hence there
-was a class of citizen paupers to whom largesses of corn were doled out
-by the demagogues of the Senate and the army. Ultimately these
-citizen-paupers became so vile and filthy that they engendered leprosy
-and other loathsome diseases, as they dragged their palsied limbs
-through the streets of the city, crying, “Bread and circuses! bread and
-circuses!”
-
-Roman education was confined almost exclusively to the training of the
-sons of rich citizens in the arts of politics and war; and in a State
-where labor was despised, and whose corner-stone was slavery, and whose
-shibboleth was conquest, the baseness of these arts may be imagined but
-hardly described. It promoted selfishness, and in the course of
-centuries selfishness transformed Roman courage into cruelty, and Roman
-fortitude into brutal stoicism. The Roman sense of justice was swallowed
-up in Roman lust of power. Rome became the great robber nation of the
-world. She was on the land what Greece had once been on the sea--a
-pirate. She made the streets of the cities she conquered run with
-blood. Thousands of captives she doomed to death; other thousands graced
-the triumphs of her generals, and the spoil saved from the fury of the
-flames, and the more ungovernable fury of the licentious soldiery, was
-carried home to the Eternal City, there to fall into the hands of the
-most cunning among the demagogues, for use in the bribery of courts,
-senators, and the populace.
-
-Tacitus deplored the decline of public virtue. He declared, mournfully,
-that “Nothing was sacred, nothing safe from the hand of rapacity.” His
-environment blinded him to the true cause of the depravity he so
-eloquently deplored--selfishness. Had he been familiar with the
-inductive method he would have found in a defective system of education
-the cause of Roman venality and corruption. He might thus have realized
-the weakness of a community of men who wanted the necessary force and
-virtue to depose a Tiberius and elevate to his place a Germanicus; or to
-dethrone a Domitian and crown in his stead an Agricola.
-
-Education in Rome deified selfishness, and hence realized its last
-analysis--total depravity. Of course nothing was sacred in a community
-where men were ruthlessly trampled underfoot! Of course nothing was
-“safe from the hand of rapacity” where the laborer was degraded to a
-place in the social scale below the leprous pauper whose filthy person
-provoked disgust, and whose poisonous breath, as he cried for bread,
-spread abroad disease and death!
-
-It was inevitable that the nation that grew rich through plunder should
-grow poor in public and private virtue. And such was the fact. The
-eagles that protected robbers abroad, spread their sheltering wings over
-defaulters, bribers, and thieves at home. There had been a time in Rome
-when bribery was punishable with death, but now candidates for office
-sat at tables in the streets near the polling-places and openly paid the
-citizens for their votes. The change in the habits of the people was as
-pronounced as the change in the laws. The early triumphs of the Romans
-were industrial--flocks and herds; their trophies, obtained in single
-combat, consisted of spears and helmets. When Cincinnatus was sent for
-to assume the dictatorship he was found in his field following the
-plough. Valerius, four times consul, and by Livy characterized as the
-first man of his time, died so poor that he had to be buried at the
-public charge. But with the fall of Greece and Carthage, and the
-reduction of Asia, there was a great social change at Rome. The Roman
-legions not only carried home the wealth of the countries they conquered
-but the vices of the peoples they subdued. An ancient writer summarizes
-the situation in the following graphic sentence: “The only fashionable
-principles were to acquire wealth by every means of avarice and
-injustice, and to dissipate it by every method of luxury and profusion.”
-
-The end is not far off. The story of Persia, of Egypt, and of Greece is
-the story equally of Rome. Avarice and injustice, luxury and profusion
-do their sure work. The Roman civilization is more than a thousand years
-old. Asiatic wealth, the luxury and false philosophy of Greece, and a
-vicious system of education, promoting selfishness, have united to sap
-its foundations. Society is divided into three classes--an aristocracy
-based solely upon wealth, cruel and profligate, a mob of free citizens,
-otherwise paupers, who live by beggary and the sale of their votes, and
-laborers who are slaves.
-
-On the occasion of the presentation of spectacles, among a variety of
-presents slaves (laborers) are thrown into the arena to be scrambled for
-by the free citizens! But men are cheap. In Asia they sell for sixpence
-apiece, and Rome has only to send an army there to get them for nothing.
-To this class, to these slaves, however, the Roman people are indebted
-for all the arts which make life agreeable. They construct all the great
-public works. They build the splendid roads over which the Roman legions
-follow their generals in triumph home to Rome. They make the aqueducts,
-dig the canals, and construct the buildings, public and private, whose
-remains still attest their magnificence--the Forum, the amphitheatres,
-and the golden house of the Cæsars. They build the villas overlooking
-the Bay of Naples, in which the nobles live in riot and wantonness; they
-cook the dinners given in those villas; they make the clothes the nobles
-wear, and the jewels that adorn their persons. They cultivate the
-fields, follow the plough, train and trim the vine, and gather in the
-harvest. They raise the corn that is distributed by the nobles among the
-soldiery, and given as a bribe to the diseased and debauched free
-citizens for their votes. They feel deeply the injustice of their lot,
-and, like men, strike for liberty. But the Roman legions are set on them
-like blood-hounds, and hundreds of thousands of them are slaughtered and
-made food for birds of prey, and other thousands are thrown into the
-arena to be torn by wild beasts, and still others are bestowed as gifts
-upon the populace at the games.
-
-The contest between the rich and the poor is at an end; the rich are
-millionaires, the poor are beggars. It is the story of Dives and Lazarus
-over again. The rich are clothed in purple and fine linen, and fare
-sumptuously every day; the poor are full of sores, and live upon the
-crumbs that fall from the tables of the rich. Rome topples to her fall.
-The Gothic invader is at her gates, and there is no army to defend them.
-The barbarian demands a ransom. To obtain it the statues are despoiled
-of their ornaments and precious stones, and the gods of gold and silver
-are melted in the fire. The ransom is given, and Alaric retires. But he
-returns, and this time to pillage. The city is sacked; rich and poor,
-bond and free, are whelmed in one common ruin. At last the diabolic wish
-of the infamous Caligula is realized. The Roman people have but one
-neck, and the Goth puts his foot upon it. Rome falls, the victim of her
-own crimes, strangled by her own gluttony. Thus ends the first period of
-the world’s manhood--ends in exhaustion, and a syncope which is destined
-to last a thousand years.
-
-Long before the fall of the republic Rome had become the seat of all the
-world’s learning. In robbing conquered countries she not only took their
-gold and silver, a share of their people for slaves, and their works of
-art, but their libraries, their philosophy, and their literature. But
-neither the Greek nor the Roman philosophy contributed in the least to a
-solution of the pressing social problems of the time. The wise men of
-Rome were powerless to help either themselves or their fellow-men,
-because their philosophy was false. It was purely speculative; it had no
-body of facts to rest upon.
-
-The Roman educators and philosophers were almost as ignorant of
-physiology as Plato was hundreds of years before, hence they were unable
-to study the mind in the sole way in which it is intelligently
-approachable, namely, through its bodily manifestations. In studying the
-mind as an independent entity there could be no general rules of
-investigation. The metaphysical philosopher did not study the mind of
-man; he explored his own mind merely--consulted his own inner
-consciousness. Hence there were, in Rome, as many systems of philosophy,
-more or less clearly defined and distinct, as there were philosophers.
-But they were merely metaphysical speculations, dreams, dependent upon
-purely subjective processes; and those processes were in turn dependent
-upon the ever-changing states of mind of each philosopher.
-
-It is obvious that these systems of philosophy could exert no influence
-upon the community at large, for the community formed no part of the
-subject matter of their speculations. But they did exert an influence,
-and a very pernicious one, upon the philosophers themselves, and indeed
-upon all the cultured men of Rome; for they were thereby made thoroughly
-selfish, and so rendered incapable of forming a just judgment of public
-affairs. In considering the mind apart from the body, the body naturally
-fell into utter contempt. This was the great crime of speculative
-philosophy; for in engendering a feeling of contempt for the human body
-it furnished an excuse for slavery. And this contempt logically included
-manual labor, for the only manual laborer was a slave; and it also
-extended to the useful arts, for all those arts were the work of slaves.
-Hence the laborer, being a slave, was placed lower in the social scale
-than the pauper who sold his vote for a glass of wine. And thus it came
-about that a factitious right--the right of suffrage--was more highly
-esteemed by the public than the cardinal virtue of industry, upon which
-alone the perpetuity of the social compact depends.
-
-And, again, the wretched state of public morals may be inferred from the
-fact that the right of suffrage, through which the idle, leprous pauper
-was elevated above the industrious laborer and above the useful arts,
-was notoriously the subject of open traffic in the streets of Rome on
-every election day. Thus Roman philosophy landed the Roman people in the
-last ditch, for it led to the deification of abstract ideas and to scorn
-of things. That this utter perversion of the truth and wreck of justice
-was the cause of the decline of the Roman Empire there is no doubt.
-
-It is equally plain that the noted men of Rome were utterly ignorant of
-the cause of the disorders which afflicted the body politic. There is no
-evidence, either in their lives or their works, that they brought to the
-consideration of the great social problems of the time any practical
-philosophy whatever. Suetonius, with a graphic pen, portrays the
-cruelties of the Cæsars, but hints at no cause therefor inherent in the
-social system. Cicero forecasts the doom of the republic, but has no
-remedy to propose except that of the elevation of Pompey rather than
-Cæsar. Livy and Tacitus deplore the decay of public and private virtue,
-but are silent on the subject of the infamy of slavery and on the shame
-of degrading labor. The moral sentiments of Seneca and Aurelius are of
-the most elevated character, but the fact that they ignore slavery, the
-slave, the laborer, and the useful arts, shows either that they never
-thought upon those fundamental social questions, or that their thoughts
-ran in the popular channel; in a word, that their philosophy was so
-shallow as to render them callous to the great crimes upon which the
-Roman State rested.
-
-That the subjective philosophy and the defective educational system of
-the Romans rendered them selfish, and hence corrupt, there is abundant
-evidence. Cicero professed the most lofty patriotism, but he was
-without moral courage. It was he who congratulated the public men of
-Rome, after the usurpation of Cæsar, upon the privilege of remaining
-“totally silent!” He regarded Pompey as “the greatest man the world had
-ever produced,” but deserted him in his extremity, which was equally the
-extremity of his country. He denounced Cæsar as the cause of the
-culminating misfortunes of Rome, but went down upon his knees to him,
-and rose to his feet only to exhaust all the resources of his matchless
-eloquence in fulsome adulation of the destroyer of the Republic.
-
-Seneca’s moral precepts are sublime, but his political maxims are
-atrocious. Witness this pretence of an all-embracing love for
-man--“Whenever thou seest a fellow-creature in distress know that thou
-seest a human being.” Contrast with this exalted sentiment of the great
-stoic his political maxim--“Terror is the safeguard of a kingdom”--and
-reflect that he lived under the reigns of Claudius and Nero. The
-millions of slaves in the Roman dominions were “human beings,” but
-Seneca had no practical regard for them as “fellow-creatures in
-distress.” His beautiful humanitarian sentiment was a barren
-ideality--it bore no fruit; but his brutal political maxim caused him to
-thrive. Under the favor of Claudius he amassed a vast fortune. His
-palace in the city was sumptuously furnished, his country-seats were
-splendidly appointed, and he possessed abundance of ready money. “There
-can be no happiness without virtue,” exclaims this prosperous Roman
-citizen. But while he pens this lofty sentiment he is accused of
-avarice, usury, and extortion, charged with complicity in the Piso
-conspiracy, and banished for the crime of adultery.
-
-The debasing influence of the Greek philosophy, upon the Roman people,
-is shown by contrasting the characters of the distinguished men who were
-honored by the public at widely separated periods of time. Thus, during
-the period 400-350 B.C., Camillus, noted above all his contemporaries
-for the purity of his public life, was uninterruptedly honored with the
-highest offices in the State, and loved and respected by all classes of
-the community. But three hundred years later Cæsar, who involved the
-country in civil war to compass his ambition, and in which struggle
-liberty perished--he was preferred, in all the political struggles
-preliminary to his assumption of supreme power, to Cato, whose
-patriotism was unquestioned, and whose rigid virtue was proverbial
-throughout the Roman Empire. So also of a still later period, Agricola
-and Germanicus were renowned for the possession of the highest qualities
-of true manhood, joined to the practice in public life of the most
-austere and self-sacrificing virtue. Both served the State with courage,
-ability, and zeal; but the one, after a brilliant career in the West,
-was forced into retirement, and the other, after splendid services in
-the East, was exiled and poisoned.
-
-Previous to the introduction of the Greek philosophy, and the Greek
-education and social habits, the Roman people were worthy of their
-noblest representative--Camillus. At that early period of their history
-they rewarded virtue and punished vice. But during the Empire, after the
-invasion of Greek manners, they were unworthy of their best
-representatives--Cato, Germanicus, and Agricola. To those great and good
-men they preferred Cæsar, Caligula, and Nero: they rewarded vice and
-punished virtue. There is in this circumstance unquestionable evidence
-of a great declension in character. But the remarkable fact in regard to
-this period of Roman history is that the declension in character was
-accompanied by a species of great mental growth or power.
-
-During this period a literature was created which has ever since been
-famous, and which still exerts a considerable influence upon man.
-Cæsar’s Commentaries, the Orations of Cicero, the Annals of Tacitus,
-Livy’s History, the Odes and Satires of Horace, the Meditations of
-Aurelius, and the Morals of Seneca are in all the world’s libraries,
-and, in the universities, are placed in the hands of the most favored
-youth of all the civilized countries of the world, as models of style
-and exponents of a civilization whence all modern civilizations sprung.
-But this literature possessed no saving quality, because in so far as it
-was elevated in morals it did not represent the Roman people, not even
-the authors themselves generally, as has been shown. As a matter of
-fact, during the period of the creation of the great literature of Rome,
-Darwin’s law of “reversion” was in active operation. There was a “black
-sheep” in every noble Roman family. Bad men appeared, not now and then,
-at long intervals, as in all civilizations, but every day and
-everywhere; and these men were political and social leaders. They
-moulded the policy of the State and set the fashion in society. Under
-their direction the Roman people retrograded towards a state of
-savagery, and savagery is but another name for selfishness. Selfishness
-in its worst estate is the essence of human depravity, and to that
-condition the Roman people fell, at the time when their moralists were
-inditing those sublime sentiments which still challenge the admiration
-of all great and good men.
-
-That the Roman people were as dead to the influence of high moral
-sentiments as the Britons were when first encountered by Cæsar, shows
-that they had degenerated to a similar condition of savagery, or to a
-condition of absolute selfishness, which is its moral equivalent. Given
-a savage state, two savages and one dinner; the savages will fight to
-the death for the dinner. Given a state of civilization absolutely
-selfish, two contestants and one prize; each contestant will exhaust all
-the resources of artifice, duplicity, and falsehood to secure the prize.
-To this deplorable condition the Roman people were reduced by subjective
-educational processes. Selfishness causes the individual to seek his own
-interest in total disregard of the interest of others. Hence it tends
-directly to the disintegration of society, since the essence of the
-civil compact is the pledge of each member of the community that he will
-do no injury to his fellows. Selfishness violates this pledge; for to
-gain its end it ruthlessly crushes whatever appears in its path.
-
-In Rome selfishness did its complete work. It transformed the government
-from a pure democracy into an oligarchy composed of wealthy citizens,
-who called themselves nobles. By this class wealth was made the sole
-standard of social and political distinction, and in its presence, and
-through its influence, the old strife between the patricians and the
-plebeians gave way to a state of hostility between the rich and the
-poor--always the last analysis of social disorder. The contest was
-distinguished by assassinations, embezzlements of the public money, the
-quarrels of rival demagogues, and civil wars, and it culminated in Cæsar
-and the empire.
-
-The nobles, or aristocrats, who wrought the work of transformation, were
-refined and elegant in their manners, and accomplished in the tricks of
-finance, the technicalities of the law, and the arts of oratory. They
-were the product of the Roman schools of rhetoric and logic, whose
-subjective methods obscured the truth, promoted vanity, and deified
-selfishness. All the guards of honor and rectitude having been swept
-away by Cæsar, a savage contest for supremacy ensued among the
-aristocrats. The prize for which they contended consisted of the spoil
-of the Roman legions and the product of the labor of the Roman slaves.
-This was the Roman patrimony--the price of blood and of the sweat of
-enforced toil. For this prize the Roman aristocrats struggled like
-savages fighting for the one dinner.
-
-It is the old struggle, the struggle witnessed by each, in turn, of the
-nations of antiquity--the struggle in which selfishness vanquishes
-itself. But this is a struggle of giants, is on a grander scale, and is
-more conspicuous, for the historian, pen in hand, records its bloody
-scenes. It is the last act in a great drama, a drama that has lasted a
-thousand years. It is the conclusion of the long struggle of a few
-large-brained, unscrupulous individuals, to grasp the fruits of the toil
-of all men. The conspirators are about to fail, as such conspiracies
-have always failed and must always fail, and like Samson in his blind
-fury they will pull down upon their own devoted heads the pillars of the
-temple. The struggle culminates in a hand-to-hand conflict for the
-mastery between the baffled chiefs of the conspiracy to enslave
-mankind--the supreme effort of selfishness--and it involves the authors
-and their victims in one common disaster. Once more it is proved that a
-false system of education, a system which exalts abstract ideas and
-degrades things, promotes selfishness; that selfishness is the
-equivalent of savagery, and that savagery, however refined, wrecks
-society.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII.
-
-EDUCATION AND THE SOCIAL PROBLEM--HISTORIC.
-
-_THE MIDDLE AGES._
-
- The Trinity upon which Civilization Rests: Justice, the Arts, and
- Labor; and these Depend upon Scientific Education. -- Reason of the
- Failure of Theodoric and Charlemagne to Reconstruct the Pagan
- Civilization. -- Contempt of Man. -- Serfdom. -- The Vices of the
- Time: False Philosophy, an Odious Social Caste, and Ignorance. -- The
- Splendid Career of the Moors in Spain, in Contrast. -- Effect upon
- Spain of the Expulsion of the Moors. -- The Repressive Force of
- Authority and the Atrocious Philosophy of Contempt of Man. -- The Rule
- of Italy -- a Menace and a Sneer. -- The work of Regeneration. -- The
- Crusades. -- The Destruction of Feudalism. -- The Invention of
- Printing. -- The Discovery of America. -- Investigation. --
- Discoveries in Science and Art.
-
-
-Civilization languishes in an atmosphere of injustice, and if the
-injustice is gross, as slavery, for example, and long continued, the
-State perishes in the social convulsion which ensues. Thus perished the
-nations of antiquity. Civilization depends upon the useful arts; in them
-it had its origin, and with them it advances. The savage, in his most
-primitive state, is ignorant of all the arts; the most highly civilized
-man is familiar with, and under obligations to, all of them. The useful
-arts depend upon labor. If the laborer is degraded, the useful arts
-decline, as he sinks, in the social scale; if he is honored, they
-advance, as he rises. The trinity upon which civilization rests is,
-therefore, justice, the useful arts, and labor; and this trinity of
-saving forces depends in turn upon the scientific education of man.
-Rome held all these things in contempt, and Rome perished. Anarchy
-ensued, and, from a state of governmental chaos, the feudal system was
-evolved. A brief analysis of the history of the mediæval period will
-show that education was unscientific, and consequently that justice was
-scorned, the useful arts neglected, and labor despised.
-
-Theodoric strove to stem the tide of demoralization which succeeded the
-overthrow of the pagans in Italy. He was a semi-barbarian, but a man of
-genius, and ten years of his youth, spent at Constantinople, taught him
-the value of civilization. Under his reign there was a restoration of
-the common industries, work on internal improvements was resumed, and
-there was a revival of polite literature and the fine arts. But there
-was no general prosperity because there was no general system of
-education. Polite literature must rest upon a basis of general culture,
-or it is valueless to the country in which it flourishes. So of the fine
-arts; they can exist legitimately only as the natural outgrowth and
-embellishment of the useful arts.[80] In the due order of development
-the useful precede the fine arts. Theodoric began the reconstruction of
-the exhausted Roman civilization from the top, and his work was a
-complete failure, of course, because it had no foundation. It was like
-the Greek and Roman philosophy, it had no basis of things to rest upon.
-Hence the order evoked from chaos by the great Ostrogoth to chaos soon
-returned.
-
- [80] “But it is one thing to admit that æsthetic culture is in a high
- degree conducive to human happiness, and another thing to admit that
- it is a fundamental requisite to human happiness. However important it
- may be, it must yield precedence to those kinds of culture which bear
- more directly upon the duties of life. As before hinted, literature
- and the fine arts are made possible by those activities which make
- individual and social life possible; and manifestly that which is made
- possible must be postponed to that which makes it
- possible.”--“Education,” p. 72. By Herbert Spencer. New York: D.
- Appleton & Co., 1883.
-
-Charlemagne also attempted to reconstruct a worn-out civilization
-through the revival of polite literature and the fine arts. He assembled
-at his court distinguished _littérateurs_ from all parts of the world,
-with the view of reviving classical learning. He established a normal
-school called “The Palatine,” whence classically trained teachers were
-sent into the provinces. He constructed gorgeous palaces, some of which
-were ornamented with columns and sculptural fragments, the spoil of the
-earlier architectural triumphs of Italy. But he did not found schools
-for the education of the common people. The common people were serfs.
-The theory of Plato still prevailed, namely, that the majority is always
-dull, and always wrong; that wisdom and virtue reside in the minority.
-In pursuance of this theory, which happens, curiously enough, to inure
-to the exclusive benefit of its inventors and supporters, education was
-confined to a small class. The training of the masses was wholly
-neglected, and they were poor, ignorant, and brutal. The state of
-mediæval society is graphically summarized by a modern historian:
-
-“In the castle sits the baron, with his children on his lap, and his
-wife leaning on his shoulder; the troubadour sings, and the page and the
-demoiselle exchange a glance of love. The castle is the home of music
-and chivalry and family affection; the convent is the home of religion
-and of art. But the people cower in their wooden huts, half starved,
-half frozen, and wolves sniff at them through the chinks in the walls.
-The convent prays and the castle sings; the cottage hungers and groans
-and dies.”[81]
-
- [81] “The Martyrdom of Man.” By Winwood Reade. New York: Charles P.
- Somerby, 1876.
-
-Enterprise was the slave of superstition and ignorance. Some monks in
-Germany desired to erect a corn-mill, but a neighboring lord objected,
-declaring that the wind belonged to him. The useful arts were unknown
-and unstudied except by the monks, and their practice of them was
-confined chiefly to fashioning utensils for the use of the altar.
-Mankind lay in a state of intellectual and moral paralysis. Feudalism
-emasculated human energy. One art only flourished--the art of war. The
-pursuit of any of the useful arts, beyond that of agriculture, by the
-serfs, was impracticable, since sufficient time could not be spared from
-feudal strife for the proper tillage of the soil. The vassal was always
-subject to summary call to arms. If in the spring the noble wished to
-fight, the fields remained unplanted; if he wished to fight in the fall,
-the harvest remained ungathered. The serf, therefore, led a precarious
-life. If he escaped death in battle, he was still quite likely to die of
-starvation. In the fertile plains of Lombardy, in the first half of the
-thirteenth century, there were five famines!
-
-Nothing happens without due cause. The misfortunes suffered by the
-people of Europe during the Middle Ages did not fall upon them from the
-clouds. The moral darkness which veiled the face of justice, and the
-intellectual stupor which prevented scientific and art researches, are
-not inexplicable mysteries. The vices, the cruelties, the poverty, and
-the pitiable superstitions of that time were the product of a false
-philosophy, an odious social caste, and a state of general ignorance.
-
-It happens that for hundreds of years of this period of wretchedness and
-crime there was in the heart of Europe an industrious, cultured,
-prosperous, and happy people. Their religion forbade the taking of
-usurious interest under terrible moral penalties; it also forbade “all
-distinctions of caste,” and enjoined full social equality. They were the
-friends of education. “To every mosque was attached a public school, in
-which the children of the poor were taught to read and write.” They
-established libraries in their chief cities, and were the patrons of the
-sciences and of the useful arts in all their forms. In a word, to the
-general prevalence of superstition and ignorance in Europe the Moors in
-Spain constituted a glowing exception.
-
-Wherever the Saracen went he carried science and art. He honored labor,
-and genius and learning followed in his footsteps. Taught by learned
-Jews, he studied the works of the ancient philosophers, and preserved
-and extended their knowledge of astronomy, chemistry, algebra, and
-geography. Cordova was the abode of wealth, learning, refinement, and
-the arts. Its mosques and palaces were models of architectural splendor,
-and its industries employed 200,000 families. Seville contained 16,000
-silk-looms, and employed 130,000 weavers. The banks of the Guadalquivir
-were thickly studded with those gems of free labor, manufacturing
-villages. The dyeing of silk and wool fabrics was carried to great
-perfection, and the Moorish metal-workers were the most expert of the
-time. The Saracen invented cotton paper, introduced into Spain cotton
-and leather manufactures, and promoted the cultivation of sugar-cane,
-rice, and the mulberry. Nor did he neglect agriculture in any of its
-branches; he created a new era in husbandry. His kingdom in Spain was
-the richest and most prosperous in the Western world; indeed, its
-prosperity was in striking contrast with the poverty and misery of the
-peoples by whom it was surrounded. Under the third caliph its revenue
-reached £6,000,000 sterling, a sum, as Gibbon remarks, which in the
-tenth century probably surpassed the united revenues of all the
-Christian monarchs. But these industrious, cultured people were the
-descendants of invaders, and the Spaniards, under the influence of a
-blind and unreasoning impulse of religious and patriotic zeal, drove
-them from the soil they had literally made to “blossom like the rose,”
-and themselves relapsed into a state of indolence, ignorance, and
-poverty.
-
-From the effects of the persecution of a race of artificers, and the
-proscription of the useful arts, Spain has never recovered. She has
-since always been, and is to-day, a striking exemplification of the
-verity of the proposition that stagnation in the useful arts is the
-death of civilization. In the last half of the seventeenth century the
-people of Madrid were threatened with starvation. To avert the impending
-calamity the adjacent country was scoured by the military, and the
-inhabitants compelled to yield supplies. There was danger that the Royal
-family would go hungry to bed. The tax-gatherer sold houses and
-furniture, and the inhabitants were forced to fly; the fields were left
-uncultivated, and multitudes died from want and exposure. During the
-seventeenth century Madrid lost half its population; the looms of
-Seville were silenced; the woollen manufactures of Toledo were
-transferred by the exiled Moriscoes to Tunis; Castile, Segovia, and
-Burgos lost their manufactures, and their inhabitants were reduced to
-poverty and despair.[82]
-
- [82] “The Intellectual Development of Europe,” Vol. II., Chap. II. By
- John William Draper, M.D., LL.D. New York: Harper & Brothers; “History
- of Civilization in England,” Vol. II., Chap. I. By Henry Thomas
- Buckle. New York: D. Appleton & Co., 1864.
-
-Two leading causes contributed to reduce the people of Europe during the
-Middle Ages to a state of moral obliquity, intellectual torpor, and
-physical incapacity--the repressive force of authority and the atrocious
-philosophy of contempt of man formulated by Machiavelli. The one forbade
-scientific investigation, the other strangled the spirit of invention in
-the grip of enforced ignorance. Authority chilled courage, and contempt
-withered hope. Italy governed the world, and her rule consisted of a
-menace and a sneer. Under this _régime_ of cruelty and cynicism man
-shrunk into a state of moral cowardice and intellectual lethargy.
-
-The political maxims which bear the name of Machiavelli were not
-invented by him. When he formulated them, in 1513, they had been in
-force in Italy a thousand years. These maxims explain the fact of the
-existence of a period of the world’s history known as “the Dark Ages.”
-The chief of them divides the human race into three classes, the members
-of the first of which understand things by their own natural powers; the
-second when they are explained to them; the third not at all. The third
-class embraces a vast majority of men; the second only a small number;
-the first a very small number. The first class is to rule both the other
-classes, the second by craft and duplicity, the third by authority, and,
-that failing, by force. Other maxims assume the despicable character of
-all men, and justify falsehood, duplicity, cruelty, and murder, in the
-ruling class. A single proposition shows the infamy of the whole system,
-namely, “There are three ways of deciding any contest--by fraud, by
-force, or by law, and a wise man will make the most suitable
-choice.”[83] These are maxims not of civilization but of barbarism. They
-involve a state of slavery, and where slavery exists the useful arts
-decline, and ultimately perish. And so it was in the Middle Ages.
-
- [83] “The Prince,” Chap. XVIII. By Niccolo Machiavelli.
-
-Several great events led to the emancipation of the people of Europe
-from the joint reign of authority and contempt. The learning of the Jews
-and Saracens--their knowledge of the arts and sciences--gradually
-spread, and occupied the minds of cloistered students, giving to them an
-intellectual impulse. The Crusades, pitiful and prolific of horrors as
-they were, shed a great light upon Europe. They brought the men of the
-West face to face with a practical progressive civilization--a
-civilization that “filled the earth with prodigies of human skill.” The
-Crusaders were told that they would be led against hordes of barbarians.
-What astonishment must have seized them when they stood under the walls
-of Constantinople and beheld its splendors! Nor was their surprise less,
-doubtless, in the character of the foe they encountered. They had
-expected to meet with treachery and cruelty; they found chivalry,
-courtesy, and high culture.[84]
-
- [84] “The Intellectual Development of Europe,” Vol. II., pp. 135, 136.
- By John William Draper, M.D., LL.D. New York: Harper & Brothers.
-
-These surprises and contrasts profoundly impressed the Crusaders, and
-they returned to Europe relieved of many illusions, and notably of the
-fallacy that the wealth of Eastern princes was destined to supply the
-waste of their own squandered estates. They returned, too, to find a new
-civilization in process of development. Two hundred years of comparative
-freedom from the repressive force of feudalism changed the face of the
-country and the character of its people. During the absence of the
-nobles, in the Holy Land, a middle class sprung into existence,
-possessing the qualities which always distinguish that class--thrift and
-prudence. The mortgaged estates of the Crusaders had fallen partly into
-their hands, and partly into the hands of the Crown. Towns had sprung
-up, and a commercial class and a manufacturing class had been formed.
-The artisan became a factor in the social problem. He offered his wares
-to the lords and ladies of the castles, and they bought themselves poor.
-As Emerson says, “The banker with his seven per cent. drove the earl out
-of his castle.” In the eleventh century nobility was above price, in the
-thirteenth it was for sale, and soon afterwards it was offered as a
-gift.
-
-The invention of printing, the art preservative of all arts, removed the
-seal from the lips of learning. The desire to conceal is no match for
-the desire to print. Thenceforth, through the medium of types, the voice
-of genius was destined to reach to the ends of the earth; and, more
-important still, every discovery in science, and every invention in art,
-became the sure heritage of future ages.
-
-The discovery of America was the crowning act of man’s emancipation. In
-sweeping away the last vestige of the theory on which patristic
-geography was based, Columbus freed mankind. In the cry of “land ho!”
-with which he greeted the new continent, he sounded the death-knell of
-intellectual slavery. His was the last act in a series of acts which
-struck off the shackles of thought, and let in upon the long night of
-the Middle Ages the clear light of day. Leonardo da Vinci took up the
-interrupted work of Archimedes, and the science of mechanics made rapid
-progress. At last it was correctly observed that “experiment is the only
-interpreter of nature,” and the development of natural philosophy began.
-Bruno was still to be burned, and Galileo imprisoned. But the
-persecutors of those great men were no longer moved by mere blind zeal.
-They believed and trembled, and in seeking to drown the truth in the
-blood of the votaries of science, they rendered it more conspicuous. By
-the light of the flames which consumed the body of the too daring
-philosopher a thousand scientists studied the stars, the earth, and the
-air.
-
-The invention of printing paralyzed authority, and the discovery of
-America gave wings to hope. A few manuscripts could be locked in vaults
-or burned, but millions of books must inevitably, ultimately, find their
-way to the people. Books were, therefore, the sure promise of universal
-culture--the precursor of the common school. The discovery of another
-continent startled the people of Europe from the deep sleep of a
-thousand years, and sent a fresh current of blood surging through their
-veins. It seemed like a sort of new creation, and appealed powerfully to
-the imagination. And it is always the imagination that “blazes” the path
-to glorious achievements. It is through the imagination that men are
-moved to “crave after the unseen,” and through the imagination that the
-human mind becomes big with “bold and lofty conceptions.” A new world
-having been discovered by one man, it was natural that all men should
-be put upon inquiry. Hence the era of investigation, the resulting
-discoveries of science, and their innumerable applications, through the
-useful arts, to the fast multiplying needs of man.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV.
-
-EDUCATION AND THE SOCIAL PROBLEM--HISTORIC.
-
-_EUROPE._
-
- The Standing Army a Legacy of Evil from the Middle Ages. -- It is the
- Controlling Feature of the European Situation. -- Its Collateral
- Evils: Wars and Debts. -- The Debts of Europe Represent a Series of
- Colossal Crimes against the People; with the Armies and Navies they
- Absorb the Bulk of the Annual Revenue. -- The People Fleeing from
- them. -- They Threaten Bankruptcy; they Prevent Education. -- Germany,
- the best-educated Nation in Europe, losing most by Emigration. -- Her
- People will not Endure the Standing Army. -- The Folly of the European
- International Policy of Hate. -- It is Possible for Europe to Restore
- to Productive Employments 3,000,000 of men, to place at the Disposal
- of her Educators $700,000,000, instead of $70,000,000 per annum, and
- to pay her National Debts in Fifty-four Years, simply by the
- Disbandment of her Armies and Navies. -- The Armament of Europe Stands
- in the Way of Universal Education and of Universal Industrial
- Prosperity. -- Standing Armies the Last Analysis of Selfishness; they
- are Coeval with the Revival during the Middle Ages of the Greco-Roman
- Subjective Methods of Education. -- They must go out when the New
- Education comes in.
-
-
-The mediæval period conferred upon man two great blessings--a new
-continent and the art of printing. It also left a legacy of evil. With
-the partition of Europe into great States the modern age began, and it
-began with this inheritance of evil from the Middle Ages--the standing
-army.
-
-The feudal lords wrecked their estates and sacrificed their lives during
-the Crusades, and a middle class arose and united with the kings in the
-government of the State. But this alliance was of short duration; it
-soon gave way to an alliance which proved to be enduring--an alliance
-between the aristocracy and the kings.
-
-By the ruin of feudalism thousands of serfs were set free. Trained to
-arms, it was easy to make soldiers of them. They were accordingly
-converted into mercenary troops--mustered into the service of the new
-alliance as guards of the modern State. Thus the standing armies of the
-“great powers” originated. This legacy of evil has so increased in
-magnitude that it is, to-day, the dominant feature of European public
-economy, and the portentous fact of the social problem.
-
-The standing armies of Europe number two million five hundred thousand
-men, and their naval auxiliaries consist of three thousand vessels,
-thirty thousand guns, and two hundred thousand men. This is the mammoth
-evil bequeathed to Europe by the Middle Ages, and out of it many
-collateral evils have sprung, as wars, debts, and exorbitant tax
-levies.[E25]
-
-Thirty years ago the national debts of the governments of Europe had
-risen to $9,000,000,000. Since that time they have almost trebled! The
-cause of this vast increase is easy to find. It consists chiefly of four
-great wars, namely, the Crimean war of 1854-56, the Franco-Sardinian war
-against Austria in 1859, the German-Italian war of 1866, and the
-Franco-Prussian war of 1870-72. These wars were waged to maintain what
-is termed the balance of power; they involved no principle affecting the
-rights of man. Whatever their issue, no gain could hence accrue to the
-people of Europe. And this is the nature of most of the wars in which
-the standing armies of Europe have been employed since their
-organization. But the European budget shows that they are the
-overshadowing feature of the European governmental systems.
-
-The annual revenue of the States of Europe is about $1,725,000,000. Of
-this sum $700,000,000 is devoted to the support of the standing armies
-and navies, and as much more is required to meet the interest charge on
-the debts created in the prosecution of wars waged to maintain the
-balance of power! Thus, of the aggregate of European revenue, the sum of
-$1,400,000,000 is devoted to the purely supposititious theory that the
-subjects of the great powers are inflamed with an intense desire to cut
-one another’s throats, while the small sum of $325,000,000 is left for
-the support of the civil service, comprising all the strictly legitimate
-objects of government, and including education!
-
-The national debts of Europe represent a series of colossal crimes
-against the people. They were incurred in the prosecution of unnecessary
-wars, and for the support of unnecessary standing armies. With relation
-to these debts the people are divided into two classes--one class owns
-them and the other class pays interest on them. This relationship
-comprehends future generations in perpetuity. Every child born in Europe
-inherits either an estate in these debts or an obligation to contribute
-towards the payment of the interest upon them. Thus the fruits of a
-great crime have been transmuted into a vested right in one class of
-people, and into a vested wrong in another class.[85]
-
- [85] “For instance, I have seven thousand pounds in what we call the
- Funds or Founded things; but I am not comfortable about the founding
- of them. All that I can see of them is a square bit of paper, with
- some ugly printing on it, and all that I know of them is that this bit
- of paper gives me the right to tax you every year, and make you pay me
- two hundred pounds out of your wages; which is very pleasant for me;
- but how long will you be pleased to do so? Suppose it should occur to
- you, any summer’s day, that you had better not? Where would my seven
- thousand pounds be? In fact, where are they now? We call ourselves a
- rich people; but you see this seven thousand pounds of mine has no
- real existence--it only means that you, the workers, are poorer by two
- hundred pounds a year than you would be if I hadn’t got it. And this
- is surely a very odd kind of money for a country to boast of.”--“Fors
- Clavigera,” Part I., p. 67. By John Ruskin, LL.D. New York: John Wiley
- & Sons, 1880.
-
-If the European standing armies and navies had not been raised and kept
-up, and if the revenue devoted to their support had been expended for
-schools, there would not now be an uneducated person in Europe. If these
-standing armies and navies were now disbanded, and the revenue at
-present expended for their support diverted to the support of schools,
-and so applied continuously for half a century, there would not be, at
-the end of that period, an illiterate person in Europe.
-
-Under existing conditions the debts of the European nations cannot be
-paid. But vast as the sum of them is, their payment is not only
-possible, but practicable in a very short time. Disband the standing
-armies and navies, and continue the present rate of taxation, and there
-would be an annual surplus revenue of $700,000,000. Apply this sum,
-together with the surplus of the interest appropriation, accruing
-through the resulting yearly decrease of the interest charge, to the
-liquidation of these debts, and they would be extinguished in about
-twenty years.[E26] But if the period during which provision is made for
-the extinguishment of these debts be extended to fifty-four years, and,
-meantime, the present rate of taxation be maintained, there would be
-released and rendered available for educational purposes, annually, the
-sum of $600,000,000.
-
-What is the purpose, it may be inquired, of these calculations? Their
-purpose is to show what the armies and navies of Europe cost, and what
-they stand in the way of. They cost so much that not a dollar of the
-national debts of Europe can be paid while they continue to exist. They
-cost so much that the people who are taxed to support them are fleeing
-from them as from a scourge. They cost so much that the decline of the
-nations which support them has already begun, and this decline can be
-arrested only by their disbandment.
-
-That the nations of Europe are declining is shown by the statistics of
-emigration. The foundation of national prosperity is manual labor. There
-must be a solid basis of industrial growth for the superstructure of
-elegance, refinement, luxury, and culture. Manual labor is as essential
-to triumphs in literature, music, and the fine arts as the foundations
-of the Brooklyn Bridge, buried in the earth, are to the beautiful arch
-which spans the great river. And in the strife for supremacy between the
-nations of the world the maintenance of these triumphs depends, also,
-upon manual labor.[86] The real flower of a population is, therefore,
-its labor class. All other classes depend upon it, and all national
-triumphs spring from it. Hence a drain upon the labor class of a nation
-is a drain upon its most vital resource. The nation that suffers such a
-drain continuously is in its decadence. It loses some of its vigor, some
-of its productive power, and the loss is not supplied. True, the poor
-emigrant takes with him no part of the splendors of the country he
-leaves, but his brawny arm and skilled hand have contributed to the
-support of national pomp and social elegance, and as he steps aboard the
-steamer he withdraws that support forever.
-
- [86] “Now, therefore, see briefly what it all comes to. First, you
- spend eighty millions of money in fireworks [war], doing no end of
- damage in letting them off.
-
- “Then you borrow money to pay the firework-maker’s bill, from any
- gain-loving persons who have got it.
-
- “And then, dressing your bailiff’s men in new red coats and cocked
- hats, you send them drumming and trumpeting into the fields, to take
- the peasants by the throat, and make them pay the interest on what you
- have borrowed, and the expense of the cocked hats besides.
-
- “That is ‘financiering,’ my friends, as the mob of the money-makers
- understand it. And they understand it well. For that is what it always
- comes to, finally--taking the peasant by the throat. He _must_
- pay--for he only _can_. Food can only be got out of the ground, and
- all these devices of soldiership, and law, and arithmetic, are but
- ways of getting at last down to him, the furrow-driver, and snatching
- the roots from him as he digs.”--“Fors Clavigera,” Part II., p. 27. By
- John Ruskin, LL.D. New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1882.
-
-Napoleon the Infamous plundered the conquered capitals of Europe to
-beautify and enrich the art treasuries of Paris. The art treasures of
-Europe are destined to cross the ocean, in the track of the column of
-emigration, if the flower of her labor class continues to flee from her
-standing armies and navies, as the statues of Rome followed the army of
-the modern Cæsar. For where the flower of the world’s labor class
-gathers, there wealth most abounds. Labor, not gold and silver, is the
-source of wealth, hence it is to the laborer that art triumphs are due,
-and this is the order of their development. The laborer provides for
-immediate, pressing wants; he is prudent, and accumulates a surplus; he
-hungers for education; he develops a love of the beautiful; he seeks to
-dignify his life and adorn his home; he patronizes art; he draws to
-himself the art treasures of the world.
-
-The standing armies and navies of Europe have cost the European laborer
-the sacrifice of all these pleasing and noble aspirations.[E27] Beyond
-the point of providing for “immediate pressing wants” he has not been
-able to pass. His surplus goes to the tax-gatherer, to feed and clothe
-the army and the navy. His desire for education, his love of the
-beautiful, his hope of a dignified life, and of a home adorned by
-art--these all are dreams, illusions, which vanish into thin air in the
-presence of the substantial fact of the annual European budget--for the
-support of the standing armies and navies $700,000,000!
-
-In the way of the payment of the national debts of Europe her standing
-armies and navies rear themselves like an impassable wall. Against any
-general educational system they have hitherto constituted an
-insurmountable barrier; and in the future, as in the past, their
-maintenance dooms the masses to illiteracy. They stand in the way
-especially of the incorporation, in the curriculum of the public
-schools, of the manual element in education, because it is the most
-expensive, as it is the most important part of instruction.
-
-Germany affords an admirable example of the power of education, even
-though defective in character, and of the disgust with which standing
-armies inspire an intelligent people. The Germans are the best-educated
-people in Europe. The educational system of Germany was established by
-Prussia as a politico-economic measure after the humiliation of the
-German States by Bonaparte. Said Frederick William, “Though territory,
-power, and prestige be lost, they can be regained by acquiring
-intellectual and moral power.” The outcome of the Franco-Prussian war of
-1870 verified the truth of this prediction. Her freedom from debt
-enabled Prussia to inaugurate and carry forward a comprehensive
-educational system, which in turn enabled her not only to vanquish her
-ancient enemy, but to make France pay the cost of her own humiliation.
-Thus at a single stroke Prussia avenged the defeats suffered at the
-hands of the first Napoleon, and permanently weakened France by
-compelling her vastly to increase her national debt.
-
-The alacrity with which the French people subscribed for the new bonds
-was much remarked upon, at the time, as evincing both financial
-soundness and patriotism. But the really grave feature of the
-situation--the vast augmentation of the public burdens of France--was
-scarcely mentioned, and was, perhaps, philosophically considered only by
-that astute statesman, Prince Bismarck. The war with Germany cost France
-$2,000,000,000, and compelled an enormous increase of taxation. The debt
-statement for 1877 was $4,635,000,000--the expenditures $533,000,000;
-and of this latter sum $373,000,000 were absorbed by the army, the navy,
-and the national debt!
-
-The significant feature of the European situation is the freedom from
-debt of Germany. It is by virtue of this fact that she holds the first
-place in Europe. Her rate of taxation is as low as that of little
-Switzerland. All the other Great Powers are hampered by great debts.
-Spain is bankrupt; she does not pay the interest on her debt. Austria
-increases her debt every year; she is practically bankrupt. It is only a
-question of time, if standing armies and navies continue to be
-maintained and wars to occur, when all the debtor nations will be
-reduced to bankruptcy.[87] The nation sinks as the column of debt
-rises. France cannot double her debt again and make her people pay
-interest on it. England draws from her citizens a larger _per capita_
-revenue than any other nation of Europe, except France, and she has
-nearly touched the limit of their capacity to pay taxes. A sudden and
-considerable increase of her debt would strain the Government, and might
-shatter it.
-
- [87] “The progress of the enormous debts which at present oppress, and
- will in the long run probably ruin, all the great Nations of Europe,
- has been pretty uniform.”--“Wealth of Nations,” Vol. III., p. 392. By
- Adam Smith, LL.D., F.R.S. Edinburgh, 1819.
-
-Thus, the more searching the analysis of the European situation, the
-more clear does the exceptional strength of Germany appear. But out of
-her abundant strength a weakness has been evolved. The system of
-education that rendered the Germans so powerful against France as
-soldiers, has made them thoughtful citizens. It has revolutionized the
-public sentiment of Germany on the subject of government. In the place
-of passion it has substituted reason. The Prussian “subject” for whom
-the king thought, has become a German citizen who thinks for himself,
-and one of his earliest reflections is that, in modern civilization, a
-standing army is a solecism. The ignorant Prussian hated the French
-because hatred of them was enjoined upon him as the correlative of the
-duty of blind devotion to his king. But the educated German knows that
-the sole motive of the continuance of the standing army is the
-maintenance of the balance of power, which is merely a tacit agreement
-between the European rulers, by divine right, to perpetuate their own
-lease of power. Hence the “intellectual and moral power” conferred upon
-the German people, by education, reacts upon Germany in the form of a
-drain of the flower of her population by emigration.
-
-The citizenship of Germany is more valuable, in an economic sense, than
-that of any other country of Europe--more valuable because Germany is
-the most powerful nation of the European family of States; more valuable
-because of them all she alone is free from debt; more valuable by reason
-of her more moderate scale of taxation. But she still furnishes the
-heaviest contingent to the column of emigration steadily moving towards
-the United States. In a word, the most valuable citizenship in
-Europe--that of Germany--is least regarded and most freely surrendered.
-Why? Because the Germans are the best-educated people in Europe. Poor as
-the German primary school system is, it is universal, and it has
-destroyed what it was founded chiefly to promote and perpetuate, namely,
-reverence for, and loyalty to, government by Divine right. German
-intelligence revolts from taxation for the support of a standing army.
-It revolts from the theory and policy of hate upon which standing armies
-are based. It comprehends perfectly that the standing army is a menace
-to the freedom of the citizen, at home, rather than a defence against
-pretended danger from abroad. It scorns, as absurd, the threadbare
-assumption that Englishmen, Frenchmen, Italians, Russians, and Germans
-desire to fly at one another’s throats, and that they can be restrained
-only by a cordon of bayonets.[E28] It realizes that the perpetuation of
-the era of hate, through the standing army, retards the mental and
-physical progress of the human race, which would be greatly promoted by
-the free intermingling of the various nationalities of Europe.[88] That
-it is from the standing army that the emigrant flees is shown by the
-records of the military department of the German government.
-
- [88] The multiplicity of languages is due to the policy of
- international hate, inaugurated by the nations of Europe to promote
- the selfish purposes of rulers. Barbarism is diversity; civilization
- is unity. The human race is one, provided it is civilized, and it
- should have but one language. Language is a tool, and time consumed in
- acquiring skill in the use of more than one tool designed for the same
- end, is wasted. The standing armies of Europe obstruct the way to
- unity of language. The time will come when all civilized peoples will
- speak one tongue, probably the English. Then language will cease to be
- a mere vain accomplishment, and become what it ought always to have
- been, the simple means of familiarizing the mind with things, and of
- the communication of knowledge.
-
-In the year 1883 twenty-nine thousand men were arrested for attempting
-to emigrate from Germany to avoid the required military service, and
-more than a hundred thousand others, from whom service was due, refused,
-both to report for duty, and to furnish the required excuses for the
-failure to enroll themselves.
-
-The law of Germany requires every male citizen, capable of bearing arms,
-to serve three years in the standing army--to devote three of the best
-years of his life to the preservation of the balance of power in Europe!
-In addition, he must serve four years in the reserve, and five years in
-the landwehr. And this service is regarded as a debt due the government.
-Every male child born in Germany contracts this debt, in contemplation
-of law, in the act of drawing his first breath, and nothing but death
-releases him from the obligation. Having been taught in the emperor’s
-schools to love the emperor, when he reaches the military age, a musket
-is placed in his hands, and he is taught to shoot the emperor’s
-enemies. If he refuses to enter the army he is fined; if he refuses to
-pay the fine he is imprisoned.
-
-The German emperor attributes the decline in the military organization
-to the negligence of his military staff, but its true cause is the
-German educational system. The steady augmentation of the rolls of
-military delinquents is the measure of the growth of German
-intelligence. The ease with which Germany conquered France flattered the
-vanity of the educated German, but it did not prevent him from
-emigrating to America. To the cultured mind the army that wins the
-contest in which no principle is involved is as odious as the army that
-loses. To the cultured mind all standing armies are odious, because they
-are an embodied assumption of the barbarism of man, and a denial of the
-efficacy of reason. The great stream of German emigration attests the
-superiority of German culture. The educated German declines to learn the
-art of shooting the emperor’s enemies, but he knows that Germany is, in
-fact, governed by its standing army--by muskets--and he quits the
-country.
-
-Thus the chief power of Germany becomes her chief weakness. A system of
-education which has made her the first nation in Europe produces
-wide-spread discontent among her people, because she is governed by
-obsolete ideas. Nor can the loss in virile force suffered by Germany,
-through emigration, be made good by a counter movement of immigrants
-from the less favored countries of Europe. The economic condition of
-Germany--her freedom from debt and her comparatively low rate of
-taxation--invite such a movement. But the European policy of
-international hate, created and perpetuated by standing armies, forbids
-Germany to recoup her losses of men to America, through corresponding
-gains of men from the overtaxed populations of neighboring countries.
-The grinning skeletons of a hundred battles in which the rival
-nationalities of Europe have been pitted against one another, rise to
-challenge the social intermingling of peoples separated for centuries by
-the arts of diplomacy, traditions of blood and flames, and the serried
-ranks of standing armies.
-
-The disposition of Germans to emigrate irritates the emperor and his
-prime-minister. The loss of numbers might be borne, for notwithstanding
-the steady outward flow of emigrants there is a slight increase of
-population in Germany. But it is the quality of the exodus that annoys
-the emperor and his chancellor. The German emigrants are strong men and
-women--strong mentally and physically. All the weaklings, all the
-paupers, all the imbeciles, the aged, and the infirm remain, only the
-young and vigorous go. Those who go have been taught at the expense of
-the State to love the emperor and hate his enemies, but they do neither.
-The German system of education, from the point of view of rulers by
-divine right, is, hence, a conspicuous failure. It makes better men but
-poorer subjects. The more thoroughly the man is educated the more
-valuable he is to himself and to the community, but the less valuable to
-his king. His growth in intelligence is the measure of his decline in
-reverence for rulers by divine right, and the standing armies by which
-they are alone supported. This is the cause of German emigration, and
-its effect is to weaken the German Empire. Germany is not so strong as
-she was when her armies swept over France; she declines in power each
-year, through the loss of men--the sole support of a State.[E29] They
-flee from her standing army to the United States, a republic with only
-a handful of soldiers.
-
-The system of education established to increase the power of Prussia in
-Europe has accomplished its purpose. But it has done much
-more--something never thought of by its founders. It has produced a
-wide-spread feeling of intelligent discontent; and discontent is an
-inarticulate cry for reform. The cultured German scorns the standing
-army, refuses to serve in it, protests against its longer existence, and
-demands more and better education for his children. His protest is
-unheeded, and he quits the country. But the demand for higher education
-is not, cannot be, disregarded. Intelligence is contagious; it infects
-with a thirst for knowledge all with whom it comes in contact. Education
-is the arch-revolutionist whose onward march is irresistible. Soon a
-riper culture will make the German Protestants more courageous and more
-imperative in their demands, and they will remain in the country to
-enforce them. Education made Germany the first military power in Europe;
-but education could not have been put to a more ignoble service. The
-desire of intelligent Germans is that Germany shall become the first
-industrial power in Europe, and this desire can be realized by the
-disbandment of her standing army.
-
-This review of the situation in Europe shows that it is practicable for
-her to restore, at once, to productive employments three millions of
-men--the flower of her population--now not only idle, but a public
-charge. It shows, also, that it is practicable for Europe to place, at
-once, at the disposal of her educators $700,000,000 per annum instead of
-$70,000,000 per annum, as at present. The corollary of these two
-propositions is a third, namely, that it is practicable for Europe to
-extinguish her national debts in fifty-four years. It follows that the
-regular armies of Europe alone stand in the way of universal education,
-and of universal industrial prosperity.
-
-Standing armies everywhere within the lines of advanced civilization
-must soon disappear before the march of education.[89] Social questions
-cannot much longer be settled by emigration. The world’s virgin soil is
-being rapidly appropriated. When the surface of the whole earth shall
-have become occupied, barbarisms of every nature will be intolerable.
-Man must then be highly civilized, and the only highly civilizing
-influence is education. The age of force is passing away; the age of
-science and art--the age of industrial development--has begun, and
-standing armies are as abnormal in Europe now as slavery was in the
-United States twenty-five years ago.[90]
-
- [89] “This nation to-day is in profound peace with the world; but in
- my judgment it has before it a great duty, which will not only make
- that profound peace permanent, but shall set such an example as will
- absolutely abolish war on this continent, and by a great example and a
- lofty moral precedent shall ultimately abolish it in other continents.
- I am justified in saying that every one of the seventeen independent
- Powers of North and South America is not only willing but ready--is
- not only ready but eager--to enter into a solemn compact in a congress
- that may be called in the name of peace, to agree that if, unhappily,
- differences shall arise--as differences will arise between men and
- nations--they shall be settled upon the peaceful and Christian basis
- of arbitration.
-
- “And, as I have often said before, I am glad to repeat, in this great
- centre of civilization and power, that in my judgment no national
- spectacle, no international spectacle, no continental spectacle, could
- be more grand than that the republics of the Western world should meet
- together and solemnly agree that neither the soil of North nor that of
- South America shall be hereafter stained by brothers’ blood.”--Extract
- from the Speech of Hon. James G. Blaine at the Delmonico Dinner,
- October 29, 1884.
-
- [90] “It is only slowly, and after having been long in contact with
- society, that man becomes more indulgent towards others and more
- severe towards himself.”--“Suicide: an Essay on Comparative Moral
- Statistics,” p. 226. By Henry Morselli, M.D. New York: D. Appleton &
- Co., 1882.
-
-Standing armies are the instruments of tyranny; they are the last
-analysis of selfishness, the incarnation of depravity; for they do not
-reason--they strike. It is worthy of note that the standing armies of
-Europe are coeval with the revival of learning, and the revival of
-learning was a revival of the Greco-Roman subjective educational
-methods. The logical effect of those methods was the promotion of
-selfishness, and the standing armies conserved the selfish designs of
-the rulers of the newly-formed States. It is hence not a mere
-coincidence that standing armies and the revival of learning through
-subjective processes of thought are of common origin. The Machiavellian
-philosophy of cruelty, duplicity, and contempt of man sprung logically
-from egoism, and as logically led to the formation of standing
-armies--bodies of armed men, trained, under compulsion, to kill, burn,
-and destroy.
-
-The synonyms of the standing army are selfishness and its vile issue,
-feudalism, serfdom, slavery, ignorance, and contempt of man. These
-conditions are passing away, and the standing army, the worst, as it is
-the most costly relic of savagery, must pass away with them. It cannot
-withstand the advance of the new education, whose mission is peace,
-whose quest is the truth, whose premise is a fact, whose conclusion is a
-thing of use and beauty, and whose goal is justice.
-
- [E25] War is not merely a relic of barbarism; it is barbarism
- triumphant. It is evidence of the presence, active and malignant, of
- all the bad passions of man. Nor are idle armies less infamous than
- armies in deadly conflict. Carlyle well says that the one monster in
- the world is the idle man; and the standing army is a vast horde of
- idle men quartered on the community. The standing armies of Europe, on
- parade, in barracks, and in forts, are as unmixed an evil as the
- legions of Rome were in Gaul, in Greece, or before Carthage. It is a
- shame to civilization that arbitration did not long ago take the place
- of the coarse brutality of war. The _duello_ between Nations is not
- less absurd, and it is a thousand-fold more wicked, than the _duello_
- between individuals. It is savagery pure and simple, the child of
- selfishness, and not less inconsistent with a high state of
- civilization than slavery.
-
- [E26] Of the British funding system when it was in its infancy, as
- early as 1748, Lord Bolingbroke said: “It is a method by which one
- part of the nation is pawned to the other, with hardly any hope left
- of ever being redeemed.”
-
- See, also, in the _North American Review_ for September, 1886, an
- exhaustive article on the impolicy of national debt perpetuation, by
- N. P. Hill, in which it is alleged that “great interests are at work
- to prevent the payment of the national debt of the United States.”
-
- [E27] In his recent great work--“The Wonderful Century”--Mr. Alfred
- Russel Wallace, on the authority of “The Statesman’s Year Book” for
- 1897, states that the standing armies and navies of Europe number
- three millions of men; cost 180,000,000 pounds sterling per annum, and
- withdraw from useful employments ten millions of men engaged in
- repairing the waste of war.--“The Wonderful Century,” pp. 335-336. New
- York: Dodd, Mead & Co., 1898.
-
- [E28] “I know now that my fellowship with others cannot be shut off by
- a frontier, or by a government decree which decides that I belong to
- some particular political organization. I know now that all men are
- everywhere brothers and equals. When I think now of all the evil I
- have done, that I have endured, and that I have seen about me, arising
- from national enmities, I see clearly that it is all due to that gross
- imposture called patriotism--love for one’s native land.” ... “I
- understand now that true welfare is possible for me only on condition
- that I recognize my fellowship with the whole world.”--“My Religion,”
- p. 256. By Count Leo Tolstoi. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell & Co.
-
- [E29] There is another cause of the decline of Germany: War degrades;
- it is a reversion toward barbarism. Not only is the soldier brutalized
- by martial exercises and scenes of carnage, but the moral and mental
- fibre of the people of a nation which indulges in war is rendered
- coarser. The remark of M. Renan on the subject is profoundly
- philosophical:
-
- “The man who has passed years in the carriage of arms after the German
- fashion is dead to all delicate work whether of the hand or
- brain.”--“Recollections of my Youth,” p. 159. By Ernest Renan. New
- York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1883.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV.
-
-EDUCATION AND THE SOCIAL PROBLEM--HISTORIC.
-
-_AMERICA._
-
- An Old Civilization in a New Country. -- Old Methods in a New System
- of Schools. -- Sordid Views of Education. -- The highest Aim
- Money-getting. -- Herbert Spencer on the English Schools. -- Same
- Defects in the American Schools. -- Maxims of Selfishness. -- The
- Cultivation of Avarice. -- Political Incongruities. -- Negroes
- escaping from Slavery called Fugitives from Justice. -- The Results of
- Subjective Educational Processes. -- Climatic Influences alone saved
- America from becoming a Slave Empire. -- Illiteracy. -- Abnormal
- Growth of Cities. -- Failure of Justice. -- Defects of Education shown
- in Reckless and Corrupt Legislation. -- Waste of an Empire of Public
- Land. -- Henry D. Lloyd’s History of Congressional Land Grants. -- The
- Growth and Power of Corporations. -- The Origin of large Fortunes,
- Speculations. -- Old Social Forces producing old Social Evils. --
- Still America is the Hope of the World. -- The Right of Suffrage in
- the United States justifies the Sentiment of Patriotism. -- Let
- Suffrage be made Intelligent and Virtuous, and all Social Evils will
- yield to it; and all the Wealth of the Country is subject to the Draft
- of the Ballot for Education. -- The Hope of Social Reform depends upon
- a complete Educational Revolution.
-
-
-The discovery of America startled Europe. It was a great blow to
-prevailing dogmatisms. It upset many learned (?) theories. It swept away
-patristic geography. It completed the figure of the earth, rendering it
-susceptible of intelligent study. The advantages of such investigation
-accrued to man, to a degree, before the social and civil life of America
-began. In the century and a quarter which elapsed between the landing of
-Columbus and that of the Pilgrims, on these shores, considerable social
-and political progress was made in Europe, and especially in England.
-From the turbulent scenes of the reigns of James I. and Charles I.,
-which eventuated in the Cromwellian rebellion and victory of the
-Commons, the Pilgrims escaped. They not only bore with them, to the new
-continent, the impress of the long struggle for liberty waged by the
-English people, but they were, in a certain sense, the product of the
-progress of all the ages. But they constituted only a small part of the
-column of immigrants. Detachments of the Cavaliers came also, and
-Germans, Frenchmen, and Irishmen came with them.
-
-The discovery of America was a sort of new creation,[91] but its almost
-virgin soil was destined to become the home of an old civilization. From
-all the nationalities of the Old World the New World was to be peopled.
-The ambitious, the restless, the adventurous, the enterprising, and the
-hardy of every tongue, were gradually to assemble in the new field of
-action. The manner in which they treated the natives of the new country,
-both north and south, showed their origin and their training. Their
-determination to conquer and hold the new territory was but thinly
-disguised. Their descent upon the Atlantic coast was not the exact
-counterpart of that of Cæsar upon the coast of Britain, but it was the
-same in spirit; and the active trade in slaves which soon sprang up, and
-which was thereafter vigorously prosecuted for two hundred years, showed
-the taint of savagery--the impress of Roman cruelty, rapacity, and
-injustice.
-
- [91] “The discovery of America is the greatest event which has ever
- taken place in this world of ours, one half of which had hitherto been
- unknown to the other. All that until now appeared extraordinary seems
- to disappear before this sort of new creation.”--Voltaire.
-
-It is evident that in its most important feature--the formation of
-character--education had made little if any progress at the time of the
-organization of civil society in America. The democratic idea was not
-new. It found expression in every form during the struggles of Greece
-and Rome, and the revival of learning had led to the discussion of
-governmental questions in the light of history. Besides, the reformation
-of Luther had opened the way to the last analysis of dissent in the
-person of Roger Williams, who asserted the right of absolute freedom of
-thought and speech. Of the religious right of private judgment the
-political right of an equal voice in public affairs is the corollary.
-Hence, that the Puritans should establish the town organizations so
-justly lauded by M. Tocqueville was quite logical.[92] Nor was the
-public-school system less logical; all citizens being members of the
-government, all children must be prepared for the duties of citizenship.
-But unfortunately the old system of education was put into the new
-schools, as the old civilizations had been transferred to the new
-country. The system of education under which the kings and ruling
-classes of England and of the continent of Europe were trained to
-selfishness, cruelty, and injustice, was heedlessly adopted in the
-schools of New England, which became the models of schools throughout
-the country.
-
- [92] “Town meetings are to liberty what primary schools are to
- science; they bring it within the people’s reach, they teach men how
- to use and how to enjoy it.... The township institutions of New
- England form a complete and regular whole; they are old; they have the
- support of the laws, and the still stronger support of the manners of
- the community, over which they exercise a prodigious
- influence.”--“Democracy in America,” Vol. I., p. 76. By Alexis De
- Tocqueville. Boston: John Allyn, 1876.
-
-The popular idea in regard to the schools was (1) that they fitted their
-pupils for the duties of citizenship, or, more properly, for the art of
-governing, and (2) that they taught the art of getting on in the world;
-and getting on in the world was interpreted to mean getting and keeping
-money. That this sordid view of education was generally held in the
-rural districts of New England is shown by the fact that any culture
-beyond a limited and imperfect knowledge of reading, writing, and
-arithmetic was regarded as superfluous. Not even the rudiments of either
-the sciences or the arts were imparted, and yet it is only through a
-knowledge of the sciences and the arts that progress in civilization is
-made. The early settlers of New England devised a new system of schools,
-but they imported into them an old system of education, the Greco-Roman
-subjective system, introduced into England with the revival of learning.
-Of this system Mr. Herbert Spencer says, “Had there been no teaching but
-such as is given in our public schools, England would now be what it was
-in feudal times.” And he adds:
-
-“The vital knowledge, that by which we have grown as a nation to what we
-are, and which now underlies our whole existence, is a knowledge that
-has got itself taught in nooks and corners, while the ordained agencies
-for teaching have been mumbling little else but dead formulas.”[93]
-
- [93] “That which our school courses leave almost entirely out, we thus
- find to be that which most nearly concerns the business of life. All
- our industries would cease were it not for that information which men
- begin to acquire as they best may after their education is said to be
- finished.”--“Education,” p. 54. By Herbert Spencer. New York: D.
- Appleton & Co., 1883.
-
-But these are merely negative effects of subjective methods of
-education. The positive evil effect of them is selfishness, the sum of
-all villanies. Under the new system of schools--schools for all--the old
-philosophy of life flourished. Under the name of prudence, selfishness
-was deified. The maxim of Herbert--“Help thyself and God will help
-thee”--was reproduced by Franklin in a hundred forms. The child was
-taught, not that “The half is more than the whole,” but that “In the
-race of life the devil takes the hindmost.”
-
-Thus greed and avarice were cultivated to the sacrifice of honesty.
-Calling selfishness prudence led to confounding right and wrong--freedom
-and slavery. Hence we have the Declaration of Independence containing
-the lofty sentiment, “All men are created equal,” and the Constitution
-throwing the shield of its protection over human bondage. A false system
-of education led to political incongruities of the grossest character,
-as, in the preamble to the Constitution, the declaration of its high
-purpose--to establish justice and secure the blessings of liberty--and
-in the body of the instrument a guaranty of the slave-trade for
-twenty-five years, and a compact that it should be the duty of the
-national army to shoot rebellious slaves, and the duty of free citizens,
-of the free States, to hunt down escaping slaves and surrender them to
-their owners in the slave States.
-
-The failure of the prevailing system of education to promote rectitude
-and right thinking was so complete that negroes escaping from slavery
-were called “fugitives from justice!” Its failure was so complete that
-the very streets of Boston in which patriots had struggled to the death
-in the cause of liberty now echoed the groans of the slave, and
-resounded with the clank of his chains. Its failure was so complete that
-in Faneuil Hall, the cradle of liberty, slavery was justified. Its
-failure was so complete that a senator, for daring to characterize
-slavery as barbaric, was stricken down and beaten with a club, until he
-lay helpless in a pool of blood on the floor of the legislative hall of
-the great, free republic.
-
-These are characteristics of the early civilizations, the civilizations
-of Greece and Rome. They are the product of selfishness, and they show
-that subjective educational processes--processes which proceed from the
-abstract to the concrete, thus violating the natural law of
-investigation--produce the same effects in the nineteenth century as
-they did in the first century.
-
-Ethically, slavery was tried only by the test of self-interest. In the
-North, as in Europe, it was not profitable, and it faded away; in the
-South, in the cotton and rice fields, it was thought to be profitable,
-and it spread and flourished. That the opposition to slavery, at the
-North, did not grow out of education in the schools, is evident, because
-the sons of the Southern ruling class were educated in the high schools
-and colleges of the North; but they became, notwithstanding such
-training, almost to a man, slavery propagandists. The heinousness of
-slavery was perceptible only to those who had no personal interest in
-its perpetuation. It is plain that the effect of the education of the
-schools upon the youth of the country was to make them callous to the
-common impressions of right and wrong; in a word, to render them
-thoroughly selfish.
-
-It is difficult to resist the conclusion that, if slavery had been as
-profitable at the North as it was at the South, it would have been
-perpetuated, and would have poisoned the infant civilization of America
-as that of Rome was vitiated and destroyed. Assuming the truth of this
-hypothesis, climate conditions, not education, saved this continent
-from the scourge of slavery. To the fact that a large part of the
-territory of the United States is situated in the temperate zone we owe
-the elimination of slavery from the social problem.
-
-Existing social conditions in the United States do not differ materially
-from those of the chief countries of Europe. We have only a small
-standing army; but the sole great question which divided the people
-during the first hundred years of our political existence--slavery--had
-to be settled as such questions have been settled from the beginning of
-history, as savages settle all questions--by violence, by an appeal to
-the logic of brute force.
-
-Our government differs from the governments of Europe both in principle
-and form, but the governmental influence is only one of many influences
-which unite to mould social habits. The democratic principle, adopted as
-the foundation of our political institutions, has not served to
-counteract the tendency to the formation of social class distinctions.
-The people lack the wisdom, or the virtue, or both, to insist upon the
-first prerequisite to even an approximation to social equality, namely,
-universal education. Of our population of fifty millions, five millions
-of persons, ten years old and over, are unable to read, and six millions
-are unable to write. In the last census decade we made the paltry gain
-of three per cent, in intelligence, but in 1880 we had six hundred
-thousand more illiterates than in 1870. Nearly two millions of the legal
-voters in the United States are illiterates. Every sixth man who offers
-his ballot at the polls is unable to write his name. Under such
-circumstances class distinctions of the most pronounced type are
-inevitable.
-
-The tendency to the concentration of populations in cities in the
-United States is not less decided than it is in the countries of Europe.
-In 1820 the population of our cities constituted less than one-twentieth
-of the whole population of the country, but in 1880 it constituted more
-than one-fifth of the whole.
-
-Cities have always been the chief source of societary disturbances. In
-the worst days of the Roman Empire tranquillity and prosperity reigned
-in many of the distant provinces. While at the city of Rome “every kind
-of vice paraded itself with revolting cynicism,” in the provinces “there
-was a middle class in which good-nature, conjugal fidelity, probity, and
-the domestic virtues were generally practised.”
-
-Of one of the youngest large cities in the United States the late
-superintendent of a Training School for Waifs says, “Never in the
-history of this city has infant wretchedness stalked forth in such
-multiplied and such humiliating forms. It is hard to suppress the
-conviction that even Pagan Rome, in the corrupt age of Augustus, did not
-witness a more rapid and frightful declension in morals than that which
-can to-day be found in the city of Chicago.”
-
-The most graphic description ever given of a waif came from the lips of
-John Morrissey.[94] He said of himself,
-
-“I was, at the age of seven years, thrown a waif upon the streets of
-Dublin. I slept in alleys and under sidewalks. I disputed with other
-waifs the possession of a crust. We fought like young savages for the
-garbage that fell from the basket of the scullion. The strongest won
-and satisfied the cravings of hunger; the weakest starved. I had no idea
-that anything was to be gained by other means than brute force. Hence my
-code of moral and political ethics--the strongest man is the best man. I
-became a pugilist.”
-
- [94] A noted pugilist, proprietor of gambling-houses in New York City
- and at Saratoga Springs, and a politician who represented a New York
- City district in Congress.
-
-The substantial citizen who passes the street waif with contempt should
-reflect that ten or a dozen years later he will meet him, a full-grown
-man, at the polls, still clothed in rags, perhaps, but his peer in all
-the rights of citizenship. It was the unfortunates of the dark alleys
-and noxious streets of New York--the waifs, the savages of the John
-Morrissey type--that made Tweedism[95] possible, that made robbery in
-the name of law possible, that made taxation the equivalent of
-confiscation in that city.
-
- [95] For an account of the career of William Marcy Tweed, see “The
- American Cyclopædia,” Vol. XVI, p. 85. New York: D. Appleton & Co.,
- 1881.
-
-Mr. Charles Dickens, in “Bleak House,” in the course of a pen-picture of
-a wretched quarter of London, under the name of “Tom-all-alones,” shows
-how ignorance, poverty, and vice react upon society. He says, “There is
-not an atom of Tom’s slime, not a cubic inch of any pestilential gas in
-which he lives, not one obscenity or degradation about him, not an
-ignorance, not a wickedness, not a brutality of his committing but shall
-work its retribution through every order of society, up to the proudest
-of the proud, and to the highest of the high.”
-
-The presence of the poison is already shown in the failure of justice.
-These waifs, grown to man’s estate, but destitute of education and moral
-principle, wielding the power of the ballot, desecrate the jury-room
-with their vile presence, and tug at the skirts of sheriffs,
-prosecuting officers, and judges, and notorious criminals escape
-punishment! So grievous has the abuse become that Judge Lynch has opened
-his summary, awful court in almost every State of the Union.
-
-To say that this class menaces the government with destruction is to
-state it mildly. In every case of the failure of justice the government
-is in part subverted; for when crime goes unpunished, the law, violated
-in that particular instance, becomes a dead letter; and when lynching
-shall have become the rule, and the execution of the law the exception,
-government by law will have ceased to exist--it will have given way to
-government by force. Then the army will be invoked to shoot down the men
-for whose education the law failed to provide, in every city of the
-land, as it was invoked in Pittsburg in 1877.
-
-What are we doing to avert this danger which threatens our institutions?
-With the exception of here and there a weak effort on the part of a few
-humanitarians, as in the training school referred to, we are leaving
-hundreds of thousands of waifs to develop into savages, and, what is
-worse, savages with the power to tax civilized people! We have a system
-of public schools into which such children as choose may enter to a
-certain limit, remain as long as they please, and depart when they
-please. But there are thousands of children in every large city who
-could not enter if they would, and who are not compelled to receive the
-civilizing benefits of education, and who hence join the army of waifs
-and study the art of savagery; and, as has been remarked, they go to
-swell the ranks of a populace as depraved as that which in Rome cried
-for “bread and circuses!” and sacked the city while it was in flames.
-
-The defective, not to say vicious character of our system of education,
-is shown by the reckless course of our legislators on the subject of the
-disposition of the public domain. William the Conqueror, conceiving that
-any social revolution is incomplete until it disturbs the proprietorship
-of land, confiscated the entire landed estates of England, and conferred
-what remained of the proprietary, after reservations in the Crown, upon
-his retainers, the Normans. Eight hundred years have elapsed since the
-issue of William’s land-tenure edict, but it still remains the
-controlling feature of the British Constitution. It has compelled the
-deportation of millions of Englishmen; it has reduced the masses of
-Scotland to a grinding poverty, and converted their country into
-hunting-grounds for the amusement of the landlord class; it has
-depopulated Ireland, and exasperated almost to madness the remnant of
-her people.
-
-But we have failed to profit by the example of England. Our legislators
-have been blind to the lessons of history, or they have been corrupt.
-They have been ignorant of political and social laws, or they have been
-wanting in rectitude. In the period of thirty years, ended in 1880,
-Congress gave to railway corporations over 240,000 square miles, or
-154,067,553 acres, of the best public lands in the States and
-Territories of the Union--an area double that of the whole kingdom of
-Great Britain and Ireland, including the adjacent isles.
-
-On the 17th of March, 1883, the _Chicago Daily Tribune_ published a
-history of these land grants, compiled by Mr. Henry D. Lloyd, under the
-following summary:
-
-“_The story of the dissipation of our great national inheritance--thrown
-away by Congress, wasted by the Land Office, stolen by thieves. A land
-monopoly worse than that of England, begotten in America. English
-monopoly is in families; American monopoly is in corporations; and
-corporations are the only aristocrats that have no souls, and never
-die._”
-
-The following passages from the opening paragraphs of Mr. Lloyd’s
-history are reproduced here by permission of the author:
-
-“The public are profoundly ignorant of the facts about the public land.
-They know, in a dim way, that it is passing out of their hands, and that
-huge monopolies are being created out of the lands which they meant
-should be the inheritance of the settler. The land set apart for homes
-for families has been made into empires for corporations. In the story
-recited below, every element of human fault and fraud will be seen to
-have been at work in the spoliation of the land of the people. Congress
-has been extravagant and has failed to act when part of the results of
-its extravagance might have been saved. The Land Office has been
-inadequately equipped by Congress, and has on its own account been
-careless, dishonest, and traitorous to the interests of the people. It
-has been wax in the hands of the great railroad corporations, but
-double-edged steel in the side of the poor settler. It has overruled
-decisions of the Supreme Court and nullified acts of Congress to betray
-its trust and enrich the railroads, but has refused even to exercise its
-discretion when the home of a settler, held by a righteous title, was to
-be confiscated at the demand of corporate greed. The niggardliness of
-Congress makes clerks, on salaries of twelve hundred to eighteen hundred
-dollars a year, untrained in the law, knowing nothing of the rules of
-evidence, judges of the law and facts in cases involving millions of
-dollars and thousands of homes. There is no worse chapter in the
-history of government than the facts we have to give showing the
-deliberate and heartless evictions of the European immigrant and the
-American settler in order to give their farms to covetous corporations.
-The land-grant roads have had millions of acres granted them by the Land
-Office in excess of the grants by Congress. The whole story is summed up
-in the recent remark of one who had thoroughly investigated the
-subject--that the history of the management of the land-grant roads by
-the Land Office is a history of the management of the Land Office by the
-railroads.
-
-“No chapter in this story will be found of more sombre interest than the
-statements made as to the Supreme Court by the Senate Committee on
-Public Lands, in a report submitted by Senator Van Wyck recommending a
-bill to compel the railroads to pay taxes on their lands. Its decisions
-as to the titles of the railroads and the settlers to the lands, like
-those of a weathercock, have pointed the way the corporation blew its
-breath.”
-
-The summary of Mr. Lloyd’s paper by the editor of the _Tribune_, as a
-preface to its publication, and the foregoing characterization of the
-acts of Congress, of the Land Office, and of the Supreme Court, by Mr.
-Lloyd, are fully justified by the alleged facts marshalled in the body
-of the sketch; and these allegations, after a year and a half of public
-scrutiny, stand unchallenged.
-
-It would be difficult to conceive of a more reckless series of
-legislative acts than those through which the public domain in the
-United States has been squandered; and they are rendered either ignorant
-or vicious by the fact that in the vast empire surrendered almost
-totally without consideration, each legislator, in common with the
-people by and for whom he was deputed to act, had a personal interest.
-Through this series of acts of Congress the public domain was rudely
-wrested from its rightful owners, the people; the abnormal growth of
-corporate power unduly promoted, and a tendency to the concentration, in
-a few hands, of the landed estates of the country fostered.
-
-The social and economic effects of this land legislation must be very
-great and far-reaching. Of the effects of the concentration of landed
-estates in a few hands we need not speak; they are sufficiently plain in
-England, Scotland, and Ireland.[96] But great corporations are a
-creation of yesterday; they are the product of steam. The railway, the
-factory, the mine of iron or coal, the furnace, the foundery, and the
-forge--these vast interests, chartered and endowed with certain
-muniments of sovereignty, are, as property, almost as indestructible as
-landed estates protected by the law of primogeniture. Men are trained
-from generation to generation to the care and conduct of them, and hence
-they are far less liable to waste and dispersion than private estates,
-which, in transmission, may be subjected to disastrous changes of
-management. Being also enterprises of a semi-public character, the
-public is bound, as well as their owners, to see to their preservation.
-
- [96] “The more essential and important consideration is this--that
- whenever the few rapidly accumulate excessive wealth, the many must,
- necessarily, become comparatively poorer.... In every case in which we
- have traced out the efficient causes of the present depression we have
- found it to originate in customs, laws, or modes of action which are
- ethically unsound, if not positively immoral. Wars and excessive war
- armaments, loans to despots or for war purposes, the accumulation of
- vast wealth by individuals, excessive speculation, adulteration of
- manufactured goods, and, lastly, _our bad land system_, with its
- insecurity of tenure, excessive rents, confiscation of tenants’
- property, its common enclosures, evictions, and depopulation of the
- rural districts--all come under this category.”--“Bad Times,” pp. 65,
- 117. By Alfred Russel Wallace, LL.D. London: Macmillan & Co., 1885.
-
-It is to a small number of the greatest of these great companies that
-Congress has given an empire of land in the West--an area double that
-owned by the lords of England, Scotland, and Ireland. In the railway
-proprietor of the United States the two great elements of power are
-united--steam and land. It needs no argument to show that only the
-nation can control the proprietor of both the land and the railway--the
-sole means of reaching a market for the products of the land. The
-appellative--kingship--to the railway proprietor is not a misnomer. He
-is a real potentate, both by virtue of the multitudes of men over whom
-he rules autocratically, and of the magnitude of the revenue he wields.
-Presidents come and go, but he remains. Legislators investigate him and
-report upon him, but they are met by a flat denial of the authority of
-either State or nation to interfere with his “vested rights.” He claims
-the right of himself and associates to control, absolutely, the internal
-commerce of the country; and this claim involves the pretence that they
-may confiscate merchandise seeking a market by charging, for carriage,
-the full value of the thing transported.
-
-The railway and the factory, the two great products of steam, are new
-factors in the social problem, and to properly control them will require
-new wisdom; and the new wisdom is not to be drawn from old educational
-fountains.
-
-State legislation has been as vicious as that of the nation. The people
-of nearly every State in the Union have been made the victims of great
-frauds and gross ignorance at the hands of their representatives. In
-nearly every State syndicates have been formed with the design of
-securing valuable franchises without consideration; and to effectuate
-such designs bribery has been freely and successfully resorted to in a
-vast number of cases. But rarely has the guilty agent of the guilty
-syndicate, or the perjured, purchased legislator been brought to
-justice, notwithstanding the fact that exposure has often followed the
-iniquity.
-
-Evidence of the essentially European character of the American
-civilization is afforded by the prevalence of speculation.[E30] In Wall
-Street, New York, on the Board of Trade, Chicago, and on the exchanges
-of all large cities speculation rages. The real transactions of those
-business marts are very small, indeed, as compared with the transactions
-of a speculative character. On the New York Cotton Exchange the
-speculative trades in “futures” are thirty times more than the cotton
-sales. On the Chicago Board of Trade the speculative trades in “futures”
-are fifteen times more than the sales of grain and provisions, and so of
-the exchanges of all other large cities. To support these speculative
-operations fresh money is required to be constantly poured into the
-pool, and it is drawn from every class in the community. Very little of
-the “fresh money” is ever returned. Most of it remains in the hands of
-the pool managers, of those whose profession it is to manipulate the
-markets. Thus the fever of speculation extends from centre to
-circumference of the country, stimulating bad passions, creating
-distaste for labor, relieving the countryman of his surplus, and
-increasing the already overgrown fortune of the city operator. A writer
-on current topics, discussing this subject, says, “Put your finger on
-one of our great fortunes, and nine times out of ten you will feel
-underneath it the cold heart of some one who has mined on the San
-Francisco Stock Exchange, or packed pork on the Chicago Board of Trade,
-or built railroads in Wall Street.”[97]
-
- [97] “America does not now suffer from this cause [standing armies],
- but nowhere in the world have colossal fortunes, rabid speculation,
- and great monopolies reached so portentous a magnitude, or exerted so
- pernicious an influence.”--“Bad Times,” p. 80. By Alfred Russel
- Wallace, LL.D. London: Macmillan & Co,. 1885.
-
-A sufficient number of the salient features of American civilization
-have been brought under review to show that the new continent has not
-borne new social fruits. Under extremely favorable physical
-conditions--a country of vast resources, a wide range of climates, and a
-soil of great fertility--we planted old social forces, and old social
-evils are in process of rapid development. We are transplanted
-Europeans, controlled by European mental and moral habitudes. And the
-virile force, evoked by the splendid physical opportunities of a vast
-new country, so intensifies the struggle for wealth and power, that
-European social abuses are not only reproduced, but sometimes
-exaggerated in this land of boasted equal political rights.
-
-But notwithstanding the fact that social tendencies in America seem to
-be similar to those of Europe, it is upon America alone that the eyes of
-mankind rest with an expression of ardent hopefulness. Nor is this hope
-destitute of a basis of rationality. It is in the United States, for the
-first time in all the ages, that a good reason can be given for
-indulging the sentiment of patriotism. Love of country here is a due
-appreciation of the value of the right of suffrage. The private soldier
-who goes forth to fight the battles of the United States is a man and
-citizen, and upon his return from the field he may, with the ballot,
-devote to the education of his children a share of the estate of the
-army contractor who amassed a fortune while he defended the country. All
-the property in the United States, whether honestly or dishonestly
-acquired, is subject to the order of the ballot of the citizen. It may
-be taken for war purposes, and it may be taken for educational purposes.
-In the universality of the right of suffrage lies the power of
-correcting all social evils. It is through the right of suffrage that
-the wrongs inflicted upon a too patient people by corrupt and ignorant
-legislation may be ultimately righted. By the suffrages of the people
-the tax bill is voted; and it is through the tax bill that the vast
-estates of corporations and individuals, whether obtained by dishonest
-practices or not, may be made to contribute to the thorough education of
-all the children of the country. And it is through the sentiment of
-patriotism thus inspired that the right of universal suffrage in the
-United States is destined to preservation forever.
-
-The late proposition to limit suffrage in the city of New York is
-explainable only on the theory put forth in this chapter, that our
-civilization is the product of European ideas--that we are Europeans in
-disguise. On any other hypothesis it would be amazing. It is even now
-sufficiently startling that the proposition to restrict suffrage should
-precede the proposition to make education universal by making it
-compulsory, and to purge it of its glaring defects. Every attempt to
-restrict the right of suffrage in the United States will, however, fail.
-The right of self-government can be taken from the American people only
-by force. The American citizen will not vote away his right to vote, as
-the careless Greek sold his freedom, and as the Chinaman sells his life.
-
-That American social abuses do not spring from free suffrage is evident,
-because similar abuses exist in countries where the masses have little
-or no share in the government. Social evils are the product of defective
-education. So long as European educational methods prevail in this
-country, so long European social abuses will characterize our
-civilization. Our education is scant in quantity and poor in quality;
-hence the standard of the suffrage is lowered by the presence of
-ignorance and depravity. But when the suffrage shall be better informed,
-it will be more honest; and when it shall have become more honest and
-more intelligent, it will have gained the power to grapple with social
-abuses.
-
-Such examination of history as we have been able to make fails to
-disclose any radical change in educational methods for three thousand
-years. The charge of Mr. Herbert Spencer against the schools of England,
-to wit, “That which our school courses leave almost entirely out we thus
-find to be that which most nearly concerns the business of life”--this
-charge applies with almost as much force to the schools of the United
-States as to the Greek and Roman schools of rhetoric and logic. Bacon’s
-aphorism--“Education is the cultivation of a just and legitimate
-familiarity betwixt the mind and things”--is two hundred and fifty years
-old, but it has as yet exerted scarcely an appreciable influence upon
-the methods of our public schools. We still reverse the natural order of
-investigation proceeding from the abstract to the concrete, thus
-lumbering the mind of the student with trash which must be removed as a
-preliminary to the first step in the real work of education. We still
-impart a knowledge of words instead of a knowledge of things; we still
-ignore art, notwithstanding the fact that it is through art alone that
-education touches human life. We still inculcate contempt of labor, and
-teach the student how to “make his way in the world” by his wits, rather
-than by giving an equivalent for what he shall receive; and, worst of
-all, we continue, through subjective processes of thought, to charge the
-mind with selfishness, the essence of depravity.
-
-Meantime, social problems press for a solution, a solution here and now.
-Our social problems cannot be settled as those of Europe have been, for
-two hundred years, by emigration. We have no Columbus, and if we had
-such an explorer, there is no new hemisphere for him to discover. The
-lesson of all history is, that selfish people cannot dwell together in
-unity. The struggle to secure more than a fair share of the products of
-the labor of all is sure to end in a quarrel; the quarrel ends in a
-revolution, and the revolution, under the glare of flames, drowns in
-blood the records of civilization. But in America the man must live with
-his fellows. As Mr. Henry D. Lloyd well says, in “Lords of Industry,”
-“Our young men can no longer go West; they must go up or down. Not new
-land, but new virtue must be the outlet for the future. Our halt at the
-shores of the Pacific is a much more serious affair than that which
-brought our ancestors to a pause before the barriers of the Atlantic,
-and compelled them to practise living together for a few hundred years.
-We cannot hereafter, as in the past, recover freedom by going to the
-prairies; we must find it in the society of the good.” [98]
-
- [98] _North American Review_, June, 1884, p. 552.
-
-If we are to find freedom only in the society of the good, we must
-create such a society--a society free from selfishness; for to the
-stability of society public spirit is essential, and with a pure public
-spirit selfishness is at war. Hence, in a system of education like the
-prevailing one, which promotes selfishness, the germs of social
-disintegration are present, and, from the beginning, the end may with
-absolute certainty be predicted. It follows that any hope of social
-reform is wholly irrational that does not spring from the postulate of a
-complete educational revolution.
-
- [E30] The speculative habit has so debauched public sentiment in
- England and America that distinguished authors hesitate not to give
- free expression to a feeling of contempt for the ancients because of
- their failure to engage in colossal swindling operations, as witness
- the following:
-
- “The charges of fraud [in the Attic courts], which are many, are of
- the vulgarest and simplest kind, depending upon violence, on false
- swearing, and upon evading judgment by legal devices. There is not a
- single case of any large or complicated swindling, such as is
- exhibited by the genius of modern English and American speculators.
- There is not even such ingenuity as was shown by Verres in his
- government of Sicily to be found among the clever Athenians.”--“Social
- Life in Greece,” p. 408. By the Rev. J. P. Mahaffy, F.T.C.D. London:
- Macmillan & Co., 1883.
-
- [E31] “On all hands of us, there is the announcement, audible enough,
- that the Old Empire of Routine has ended; that to say a thing has long
- been, is no reason for its continuing to be. The things which have
- been are fallen into decay, are fallen into incompetence; large masses
- of mankind, in every society of our Europe, are no longer capable of
- living at all by the things which have been. When millions of men can
- no longer by their utmost exertion gain food for themselves, and ‘the
- third man for thirty-six weeks each year is short of third-rate
- potatoes,’ the things which have been must decidedly prepare to alter
- themselves!”--“Lectures on Heroes,” p. 157. By Thomas Carlyle. Chapman
- & Hall’s People’s Edition.
-
- “Change the sources of a river, and you will change it throughout its
- whole course; change the education of a people, and you will alter
- their character and their manners:”--“Studies of Nature,” Vol. II., p.
- 575. By Bernardin St. Pierre. London: Henry G. Bohn, 1846.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI.
-
-THE MANUAL ELEMENT IN EDUCATION IN 1884.
-
- The Kindergarten and the Manual Training School one in Principle. --
- Russia solved the Problem of Tool Instruction by Laboratory Processes.
- -- The Initiatory Step by M. Victor Della-Vos, Director of the
- Imperial Technical School of Moscow in 1868. -- Statement of Director
- Della-Vos as to the Origin, Progress, and Results of the New System of
- Training. -- Its Introduction into all the Technical Schools of
- Russia. -- Dr. John D. Runkle, President of the Massachusetts
- Institute of Technology, recommends the Russian System in 1876, and it
- is adopted. -- Statement of Dr. Runkle as to how he was led to the
- adoption of the Russian System. -- Dr. Woodward, of Washington
- University, St. Louis, Mo., establishes the second School in this
- Country. -- His Historical Note in the Prospectus of 1882-83. -- First
- Class graduated 1883. -- Manual Training in the Agricultural Colleges
- -- In Boston, in New Haven, in Baltimore, in San Francisco, and other
- places. -- Manual Training at the Meeting of the National Educational
- Association, 1884. -- Kindergarten and Manual Training Exhibits. --
- Prof. Felix Adler’s School in New York City -- the most Comprehensive
- School in the World. -- The Chicago Manual Training School the first
- Independent Institution of the Kind -- its Inception; its
- Incorporation; its Opening. Its Director, Dr. Belfield. -- His
- Inaugural Address. -- Manual Training in the Public Schools of
- Philadelphia. -- Manual Training in twenty-four States. --
- Revolutionizing a Texas College. -- Local Option Law in Massachusetts.
- -- Department of Domestic Economy in the Iowa Agricultural College. --
- Manual Training in Tennessee, in the University of Michigan, in the
- National Educational Association, in Ohio. -- The Toledo School for
- both Sexes. -- The Importance of the Education of Woman. -- The Slöjd
- Schools of Europe.
-
-
-The principle of the manual training school exists in the kindergarten,
-and for that principle we are indebted directly to Froebel, and
-indirectly to Pestalozzi, Comenius, Rousseau, and Bacon. But it was
-reserved for Russia to solve the problem of tool instruction by the
-laboratory process, and make it the foundation of a great reform in
-education. The initiatory step was taken in 1868 by M. Victor Della-Vos,
-Director of the Imperial Technical School of Moscow. The following
-statement is extracted from the account given by Director Della-Vos of
-the exhibit of the Moscow school at Philadelphia (Centennial of 1876),
-and at the Paris Exposition in 1878, as best showing the inception of
-the new education:
-
-[Illustration: M. VICTOR DELLA-VOS, THE FOUNDER OF MANUAL TRAINING IN
-RUSSIA.]
-
-“In 1868 the school council considered it indispensable, in order to
-secure the systematical teaching of elementary practical work, as well
-as for the more convenient supervision of the pupils while practically
-employed, to separate entirely the school workshops from the mechanical
-works in which the orders from private individuals are executed,
-admitting pupils to the latter only when they have perfectly acquired
-the principles of practical labor.
-
-“By the separation alone of the school workshops from the mechanical
-works, the principal aim was, however, far from being attained. It was
-found necessary to work out such a method of teaching the elementary
-principles of mechanical art as, firstly, should demand the least
-possible length of time for their acquirement; secondly, should increase
-the facility of the supervision of the graded employment of the pupils;
-thirdly, should impart to the study of practical work the character of a
-sound systematical acquirement of knowledge; and fourthly and lastly,
-should facilitate the demonstration of the progress of every pupil at
-every stated time. Everybody is well aware that the successful study of
-any art whatsoever, free-hand or linear drawing, music, singing,
-painting, etc., is only attainable when the first attempts at any of
-them are strictly subject to the laws of gradation and successiveness,
-when every student adheres to a definite method or school, surmounting
-little by little, and by certain degrees, the difficulties encountered.
-
-“All those arts which we have just named possess a method of study which
-has been well worked out and defined, because, since they have long
-constituted a part of the education of the well-instructed classes of
-people, they could not but become subject to scientific analysis, could
-not but become the objects of investigation, with a view of defining
-those conditions which might render the study of them as easy and well
-regulated as possible.
-
-“If we except the attempts made in France in the year 1867 by the
-celebrated and learned mechanical engineer, A. Cler, to form a
-collection of models for the practical study of the principal methods of
-forging and welding iron and steel, as well as the chief parts of
-joiners’ work, and this with a purely demonstrative aim, no one, as far
-as we are aware, has hitherto been actively engaged in the working out
-of this question in its application to the study of hand labor in
-workshops. To the Imperial Technical School belongs the initiative in
-the introduction of a systematical method of teaching the arts of
-turning, carpentering, fitting, and forging.
-
-“To the knowledge and experience in these specialties, of the gentlemen
-intrusted with the management of the school workshops, and to their warm
-sympathy in the matter of practical education, we are indebted for the
-drawing up of the programme of systematical instruction in the
-mechanical arts, its introduction in the year 1868 into the workshops,
-and also for the preparation of the necessary auxiliaries to study. In
-the year 1870, at the exhibition of manufactures at St. Petersburg, the
-school exhibited its methods of teaching mechanical arts, and from that
-time they have been common to all the technical schools of Russia.
-
-“And now (1878) we present our system of instruction, not as a project,
-but as an accomplished fact, confirmed by the long experience of ten
-years of success in its results.”
-
-For the introduction of the manual element in education to the United
-States we are indebted to the intellectual acumen of Dr. John D. Runkle,
-Ph.D., LL.D., Walker Professor of Mathematics, Institute of Technology,
-Boston, Mass. In 1876 Doctor Runkle was President of the Massachusetts
-Institute of Technology. In his official report for that year he gave an
-exhaustive exposition of the Russian system, in the course of which he
-said,
-
-“We went to Philadelphia, therefore, earnestly seeking for light in this
-as well as in all other directions, and this special report is now made
-to ask your attention to a fundamental, and, as I think, complete
-solution of this most important problem of practical mechanism for
-engineers. The question is simply this, Can a system of shop-work
-instruction be devised of sufficient range and quality which will not
-consume more time than ought to be spared from the indispensable
-studies?
-
-“This question has been answered triumphantly in the affirmative, and
-the answer comes from Russia. It gives me the greatest pleasure to call
-your attention to the exhibit made by the Imperial Technical Schools of
-St. Petersburg and Moscow, consisting entirely of collections of tools
-and samples of shop-work by students, illustrating the system which has
-made these magnificent results possible.”
-
-In conclusion Doctor Runkle made the following earnest recommendation:
-
-“In the light of the experience which Russia brings us, not only in the
-form of a proposed system, but proved by several years of experience in
-more than a single school, it seems to me that the duty of the Institute
-is plain. We should, without delay, complete our course in Mechanical
-Engineering by adding a series of instruction shops, which I earnestly
-recommend.”
-
-In accordance with this recommendation the “new school of Mechanic Arts”
-was created, and made part of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
-
-In his report for 1877 Doctor Runkle said,
-
-“The plan announced in my last report, of building a series of shops
-[laboratories] in which to teach the students in the department of
-Mechanical Engineering and others the use of tools, and the fundamental
-steps in the art of construction, in accordance with the Russian system,
-as exhibited at Philadelphia in 1876, has been carried steadily forward,
-and I have now the pleasure of announcing its near completion.”
-
-Reference is also made in the same report to the action of the trustees
-of the Institute in acknowledging the reception of certain models
-illustrating the system of Mechanic Art education, presented by the
-government of Russia, as follows:
-
-“At a meeting of the Corporation of the Massachusetts Institute of
-Technology, held November 20, 1877, a communication from his Excellency,
-Hon. George H. Boker, American Minister at St. Petersburg, was read,
-announcing the gift to this Institute of eight cases of models,
-illustrating the system of Mechanic Art education, as devised and so
-successfully applied at the Imperial Technical School of Moscow. The
-undersigned have been charged with the agreeable duty of transmitting to
-his Imperial Highness the following resolutions:
-
-[Illustration: DR. JOHN D. RUNKLE, THE FOUNDER OF MANUAL TRAINING IN THE
-UNITED STATES.]
-
-“_Resolved_, That the Corporation of the Massachusetts Institute of
-Technology takes this opportunity to cordially congratulate his Imperial
-Highness, Prince Pierre d’Oldenbourg, that, at the Imperial Technical
-School of Moscow, education in the Mechanic Arts has been for the first
-time based upon philosophical and purely educational grounds, fully
-justifying for it the title of the ‘Russian system.’
-
-“_Resolved_, That this Corporation hereby tenders its grateful thanks to
-his Imperial Highness for his most valuable gift, with the assurance
-that these models will be of the greatest aid in promoting Mechanic Art
-education not only in the School of this Institute, but in all similar
-schools throughout the United States.”
-
-Appreciating the value of the services rendered to the cause of the new
-education by Dr. Runkle, in introducing to the schools of the United
-States tool practice by laboratory methods, and desiring to inform the
-public of the course of thought which led to results so important, the
-author addressed him on the subject. His reply, under date of May 22,
-1884, is in substance as follows:
-
-“From the first the course in Mechanical Engineering has been an
-important one in the Institute of Technology. A few students came with a
-knowledge of shop-work, and had a clear field open to them on
-graduation, but the larger number found it difficult to enter upon their
-professional work without first taking one or two years of
-apprenticeship. This always seemed to me a fault in the education, and
-yet I did not see the way to remedy it without building up manufacturing
-works in connection with the school--a step which I knew to be an
-inversion of a true educational method.
-
-“At Philadelphia, in 1876, almost the first thing I saw was a small case
-containing three series of models--one of chipping and filing, one of
-forging, and one of machine-tool work. I saw at once that they were not
-parts of machines, but simply graded models for teaching the
-manipulations in those arts. In an instant the problem I had been
-seeking to solve was clear to my mind; a plain distinction between a
-Mechanic Art and its application in some special trade became apparent.
-
-“My first work was to build up at the Institute a series of Mechanic Art
-shops, or laboratories, to teach these arts, just as we teach chemistry
-and physics by the same means. At the same time I believed that this
-discipline could be made a part of general education, just as we make
-the sciences available for the same end through laboratory instruction.
-
-“All teaching has in an important sense a double purpose: first, the
-cultivation of the powers of the individual, and second, the pursuit of
-similar subjects, by substantially the same means, as a professional
-end. Now we use our shops [laboratories] both for educational and
-professional ends.... In brief, we teach the mechanic arts by laboratory
-methods, and the student applies the special skill and knowledge
-acquired, or not, as circumstances or his inclinations dictate.”
-
-The second manual training school in this country was founded as a
-department of Washington University, St. Louis, Mo., by Dr. C. M.
-Woodward. In a paper read before the St. Louis Social Science
-Association, May 16, 1878, Dr. Woodward discussed the subject of
-education both philosophically and practically. In the course of his
-address he gave a full account of the Russian system of manual training
-as expounded by Dr. Runkle, endorsed it, and recommended it to the
-people of St. Louis as the true method of education in the following
-pregnant sentence: “The manual education which begins in the
-kindergarten, before the children are able to read a word, should never
-cease.”[99]
-
- [99] The pressing problem of the time in methods of practical
- education is to devise suitable manual exercises for the school period
- embraced in the interim between the end of the kindergarten series of
- lessons and the beginning of the series of laboratory exercises
- described in this work--the grammar-school period--for children of
- both sexes from six to fourteen years of age.
-
-In the same paper Dr. Woodward thus modestly describes the beginning of
-the school which is now one of the most highly-esteemed educational
-institutions of St. Louis:
-
-“With the aid of our stanch friend, Mr. Gottlieb Conzelman, we fitted up
-during last summer a wood-working shop, with work-benches and vises for
-eighteen students; a second shop for vise-work upon metals and for
-machine-work; and a third with a single outfit of blacksmith’s tools.
-During the last few months systematic instruction has been given to
-different classes in all these shops. Special attention has been paid to
-the use of wood-working hand-tools, to wood-turning, and to filing.”
-
-These tentative steps promoted a healthy public sentiment, and attracted
-the attention of several wealthy men, who in 1879 contributed the funds
-for the permanent foundation of the school. The prospectus for the year
-1882-83 contains the following “historical note,” which shows great
-progress:
-
-“The ordinance establishing the Manual Training School was adopted by
-the Board of Directors of the University, June 6, 1879.
-
-“The lot was purchased and the building begun in August of the same
-year. In the November following a prospectus of the school was
-published. In June, 1880, the building being partially equipped, was
-opened for public inspection, and a class of boys was examined for
-admission. On September 6, 1880, the school began with a single class of
-about fifty pupils. The whole number enrolled during the year was
-sixty-seven. A public exhibition of drawing and shop-work was given June
-16, 1881.
-
-“The _second year_ of the school opened September 12, 1881, and closed
-June 14, 1882. There were two classes, sixty-one pupils belonging to the
-first year, and forty-six to the second year, making one hundred and
-seven in all. Of the second-year class, forty-two had attended the
-school the previous year.
-
-“The _third year_ of the school will open on September 11th, when three
-classes will be present.
-
-“The large addition now in progress (June, 1882) is to be completed and
-furnished by the day set for the examination of candidates for
-admission, September 8th. The number of pupils in the new first-year
-class is to be limited to one hundred. _Nearly one-half of that number
-have already been received._”
-
-The capacity of the school since the completion of the “addition”
-alluded to in the “historical note” is two hundred and forty students.
-The first class was graduated in June, 1883; the second class in June,
-1884. The establishment of this excellent school is due first to the
-energy and educational foresight of Dr. Woodward, and second, to the
-munificent money donations of three citizens of St. Louis--Mr. Edwin
-Harrison, Mr. Samuel Cupples, and Mr. Gottlieb Conzelman. Other citizens
-emulated their noble example, and the result was a sufficient fund for
-the support of the school, whose purpose is to demonstrate the
-practicability of uniting manual and mental instruction in the public
-schools of St. Louis and of the country. With a single further quotation
-from the prospectus of the second great manual training school in the
-United States, on the subject of labor, we close this too brief notice:
-
-“One great object of the school is to foster a higher appreciation of
-the value and dignity of intelligent labor, and the worth and
-respectability of laboring men. A boy who sees nothing in manual labor
-but mere brute force despises both labor and the laborer. With the
-acquisition of skill in himself comes the ability and willingness to
-recognize skill in his fellows. When once he appreciates skill in
-handicraft, he regards the workman with sympathy and respect.”
-
-Considerable progress in manual training has been made in the State
-agricultural colleges of the country. In twelve of these colleges
-drawing and tool practice have been introduced. Generally the tool
-practice covers pattern-making, blacksmithing, moulding and founding,
-forging and bench-work, and machine-tool work in iron. The most
-pronounced success has been achieved at Purdue University, Lafayette,
-Ind., under the directorship of Prof. Wm. F. M. Goss, who graduated from
-the school of Mechanic Arts of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
-in 1879.
-
-Manual training in connection with the public-school system of education
-has been inaugurated in Boston and Milford, Mass.; New Haven, and the
-State Normal School, New Britain, Conn.; Omaha, Neb.;[100] Eau Claire,
-Wis.;[101] Moline, Peru, and the Cook County Normal School, Normal Park,
-Ill.; Montclair, N. J.; Cleveland and Barnesville, Ohio; San Francisco,
-Cal.; and Baltimore, Md.
-
- [100] In charge of Albert M. Bumann, B.S., graduate of the St. Louis
- Manual Training School, class of 1885.
-
- [101] In charge of William F. Barnes, B.S., graduate of the St. Louis
- Manual Training School, class of 1885.
-
-On the occasion of the annual meeting of 1884 of the National
-Educational Association of the United States, at Madison, Wis., manual
-training received a very large share of the attention of educators. Very
-creditable exhibits of various manipulations in wood, iron, and steel
-were made by the following institutions, namely, the Massachusetts
-Institute of Technology, Purdue University, the St. Louis Manual
-Training School, the Illinois Industrial University, the University of
-Wisconsin, and the Spring Garden Institute of Philadelphia. There were
-also about thirty kindergarten exhibits, and a large number of exhibits
-of specimens of drawing from public schools in various parts of the
-country.
-
-Prof. Felix Adler’s educational enterprise in the city of New York--The
-Workingman’s School and Free Kindergarten--is unique in this that, while
-it is entirely a work of charity, it is the most comprehensive
-educational institution in existence, as appears from the following
-description of its course of instruction:
-
-“The Workingman’s School and Free Kindergarten form one institution. The
-children are admitted at the age of three to the kindergarten. They are
-graduated from it at six, and enter the workingman’s school. They remain
-in the school till they are thirteen or fourteen years of age.
-Thereafter those who show decided ability receive higher technical
-instruction. For the others who leave the school proper and are sent to
-work, a series of evening classes will be opened, in which their
-industrial and general education will be continued in various
-directions. This graduate course of the workingman’s school is intended
-to extend up to the eighteenth or twenty-first year.
-
-“From the third year up to manhood and womanhood--such,” says Prof.
-Adler, “is the scope embraced by the purposes of our institution!”
-
-The following extracts from a late report of the principal of the
-school, Mr. G. Bamberger, on its “purposes,” show that they are
-identical with those of the so-called manual training school, and also
-that its methods are similar:
-
-“We, therefore, have undertaken to institute a reform in education in
-the following two ways: We begin industrial instruction at the very
-earliest age possible. Already in our kindergarten we lay the foundation
-for the system of work instruction that is to follow. In the school
-proper, then, we seek to bridge over the interval lying between the
-preparatory kindergarten training and the specialized instruction of the
-technical school, utilizing the school age itself for the development of
-industrial ability. This, however, is only one characteristic feature of
-our institution. The other, and the capital one, is, that we seek to
-combine industrial instruction organically with the ordinary branches of
-instruction, thus using it not only for the material purpose of
-creating skill, but also ideally as a factor of mind-education. To our
-knowledge, such an application of work instruction has nowhere as yet
-been attempted, either abroad or in this country....
-
-“In the teaching of history to these young children we hold it essential
-that the teacher should be entirely independent of any text-book, and
-able to freely handle the vast material at his disposal, and to draw
-from it, as from an endless storehouse, with fixed and definite purpose.
-We attach even greater importance to the moral than to the intellectual
-significance of history. The benefits which the understanding, the
-memory, and the imagination derive from the study of history are not
-small. But history, considered as a realm of actions, can be made
-especially fruitful of sound influence upon the active, moral side of
-human nature. The moral judgment is strengthened by a knowledge of the
-evolution of mankind in good and evil. The moral feelings are purified
-by abhorrence of the vices of the past, and by admiration of examples of
-greatness and virtue. Text-books are not to be discarded, but their
-choice is a matter of great difficulty. Thus, all books in which
-historical instruction is given in the shape of printed questions and
-answers are highly objectionable. They are convenient bridges which lead
-to nothing.”
-
-The following extract from a late report of Prof. Adler shows the
-purpose of the establishment of what he calls the “model school” to be
-identical with that of the projectors of the St. Louis and Chicago
-manual training schools, namely, the ultimate adoption by the public
-schools of the country of a far more rational system of instruction than
-that which at present prevails. He says,
-
-“It seemed to us, therefore, far more necessary, far more calculated to
-really advance the public good, that one model school should be erected
-in which the entire system of rational and liberal education for the
-children of the poorer class might be exhibited from beginning to end.
-We ventured to hope that such an example, having once been set, would
-not be without effect upon the common-school system at large, and that
-the extension of our work would proceed by the natural course of the
-‘survival of what is fittest.’ It was decided, therefore, that the
-twenty-five graduates from the kindergarten should be invited to remain
-with us, that a complete school should be instituted, and that a teacher
-should be at once appointed to take in hand the instruction of the
-lowest class. The munificence of Mr. Joseph Seligman, to whose name we
-cannot refer without gratitude and respect, at this stage enabled us to
-go on with our undertaking, when the dearth of funds would otherwise
-have compelled us to wait, or perhaps desist altogether. His timely gift
-of ten thousand dollars was the means of starting the school, and on
-this as well as on other accounts his memory deserves to be cherished by
-those who cherish the educational interests of the people.”
-
-The Chicago Manual Training School is the only independent educational
-institution of the kind in the world. All the schools of this character
-to which reference has been made in this chapter are departments of
-colleges or institutes of technology. The Chicago school is unique in
-another respect: it owes its origin entirely to laymen. Professional
-educators labored long and earnestly to found the schools we have
-described, but the Chicago school was inspired by men unknown in the
-field of educational enterprise, advocated by a secular daily journal,
-and established by an association of merchants, manufacturers, and
-bankers. For many years the _Chicago Tribune_ had very freely and
-severely criticised the educational methods of the public schools. Early
-in the year 1881 its editorial columns were opened to the author of this
-work, who began and continued, therein, the advocacy of the
-establishment of a manual training school in Chicago, as a tentative
-step towards the incorporation in the curriculum of the public schools,
-of more practical methods of instruction.
-
-The editorial advocacy of the _Tribune_ was continued for twelve months,
-articles appearing about once a week, without apparent effect beyond
-provoking a controversy with certain professional educators, who
-attacked the positions assumed by the _Tribune_. But a public sentiment
-had been created on the subject, and the Commercial Club was destined
-soon to embody that sentiment in action. At its regular monthly meeting,
-March 25, 1882, the subject of reform in methods of education was
-discussed by members of the club, and by men invited to be present for
-that purpose; the establishment of a school was resolved upon, and
-$100,000 pledged for its support.
-
-The Chicago Manual Training School Association was incorporated April
-11, 1883; the corner-stone of its building was laid September 24, 1883;
-and the sessions of the school commenced on the 4th of February, 1884,
-with a class of seventy-two students, “selected by examination from one
-hundred and thirty applicants, under the directorship of Henry H.
-Belfield, A.M., Ph.D.”
-
-The Board of Trustees consists of E. W. Blatchford, president; R. T.
-Crane, vice-president; Marshall Field, treasurer; William A. Fuller,
-secretary; John Crerar, John W. Doane, N. K. Fairbank, Edson Keith, and
-George M. Pullman.
-
-The object of the school is stated in the articles of incorporation as
-follows:
-
-“Instruction and practice in the use of tools, with such instruction as
-may be deemed necessary in mathematics, drawing, and the English
-branches of a high-school course. The tool instruction as at present
-contemplated shall include carpentry, wood-turning, pattern-making, iron
-chipping and filing, forge-work, brazing and soldering, the use of
-machine-shop tools, and such other instruction of a similar character as
-may be deemed advisable to add to the foregoing from time to time, it
-being the intention to divide the working hours of the students, as
-nearly as possible, equally between manual and mental exercises.”
-
-From the first annual catalogue, under the title “Building and
-Equipment,” we extract the following:
-
-“The school building is beautifully located on Michigan Avenue, and
-contains ample accommodations, in rooms for study and work, for several
-hundred pupils.
-
-“The equipment in the mechanical department consists mainly, at present,
-of twenty-four cabinet-makers’ benches; bench and lathe tools of the
-best quality for seventy-two boys; twenty-four speed lathes, twelve-inch
-swing, thirty inches between centres; a fifty-two horse-power Corliss
-engine, twelve-inch cylinder, thirty-six inch stroke; two tubular
-boilers, forty inches in diameter, fourteen feet long. The Corliss
-engine, boilers, and lathes were made especially for the school.
-
-“A very valuable scientific library of nearly five hundred volumes, the
-property of the American Electrical Society, has been placed in the
-school. To this library, which is particularly rich in works pertaining
-to electricity and chemistry, but which contains also cyclopedias,
-dictionaries, and other works of reference, the pupils have access.
-
-“The Blatchford Literary Society, an organization of pupils for
-improvement in composition, debate, etc., has lately had a handsome
-donation of money for the purchase of books to be placed in their alcove
-in the school library. Several periodicals are regularly placed on the
-library tables through the generosity of the publishers.
-
-“By the kindness of Dr. Wm. F. Poole, librarian, pupils are able to
-obtain books from the Chicago Public Library on unusually favorable
-conditions.”
-
-Thus the Chicago Manual Training School, a practical school, a school of
-instruction in things, a school after Bacon’s “own heart,” sprang from
-the brains of a number of plain, practical business men, full-armed, as
-Minerva from the brain of Jupiter.
-
-The Trustees were fortunate in securing Dr. Belfield for the
-directorship of the school. Before the introduction of the new education
-to this country, eleven years ago, while Russia was struggling with the
-problem of tool practice by the laboratory method, Dr. Belfield urged
-the need of manual training in the public schools of Chicago, in which
-he was a teacher. He was met with derision; but the president of the
-Board of Education of Chicago and the superintendent of schools are now
-advocates of the new system of training.
-
-In conclusion we present the following extracts from the inaugural
-address of Dr. Belfield, delivered before the Chicago Manual Training
-School Association, June 19, 1884, as embodying the results of his
-experience and observation as to the value of the new system of
-training:
-
-“The distinctive feature of the manual training school is the education
-of the mind, and of the hand as the agent of the mind. The time of the
-pupil in school is about equally divided between the study of books and
-the study of things; between the academic work on the one hand, and the
-drawing and shop-work on the other. Observe, I do not say between
-_school-work_ and _shop-work_, for the shop is as much a school as is
-any other part of the establishment. Nor do I mean that the shop gives
-an education of the hand alone, and the class-room an education of the
-brain; but I mean that the shop educates _hand and brain_. That the
-_hand_ is educated I need not stop to prove; but the shop educates the
-mind also.
-
-“Had you been in the wood-working room of this school a few hours ago,
-what would you have seen? Twenty-four boys at work at lathes driven by a
-powerful engine. Are any idle? No. Are any inattentive to their work?
-No; you notice the closest and most earnest attention, frequently
-approaching abstraction. Here, then, is the cultivation of a most
-important faculty of the mind, attention, the power of concentration;
-and it is worthy of remark that this attention is not an _enforced_
-attention, but is cheerful, voluntary, and unremitting.
-
-“The young workman is engaged on a problem in wood, just as, a few hours
-earlier, he was engaged on a problem in algebra. He has before him a
-drawing made to a scale. The problem is this: He must gain a clear
-conception of the object represented by the drawing; he must _imagine_
-it; he must select or cut a block of wood of the proper dimensions and
-of the right quality. It must not be too large, for he must guard
-against waste of material and waste of time. It must be large enough,
-for there must be no incompleteness about the finished product of his
-labor. Observe him as the work grows under his hand; observe the
-selecting of the proper tools for the different parts of the process;
-observe the careful measuring, the watchful eye upon the position of the
-chisel, the speed of the lathe, the gradual approach of the once
-rectangular block to the model which exists in his brain--and you must
-admit that this work demands and develops, not manual dexterity alone,
-but attention, observation, imagination, judgment, reasoning....
-
-“My own opinion is that an hour in the shop of a well-conducted manual
-training school develops as much mental strength as an hour devoted to
-Virgil or Legendre....
-
-“But of this I am confident, that three years of a manual training
-school will give at least as much purely intellectual growth as three
-years of the ordinary high school, because, as has been said, every
-school hour, whether spent in the class-room, the drawing-room, or in
-the shop, is an hour devoted to intellectual training. And I am also
-convinced that the manual training school boy’s comprehension of some
-essential branches of knowledge will be as far superior to that of the
-other boy’s, as the realization of the grandeur and beauty of the Alps
-to the man who has seen their glories is superior to the conception of
-him who has merely read of them....
-
-“And here is the mistake of those who would degrade a manual training
-school into a manufacturing establishment. The fact should never be lost
-sight of for an instant that the product of the school should be, not
-the polished article of furniture, not the perfect piece of machinery,
-but the polished, perfect _boy_. The acquisition of industrial skill
-should be the means of promoting the general education of the pupil; the
-education of the hand should be the means of more completely and more
-efficaciously educating the brain....
-
-“Take two boys, one with little or no education, the other a high-school
-graduate; let them enter the machine-shop of a large manufactory,
-beginning, as boys ignorant of the technique of the trade must begin, at
-the lowest round of the ladder. It cannot be doubted that in three or
-four years the high-school graduate, if he had been willing to do the
-drudgery incident to the place, would have reached a higher position
-than the other boy, and would be in a fair way to succeed to some
-responsible post in the establishment. But the graduate of the manual
-training school, by reason of his superior knowledge of machinery and
-materials, his skill in the use of tools, added to his general mental
-training, would begin at the point reached by the high-school boy after
-his years of apprenticeship. From the day of his entrance into the
-factory he would be conspicuous. While the other boys would stand in the
-presence of the huge Titan of the shop lost in the wonder of ignorance,
-the manual training boy would gaze with delight on the marvel of
-mechanism, wrapped in the admiration begotten of a thorough
-understanding of its construction, and strong in the consciousness of
-his mastery of it.”
-
-Manual training was introduced in the Pennsylvania State College,
-experimentally, about three years ago. In 1883 the course was “greatly
-extended,” and in September, 1884, it went into full operation. The
-course is substantially the same as that of the Chicago school; and that
-it was the outgrowth of the Russian system, and inspired by Dr. Runkle,
-is shown by the following extract from a circular lately issued by Prof.
-Louis E. Reber:
-
-“Some may think that the variety of operations in the mechanic arts is
-so great as to make it impossible to give the student any real knowledge
-in the time at his disposal. It should be borne in mind, however, that
-this multiplicity of processes may be reduced to a small number of
-manual operations, and the numerous tools employed are only
-modifications of, or convenient substitutes for, a few tools which are
-in general use.”
-
-A course in tool practice by the laboratory method has been made part of
-the curriculum of the College of the City of New York.[102] I am
-permitted to make an extract from a letter written in August last by
-Alfred G. Compton, Professor of Applied Mathematics of the College of
-the City of New York, to Dr. Runkle. I print this extract to show the
-exacting nature of the demands made upon instructors by the new
-education. It is as follows:
-
- [102] “The first report of the Industrial Educational Association of
- New York gives a list of thirty-one schools in that city in which
- industrial education is furnished.”--Address of Prof. S. R. Thompson,
- Industrial Department of the National Educational Association,
- Saratoga Springs, N. Y., July, 1885.
-
-“We are anxious to find, by the opening of our term in September, a
-competent instructor in wood-working for our course in mechanic arts,
-now in its second year. He should be a good and ready draughtsman,
-skilful in perspective and projections, and ready in black-board
-sketching, besides being acquainted with the use of tools, and apt at
-class-teaching. He will have at first $1000 a year.”
-
-The lack of competent instructors is the most serious difficulty which
-the new education is destined to encounter. The desire to adopt tool
-practice is so widespread among the people that educators, whether
-willing or otherwise, are compelled to attempt to gratify the demand.
-At the same time the force of competent instructors is very small, and
-the danger is that the new system of education will be brought into
-disrepute through the failure of its proper administration.
-
-In 1882 Mr. Paul Tulane, of Princeton, N. J., made a large donation,
-consisting of his realty in the city of New Orleans, in aid of education
-in the State of Louisiana. In 1884 the University bearing its donor’s
-name--Tulane--came into existence. In the deed of donation Mr. Tulane
-declared that by the term education he meant to “foster such a course of
-intellectual development as shall be useful and of solid worth, and not
-be merely ornamental or superficial.” Hence manual training has been
-made a prominent feature of the institution.[103]
-
- [103] John M. Ordway, A.M., late Professor of Metallurgy and
- Industrial Chemistry of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, has
- been called to New Orleans to organize and direct the manual training
- department of the institution; and he is assisted by Charles A. Heath,
- B.S., and Everett E. Hapgood, graduates of the School of Mechanic Arts
- of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
-
-There is in operation at Crozet, Va., a manual training school called,
-after its founder, Mr. Samuel Miller, “The Miller Manual Labor School;”
-but of the methods of training pursued at this school the author is not
-accurately informed.
-
-Girard College, dedicated nearly forty years ago, has adopted manual
-training. In response to a letter by the author, asking for information,
-Mr. W. Heyward Drayton, of Philadelphia, gives the following historical
-sketch of the introduction and progress of tool practice by the
-laboratory method in that noble institution:
-
-“From time to time some of the directors recognized the importance of
-mechanical instruction, but after one or two attempts further efforts in
-this direction were abandoned, as those proved utter failures. It was
-not until Dr. Runkle, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, at
-the instance of the late Mr. William Welsh, then president of the Board
-of Directors of City Trusts, delivered a short address on the subject in
-the lecture-room of the Franklin Institute in this city, that any
-practical mode of introducing this branch of study into the college was
-presented.
-
-“... Following as nearly as possible the scheme suggested by Dr. Runkle,
-and aided by many suggestions from him, in April, 1882, we began to
-instruct the larger boys to use tools in several kinds of metals. We
-were so fortunate as to secure the services of a very competent and
-enthusiastic instructor, who confined his instruction merely to teaching
-the use of tools, but without any pretence of teaching any trade. The
-result of two years’ experience has been so satisfactory that our boys
-leave the college to go to workshops, where they secure sufficient wages
-to support them at once; and they have, in many cases, been found so
-expert that in a few months their wages have been increased. We have
-been so encouraged by this as a substitute for apprenticing lads, which
-is fast becoming impossible, that we have just erected commodious
-workshops [laboratories], in which, on the same system, but to many more
-boys, we propose to teach the use of tools in wood-work also, as we have
-heretofore taught in metals. To this time we have been compelled, from
-want of facilities, to confine our instruction to about one hundred and
-seventy-five boys. We expect next month (October, 1884) to increase the
-number to three hundred--only being limited by the youth of the pupils,
-many of whom are too young to permit of their handling tools.”
-
-Manual training has been made part of the curriculum of the Agricultural
-and Mechanical College of Auburn, Ala., and the department is under the
-direction of a graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of
-Technology.[104]
-
- [104] George H. Bryant, B.S., graduate of the Massachusetts Institute
- of Technology, class of 1883.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Manual training has been adopted as a branch of education in the Denver
-(Col.) University, and the director of the department is a graduate of
-the manual training department of the Washington University of St.
-Louis, Mo.[105]
-
- [105] C. H. Wright, B.S., graduate of the St. Louis Manual Training
- School, class of 1885.
-
-The present year (1885) witnesses a very important addition to the list
-of manual training schools--that of Philadelphia.
-
-It is not too much to say that Mr. James MacAlister has revolutionized
-the public schools of Philadelphia in the short period of two years
-during which he has held the office of superintendent; and the last wave
-of the revolution reveals a fully-equipped manual training school as
-part of the public-school system of the conservative, grand old Quaker
-city. And this practical element in education is to be free to all
-public-school boys fourteen years of age, who can show themselves
-qualified to enter, as witness the following “rules” of the Philadelphia
-public schools:
-
-“Promotions to the Manual Training School shall be made at the close of
-the June term, from the Twelfth Grade, or any higher grade, of the
-Boys’ Grammar, Consolidated and Combined Schools; but no boy shall be
-promoted who is under fourteen years of age.
-
-“It shall be the duty of the Principals of the several Boys’ Grammar,
-Consolidated and Combined Schools, to certify to the superintendent of
-schools the names of all boys of the proper age who have finished the
-course of study in the Twelfth Grade, or any higher grade, and are
-desirous of promotion to the Manual Training School.”
-
-In calling the attention of the public to the establishment of a manual
-training school as part of the educational system of Philadelphia, a
-committee of the City Board of Education say, under date of June 10,
-1885,
-
-“The undersigned desire to call attention to the new manual training
-school to be opened in this city next September. It is intended for boys
-who have finished the Twelfth Grade, or any higher grade, of the
-Grammar-school course. The instruction will embrace a thorough course,
-so far as it goes, in English, mathematics, free-hand and mechanical
-drawing, and the fundamental sciences; but in addition to these branches
-a carefully graded course of manual training will form a leading feature
-of the school. This manual training is intended to give the boys such a
-knowledge of the tools and materials employed in the chief industrial
-pursuits of our time as shall place them in more direct and sympathetic
-relations with the great activities of the business world. The school
-will make our public education not only more complete and symmetrical in
-character than it has been heretofore, but it will be at the same time
-better adapted to enable the pupils to win their way in life. No matter
-what future a parent may have marked out for his boy--whether he be
-intended for an industrial, a mercantile, or a professional occupation,
-it is believed that such an education will be of immense advantage to
-him. Upon the industries of the world, to a much larger extent than ever
-before in its history, depend the progress, the prosperity, the
-happiness of society. To prepare boys for this condition of things will
-be the aim of this school. The entire course of instruction and training
-will be _practical_ in the largest and best sense of that term. The
-culture it gives will include the hand as well as the head, and its
-graduates will be trained to work as well as to think. The course will
-extend over a period of three years, but it is so arranged that boys
-whose intended pursuits in life will not warrant spending so much time
-may participate in its advantages for a shorter period before entering
-upon other studies or a permanent occupation.
-
-“The Manual Training School has been organized in response to a growing
-sentiment respecting the character of public education which has been
-strongly manifested in Philadelphia, and the Board of Public Education
-believe that the movement, when fully understood, will meet with the
-cordial approval of our people. Your careful consideration of the nature
-and objects which the school seeks to accomplish is respectfully
-solicited.”
-
-This act of the school authorities of the city of Philadelphia is the
-strongest popular endorsement the theory of manual training as an
-element of education has received. It commits a great city to a fair
-trial of the new education under the most favorable auspices--under the
-conduct of Mr. James MacAlister, one of the most accomplished, as well
-as most sternly practical educators in the United States.
-
-But this is only part of a general system of manual training introduced
-throughout the whole course of instruction given in the public schools
-of Philadelphia. There are kindergartens (sub-primaries) for children
-from three to six years of age, and an industrial art department for all
-the students (of both sexes) of the grammar schools. In this latter
-department the course of training comprises “drawing and design,”
-“modelling,” “wood-carving,” “carpentry and joinery,” and “metal work.”
-These courses, including manual training proper, “at the top,” form a
-comprehensive system of head and hand training known as the new
-education. Mr. MacAlister says, “The conviction is gradually obtaining
-among the members of the Board of Education [of Philadelphia], and in
-the public mind, that every child should receive manual training; that a
-complete education implies the training of the hand in connection with
-the training of the mind; and that this feature must ultimately be
-incorporated into the public education. What is this but the realization
-of the principles which every great thinker and reformer in education
-has insisted upon, from Comenius, Locke, and Rousseau, to Pestalozzi,
-Froebel, and Spencer!”[106]
-
- [106] In a letter to the author, Mr. MacAlister re-enforces the
- observations quoted in the text. He says,
-
- “I wish you to understand that all my own convictions and action in
- connection with this movement are based upon what in my judgment
- should constitute an education fitted to prepare a human being for the
- social conditions of to-day, _and not merely upon the industrial
- demands of our time_.... I believe there is a great future for the
- manual training movement in Philadelphia. I feel encouraged to go
- forward with the work. The great principles which underlie the system
- are with me intense convictions; _they mean nothing less than a
- revolution in education_. The great ideas of the reformers of school
- training must be realized in the public schools, or they will fail in
- accomplishing the ends for which they were instituted and have been
- maintained.”
-
-The rapid progress of the revolution in education is shown by the fact
-that manual training in some form has been adopted in certain of the
-schools of at least twenty-four of the States of the American Union.
-
-In some of the higher educational institutions the new education is
-warmly welcomed, while in others public sentiment alone compels its
-adoption. The State Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas has
-been revolutionized in this way. A member of the Faculty[107] writes as
-follows:
-
- [107] H. H. Dinwiddie, Professor of Chemistry, Chairman of the
- Faculty.
-
-“This institution was opened on the 4th of October, 1876. In spite of
-its name, the conditions of its endowment, and its avowed object, it was
-founded on the plan of the old classical and mathematical college, and
-had no industrial features whatever till the beginning of the year 1880.
-At that time the public sentiment of the State had condemned so
-decidedly and repeatedly the misappropriation of the funds, and
-perversion of the energies of the college under its administration as a
-literary school, that the directors found it necessary to reorganize it
-by accepting the resignation of the members of the faculty without
-exception, and calling in a new corps of instructors. In 1880-81 a large
-dormitory building was converted into a shop [laboratory]. This was
-fitted with tools for elementary instruction in wood-working for the
-accommodation of about fifty students. A small metal-working plant was
-also erected, the whole being furnished with power from a
-twelve-horse-power engine. Since that time a brick shop [laboratory] has
-been provided for the accommodation of the metal-working machinery,
-which now includes the principal machines used in ordinary
-iron-working, all driven by a twenty-horsepower engine.”
-
-Massachusetts, the cradle of the American common-school system, is the
-first State to legalize by statute the new education, placing manual
-training on an equal footing with mental training, by the following act:
-
-“Section I. of Chapter XLIV. of the Public Statutes, relating to the
-branches of instruction to be taught in public schools, is amended by
-striking out in the eighth line the words ‘and hygiene,’ and inserting
-instead the words ‘hygiene and the elementary use of hand-tools;’ and in
-any city or town where such tools shall be introduced they shall be
-purchased by the school committee at the expense of such city or town,
-and loaned to such pupils as may be allowed to use them free of charge,
-subject to such rules and regulations, as to care and custody, as the
-school committee may prescribe.”[108]
-
- [108] “School Laws of Massachusetts. Supplement to the Edition of
- 1883, containing the Additional Legislation to the Close of the
- Legislative Session of 1885; issued by the State Board of Education.”
-
-The Legislature of Connecticut adopted a similar statute last year
-(1884).
-
-The Iowa Agricultural College is the first educational institution in
-the country to recognize the importance of instruction in the arts of
-home life. In this college domestic economy has been elevated to the
-dignity of a department called the “School of Domestic Economy,” with
-the following “special faculty:”
-
- The President, Mrs. Emma P. Ewing, Dean. _Domestic Economy_.
- J. L. Budd _Horticulture and Gardening_.
- A. A. Bennett _Chemistry_.
- B. D. Halsted _Botany_.
- D. S. Fairchild _Hygiene and Physiology_.
- Laura M. Saunderson _Elocution_.
-
-The course of study is as follows:
-
- FIRST YEAR.
-
- _First Term._ _Second Term._
-
- Domestic Economy. Domestic Economy.
- Botany. Physiology and Hygiene.
- Physical Training. Dress-fitting and Millinery.
- Household Accounts. Essays.
-
-
- SECOND YEAR.
-
- _First Term._ _Second Term._
-
- Domestic Economy. Domestic Economy.
- Chemistry. Home Architecture.
- Duties of the Nurse. Home Sanitation.
- Designing and Free-hand Drawing. Home Æsthetics and Decorative Art.
- Landscape and Floral Gardening. Essays and Graduating Thesis.
-
-Mrs. Ewing, dean of the school, thus states, clearly and powerfully, the
-reasons for its establishment and its purposes:
-
-“This school is based upon the assumption that no industry is more
-important to human happiness than that which makes the home; and that a
-pleasant home is an essential element of broad culture, and one of the
-surest safeguards of morality and virtue. It was organized to meet the
-wants of pupils who desire a knowledge of the principles that underlie
-domestic economy, and the course of study is especially arranged to
-furnish women instruction in applied house-keeping and the arts and
-sciences relating thereto--to incite them to a faithful performance of
-the every-day duties of life, and to inspire them with a belief in the
-nobleness and dignity of a true womanhood.
-
-“No calling requires for its perfect mastery a greater amount of
-practice and theory combined than that of domestic economy, and
-students, in addition to recitations and lectures on the various topics
-of the course, receive practical training in all branches of house-work,
-in the purchase and care of family supplies, and in general household
-management. They are not, however, required to perform a greater amount
-of labor than is necessary for the desired instruction.
-
-“The course of study is for graduates of colleges and universities. It
-extends through two years, and leads to the degree of Master of Domestic
-Economy.”[109]
-
- [109] Annual Catalogue of the Iowa Agricultural College.
-
-The Le Moyne Normal Institute of Memphis, Tenn., is a private school,
-“sustained chiefly by benevolently disposed people at the North, for
-colored youth.” In a letter to the author the principal of this school
-thus describes the manual features of its curriculum:
-
-“Besides our Normal work proper, we give girls of the school two years’
-training in needle-work of different kinds, one year’s instruction in
-choice and preparation of foods, with practice in an experimental
-kitchen, and six months’ training in nursing or care of the sick. One
-hour a day is given to each of the foregoing subjects for the time
-indicated.
-
-“I am about to erect workshops for training for our boys in the use of
-wood-working tools, and in iron-working and moulding--the course to
-comprise two years’ time, two hours per day at the benches. We shall
-also have type-setting and printing as specialties for individual
-students. This work will be in operation in January, 1886.”[110]
-
- [110] A. J. Steele.
-
-The professor in charge of the Mechanical Engineering Department of the
-University of Michigan writes to the author as follows:
-
-“There can be no doubt in the mind of a sane man that this practical
-instruction [laboratory work] is exactly what is needed by our
-engineering students. We are assured of that fact by the expression of
-gratification on the part of our engineering _alumni_ to find here the
-very instruction which they were obliged to spend two or three years to
-secure after graduating. We give our students work of an elementary
-character for a few weeks, or until they become accustomed to tools,
-when we put them to work on some part of a machine. If they spoil it,
-well and good--it goes into the scrap-heap; if they succeed, they have
-the pleasure of seeing a perfect machine grow up under their eyes and
-hand. Students having matured minds, as most of ours have, work better
-with a definite plan in view. We always require them to work from
-drawings. Our course in forging is very popular; and it is especially
-useful, as it gives our young men that knowledge of the different kinds
-of iron and steel which will be of the greatest benefit to them as
-engineers.”[111]
-
- [111] Mortimer E. Cooley, Assistant Engineer, U. S. Navy.
-
-The National Educational Association of the United States, at its last
-meeting, at Saratoga Springs, N. Y. (1885), took a great step forward in
-the adoption of a resolution[112] endorsing the kindergarten. The
-association was, however, singularly illogical in its subsequent
-action, in voting to lay upon the table a resolution[113] recommending
-the introduction of manual training to the public schools. The
-kindergarten and manual training are one in principle, and should be one
-in practice. All educators will soon see this, and the National
-Educational Association will no doubt soon place itself as heartily on
-record in support of manual training as it has already done in support
-of the kindergarten.
-
- [112] “_Resolved_, that we trust the time is near at hand when the
- true principles of the kindergarten will guide all elementary
- training, and when public sentiment and legislative enactment will
- incorporate the kindergarten into our public-school system.”
-
- [113] “_Resolved_, That we recognize the educational value of training
- the hand to skill in the use of tools, and recommend that provision be
- made, as far as practicable, for such training in public schools.”
-
-Ohio ranks as the third State in the Union industrially, and she is
-making great strides in the direction of a more practical system of
-education. This is shown by the prominent place given to instruction in
-the mechanic arts in the State University at Columbus, by the prosperity
-of the Case School of Applied Science, and the introduction of manual
-training to the public-school system at Cleveland, and by the
-establishment of the Scott Manual Training School at Toledo. The city of
-Toledo owes the inception of the movement in support of the new
-education to the munificence of the late Jesup W. Scott, who during his
-life conveyed to trustees for purposes of industrial education, in
-connection with the public-school system, certain valuable real estate.
-After the death of Mr. Scott, his three sons,[114] still residents of
-Toledo, supplemented their father’s donation with a sufficient sum of
-money to secure the erection and complete equipment of a manual training
-school for three hundred and fifty pupils.
-
- [114] William F., Frank J., and Maurice Scott.
-
-The school is modelled after the schools of St. Louis and Chicago; but
-it gives only the manual side of the curriculum, because it is
-conducted in connection with the public High School, receiving its
-pupils therefrom. It opened in the autumn of 1884 with sixty pupils, ten
-of whom were girls. Its register now numbers two hundred, fifty of whom
-are girls. Its course for boys is substantially the same as that of the
-Chicago school. The course for girls includes free-hand and mechanical
-drawing, designing, modelling, wood-carving, cutting, fitting, and
-making garments, and domestic science, including food preparation and
-household decoration. A distinguished lawyer and citizen of Toledo,[115]
-who has been prominent in the work of establishing the school, says,
-
- [115] Hon. A. E. Macomber.
-
-“The brightest and most faithful pupils of the High School have eagerly
-availed themselves of the opportunity for manual instruction, and the
-zeal with which this new work is pursued has added a new charm to school
-life.”
-
-The school is in charge of Mr. Ralph Miller, B.S., who is assisted by
-Mr. Geo. S. Mills, B.S.[116] It is especially interesting, both as the
-newest educational enterprise and because it places the sexes on a
-footing of absolute equality. Reform in education must begin with woman,
-for it is from her that man inherits his notable traits, and from her
-that he receives the earliest and most enduring impressions. In the arms
-of the mother the infant mind rapidly unfolds. It is in the cradle, in
-the nursery, and at the fireside that the child becomes father of the
-man. The regeneration of the race through education must, then, begin
-with the child, and be directed by the mother; and this being the fact,
-the education of woman becomes far more imperative than that of man.
-
- [116] Graduates of the St. Louis Manual Training School, class of
- 1884.
-
-That the ancients made so little progress in morals is due to the fact
-of their neglect of the education of woman. Neither in Egypt nor Persia
-was provision made for her mental or moral training. There were schools
-for boys in Greece, but none for girls; and not till late in the Empire
-was there any special culture for girls in Rome.
-
-In the Middle Ages learning was confined to the religious orders. The
-narrow bounds of the convent contained all there was of science and art.
-In the castle and at the tournament woman ministered to man’s pride and
-vanity; and in the peasant’s hut, which was the abode equally of poverty
-and ignorance, she endured both mental and moral starvation. Sir Walter
-Raleigh, Lord Bacon, Swift, Addison, Lord Chesterfield, Dr. Johnson, and
-Southey treated woman with mingled contempt and pity, and yet they were
-familiar with the story of Lucretia, of Virginia, and of the Maid of
-Orleans! But Shakespeare, with a sublimer genius, portrayed a Cordelia,
-a Desdemona, an Imogen, and a Queen Catharine, and with rare prevision
-of a future better than the age he knew, wrote these glowing lines:
-
- “Falsehood and cowardice
- Are things that women highly hold in hate.”
-
-This is the rational age, though not less truly chivalrous than that of
-Arthur and his knights; for, as Ruskin well says, “The buckling on of
-the knight’s armor by his lady’s hand is the type of an eternal
-truth--that the soul’s armor is never well set to the heart unless a
-woman’s hand has braced it.”[117]
-
- [117] “Sesame and Lilies,” p. 97. By John Ruskin, LL.D. New York: John
- Wiley & Sons, 1884.
-
-The distinguishing features of this time are its homes and its schools,
-and the purity of the one and the efficiency of the other depends upon
-woman. It was reserved for Froebel to rescue woman from the scorn of
-preceding ages by declaring her superior fitness for the office of
-teacher--the most exalted of civil functions.
-
-The growth of the kindergarten has not been commensurate with its
-importance. Indifference and prejudice have united to discourage
-progress. Ancient contempt of childhood--that contempt which in Persia
-excluded the boy from the presence of his father until the fifth year of
-his age[118]--projects its sombre shadow down the ages. But manual
-training, which is the kindergarten in another form, is leading captive
-the imagination of the American people, and where the imagination leads,
-woman is in the van. Woman is to man what the poet is to the scientist,
-what Shakespeare was to Newton, the celestial guide. She tempts to deeds
-of heroism and self-sacrifice. She is less selfish than man, because a
-more vivid imagination inspires her with a deeper feeling of compassion
-for the misfortunes and follies of the race. Her intuitions are truer
-than those of man, her ideals higher, her sense of justice finer, and of
-duty stronger; and she has a better appreciation of the moral value of
-industry, remembering the temptations of her sex to evil through habits
-of idleness, enforced by the decrees of custom. And she is our teacher,
-whether we will or no--our teacher from the cradle to the grave--and it
-is through her ministry that we are destined to realize our highest
-mental and moral ideals.[E32]
-
- [118] “Herodotus,” Clio I., p. 136.
-
-This sketch of the history of manual training in the United States is
-doubtless incomplete. It is, however, sufficient to show that the
-subject is already one of absorbing interest in all parts of the
-country.
-
-Manual training in the public schools of Europe can scarcely be called
-educational, since the pupils usually make articles for household use.
-The purpose is purely industrial, and hence the mental culture received
-in the course of the manual exercise is the mere incident of a
-mechanical pursuit. But the making of things in the schools of Europe is
-gradually extending.
-
-In Denmark an annual appropriation ($2000) is made by the Legislature
-for the encouragement of _slöjd_ (hand-cunning) in the schools. All
-pupils in Danish and Swedish schools make things.
-
-In Germany, Dr. Erasmus Schwab published in Vienna, in 1873, a book,
-“The Work School in the Common School.” Rittmeister Claussen Von Kaas,
-of Denmark, travelled through Germany and delivered lectures on manual
-training, and now there is a considerable agitation of the subject.
-
-In Finland all the country schools are _slöjd_ schools.
-
-In 1881 the Legislature of Norway appropriated $1250 for the support of
-_slöjd_ in the schools.
-
-In France a law (1882) makes manual training obligatory, and a school
-for training teachers has been established--“L’école Normale Superieure
-de travail Manuel”--in which there are about fifty students. Prof. G.
-Solicis was the chief supporter of manual training in France.
-
-In Sweden, in 1876, there were eighty _slöjd_ schools. In 1877 the
-number had increased to one hundred; in 1878, to one hundred and thirty;
-in 1879, to two hundred; in 1880, to three hundred; in 1881, to four
-hundred; and in 1882, to five hundred.
-
-In Nääs, in Sweden, there is a seminary for the training of _slöjd_
-teachers.[119] Of this seminary Otto Salomon is director. In the _slöjd_
-schools small articles are made for use in the house, kitchen, on the
-farm, etc. The course of instruction embraces one hundred models. The
-materials for the first series of twenty-five models cost about 40
-cents; for the second series of twenty-five the cost is 75 cents; and
-for the third series of fifty the cost is $3.25. The annual expense of
-the manual training in a Swedish country school is about ten to eleven
-dollars.
-
- [119] “Four young women have graduated from the Slöjd Teacher’s
- Seminary at Nääs, Sweden, and two of them are now engaged in teaching
- manual arts.”--Letter from John M. Ordway, A.M., Chair of Applied
- Chemistry and Biology, and Director of Manual Training, Tulane
- University of Louisiana.
-
-The technical and mechanic art or trade schools of Europe, generally,
-whether public or private, do not come within the scope of this work,
-since their purpose is industrial, not educational.
-
- [E32] “In fine, I have been beloved by the four women whose love was
- of the most comfort to me: My mother, my sister, my wife and my
- daughter. I have had the better part, and it will not be taken from
- me, for I often fancy that the judgments which will be passed upon us
- in the Valley of Jehoshaphat, will be neither more nor less than those
- of women, countersigned by the Almighty.”--“Recollections of My
- Youth,” p. 306. By Ernest Renan. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1883.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII.
-
-PROGRESS OF THE NEW EDUCATION--1883-1898.
-
- Educational Revolution in 1883-4. -- Urgent Demand for Reform --
- Existing Schools Denounced as Superficial, their Methods as Automatic,
- their System as a Mixture of Cram and Smatter -- The Controversy
- between the School-master of the Old Régime and the Reformer -- The
- Leaders of the Movement, Col. Parker, Dr. MacAlister, and Others --
- Followers of Rousseau, Bacon, and Spencer -- “The End of Man is an
- Action, not a Thought” -- The Conservative Teachers Fall into Line --
- The New Education Becomes an Aggressive Force, Pushing on to Victory
- -- The Physical Progress of Manual Training -- Its Quality Not Equal
- to its Extent -- The New System of Training Confided to Teachers of
- the Old Régime -- Ideal Teachers Hard to Find -- Teachers Willing to
- Learn Should Be Encouraged -- The Effects of Manual Training Long
- Antedate its Introduction to the Schools -- Bacon’s Definition of
- Education -- Stephenson and the Value of Hand-work -- Manual Training
- is the Union of Thought and Action -- It is the Antithesis of the
- Greek Methods, which Exalted Abstractions and Debased Things -- The
- Rule of Comenius and the Injunction of Rousseau -- Few Teachers
- Comprehend Them -- The Employment of the Hands in the Arts is More
- Highly Educative than the Acquisition of the Rules of Reading and
- Arithmetic -- What the Locomotive has Accomplished for Man --
- Education Must be Equal, and Social and Political Equality will Follow
- -- The Foundation of the New Education is the Baconian Philosophy as
- Stated by Macaulay -- Use and Service are the Twin-ministers of Human
- Progress -- Definitions of Genius -- Attention -- Sir Henry Maine --
- Manual Training Relates to all the Arts of Life -- Mind and Hand --
- Newton and the Apple -- The Sense of Touch Resides in the Hand --
- Robert Seidel on Familiarity with Objects -- Material Progress the
- Basis of Spiritual Growth -- Plato and the Divine Dialogues --
- Poverty, Society, and the Useful Arts -- Selfishness Must Give Way to
- Altruism -- The Struggle of Life -- The Progress of the Arts and the
- Final Regeneration of the Race -- The Arts that Make Life Sweet and
- Beautiful -- The Final Fundamental Educational Ideal is Universality
- -- Comenius’s Definition of Schools -- The Workshops of Humanity --
- That One Man Should Die Ignorant who had Capacity for Knowledge is a
- Tragedy -- Mental and Manual Exercises to be Rendered Homogeneous in
- the School of the Future -- The Hero of the Ideal School.
-
-
-Fifteen years ago a great wave of educational awakening swept over this
-country. It penetrated every nook and corner of the land, pervading both
-cities, large and small, and the rural districts. It took the shape of a
-demand, often almost inarticulate, for reform. The schools were
-denounced as superficial; their methods as automatic; their teachers as
-unintelligent and untrained, their system of instruction as a mixture of
-cram and smatter.
-
-The school-master is a conservative, and with his champions he came
-promptly to the defence of the old schools and their old methods. The
-controversy became heated, and soon the rival forces joined battle. Col.
-Francis W. Parker, of the Chicago Normal School, and Dr. James
-MacAlister, now President of the Drexel Institute of Philadelphia, and
-others were prominent leaders of the new reform movement, whose banner
-was “Manual Training,” or “The New Education.”
-
-Under this brilliant and enthusiastic leadership the movement became a
-crusade in the interest of the educational ideas of Montaigne, Rousseau,
-Bacon, Locke, Comenius, Pestalozzi, Froebel, Spencer, Mann, and their
-long array of sympathizers and supporters, who, with Bacon, declare that
-“the end of man is an action, not a thought.”
-
-But the work of the reformers was too serious to be long controlled,
-either by emotion or passion. The more intelligent and better educated
-and trained teachers gradually came to the support of the new system and
-methods, and the mass of the teaching fraternity caught something of the
-enthusiasm by which the reformers were inspired to struggle for a great
-cause. Thereafter Manual Training became an aggressive force openly
-demanding recognition, and pushing for victory and ultimate control.
-
-In the Appendix hereto the physical progress of Manual Training is shown
-in tabulated form; and the extent of such progress is all, if not more,
-than its most ardent friends and advocates could rationally desire. But
-it is not to be doubted that the quality of the progress the new
-education has made in the period of fifteen years under consideration is
-far inferior to its extent. The statistics here presented relate mainly
-to the village, town, and city schools of this country, and especially
-to its public schools, with some general observations and facts in
-relation to the progress of the new education in England and the chief
-countries in Europe. In a few instances the tabulations include
-institutions designed for industrial rather than strictly educational
-purposes. But it is deemed wise to retain them, on the ground that
-whether so designed or not all industrial training is educative.
-
-It is worthy of intelligent inquiry whether as a matter of fact, not
-only in this country, but in all countries, the progress of Manual
-Training has not been very unsatisfactory in quality. In most cases the
-new education was necessarily confided to teachers of the old régime,
-who, as a preliminary, were compelled to unlearn what was false and
-erroneous in the old system, to overcome the prejudices of years,
-sometimes of a lifetime, and to become faithful and laborious students
-of a new and scientific scheme of education. The main difficulty in
-matters educational has always been to secure ideal teachers. Education
-is the first of human considerations, and its professors should be the
-most learned of human beings. If the teachers who have been called to
-the Priesthood, of the New Education, have proved incompetent in many
-instances, instead of being hastily condemned they should be helped
-forward towards the goal of competency by all friends of that progress
-in education which is the sole hope of human perfection.
-
-The most striking effects of Manual Training long antedate its
-introduction to the schools. For thousands of years, in every shop where
-the humble mechanic wrought; at every fireside where the domestic arts
-obtained a foothold; in every field where a step forward was made
-through the invention of some less crude implement of husbandry than the
-one that preceded it, the mind and the hand expressed their joint
-struggle towards the achievement of that skill in useful things which
-constitutes the very kernel of civilization. Bacon’s definition of
-education--“the cultivation of a just and legitimate familiarity betwixt
-the mind and things”--is a recognition of the philosophic fact that the
-hand is the source of wisdom; and the life of George Stephenson, the
-inventor of the locomotive, affords a most impressive illustration of
-the educative value of hand-work. At the coal-pit’s mouth Stephenson,
-meantime learning his “A B C’s,” invented the “Rocket,” while the
-bookish engineers were declaring it to be a mechanical impossibility.
-Stephenson’s achievement was the realization in things of Bacon’s
-luminous precept--“The end of man is an action, not a thought.”--This
-is the philosophy, the rationale, of Manual Training; it is the union of
-thought and action, and it therefore demands the elimination from
-educational methods of the abstract philosophy of the Greeks. In his
-declaration, “All the useful arts are degrading,” Plato defined the
-character of the revival of learning which was to occur hundreds of
-years afterwards; it was a revival of Greek methods, which exalted
-abstractions, and debased things. Mr. Herbert Spencer refers to its
-baleful effects upon the schools of England in the severest terms of
-condemnation. That Mr. Spencer’s arraignment of the schools is just, is
-shown by its antithesis expressed in the dictum of Dr. Dwight, of Yale
-College, who says: “Education is for the purpose of developing and
-cultivating the thinking power. It is to the end of making a knowing,
-thinking mind.”
-
-Bacon discovered, and did not hesitate to declare, that “the
-understanding is more prone to error than the senses”; and this fact
-constitutes the basis of his philosophy of “things,” which is another
-name for the law of induction. “For if we would look into and dissect
-the nature of this real world,” he says, “we must consult only things
-themselves.” If we would find the corner-stone of education, we must
-consult labor. Nothing great is accomplished without a due mingling of
-drudgery and humility; for of all the virtues humility is the most
-excellent. The Greeks failed to comprehend the true educational idea
-because of their pride. They associated use with slavery, because in
-Greece all labor was performed by slaves; and, scorning labor, they
-scorned use, and, by consequence, service, the greatest of the
-moralities.
-
-Upon the foundation laid by Bacon, Rabelais, and Montaigne, Comenius,
-Rousseau, Pestalozzi, and Froebel raised a great superstructure of
-educational ideas. Words were subordinated, and things ennobled.
-
-Comenius’s rule, to “leave nothing until it has been impressed by means
-of the ear, the eye, the tongue, the hand,” and the injunction of
-Rousseau that “the student will learn more by one hour of manual labor
-than he will retain from a whole day’s verbal instructions; that the
-things themselves are the best explanations”--these are the maxims of
-the new education.
-
-But to what extent has the old school-master adopted the new education,
-to what extent occupied the old school-room with new ideas? How many
-school-masters of even the present _régime_ comprehend with John Ruskin
-that “the youth who has once learned to take a straight shaving off a
-plank, or to draw a fine curve without faltering, or to lay a brick
-level in its mortar, has learned a multitude of other matters which no
-lips of man could ever teach him?” In other words, to what extent does
-the conviction pervade the ranks of the fraternity of teachers, whether
-of public-schools, private schools, colleges, or universities, that the
-employment of the hands in the useful arts is more highly educative than
-the acquisition of the rules of reading, writing, and arithmetic? Or,
-considering the subject of the history and career of George Stephenson,
-for instance, what, in the opinion of the modern school-master,
-contributed most to his development as a man and citizen of the
-world--the mental exercise of learning to read, write, and cipher, which
-task he accomplished while engaged in inventing the locomotive, or the
-combined mental and manual exercise of taking apart, repairing, and
-putting together the stationary engine used at the colliery where he
-was employed? If, in the course of our investigation, it should be found
-that doing things as Stephenson did is more conducive to intellectual
-development than memorizing words and reciting poetry, as the Greeks
-did, some light may be thrown on the general subject of existing
-educational methods. Their chief defect is their lack of moral power.
-Morality does not reside in the letters of the alphabet, but there is in
-the locomotive, for example, a great moral principle--the principle of
-the brotherhood of man. For, in devising the locomotive, Stephenson made
-man’s neighborhood coterminous with earth’s utmost bounds; thus, in a
-single act, achieving his own apotheosis, and assuring, ultimately, the
-moral and intellectual kinship of the race. For the hand stands for use,
-for service, and for unyielding integrity; and it may be confidently
-asserted on the conviction of observation, experience, and a studious
-consideration of historic facts, that its drill and discipline as
-enforced in the world’s workshops, and in the best of existing
-Manual-training schools, results in a far greater degree of mind
-development than is produced by any exclusively academic course, and
-hence that Manual Training is the most important of all methods of
-education.
-
-The most sacred of human rights is the right of the poor child, born in
-a highly civilized, wealthy community, to the same kind and degree of
-education as that received by the child of the most opulent citizen.
-
-It was long ago remarked that “the inequalities of intellect, like the
-inequalities of the surface of our globe, bear so small a proportion to
-the mass that in calculating its great revolutions they may safely be
-neglected;” and the late Henry George declared that the differences in
-men, intellectually, are no greater than their physical differences.
-
-The perpetuity of free institutions depends upon social not less than
-upon political equality. But social equality is impossible without
-educational equality: the very thought of intimate relations with the
-ignorant is repulsive to the learned. Education, impartial and
-universal, is, therefore, the sole guarantee of an ideal civilization,
-and so of an imperishable state.
-
-Old social evils constantly recur because the old crime of inequality in
-education is forever and ever repeated. It follows that we shall make
-all things equal through equal education. But what sort of education? We
-shall not train the child, as the ancients did, “to dispute in learned
-phrase as to whether we can be certain that we are certain of nothing!”
-Nor shall we stuff his memory with the grammar and rhetoric of an
-ancient tongue, in view of the profound observation of Dr. Draper, that
-a living thought can no more be embodied in a dead language than
-activity can be imparted to a corpse. But we shall rather instruct him
-in the principles of the Baconian philosophy, of which Macaulay so aptly
-says: “Its characteristic distinction, its essential spirit, is its
-majestic humility--the persuasion that nothing can be too insignificant
-for the attention of the wisest which is not too insignificant to give
-pleasure or pain to the meanest.”
-
-The end sought in education by the ancients was ornament, and its strict
-analogy is found in barbaric life. Spencer has pointed out that the
-savage smeared his body with yellow ochre before he covered it with
-clothes, and that he adorned his head with feathers before he built a
-hut. So, under the laws of evolution, before a Bacon could arise, whole
-generations of philosophers were born, lived, speculated, and died,
-without leaving to mankind the smallest heritage of that common sense by
-which we nevertheless live.
-
-A philosophy which scorned the useful in all its aspects was essentially
-barbaric; for art differentiates civilized from savage life: its law was
-stagnation, as the law of scientific investigation is progress. Use is
-the greatest thing in the material world, as service is the greatest
-thing in the moral world; and they are united in the philosophy of
-Bacon, which, beginning in observation and ending in art, multiplies
-useful things that are beautiful, and beautiful things that are useful.
-
-The old education was an outgrowth of the old philosophy; the new
-education springs as logically from the new, or Baconian, philosophy.
-The old education was ornamental; the new is scientific, or useful. The
-old education was designed to make masters; the new is designed to make
-men.
-
-President Eliot, of Harvard University, admits that his method of
-education is to compel the student to work. On the other hand, the
-method of the new education is to attract him. Genius has many
-definitions, one of which is “a capacity for taking infinite pains.” But
-its humblest equivalent is “attention”; and we propose to secure the
-student’s attention through his hands: for the most significant fact in
-all the realm of certitude is the fact that man impresses himself upon
-nature through the hand alone!
-
-Let us then, in the new school, unite mind and hand in a crusade after
-the truths that are hidden in things. For Manual Training,
-educationally, is the blending of thought and action. The thought that
-does not lead to an act is both mentally and materially barren. For as
-it confers no benefit upon the human race, neither does it profit the
-mind that conceives it. Nay, more. An unprolific thought exhausts the
-mind to no purpose, as an unfruitful tree cumbers the ground. It follows
-that the integrity of the mind can be maintained only by the submission
-of its immature judgments to the verification of things. Hence the
-correlation of thoughts and things is as necessary to mental and moral
-growth as the application of the principles of abstract mechanics to the
-arts of peace is essential to human progress.
-
-Sir Henry Maine supports this doctrine in a graphic paragraph:
-“Unchecked by external truth the mind of man has a fatal facility for
-ensnaring and entrapping and entangling itself. But happily, happily for
-the human race, some fragment of physical speculation has been built
-into every false system.”
-
-Things are the source of ideas. Action generates thought. He who has
-tools in his hand thinks best as well as acts best. The man whose finger
-is on Nature’s pulse feels her heart-throbs, and so discovers and
-utilizes her secrets. The men and women who do the world’s work are
-better educated than the schoolmen who vainly tell them how to do it;
-and they are better educated because they are in closer relationship
-with things, through the supreme sense of touch, which refines and
-spiritualizes the hand--that wonderful member which differentiates man
-from the other animals, and makes him their master.
-
-Manual Training educationally, then, relates to all the arts whose sum
-is the art of living. For whether it be the chair on which we sit; or
-the bed on which we lie; or the garments we wear; or the house that
-shelters us; or the railway train on which we cross continents; or the
-ship that takes us over seas; or the unspeakable marvels of the world’s
-museums and galleries upon which we gaze with rapture; or the orchestra
-of an hundred instruments, whose music enchants us; or the treasures of
-dead cities--long buried--now unearthed; or the temples in which we
-worship; or the monuments which commemorate our heroes and martyrs; or
-the tombs in which we moulder away to dust--they are all the work of the
-hand!
-
-Manual Training is the acquisition by the hand of the arts through which
-man expresses himself in things. It is a series of educational
-generalizations in things. The purpose of it is to put the mind and hand
-_en rapport_ with each other; to make the hand acquainted with the
-elementary manipulations of the typical arts, by actual exercises, as
-the mind is familiarized with the fundamental principles of the sciences
-by studying their laws.
-
-Superior observation is only another name for genius. To the dull eye
-the falling apple taught no lesson, but to Newton’s quick apprehension
-it revealed the law of gravitation!
-
-It is not alone, however, in the sense of sight that observation
-resides; nor is it keenest there. We have recently learned the value of
-object teaching; but we have yet to learn, popularly and practically,
-what has long been known to science--that the sense of touch is the
-master sense, whence all the other senses spring. It is because of this
-fact, and of the further fact that the sense of touch is most highly
-developed in the hand, that man is the wisest of animals.
-
-It follows that more than in the sense of seeing, hearing, tasting, or
-smelling--nay, more than in all these senses combined--the faculty of
-observation resides in the hand.
-
-Dr. Wilson declares that touch “reigns throughout the body, and is the
-token of life in every part”; and Dr. Maudsley says: “It is the
-fundamental sense, the mother-tongue of language.”
-
-How apt is this definition of the sense of touch--“the token of life in
-every part”--and how comprehensive this--“the mother-tongue of
-language!” And of this master sense the hand is the chief organ and
-minister. How versatile it is; what adaptability it possesses; what
-helpfulness! In the moment of danger how reassuring its supporting
-grasp; how consoling its gentle touch when grief overwhelms! In defeat
-how it trembles with emotion, and how tense with exaltation it becomes
-in the hour of victory! With what infinite loathing it shrinks from a
-hated contact, and with what sympathetic vibrations of ardor responds to
-the clinging pressure of love!
-
-If we would become familiar with objects we must subject them to the
-test of touch, we must handle them. As Robert Seidel, a great teacher,
-well says: “We must stretch them, beat them, cool them, expose them to
-the sun, the water, the air--we must work them.”
-
-It is through these processes of loving manipulation that the mechanic
-and the artisan transform things crude and ugly into forms of use and
-beauty. And it is in this way, and this way only, that man has trod the
-path of progress. It is a rugged road, whose steeps are to be climbed
-alone by those whose hearts are warm with holy zeal, whose souls are
-aglow with enthusiasm, and whose hands are endowed with the rich
-experiences of thoughtful toil. And we shall fit all mankind for this
-noble task by training them to usefulness--that is, by teaching them,
-not merely how to think, but how to act, how to work.
-
-It is a broad and conclusive generalization of Herbert Spencer that
-since literature and the fine arts are made possible by the useful arts,
-manifestly that which is made possible must be postponed to that which
-makes it possible. Nor does this rational and sober view of art detract
-in the least from its dignity or sentiment. On the contrary, it provides
-a foundation for works of the imagination--a basis for that spirituality
-which is the fruit of the happy conjunction of a multitude of material
-conditions evolved from the humblest as well as the noblest of the
-useful arts--a basis without which the beautiful arts could never exist.
-
-It thus becomes plain that social and economic conditions are the
-product of education in things. Art education differentiates the
-civilized from the savage man. The pathway of progress which now blazes
-with the glory of electricity stretches back to the gloom of the caves
-where our early ancestors dwelt; and the steps of this advance consist
-of improvements in the useful and beautiful arts. From gesture to
-speech; from pictures to types; from the canoe to the steamship, and
-from the canal to the locomotive, the race has moved forward, always and
-only, through art triumphs.
-
-So all the generations of men have lived and toiled for us. We are the
-heirs of the hoarded learning, of the accumulated mental and moral
-fibre, and of the treasured arts of the ages. And we are hence the
-elders, as Bacon says, of the philosophers, the sages, and the inventors
-and discoverers of all time. Their achievements are heights whence we
-may discern and occupy new and wider fields of human endeavor.
-
-The precise relation of the useful arts to social and economic
-conditions is, therefore, that of creator. As your art education is, so
-shall your society be. There are persons who unconsciously dissociate
-art and civilization--who think that things are not essential to
-spiritual development, who fail to realize the fact that the main reason
-of the barbaric character of the savage is the absence from his
-environment of the arts of peace and plenty. If, for example, Plato had
-not been provided with food and clothing and shelter, he would doubtless
-not have composed the divine dialogues; and if there had been neither
-mechanics, nor architects, nor sculptors to adorn with palaces and
-temples the Greek cities, his ideal republic would not have had a place
-in classic literature; and finally, if there had been no (slave)
-hand-workers in Greece (for art products are all, directly or
-indirectly, the work of the hand), instead of being the most venerated
-of philosophers, Plato might have been, perhaps, the most wretched of
-savages, prolonging a miserable existence by means the most inglorious.
-But so unconscious was he of the true relation of the useful arts to
-life that he denounced them all as “degrading”!
-
-Poverty is the chief scourge of society; and it is a familiar economic
-fact that where the useful arts are most flourishing poverty is least
-pressing, so that to abolish poverty it would seem to be only necessary
-to multiply and extend the arts. And if poverty is to be abolished; if
-there is ever to be an ideal civilization, the controlling motive of
-humanity must be changed from selfishness to altruism; and this change
-can come only through love of work. So long as work shall be regarded
-as a “curse,” the paramount purpose of the individual will be to avoid
-it, and to compel others to submit to it. Hence the antagonisms that
-arise at every point of human contact. The sum of these antagonisms is
-what we call the struggle of life, which is merely the struggle of each
-to survive at the expense of his fellows, and is therefore barbaric.
-
-Now as we have seen that it is through the arts that man has been
-civilized--that, in a word, the arts differentiate the civilized from
-the savage man--it is evident that the further regeneration of the race
-is to be wrought by analogous means--that is to say, by a wider
-expansion of the arts of peace. And the way to achieve this result is to
-transform our schools, which were modelled after the classic methods of
-Greece and Rome, into laboratories for the development of useful men and
-women, through the mastery of the useful arts; the arts that make life
-sweet and beautiful; the arts that adorn our homes, that render the
-earth fertile and make it blossom as the rose; the arts that annihilate
-distance and so promote man’s brotherhood by enlarging his
-neighborhood--these are the arts that inspire us with just and generous
-impulses, the arts in which the noblest moral sentiments are made
-manifest in things.
-
-These, then, are the arts which ought to be made the subject of thorough
-and exhaustive education--the arts that led Comenius to define schools
-as the workshops of humanity. The final essential educational condition
-is universality; for it is obvious that inequality of educational
-opportunity is the grossest injustice of which organized society is
-capable. It is against this injustice that Carlyle exclaims: “That there
-should one man die ignorant, who had capacity for knowledge, this I
-call a tragedy, were it to happen more than twenty times in the minute.”
-
-This is indeed the tragedy of tragedies--the tragedy on the heels of
-which slavery stalks; in whose train caste rides in scornful state; in
-whose hideous shadow war waits to shed blood and spread pestilence and
-famine. All these are the satellites of ignorance, and hardly less of
-partial education than of total unenlightenment; and hence the only hope
-that civilization shall finally triumph over barbarism rests in
-universal, impartial, and scientific education.
-
-The contrasts between the old and the new school methods pointed out in
-this chapter show along what lines educational progress is to be sought.
-The ideal school is to consist, not of one academic department, and a
-department of Manual Training, but of mental and manual exercises so
-related as to produce homogeneity.
-
-The tabulations of facts which will be found in the Appendix show that a
-vast number of schools have been dedicated to the new education. If they
-are to be developed into ideal schools thousands of ideal teachers must
-devote themselves to the arduous task. Each school transformed from the
-dull routine of mediocrity to the vigor and elasticity which wait on
-development will cost the life of a hero. The school that has no hero to
-struggle for its salvation will surely languish and die. Every great
-school of the future must therefore have its hero, for it is only the
-hero who toils without thought of reward. As Carlyle so well says: “The
-wages of every noble work do yet lie in heaven or else nowhere.” And he
-has left this message of advice and encouragement to the hero of the
-school of the future which is to revolutionize the world: “Thou wilt
-never sell thy life in a satisfactory manner. Give it like a royal
-heart; let the price be nothing: thou hast then, in a certain sense, got
-all for it!”
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX
-
-
-STATISTICS.--MANUAL TRAINING, 1883-1898, IN THE UNITED STATES
-
-MANUAL TRAINING IN PUBLIC HIGH-SCHOOLS
-
- -----------------------+-------------+-----+--------+--------+--------
- | | | Manual |Teachers| Pupils
- | | |Training| of | Taking
- | | | Estab- | Manual | Manual
- NAME OF SCHOOL |CITY OR TOWN |STATE| lished |Training|Training
- -----------------------+-------------+-----+--------+--------+--------
- High-school |Peru |Ill. | 1883 | 2 | 41
- Polytechnic High-school|Baltimore |Md. | 1883 | 16 | 674
- High-school |Eau Claire |Wis. | 1884 | 1 | 50
- Central Manual-training| | | | |
- School |Philadelphia |Penn.| 1885 | 13 | 406
- Industrial Training | | | | |
- High-school |Indianapolis |Ind. | 1885 | 10 | 676
- Rochester Free Academy |Rochester |N. Y.| 1885 | .. | 908
- High-school |Toledo |Ohio | 1885 | 11 | 394
- Central Manual-training| | | | |
- School | Cleveland |Ohio | 1885 | 4 | 200
- Central High-school |Washington |D. C.| 1886 | .. | 235
- Manual-training High- | | | | |
- school |New Haven |Conn.| 1886 | 13 | ..
- Manual-training School |Springfield |Mass.| 1886 | 3 | 34
- High-school |Minneapolis |Minn.| 1886 | 4 | 375
- Newburg Free Academy |Newburg |N. Y.| 1886 | 2 | 133
- Manual-training School |Galesburg |Ill. | 1887 | 1 | 74
- High-school |St. Paul |Minn.| 1887 | 5 | 350
- Manual-training High- | | | | |
- school |Stillwater |Minn.| 1887 | 1 | 12
- High-school |Jamestown |N. Y.| 1887 | 1 | 48
- Central High-school |Easton |Del. | 1888 | .. | ..
- High-school |Easton |Md. | 1888 | .. | ..
- Ridge Manual-training | | | | |
- School |Cambridge |Mass.| 1888 | 9 | 178
- High-school |Concord |N. H.| 1888 | 4 | 52
- Orange High-school |Orange |N. J.| 1888 | 3 | 180
- High-school |Albany |N. Y.| 1888 | 3 | 750
- Dist. 20 Central High- | | | | |
- school |Pueblo |Col. | 1889 | 1 | 160
- Manual-training High- | | | | |
- school |Davenport |Iowa | 1889 | 1 | 82
- West Des Moines High- | | | | |
- school |Des Moines |Iowa | 1889 | 1 | 50
- Manual-training High- | | | | |
- school |Fall River |Mass.| 1889 | 1 | 62
- High-school |Duluth |Minn.| 1889 | 2 | 80
- High school |Omaha |Neb. | 1889 | .. | 100
- High-school |Union |N. J.| 1889 | 3 | 200
- High-school |Westchester |Penn.| 1889 | 4 | 240
- English High and | | | | |
- Manual-training School |Chicago |Ill. | 1890 | 17 | 430
- Manual-training High- | | | | |
- school |Louisville |Ky. | 1890 | 13 | 212
- Approved High-school |Vineland |N. J.| 1890 | 1 | 150
- High-school |Passaic |N. J.| 1890 | 2 | 53
- High-school |South Orange |N. J.| 1890 | 1 | 150
- West Manual-training | | | | |
- School |Cleveland |Ohio | 1890 | 3 | 100
- East and West High- | | | | |
- schools |Milwaukee |Wis. | 1890 | 4 | 144
- Norwich Free Academy |Norwich |Conn.| 1891 | 1 | 33
- High-school |Waterbury |Conn.| 1891 | 1 | ..
- High-school |Springfield |Ill. | 1891 | 1 | 20
- Moline High-school |Moline |Ill. | 1891 | 1 | 47
- Manual training High- | | | | |
- school |Waltham |Mass.| 1891 | 2 | 18
- High-school |Bay City |Mich.| 1891 | [120] | [120]
- Ridgewood High-school |Ridgewood |N. J.| 1891 | 3 | 35
- Manual training High- | | | | |
- school |Camden |N. J | 1891 | 3 | 150
- Manual training High- | | | | |
- school |Seattle |Wash.| 1891 | 2 | 70
- High-school |Menominee |Wis. | 1891 | 5 | 103
- High-school |Bristol |Conn.| 1892 | 1 | 30
- Willard Hall High- | | | | |
- school |Wilmington |Del. | 1892 | 3 | 210
- Fremont Manual-training| | | | |
- School |Fremont |Ohio | 1892 | 1 | 50
- North East Manual- | | | | |
- training School |Philadelphia |Penn.| 1892 | 9 | 369
- High-school |Norristown |Penn.| 1892 | 2 | 290
- Manual-training High- | | | | |
- school |Providence |R. I.| 1892 | 18 | 280
- High-school |Spokane |Wash.| 1892 | 3 | 85
- Polytechnical High- | | | | |
- school |San Francisco|Cal. | 1893 | 4 | 250
- Manual-training High- | | | | |
- school |Mason City |Iowa | 1893 | 1 | 125
- High-school |Manchester |N. H.| 1893 | 1 | 12
- High-school |Atlantic City|N. J.| 1893 | 1 | 235
- East Orange High-school|East Orange |N. J.| 1893 | 3 | 125
- Manual-training High- | | | | |
- school |Denver |Col. | 1894 | .. | 400
- High-school |Frankfort |Ky. | 1894 | 2 | 100
- Mechanics Arts High- | | | | |
- school |Boston |Mass.| 1894 | 11 | 324
- Manual-training High- | | | | |
- school |Brooklyn |N. Y.| 1894 | .. | 800
- Washington High-school |Washington |Penn.| 1894 | .. | 27
- Townsend Industrial | | | | |
- School |Newport |R. I.| 1894 | 2 | 26
- Ryan High-school |Appleton |Wis. | 1894 | 1 | 26
- Manual-training School |Lowell |Mass.| 1895 | 2 | 50
- English High-school |Somerville |Mass.| 1895 | 2 | 75
- English and Classical | | | | |
- High-school |Worcester |Mass.| 1895 | 4 | 283
- High-school |Medford |Mass.| 1895 | 2 | 20
- English High-school |Lynn |Mass.| 1895 | 3 | 72
- High-school |Lawrence |Mass.| 1895 | 1 | 33
- Royen High-school |Youngstown |Ohio | 1895 | 1 | 200
- High-school |Fitchburg |Mass.| 1895 | .. | ..
- High-school |Burlington |Wis. | 1896 | .. | ..
- High-school |Los Angeles |Cal. | 1896 | 6 | 315
- High-school |Rockford |Ill. | 1896 | 1 | 27
- High-school |Florence |Wis. | 1896 | 2 | 36
- Brookline High-school |Brookline |Mass.| 1896 | 1 | 50
- High-school |Janesville |Wis. | 1896 | .. | ..
- High-school |Malden |Mass.| 1896 | 2 | 60
- Hackley Manual-training| | | | |
- School |Muskegon |Mich.| 1896 | 4 | 350
- Ishpeming Manual- | | | | |
- training School |Ishpeming |Mich.| 1896 | 1 | 75
- Menominee Manual- | | | | |
- training School |Menominee |Mich.| 1896 | 1 | 25
- High-school |Summit |N. J.| 1896 | 1 | 40
- Barlow School of | | | | |
- Industrial Art |Binghamton |N. Y.| 1896 | 3 | 173
- High-school |Syracuse |N. Y.| 1896 | .. | 50
- High-school |Akron |Ohio | 1896 | 2 | 180
- Cross Creek School |Washington |Penn.| 1896 | .. | 14
- High-school |Waupaca |Wis. | 1897 | 1 | 16
- High-school |Winnetka |Ill. | 1897 | 1 | 16
- High-school |Fond du Lac |Wis. | 1897 | 1 | 50
- Manual-training High- | | | | |
- school |Kansas City |Mo. | 1897 | 27 | 800
- High-school |Oshkosh |Wis. | 1897 | 3 | 250
- Central and Martin Park| | | | |
- High-schools |Buffalo |N. Y.| 1897 | 1 | 50
- High-school |Mayville |Wis. | 1897 | 1 | 30
- High-school |Red Bank |N. J.| 1897 | 1 | 375
- High-school |Hartford |Conn.| 1898 | 4 | 140
- Manual-training High | | | | |
- school |Newark |N. J.| 1898 | .. | ..
- Howard School |Wilmington |Del. | [121] | 1 | 45
- High-school |Iowa City |Iowa | [121] | .. | ..
- High-school |Brockton |Mass.| [121] | .. | ..
- High-school |South Omaha |Neb. | [121] | .. | ..
- High-school |Stamford |Conn.| [121] | .. | ..
- -----------------------+-------------+-----+--------+--------+--------
- |101 Cities |23 | | 320 |15,942
- | |States| | |
- -----------------------+-------------+-----+--------+--------+--------
-
- [120] Abandoned temporarily for want of funds.
-
- [121] Date of establishment not reported.
-
-MANUAL TRAINING IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS--GRAMMAR GRADES
-
- -------------------+------+-----------+--------+--------+--------
- | | Manual | | |
- | | Training |Separate|Teachers| Pupils
- | |Established| Manual-| of | Taking
- | | in Grammar|training| Manual | Manual
- CITY OR TOWN |STATE | Grades | Schools|Training|Training
- -------------------+------+-----------+--------+--------+--------
- Montclair |N. J. | 1882 | All | 4 | 530
- Peru |Ill. | 1883 | 2 | 2 | ..
- New Haven |Conn. | 1884 | .. | .. | ..
- Jamestown |N. Y. | 1884 | 2 | 2 | 800
- Eau Claire |Wis. | 1884 | 1 | .. | 100
- Waltham |Mass. | 1885 | 1 | 2 | 425
- Rochester |N. Y. | 1885 | .. | .. | 336
- Toledo |Ohio | 1885 | 11 | 11 | 2,257
- Washington |D. C. | 1886 | 40 | 43 | 9,452
- Springfield |Mass. | 1886 | 1 | 3 | 267
- Boston |Mass. | 1886 | All | 81 | 37,240
- Newburg |N. Y. | 1886 | 1 | 2 | 95
- Tidioute |Penn. | 1886 | .. | .. | ..
- Beardstown |Ill. | 1887 | 1 | 2 | ..
- Easton |Del. | 1888 | .. | .. | ..
- Brookline |Mass. | 1888 | 1 | 2 | 525
- Winchester |Mass. | 1888 | 1 | 2 | 408
- Concord |N. H. | 1888 | 2 | 4 | 402
- Hoboken |N. J. | 1888 | 6 | 6 | 1,229
- Orange |N. J. | 1888 | 5 | 3 | 842
- New York |N. Y. | 1888 | 37 | 32 | 10,187
- Meadville |Penn. | 1888 | .. | 2 | 263
- Wilmington |Del. | 1889 | 1 | .. | 45
- Davenport |Iowa | 1889 | 1 | 1 | 101
- Vineland |N. J. | 1889 | All | 1 | 500
- Union |N. J. | 1889 | All | All | 643
- St. Louis |Mo. | 1890 | 1 | 8 | 116
- | | | [122] | [122] | [122]
- Duluth |Minn. | 1890 | 12 | 25 | 1,000
- Passaic |N. J. | 1890 | .. | 2 | 152
- Garfield |N. J. | 1890 | 1 | 2 | 550
- Paterson |N. J. | 1890 | 1 | 1 | 300
- Ridgewood |N. J. | 1890 | .. | 4 | 200
- Knoxville |Tenn. | 1890 | .. | .. | ..
- South Orange |N. J. | 1890 | 1 | 1 | 300
- Waterbury |Conn. | 1891 | .. | .. | ..
- Springfield |Ill. | 1891 | 1 | 1 | 50
- Moline |Ill. | 1891 | 1 | 1 | 279
- Salem |Mass. | 1891 | 1 | 1 | 160
- Northampton |Mass. | 1891 | 1 | 1 | 900
- Bay City |Mich. | 1891 | [123] | [123] | [123]
- San Francisco |Cal. | 1892 | 3 | 2 | 560
- St. Paul |Minn. | 1892 | .. | 4 | 2,366
- Camden |N. J. | 1892 | .. | 4 | 4,600
- Norristown |Penn. | 1892 | 2 | 3 | 1,430
- Providence |R. I. | 1892 | 13 | .. | ..
- Menominee |Wis. | 1892 | 2 | 4 | 200
- Bristol |Conn. | 1893 | 2 | .. | 276
- Haverhill |Mass. | 1893 | 1 | 1 | 190
- Manistee |Mich. | 1893 | .. | .. | ..
- Minneapolis |Minn. | 1893 | 5 | 5 | 1,214
- St. Cloud |Minn. | 1893 | 1 | 1 | 150
- Manchester |N. H. | 1893 | All | 1 | 196
- Bayonne |N. J. | 1893 | All | All | All
- East Orange |N. J. | 1893 | All | 2 | 755
- Cleveland |Ohio | 1893 | 2 | 1 | 3,500
- Newport |R. I. | 1893 | .. | 4 | 633
- Staunton |Va. | 1893 | .. | 1 | 200
- Santa Barbara |Cal. | 1894 | 1 | 2 | 232
- San Diego |Cal. | 1894 | 5 | 1 | 270
- Portland |Maine | 1894 | 1 | 3 | 900
- Medford |Mass. | 1894 | 1 | 2 | 400
- New Bedford |Mass | 1894 | 1 | 1 | 400
- Ithaca |N. Y. | 1894 | 2 | 2 | 420
- Mason City |Iowa | 1894 | 1 | 1 | 50
- Denver |Colo. | 1895 | All | .. | 2,500
- Chicago |Ill. | 1895 | 28 | 32 | 8,200
- Cape May |N. J. | 1895 | All | 3 | 411
- Fitchburg |Mass. | 1895 | .. | .. | ..
- Buffalo |N. Y. | 1895 | .. | 1 | 200
- Pittsburg |Penn. | 1895 | 3 | 2 | 400
- Barbadoes Township |N. J. | 1895 | 3 | 3 | 713
- Woonsocket |R. I. | 1895 | .. | 1 | 150
- Oakland |Cal. | 1896 | 1 | 1 | 425
- Carlstadt |N. J. | 1896 | All | 5 | 240
- Los Angeles |Cal. | 1896 | 7 | .. | 2,080
- Summit |N. J. | 1896 | 3 | 3 | 200
- Hartford |Conn. | 1896 | All | 5 | 800
- Des Moines |Iowa | 1896 | 2 | 2 | 80
- Florence |Wis. | 1896 | 1 | .. | ..
- Menominee |Mich. | 1896 | 1 | 1 | 80
- Brooklyn |N. Y. | 1896 | .. | .. | ..
- Glens Falls |N. Y. | 1896 | 1 | 1 | 60
- Utica |N. Y. | 1896 | .. | 4 | 2,300
- Akron |Ohio | 1896 | .. | 2 | 210
- Washington |Penn. | 1896 | 5 | 3 | 112
- Pueblo Dist. No. 1 |Colo. | 1897 | .. | 2 | 180
- Winnetka |Ill. | 1897 | 1 | 1 | 48
- Oshkosh |Wis. | 1897 | 25 | 28 | 1,400
- Indianapolis |Ind. | 1897 | 1 | 2 | 1,000
- North Adams |Mass. | 1897 | 1 | 1 | 247
- Lynn |Mass. | 1897 | 1 | 1 | 351
- Newton |Mass. | 1897 | 1 | 1 | 135
- Worcester |Mass. | 1897 | .. | 2 | 397
- Cambridge |Mass. | 1897 | 1 | 2 | 136
- Muskegon |Mich. | 1897 | 2 | 4 | 700
- Kansas City |Mo. | 1897 | .. | .. | ..
- Newark |N. J. | 1897 | .. | 3 | 2,265
- Milwaukee |Wis. | 1897 | 1 | 1 | 15
- Pueblo Dist. No. 20|Colo. | 1898 | .. | 2 | 300
- New Britain |Conn. | 1898 | .. | .. | 190
- Peabody |Mass. | 1898 | .. | .. | ..
- Moberly |Mo. | 1898 | .. | .. | ..
- Stockton |Cal. | [124] | .. | .. | ..
- Santa Cruz |Cal. | [124] | .. | .. | ..
- Manchester |Conn. | [124] | .. | .. | ..
- Stamford |Conn. | [124] | .. | .. | ..
- Iowa City |Iowa | [124] | .. | .. | ..
- Augusta |Me. | [124] | .. | .. | ..
- Baltimore |Md. | [124] | All | .. | All
- Hyde Park |Mass. | [124] | 3 | 3 | 204
- Holyoke |Mass. | [124] | 1 | .. | ..
- Easton |Mass. | [124] | .. | .. | ..
- Fall River |Mass. | [124] | .. | .. | ..
- Dedham |Mass. | [124] | .. | .. | ..
- Malden |Mass. | [124] | .. | .. | ..
- Milton |Mass. | [124] | .. | .. | ..
- Waterbury |Mass. | [124] | .. | .. | ..
- Wellesley |Mass. | [124] | .. | .. | ..
- Canton |Mass. | [124] | .. | .. | ..
- Richmond |Va. | [124] | .. | .. | ..
- -------------------+------+-----------+--------+--------+--------
- 119 Cities |24 | | 287 | 444 |118,835
- |States| | | |
- -------------------+------+-----------+--------+--------+--------
-
- [122] Colored School.
-
- [123] Abandoned temporarily for want of funds.
-
- [124] Date of establishment not reported.
-
-MANUAL TRAINING IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS--PRIMARY GRADES
-
- ------------------+-----+-----------+--------+--------+--------
- | | Manual |Separate| |
- | | Training | Manual |Teachers| Pupils
- | |Established|Training| of | Taking
- | | in Primary| Primary| Manual | Manual
- CITY OR TOWN[125] |STATE| Grades | Grades |Training|Training
- ------------------+-----+-----------+--------+--------+--------
- Montclair |N. J.| 1882 | All | All | 1,047
- Jamestown |N. Y.| 1882 | All | All | 2,400
- Baltimore |Md. | 1884 | .. | .. | ..
- Washington |D. C.| 1886 | 55 | .. | 12,900
- Newburg |N. Y.| 1886 | .. | .. | ..
- Tidioute |Penn.| 1886 | .. | .. | ..
- Oakland |Cal. | 1888 | .. | 2 | 2,159
- Springfield |Mass.| 1888 | All | .. | 29,256
- Concord |N. H.| 1888 | .. | .. | ..
- Orange |N. J.| 1888 | 4 | 3 | 2,132
- New York |N. Y.| 1888 | .. | .. | 12,000
- Union |N. J.| 1889 | All | All | 560
- Vineland |N. J.| 1889 | All | 1 | 700
- Westchester |Penn.| 1889 | .. | 1 | ..
- Garfield |N. J.| 1890 | .. | 1 | 200
- South Orange |N. J.| 1890 | 1 | 1 | 200
- Waterbury |Conn.| 1891 | .. | 1 | ..
- Moline |Ill. | 1891 | .. | .. | ..
- Northampton |Mass.| 1891 | .. | 1 | 900
- Ridgewood |N. J.| 1891 | .. | 3 | 200
- San Francisco |Cal. | 1892 | 1 | 1 | 176
- St. Paul |Minn.| 1892 | 40 | .. | 4,500
- Camden |N. J.| 1892 | .. | .. | 3,080
- Providence |R. I.| 1892 | 50 | .. | ..
- Bristol |Conn.| 1893 | 2 | 2 | 144
- Minneapolis |Minn.| 1893 | 44 | .. | 4,446
- Stillwater |Minn.| 1893 | .. | .. | ..
- Cleveland |Ohio | 1893 | .. | .. | 3,500
- Staunton |Va. | 1893 | .. | 1 | 200
- Menominee |Wis. | 1893 | .. | 2 | 200
- St. Cloud |Minn.| 1894 | .. | 2 | 488
- Philipsburg |N. J.| 1894 | All | All | 700
- Elyria |Ohio | 1894 | All | All | 700
- Newport |R. I.| 1894 | .. | 2 | 101
- Denver |Colo.| 1895 | .. | .. | ..
- Oshkosh |Wis. | 1896 | 20 | 25 | 800
- Waltham |Mass.| 1896 | .. | .. | 100
- Carlstadt |N. J.| 1896 | All | 5 | ..
- Utica |N. Y.| 1896 | .. | .. | ..
- Akron |Ohio | 1896 | All | All | 1,800
- San Diego |Cal. | 1897 | 5 | 3 | 250
- Newark |N. J.| 1897 | .. | .. | ..
- Indianapolis |Ind. | 1897 | .. | 2 | 500
- Moberly |Mo. | 1897 | .. | .. | ..
- Passaic |N. J.| 1897 | .. | 1 | 375
- Pueblo Dist. No. 1|Colo.| 1898 | .. | 1 | 180
- Santa Cruz |Cal. | .. | .. | .. | ..
- Elgin |Ill. | .. | .. | 1 | ..
- Augusta |Me. | .. | .. | .. | ..
- Detroit |Mich.| .. | .. | .. | ..
- Toledo |Ohio | .. | .. | .. | ..
- Pittsburg |Penn.| .. | .. | .. | ..
- Shenandoah |Penn.| .. | .. | .. | ..
- La Crosse |Wis. | .. | .. | .. | ..
- ------------------+-----+-----------+--------+--------+----------
- 54 Cities |20 | | 222 | 62 | 88,398
- |States| | | |
- ------------------+-----+-----------+--------+--------+----------
-
- [125] Of the 54 cities tabulated, only 9 report the number of separate
- primary schools in which Manual Training is taught. These 9 cities
- report 202 schools, or an average of 22.4 schools per city. Nine
- cities report all. Thirty-four cities do not report. If the average
- obtained from the cities reporting can be applied to all, then 1120
- primary schools have Manual Training. Thirty-one cities do not report
- the number of teachers. Twenty cities report 34. Applying the above
- method shows 85 teachers of Manual Training in primary schools. It
- must be remembered that there are special or supervising teachers; the
- regular teachers doing most of this work under supervision. Thirty-two
- cities report 87,598 pupils taking Primary Manual Training; or 2737 on
- the average to each city reporting. Applying this average to the 51
- cities reporting, the total is 139,587.
-
-KINDERGARTENS IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS
-
- ----------------+-----+-----------+--------+--------+-------
- | | Kinder- |Separate| Kinder-|Kinder-
- | | garten | Kinder-| garten |garten
- CITY OR TOWN |STATE|Established| gartens|Teachers|Pupils
- ----------------+-----+-----------+--------+--------+-------
- St. Louis |Mo. | 1873 | 60 | 400 | 7,694
- Milwaukee |Wis. | 1880 | 42 | 83 | 3,816
- Cedar Rapids |Iowa | 1881 | 12 | 16 | 766
- Newport |R. I.| 1882 | 4 | 8 | 250
- Lowell |Mass.| 1883 | 12 | 25 | 400
- Pawtucket |R. I.| 1883 | 4 | 9 | 295
- La Porte |Ind. | 1884 | 3 | 5 | 163
- Muskegon |Mich.| 1884 | 8 | 10 | 581
- Philadelphia |Penn.| 1884 | 135 | 180 | 6,500
- Traverse City |Mich.| 1885 | 4 | 4 | 180
- San José |Cal. | 1885 | 7 | 17 | 337
- Augusta |Ga. | 1887 | 4 | 8 | 183
- Des Moines |Iowa | 1887 | 14 | 28 | 807
- Marshalltown |Iowa | 1887 | 7 | 10 | 260
- Louisville |Ky. | 1887 | 10 | 59 | 750
- Albany |N. Y.| 1887 | 19 | 30 | 750
- Boston |Mass.| 1888 | 67 | 126 | 3,925
- Brookline |Mass.| 1888 | 11 | 18 | 373
- Rochester |N. Y.| 1888 | 13 | 68 | 1,972
- Sheboygan |Wis. | 1888 | 9 | 27 | 980
- Bristol |Conn.| 1889 | 3 | 7 | 253
- Richmond |Ind. | 1889 | 2 | 2 | 75
- Cambridge |Mass.| 1889 | 11 | 22 | 583
- Grand Rapids |Mich.| 1889 | 8 | 7 | 352
- Montclair |N. J.| 1889 | 5 | 12 | 273
- Louisburg |N. Y.| 1889 | 5 | 10 | 165
- North Tonawanda |N. Y.| 1889 | 4 | 4 | 200
- Norwich |Conn.| 1890 | 3 | 7 | 120
- Lexington |Ky. | 1890 | 5 | 10 | 360
- Grand Haven |Mich.| 1890 | 1 | 3 | 105
- Garfield |N. J.| 1890 | 2 | 2 | 80
- East Orange |N. J.| 1890 | 6 | 6 | 180
- South Orange |N. J.| 1890 | 1 | 2 | 55
- Providence |R. I.| 1890 | 15 | 31 | 700
- Los Angeles |Cal. | 1891 | 29 | 78 | 1,800
- Covington |Ky. | 1891 | 5 | 10 | 600
- Frankfort |Ky. | 1891 | 1 | 2 | 50
- Somerville |Mass.| 1891 | 5 | 11 | 200
- Iron Mountain |Mich.| 1891 | 11 | 11 | 586
- Ironwood |Mich.| 1891 | 3 | 9 | 290
- Negaunee |Mich.| 1891 | 2 | 2 | 78
- Concord |N. H.| 1891 | 5 | 7 | 288
- Passaic |N. J.| 1891 | 6 | 8 | 284
- Greenwich |Conn.| 1892 | 1 | 1 | 52
- Terre Haute |Ind. | 1892 | 16 | 11 | 435
- Worcester |Mass.| 1892 | 10 | 19 | 518
- Lowell |Mass.| 1892 | 12 | 26 | 900
- Duluth |Minn.| 1892 | 16 | 27 | 1,000
- Omaha |Neb. | 1892 | 26 | 40 | 1,600
- Plainfield |N. J.| 1892 | 5 | 5 | 230
- Utica |N. Y.| 1892 | 11 | 26 | 750
- Cohoes |N. Y.| 1892 | 2 | 4 | 127
- Niagara Falls |N. Y.| 1892 | 4 | 6 | 156
- San Diego |Cal. | 1893 | 6 | 6 | 250
- Denver |Colo.| 1893 | 25 | 50 | 2,534
- Chicago |Ill. | 1893 | 51 | 121 | 2,500
- Newton |Mass.| 1893 | 13 | 29 | 569
- Lincoln |Neb. | 1893 | 8 | 22 | 700
- Menominee |Mich.| 1893 | 5 | 5 | 350
- Kansas City |Mo. | 1893 | 5 | 5 | 200
- Ridgewood |N. J.| 1893 | 1 | 2 | 75
- Union |N. J.| 1893 | 2 | 3 | 120
- Saratoga Springs|N. Y.| 1893 | 9 | 24 | 500
- Flushing |N. Y.| 1893 | 3 | 4 | 60
- New Rochelle |N. Y.| 1893 | 5 | 7 | 476
- El Paso |Tex. | 1893 | 1 | 3 | 100
- Burlington |Vt. | 1893 | 4 | 8 | 137
- Racine |Wis. | 1893 | 6 | 11 | 573
- Fond du Lac |Wis. | 1894 | 5 | 11 | 250
- Hammond |Ind. | 1894 | 1 | 2 | 80
- Oskaloosa |Iowa | 1894 | 5 | 5 | 210
- Sioux City |Iowa | 1894 | 3 | 6 | 125
- Springfield |Mass.| 1894 | 8 | 17 | 346
- Peabody |Mass.| 1894 | 3 | 6 | 126
- Medford |Mass.| 1894 | 4 | 8 | 220
- Superior |Wis. | 1894 | 5 | 11 | 225
- Lawrence |Mass.| 1894 | 1 | 2 | 36
- Escanaba |Mich.| 1894 | 4 | 4 | 225
- Winona |Minn.| 1894 | 8 | 13 | 400
- Natchez |Miss.| 1894 | 1 | 1 | 50
- Portsmouth |N. H.| 1894 | 4 | 6 | 180
- Binghamton |N. Y.| 1894 | 13 | 14 | 600
- Geneva |N. Y.| 1894 | 4 | 5 | 150
- Sing Sing |N. Y.| 1894 | 3 | 3 | 91
- Wilkesbarre |Penn.| 1894 | 2 | 2 | 80
- Marinette |Wis. | 1894 | 5 | 5 | 300
- La Crosse |Wis. | 1894 | 3 | 3 | 150
- Madison |Wis. | 1894 | 2 | 6 | 134
- Oakland |Cal. | 1895 | 1 | 1 | 60
- Jeffersonville |Ind. | 1895 | 7 | 7 | 200
- Burlington |Iowa | 1895 | 5 | 10 | 200
- North Adams |Mass.| 1895 | 3 | 6 | 120
- Vicksburg |Miss.| 1895 | 4 | 5 | 180
- Fremont |Ohio | 1895 | 3 | 5 | 160
- Oshkosh |Wis. | 1895 | 9 | 25 | 800
- Winnetka |Ill. | 1896 | 1 | 5 | 57
- Indianapolis |Ind. | 1896 | 1 | 1 | 53
- Dubuque |Iowa | 1896 | 4 | 8 | 232
- Malden |Mass.| 1896 | 2 | 5 | 85
- Northampton |Mass.| 1896 | 2 | 4 | 90
- Ishpeming |Mich.| 1896 | 2 | 6 | 300
- Detroit |Mich.| 1896 | 6 | 12 | 91
- Nashua |N. H.| 1896 | 2 | 4 | 120
- Syracuse |N. Y.| 1896 | 2 | 4 | 97
- Mt. Vernon |N. Y.| 1896 | 2 | 2 | 30
- Cleveland |Ohio | 1896 | 12 | 24 | 500
- Stevens Point |Wis. | 1896 | 4 | 5 | 180
- New Bedford |Mass.| 1897 | 3 | 6 | 140
- Walden |Mass.| 1897 | 1 | 2 | 40
- Newark |N. J.| 1897 | 26 | 50 | 2,100
- Hoboken |N. J.| 1897 | 7 | 15 | 368
- Bayonne |N. J.| 1897 | [126] | [126] | [126]
- Brooklyn |N. Y.| 1897 | 14 | 28 | ..
- Woonsocket |R. I.| 1897 | 1 | 2 | 30
- Pueblo |Colo.| 1898 | 1 | 2 | 65
- Akron |Ohio | 1898 | 1 | 3 | 30
- Seattle |Wash.| 1898 | 1 | 2 | 51
- Appleton |Wis. | 1898 | 4 | 8 | 200
- Anniston |Ala. | .. | 2 | .. | 122
- Hot Springs |Ark. | .. | 1 | 1 | 16
- Sacramento |Cal. | .. | 4 | 8 | 172
- Santa Cruz |Cal. | .. | 1 | 2 | 53
- Manchester |Conn.| .. | 1 | 8 | 210
- New Britain |Conn.| .. | 6 | 13 | 410
- New Haven |Conn.| .. | 8 | 19 | 676
- Hartford |Conn.| .. | 12 | 138 | 1,326
- Norwalk |Conn.| .. | 3 | 6 | 95
- Rockville |Conn.| .. | 1 | 1 | ..
- Willimantic |Conn.| .. | 2 | 6 | 229
- Rome |Ga. | .. | 1 | 1 | 16
- Evanston |Ill. | .. | 2 | 6 | 100
- Augusta |Me. | .. | 1 | 1 | ..
- Portland |Me. | .. | 6 | 10 | 125
- Fall River |Mass.| .. | 2 | 4 | 202
- Sault Ste. Marie|Mich.| .. | 3 | 5 | 300
- St. Paul |Minn.| .. | 28 | 57 | ..
- Trenton |N. J.| .. | 1 | 1 | 65
- Paterson |N. J.| .. | 15 | 17 | 500
- [127]Buffalo |N. Y.| .. | 10 | 15 | 925
- Gloversville |N. Y.| .. | 4 | 4 | 411
- New York |N. Y.| .. | 15 | 16 | 571
- Schenectady |N. Y.| .. | 1 | 2 | 40
- Newark |Ohio | .. | 2 | 3 | 33
- Pittsburg |Penn.| .. | 16 | 48 | 800
- Oil City |Penn.| .. | 2 | 2 | 104
- Allegheny |Penn.| .. | 3 | 12 | 120
- ----------------+-----+-----------+--------+--------+-------
- 146 Cities |26 | .. | 1,202 | 2,695 |73,543
- |States| | | |
- ----------------+-----+-----------+--------+--------+-------
-
- [126] All first-grade schools have kindergartens.
-
- [127] Kindergartens are conducted by a private association financially
- assisted from public-school funds.
-
-MANUAL TRAINING IN SCHOOLS FOR THE COLORED RACE
-
- ---------------+---------------+----------+--------+--------+--------
- | | | Manual |Teachers| Pupils
- | |Grade of |Training| of | Taking
- NAME OF | |Academic | Estab- |Manual | Manual
- INSTITUTION |LOCATION |Work | lished |Training|Training
- ---------------+---------------+----------+--------+--------+--------
- Storrs School |Atlanta, Ga. |Grammar | 1865 | .. | 120
- | | | | |
- Shaw University|Raleigh, N. C. |Collegiate| 1865 | 6 | 216
- | | | | |
- Storer College |Harper’s Ferry,|High | 1867 | 9 | 121
- |W. V. | | | |
- | | | | |
- Hampton Normal |Hampton, Va. |Gram. and | 1868 | 48 | 658
- Institute | |High | | |
- | | | | |
- Mt. Hermon |Clinton, Miss. |High | 1875 | 2 | 16
- Female Seminary| | | | |
- | | | | |
- Southland Col. |Southland, Ark.|Primary to| 1876 | .. | 56
- and Normal | |Coll. | | |
- Inst. | | | | |
- | | | | |
- Princess Anne |Princess Anne, |High | 1878 | 7 | 101
- Academy |Md. | | | |
- | | | | |
- Colored |Huntsville, |High | 1879 | 4 | 150
- Industrial |Ala. | | | |
- School | | | | |
- | | | | |
- Knoxville |Knoxville, |Gram. and | 1879 | 4 | 125
- College |Tenn. |High | | |
- | | | | |
- Penn Normal and|Frogmore, S. C.|High | 1880 | 3 | 164
- Ind. School | | | | |
- | | | | |
- State Colored |Salisbury, |Gram. and | 1881 | 4 | 118
- Normal School |N. C. |High | | |
- | | | | |
- Allen |Columbia, S. C.|Primary to| 1881 | 4 | 332
- University | |Coll. | | |
- | | | | |
- Tuskegee Nor. |Tuskegee, Ala. |Gram. and | 1882 | .. | 661
- and Ind. | |High | | |
- Institute | | | | |
- | | | | |
- Tougaloo |Tougaloo, Miss.|Primary to| 1882 | .. | 175
- University | |Coll. | | |
- | | | | |
- Albion Academy |Franklinton, |High | 1882 | 5 | 100
- |N. C. | | | |
- | | | | |
- Spelman |Atlanta, Ga. |Gram. and | 1883 | 16 | 375
- Seminary | |High | | |
- | | | | |
- Ballard Normal |Macon, Ga. |Gram. and | 1883 | 12 | 415
- and Ind. School| |High | | |
- | | | | |
- Scotia Seminary|Concord, N. C. |Gram. and | 1883 | 16 | 286
- | |High | | |
- | | | | |
- Central |Nashville, |Gram. to | 1884 | 7 | 103
- Tennessee |Tenn. |Coll. | | |
- College | | | | |
- | | | | |
- Hartshorn |Richmond, Va. |High | 1884 | 8 | 108
- Memorial | | | | |
- College | | | | |
- | | | | |
- Biddle |Charlotte, |Gram. to | 1885 | 6 | 136
- University |N. C. |Coll. | | |
- | | | | |
- Fisk University|Nashville, |Gram. and | 1885 | 4 | 275
- |Tenn. |High | | |
- | | | | |
- Roger Williams |Nashville, |High and | 1885 | 1 | 68
- University |Tenn. |Coll. | | |
- | | | | |
- Paul Quinn |Waco, Tex. |High | 1885 | 3 | 31
- College | | | | |
- | | | | |
- Norfolk Mission|Norfolk, Va. |.. | 1886 | 2 | 320
- College | | | | |
- | | | | |
- Howard |Washington, |.. | 1887 | 6 | 169
- University |D. C. | | | |
- | | | | |
- Colored Public |Jacksonville, |Prim. to | 1887 | .. | ..
- Schools |Fla. |Gram. | | |
- | | | | |
- Straight |New Orleans, |High | 1887 | 3 | 50
- University |La. | | | |
- | | | | |
- Wilberforce |Wilberforce, |Gram. and | 1888 | 7 | 133
- University |Ohio. |High | | |
- | | | | |
- Mary Allen |Crockett, Tex. |Gram. and | 1888 | .. | 445
- Seminary | |High | | |
- | | | | |
- Virginia |Petersburg, Va.|High | 1888 | 5 | 389
- Institute | | | | |
- | | | | |
- Scofield |Aiken, S. C. |Grammar | 1889 | 6 | 155
- Industrial | | | | |
- School | | | | |
- | | | | |
- Institute for |Philadelphia, |High and | 1889 | 9 | 259
- Colored Youth |Penn. |Norm. | | |
- | | | | |
- Burrell Academy|Selma, Ala. |Grammar | 1890 | 8 | 238
- | | | | |
- Emerson Mem. |Ocala, Fla. |Gram. and | 1890 | 2 | 30
- Home School | |High | | |
- | | | | |
- State Normal |Tallahassee, |High | 1890 | 1 | 27
- and Ind. |Fla. | | | |
- College | | | | |
- | | | | |
- State Nor. |Frankfort, Ky. |High | 1890 | 3 | 96
- School for Col.| | | | |
- Persons | | | | |
- | | | | |
- Southern |New Orleans, |Gram. to | 1890 | 5 | 107
- University |La. |Coll. | | |
- | | | | |
- Alcon Agr. and |West Side, |Collegiate| 1890 | 5 | 298
- Mech. College |Miss. | | | |
- | | | | |
- State Normal |Goldsboro, |High | 1890 | 4 | 163
- School |N. C. | | | |
- | | | | |
- Lincoln Academy|King’s Mount’n,|Gram. and | 1890 | 6 | 186
- |N. C. |High | | |
- | | | | |
- St. Augustine |Raleigh, N. C. |Gram. to | 1890 | 4 | 88
- School | |Coll. | | |
- | | | | |
- Lincoln Academy|Jefferson City,|High | 1891 | 8 | 400
- |Mo. | | | |
- | | | | |
- Arkansas |Pine Bluff, |High | 1892 | 6 | 62
- Industrial |Ark. | | | |
- University | | | | |
- | | | | |
- Berea College |Berea, Ky. |High and | 1892 | 2 | 56
- | |Coll. | | |
- | | | | |
- Colored |Bordentown, |Gram. and | 1892 | 6 | 54
- Industrial |N. J. |High | | |
- School | | | | |
- | | | | |
- Bishop College |Marshall, Tex. |Gram. and | 1892 | 5 | 109
- | |High | | |
- | | | | |
- Brewer Normal |Greenwood, |Gram. and | 1893 | 1 | 120
- School |S. C. |High | | |
- | | | | |
- Hearne Academy |Hearne, Tex. |High | 1893 | 1 | 35
- | | | | |
- Shorter |Arkadelphia, |Gram. and | 1894 | 1 | 20
- University |Ark. |High | | |
- | | | | |
- Knox Institute |Athens, Ga. |Gram. and | 1894 | 2 | 87
- | |High | | |
- | | | | |
- Walker Baptist |Augusta, Ga. |High | 1894 | 2 | 67
- Institute | | | | |
- | | | | |
- Chandler Normal|Lexington, Ky. |Gram. and | 1894 | 2 | 150
- School | |High | | |
- | | | | |
- Washburn |Beaufort, N. C.|Gram. and | 1894 | 1 | 77
- Seminary | |High | | |
- | | | | |
- State Col’d |Normal, Ala. |High | .. | 10 | 248
- Nor. and Ind. | | | | |
- School | | | | |
- | | | | |
- Cookman |Jacksonville, |High | .. | .. | ..
- Institute |Fla. | | | |
- | | | | |
- Beach Institute|Savannah, Ga. |Gram. and | .. | 7 | 85
- | |High | | |
- | | | | |
- Allen |Thomasville, |High | .. | 2 | 80
- Industrial |Ga. | | | |
- School | | | | |
- | | | | |
- Leland |New Orleans, |High and | .. | .. | ..
- University |La. |Coll. | | |
- | | | | |
- New Orleans |New Orleans, |.. | .. | .. | ..
- University |La. | | | |
- | | | | |
- Mississippi |Holly Springs, |High | .. | 1 | 85
- State Normal |Miss. | | | |
- School | | | | |
- | | | | |
- State Colored |Elizabeth City,|High | .. | .. | ..
- Normal School |N. C. | | | |
- | | | | |
- Plymouth State |Plymouth, N. C.|High | .. | .. | ..
- Normal School | | | | |
- | | | | |
- Rankin-Richards|Orangeburg, |Gram. and | .. | 20 | 454
- Institute |S. C. |High | | |
- | | | | |
- Slater Training|Knoxville, |Gram. and | [128] | 1 | 25
- School |Tenn. |High | | |
- | | | | |
- Tillotson |Austin, Tex. |.. | .. | 4 | 55
- Institute | | | | |
- | | | | |
- Emerson |Mobile, Ala. |Gram. and | .. | .. | ..
- Institute | |High | | |
- ---------------+---------------+----------+--------+--------+--------
- 67 Manual-training Schools | 327 | 10,332
- ---------------------------------------------------+--------+--------
-
- [128] The date given is that of establishment of school. Date of
- establishment of Manual Training was not ascertained in these
- instances.
-
-PRIVATE MANUAL-TRAINING SCHOOLS
-
- --------------------+---------------+--------+--------+--------+------
- | | | |Teachers|
- | |Grade of|Date of | of |
- NAME OF | |Academic| Estab- | Manual |
- INSTITUTION |LOCATION |Work |lishment|Training|Pupils
- --------------------+---------------+--------+--------+--------+------
- Massachusetts Inst. |Boston, Mass. |High | 1876 | .. | ..
- of Technology[129] | | | | |
- | | | | |
- Penn. School of |Philadelphia, |High | 1876 | .. | ..
- Industrial Arts |Penn. | | | |
- | | | | |
- Working-men’s School|New York, N. Y.|Grammar | 1878 | 19 | 353
- | | | | |
- Miller Manual-labor |Crozet, Va. |High | 1878 | .. | 198
- School | | | | |
- | | | | |
- Washington |St. Louis, Mo. |High | 1879 | 14 | 300
- University M. T. | | | | |
- School | | | | |
- | | | | |
- Girard College |Philadelphia |Gram. | 1882 | 11 | 650
- |Penn. |and High| | |
- | | | | |
- Chicago Manual- |Chicago, Ill. |High | 1893 | 13 | 263
- training School | | | | |
- | | | | |
- Hebrew Technical |New York, N. Y.|Grammar | 1883 | 11 | 254
- Institute | | | | |
- | | | | |
- M. T. School of |New Orleans, |High | 1884 | 6 | 114
- Tulane University |La. | | | |
- | | | | |
- H. Mann School and |New York, N. Y.|Primary | 1884 | 12 | 257
- Teachers’ Coll. | |to Coll.| | |
- | | | | |
- Haish Manual- |Denver, Col. |.. | 1886 | 2 | 11
- training School | | | | |
- | | | | |
- Pratt Institute |Brooklyn, N. Y.|High | 1887 | .. | 125
- | | | | |
- H. S. Newcom |New Orleans, |High and| 1887 | .. | ..
- Memorial College |La. |Coll. | | |
- | | | | |
- Sloyd Manual- |Boston, Mass. |Normal | 1889 | 3 | 104
- training School | | | | |
- | | | | |
- Tyler School |Providence, |Gram. | 1890 | 6 | 330
- |R. I. |and High| | |
- | | | | |
- Jewish Training |Chicago, Ill. |Prim. | 1890 | 27 | 700
- School | |and | | |
- | |Gram. | | |
- | | | | |
- National University |Chicago, Ill. |.. | 1890 | 5 | 500
- | | | | |
- Miss Sayer’s School |Newport, R. I. |Gram. | 1891 | 2 | 20
- | |and High| | |
- | | | | |
- Swedenborgian School|Waltham, Mass. |Grammar | 1891 | 1 | 60
- | | | | |
- Thorp Polytechnic |Pasadena, Cal. |Gram. to| 1892 | 8 | 300
- Institute | |Coll. | | |
- | | | | |
- Friends’ Select |Philadelphia, |High | 1892 | .. | 123
- School |Penn. | | | |
- | | | | |
- Providence Training |Providence, |Normal | 1893 | 1 | 49
- School for Sloyd |R. I. | | | |
- | | | | |
- Plainfield Academy |Plainfield, |Prim. to| 1893 | 2 | 25
- |N. J. |High | | |
- | | | | |
- California School of|San Francisco, |High | 1895 | 7 | 310
- Mechanical Arts |Cal. | | | |
- | | | | |
- St. Andrew’s |Rochester, |High | 1895 | 1 | 60
- |N. Y. | | | |
- | | | | |
- Lewis Institute |Chicago, Ill. |High and| 1896 | 10 | 200
- | | Coll. | | |
- | | | | |
- Free Industrial |San Diego, Cal.|Gram. | 1896 | 2 | 80
- School | |and High| | |
- | | | | |
- Commons Manual- |Chicago, Ill. |Grammar | 1896 | 1 | 40
- training School | | | | |
- | | | | |
- Hull House Manual- |Chicago, Ill. |Gram. | 1897 | 2 | 70
- training School | |and High| | |
- | | | | |
- Elmwood School |Buffalo, N. Y. |.. | .. | .. | ..
- | | | | |
- Franklin School |Buffalo, N. Y. |.. | .. | .. | ..
- | | | | |
- Lasell Seminary |Auburndale, |.. | .. | .. | ..
- |Mass. | | | |
- | | | | |
- Talladega College |Talladega, Ala.|.. | .. | .. | ..
- | | | | |
- Kenilworth Academy |Kenilworth, |.. | .. | .. | ..
- |Ill. | | | |
- | | | | |
- Y. M. C. A. Manual- |Hartford, Conn.|.. | .. | .. | ..
- training Dep’t. | | | | |
- | | | | |
- Clark University |Atlanta, Ga. |.. | .. | .. | ..
- | | | | |
- Private Manual- |Winnetka, Ill. |.. | .. | .. | ..
- training Class | | | | |
- --------------------+---------------+--------+--------+--------+------
-
- [129] The Massachusetts Institute of Technology was established in
- 1865; but in 1876 it adopted Manual Training as a system into all its
- grades, and thus became the first distinctive Manual-training School
- without prejudice to its high standing as an Institute of Technology.
-
-MANUAL TRAINING IN PUBLIC NORMAL SCHOOLS
-
- -----------------------+-------------------+--------+--------+--------
- | | Manual |Teachers| Pupils
- | |Training| of | Taking
- | | Estab- | Manual | Manual
- NAME OF SCHOOL |LOCATION | lished |Training|Training
- -----------------------+-------------------+--------+--------+--------
- Santee Normal Training |Santee Agency, Neb.| 1870 | 12 | 72
- School | | | |
- | | | |
- Cook County Normal |Chicago, Ill. | 1883 | .. | 450
- School[130] | | | |
- | | | |
- State Normal School |Whitewater, Wis. | 1883 | 2 | 100
- | | | |
- State Normal Training |New Britain, Conn. | 1884 | 5 | 253
- School | | | |
- | | | |
- Industrial Institute |Columbus, Miss. | 1885 | 1 | 123
- and College | | | |
- | | | |
- West Chester State |West Chester, Penn.| 1889 | 2 | 220
- Normal School | | | |
- | | | |
- State Normal School |San José, Cal. | 1890 | 3 | 700
- | | | |
- Georgia Normal and |Milledgeville, Ga. | 1891 | 15 | 284
- Industrial College | | | |
- | | | |
- State Normal and Model |Trenton, N. J. | 1891 | 1 | 225
- School | | | |
- | | | |
- State Female Normal |Farmville, Va. | 1891 | 2 | 75
- School | | | |
- | | | |
- Normal College of New |New York, N. Y. | 1892 | 12 | 257
- York | | | |
- | | | |
- Normal and Industrial |Greensboro, N. C. | 1892 | 5 | 300
- School | | | |
- | | | |
- Keystone State Normal |Kutztown, Penn. | 1892 | 2 | 106
- School | | | |
- | | | |
- State Normal School |Framingham, Mass. | 1893 | 1 | 25
- | | | |
- Westfield Normal School|Westfield, Mass. | 1893 | 5 | 70
- | | | |
- State Normal School |Los Angeles, Cal. | 1894 | 2 | 475
- | | | |
- Alabama Normal College |Livingston, Ala. | .. | 1 | ..
- for Girls | | | |
- -----------------------+-------------------+--------+--------+--------
-
- [130] The Cook County (Illinois) Normal School was originally
- established as a private school. It is now the public training school
- for teachers in the public schools.
-
-PRIVATE TRADE SCHOOLS AND INSTITUTES OF TECHNOLOGY
-
- ------------------------------+--------------+--------+--------+------
- | |Date of | |
- | | Estab- | |
- NAME OF INSTITUTION |LOCATION |lishment|Teachers|Pupils
- ------------------------------+--------------+--------+--------+------
- Rensselaer Polytechnic |Troy, N. Y. | 1824 | 18 | ..
- Institute | | | |
- | | | |
- Ohio Mechanics’ Institute |Cincinnati, | 1828 | .. | 720
- |Ohio. | | |
- | | | |
- Massachusetts Institute of |Boston, Mass. | 1865 | 6 | 222
- Technology | | | |
- | | | |
- Cornell University |Ithaca, N. Y. | 1865 | 36 | 599
- | | | |
- Worcester Polytechnic |Worcester, | 1868 | .. | ..
- Institute |Mass. | | |
- | | | |
- Stevens Institute of |Hoboken, | 1871 | 22 | 256
- Technology |N. J. | | |
- | | | |
- Lowell School of Practical |Boston, Mass. | 1872 | .. | 65
- Designing | | | |
- | | | |
- Rhode Island School of Design |Providence, | 1878 | .. | 341
- |R. I. | | |
- | | | |
- Chicago College of Horology |Chicago, Ill. | 1880 | .. | ..
- | | | |
- Case School of Applied |Cleveland, | 1881 | 11 | ..
- Sciences |Ohio. | | |
- | | | |
- School of Ind. Art and Tech. |New York, | 1881 | .. | ..
- Design for Women |N. Y. | | |
- | | | |
- New York Trade School |New York, | 1881 | 26 | 556
- N. Y. | | |
- | | | |
- Rose Polytechnic Institute |Terre Haute, | 1883 | 6 | ..
- |Ind. | | |
- | | | |
- [131]Textile Schools |Philadelphia, | 1883 | .. | 65
- |Penn. | | |
- | | | |
- Milwaukee Cooking School |Milwaukee, | 1884 | 2 | ..
- |Wis. | | |
- | | | |
- Newark Technical School |Newark, N. J. | 1885 | 6 | 250
- | | | |
- Technical School of |Cincinnati, | 1886 | .. | ..
- Cincinnati |Ohio. | | |
- | | | |
- Technical Drawing School |Providence, | 1887 | .. | ..
- |R. I. | | |
- | | | |
- Cogswell Polytechnic School |San Francisco,| 1888 | 7 | 150
- |Cal. | | |
- | | | |
- Institute for Artisans |New York, | 1888 | .. | ..
- |N. Y. | | |
- | | | |
- Watchmakers’ Trade School |La Porte, Ind.| 1888 | .. | ..
- | | | |
- Institute for Colored Youth |Philadelphia, | 1889 | 9 | 259
- |Penn. | | |
- | | | |
- Master-Builders’ Mechanical |Philadelphia, | 1890 | 6 | 67
- School of Phil’a. |Penn. | | |
- | | | |
- Lawrence Scientific School of |Cambridge, | 1891 | 3 | 64
- Harvard Univ’ty |Mass. | | |
- | | | |
- Baron de Hirsch Trade School |New York, | 1891 | .. | ..
- |N. Y. | | |
- | | | |
- [132]University of Cincinnati |Cincinnati, | 1891 | .. | ..
- |Ohio. | | |
- | | | |
- Leland Stanford University |Palo Alto, | 1891 | .. | ..
- |Cal. | | |
- | | | |
- Williamson Free School of |Williamson | 1891 | 10 | 160
- Mechanical Trades |Schools, Pa. | | |
- | | | |
- Springfield Industrial |Springfield, | 1891 | 5 | 105
- Institute |Mass. | | |
- | | | |
- Drexel Institute |Philadelphia, | 1892 | 38 | ..
- |Penn. | | |
- | | | |
- Armour Institute |Chicago, Ill. | 1893 | 15 | 300
- | | | |
- Mechanics’ Institute |Rochester, | 1893 | 15 | 972
- |N. Y. | | |
- | | | |
- Private School of Carpentry |Racine, Wis. | 1896 | 1 | 30
- | | | |
- Lafayette College |Easton, Penn. | .. | .. | ..
- | | | |
- Vanderbilt University |Nashville, | .. | .. | ..
- |Tenn. | | |
- | | | |
- Boston Normal School of |Boston, Mass. | .. | .. | ..
- Cookery | | | |
- ------------------------------+--------------+--------+--------+------
-
- NOTE.--Private trade schools for teaching watch-making, some fifteen
- in number, are united, because no data was secured. Private cooking
- schools, dress-making schools, barber schools, etc., have within the
- last five years sprung up in various parts of the country. Some of
- these are of considerable importance, but most are small, and no
- effort has been made to secure reports from them.
-
- [131] These schools are supported by both legislative appropriations
- and private endowments. They are not public schools in the usual sense
- of the term.
-
- [132] The University of Cincinnati is supported by both public funds
- and private endowments. It is unique in this, that, although a
- university in its grade of work, it is essentially a part of the
- public-school system. The city collects a one-tenth mill tax annually
- for its benefit; and the university, including its technical and
- Manual-training course, is free to residents of the city. The
- necessary expenses, such as laboratory fees, are kept to the lowest
- possible limit; and every family in the municipality is entitled to
- educate its children in this thoroughly equipped university,
- practically without cost.
-
-TECHNOLOGY IN PUBLIC EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS OF COLLEGIATE
-GRADE--EXCLUSIVE OF PURELY AGRICULTURAL COLLEGES
-
- -------------------------+------------------+---------+--------+------
- | |Technical| |
- | |Training | |
- | | Estab- | |
- INSTITUTION |LOCATION | lished |Teachers|Pupils
- -------------------------+------------------+---------+--------+------
- United States Naval |Annapolis, Md. | 1845 | .. | ..
- Academy | | | |
- | | | |
- State Agricultural |Agricultural | 1857 | 14 | 332
- College |College, Mich. | | |
- | | | |
- Maine State College |Orono, Me. | 1864 | 13 | 191
- | | | |
- University of Vermont |Burlington, Vt. | 1865 | 11 | 119
- | | | |
- Illinois University |Urbana, Ill. | 1868 | .. | ..
- | | | |
- University of Minnesota |Minnesota, Minn. | 1869 | 9 | 159
- | | | |
- University of Tennessee |Knoxville, Tenn. | 1869 | 6 | 150
- | | | |
- University of Iowa |Ames, Iowa. | 1869 | 9 | 284
- | | | |
- Kansas State Agricultural|Manhattan, Kan. | 1873 | 20 | 530
- College | | | |
- | | | |
- Ohio State University |Columbus, Ohio. | 1873 | 9 | 373
- | | | |
- University of California |Berkeley, Cal. | 1874 | 3 | 84
- | | | |
- [133]Purdue University |Lafayette, Ind. | 1874 | 10 | 280
- | | | |
- Agricultural and |College Station, | 1876 | 16 | 313
- Mechanical College |Tex. | | |
- | | | |
- State Agricultural |Fort Collins, Col.| 1879 | 2 | 137
- College | | | |
- | | | |
- Agricultural and |Agricultural | 1880 | 3 | ..
- Mechanical College |College, Miss. | | |
- | | | |
- Agricultural and |Blacksburg, Va. | 1880 | 18 | 190
- Mechanical College | | | |
- | | | |
- Mechanical College of |Baton Rouge, La. | 1880 | 1 | 56
- State University | | | |
- | | | |
- Storrs Agricultural |Storrs, Conn. | 1881 | 4 | 145
- College | | | |
- | | | |
- Agricultural and |Auburn, Ala. | 1885 | 4 | 200
- Mechanical College | | | |
- | | | |
- Arkansas Industrial |Fayetteville, Ark.| 1885 | 7 | 150
- University | | | |
- | | | |
- Michigan Mining School |Houghton, Mich. | 1886 | 11 | 82
- | | | |
- Agricultural College of |Brookings, S. D. | 1887 | 11 | 160
- South Dakota | | | |
- | | | |
- Florida Agricultural |Lake City, Fla. | 1888 | 2 | 62
- College | | | |
- | | | |
- Oregon State Agricultural|Corvallis, Ore. | 1888 | 9 | 237
- College | | | |
- | | | |
- Agricultural College of |Logan, Utah. | 1889 | 7 | 119
- Utah | | | |
- | | | |
- New Mexico College of |Messilla Park, | 1890 | .. | ..
- Mechanical Arts |N. M. | | |
- | | | |
- University of Michigan |Ann Arbor, Mich. | 1890 | 5 | ..
- | | | |
- Delaware College |Newark, Del. | 1891 | 3 | 23
- | | | |
- Agricultural and |Lexington, Ky. | 1891 | 3 | 31
- Mechanical Coll. of | | | |
- Kentucky | | | |
- | | | |
- State University |Columbia, Mo. | 1891 | 2 | 145
- | | | |
- College of Mining |Rolla, Mo. | 1891 | 7 | 225
- | | | |
- University of Nebraska |Lincoln, Neb. | 1891 | 3 | 210
- | | | |
- Nevada State University |Reno, Nev. | 1891 | 1 | 106
- | | | |
- University of Wyoming |Laramie, Wy. | 1891 | 4 | 60
- | | | |
- North Dakota Agricultural|Fargo, N. D. | 1892 | 2 | 24
- College | | | |
- | | | |
- West Virginia University |Morgantown, W. Va.| 1892 | 5 | 79
- | | | |
- Clemson Agricultural |Clemson College, | 1893 | 9 | 635
- College |S. C. | | |
- -------------------------+------------------+---------+--------+------
-
- [133] Purdue University is partially supported by endowment, but as it
- secures regular appropriations, it is here classified as a State
- University.
-
-INDUSTRIAL TRAINING IN CHARITY SCHOOLS[134]
-
- ---------------------------+---------------+--------+-----------+-----
- | | Indus- |Teachers| Pupils
- | | trial | of | Taking
- | |Training| Indus- | Indus-
- | | Estab- | trial | trial
- NAME OF SCHOOL |LOCATION | lished |Training|Training
- ---------------------------+---------------+--------+--------+--------
- | | | |
- Baltimore Manual-labor |Arbutus, Md. | 1841 | 2 | 60
- School | | | |
- | | | |
- Wilson Industrial School |New York, N. Y.| 1853 | 3 | 100
- for Girls | | | |
- | | | |
- Industrial Home School |Washington, | 1867 | 6 | 60
- |D. C. | | |
- | | | |
- McDonough School |McDonough, Md. | 1873 | 5 | 140
- | | | |
- South End Industrial School|Roxbury, Mass. | 1884 | 21 | 313
- | | | |
- Five Points House of |New York, N. Y.| 1885 | 9 | 331
- Industry | | | |
- | | | |
- Indiana Soldiers’ Orphans’ |Kingstown, Ind.| 1885 | 7 | 80
- Home | | | |
- | | | |
- Skyland Institute |Blowing Rock, | 1886 | .. | ..
- |N. C. | | |
- | | | |
- Samuel Ready School for |Baltimore, Md. | 1887 | 3 | 60
- Female Orphans | | | |
- | | | |
- Chicago Waifs’ Mission and |Chicago, Ill. | 1888 | 3 | 30
- Training School | | | |
- | | | |
- Industrial School |Brooklyn, N. Y.| 1888 | 8 | 80
- Association | | | |
- | | | |
- Kalamazoo Industrial School|Kalamazoo, | 1889 | 18 | 224
- |Mich. | | |
- | | | |
- Industrial School of |Rochester, | 1890 | 5 | 120
- Rochester |N. Y. | | |
- | | | |
- Industrial School for Boys |Glenwood, Ill. | 1890 | .. | 400
- | | | |
- Jewish Orphan Asylum |Cleveland, Ohio| 1891 | 8 | 157
- | | | |
- St. George’s Boys’ |New York, N. Y.| 1892 | 6 | 259
- Industrial Trade School | | | |
- | | | |
- Boys’ Club in Carpentry |Lynn, Mass. | 1895 | 1 | 25
- | | | |
- Polish Orphans’ Home |Chicago, Ill. | .. | .. | ..
- | | | |
- Unity Church Manual- |Chicago, Ill. | .. | .. | ..
- training School | | | |
- | | | |
- Iowa Orphans’ Home |Davenport, | .. | .. | ..
- |Iowa. | | |
- ---------------------------+---------------+--------+--------+--------
-
- [134] Industrial Training, rather than Manual Training, characterizes
- the Charity Schools, the central idea being to prepare the child for
- some occupation by which it can become self-supporting. As will be
- seen by the table, this idea found very early expression in the
- Manual-labor School at Arbutus, Maryland. The co-education of mind and
- hand, because of its equal, or greater, educational value, was not
- thought of in these charity institutions until recently, and cannot be
- said to obtain in any of them even now.
-
-PROGRESS OF MANUAL TRAINING BY YEARS, IN CITIES
-
-The following table shows growth by years, as represented by cities
-establishing Manual Training or Kindergartens in Public Schools. The
-number refers to cities adopting this feature of education in the years
-named.
-
- -------------+--------------+--------------+--------------
- HIGH SCHOOLS |GRAMMAR GRADES|PRIMARY GRADES|KINDERGARTENS
- ------+------+-------+------+-------+------+-------+------
- |Number| |Number| |Number| |Number
- Year | of | Year | of | Year | of | Year | of
- |Cities| |Cities| |Cities| |Cities
- ------+------+-------+------+-------+------+-------+------
- .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | 1873 | 1
- .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | 1880 | 1
- .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | 1881 | 1
- .. | .. | 1882 | 1 | 1882 | 2 | 1882 | 1
- 1883 | 2 | 1883 | 1 | 1883 | 0 | 1883 | 2
- 1884 | 1 | 1884 | 3 | 1884 | 1 | 1884 | 3
- 1885 | 5 | 1885 | 3 | 1885 | 0 | 1885 | 2
- 1886 | 5 | 1886 | 5 | 1886 | 3 | 1886 | 0
- 1887 | 4 | 1887 | 1 | 1887 | 0 | 1887 | 5
- 1888 | 6 | 1888 | 8 | 1888 | 5 | 1888 | 4
- 1889 | 8 | 1889 | 4 | 1889 | 3 | 1889 | 7
- 1890 | 7 | 1890 | 8 | 1890 | 2 | 1890 | 7
- 1891 | 10 | 1891 | 6 | 1891 | 4 | 1891 | 9
- 1892 | 7 | 1892 | 6 | 1892 | 4 | 1892 | 10
- 1893 | 5 | 1893 | 11 | 1893 | 6 | 1893 | 15
- 1894 | 7 | 1894 | 7 | 1894 | 4 | 1894 | 20
- 1895 | 8 | 1895 | 8 | 1895 | 1 | 1895 | 7
- 1896 | 15 | 1896 | 13 | 1896 | 5 | 1896 | 12
- 1897 | 8 | 1897 | 13 | 1897 | 5 | 1897 | 7
- 1898 | 2 | 1898 | 4 | 1898 | 1 | 1898 | 4
- [135] | 5 | [135] | 18 | [135] | 8 | [135] | 28
- ------+------+-------+------+-------+------+-------+------
-
- [135] Not reported.
-
-NOTE ON STATE LAWS IN RELATION TO MANUAL TRAINING.
-
-Connecticut, in 1888, authorized and empowered school boards to
-introduce Manual Training in public schools.
-
-Congress appropriated $8000 to Manual Training equipment in the District
-of Columbia in 1896.
-
-In 1885 the State of Georgia passed a law authorizing and recommending
-school boards to introduce Manual Training in the public schools of the
-state. The law was simply a moral indorsement, and had little practical
-effect.
-
-Indiana has a law authorizing the introduction of Manual Training into
-the public schools of all cities of 100,000 inhabitants or over.
-
-Massachusetts passed an authorizing act in 1884, and on April 14, 1894,
-a law was adopted, section one of which is as follows:
-
- “After the first day of September in the year eighteen hundred and
- ninety five, every city of twenty thousand or more inhabitants shall
- maintain as part of its high-school system the teaching of Manual
- Training. The course to be pursued in said instruction shall be
- subject to the approval of the state board of education.”
-
-In 1887 New Jersey passed a law to encourage the introduction of Manual
-Training in public schools. The chief provision of the act was, that
-whenever any school district should raise by taxation, subscription, or
-both, a sum of money not less than $1000, for the establishment of
-Manual Training in such school district, the state should appropriate a
-sum equal to that raised by the district, to aid in the establishment of
-such school; provided that no one district should receive over $5000 in
-any one year from state funds. In 1888 this law was amended so as to
-include districts that should raise not to exceed $500, the state
-agreeing to duplicate the sum raised. The effect of this law was very
-marked in 1890, resulting in the establishment of a large number of
-schools.
-
-In 1888 New York passed a law authorizing local school boards to
-establish Manual Training within their respective jurisdictions. The
-same law makes the teaching of Manual Training compulsory in normal
-schools, subject, however, to recommendations of the state
-superintendent of public instruction, which provision has practically
-nullified it.
-
-Ohio has a law authorizing a tax levy of ⁵⁄₁₀ of a mill for cities of a
-certain size, and ¹⁄₅ of a mill for certain other cities, in excess of
-other taxes; the sums so raised to be used for the purpose of
-introducing Manual Training into the public schools.
-
-In 1895 Wyoming authorized school boards to establish Manual Training in
-the public schools.
-
-In 1895 Wisconsin authorized the establishment of Manual Training in its
-public schools providing state aid for the same, but limiting the number
-to receive state aid to ten high-schools to be selected by the state
-superintendent of schools.
-
-The best of existing state-aid laws is that of Maryland, enacted April
-7, 1898. It is very liberal and will doubtless greatly stimulate the
-progress of the new education in that state. The Wisconsin law gives
-$250 to each of its schools per year, and the New Jersey law duplicates
-whatever the school board raises for that purpose. But the Maryland law
-gives $1500 to each school the first year, and $50 per pupil per year
-thereafter, up to the limit of $1500 per school per year--enough,
-probably, to pay the entire expense of the system. Following is the text
-of the statute:
-
- “_Whereas_, The establishment of well-conducted and liberally
- supported schools, or departments, in one of the large graded schools
- or high-schools in each county of the state, for the development and
- training of the manual ability of pupils, must tend to supply a
- growing want in each county of the state; and
-
- _Whereas_, It is especially the duty of the state to afford the best
- educational facilities to its youth in those technical studies which
- are directly associated with the material prosperity of its people;
- and
-
- _Whereas_, It is for the best interests of this state that the colored
- population of each county shall have an opportunity for the
- establishment of separate industrial schools; therefore,
-
- SEC. 1. _Be it enacted by the General Assembly of Maryland_, That it
- shall be the duty of the board of county school commissioners, when a
- suitable building, or room or rooms connected with one of the large
- graded schools or high-schools shall be provided by the county, or
- money sufficient for the erection of such building, or room or rooms,
- to accept the same (if, in the judgment of the board, there is any
- necessity therefor), and thereafter to provide for the maintenance of
- a Manual Training school, or Manual Training department, for said
- county, and the salaries of teachers and Manual Training instructors,
- out of the general school fund and the state aid hereinafter provided.
-
- SEC. 2. _And be it enacted_, That whenever a Manual Training school,
- or Manual Training department, is opened in any county, the president
- and secretary of the board of county school commissioners of said
- county shall report to the secretary of the state board of education,
- and the state board of education shall, without delay, proceed to
- appoint the principal of the state normal school, or one of the
- teachers in said school, well qualified for such service, to visit the
- school and give a certificate of approval of its condition and the
- plan upon which it is conducted; and thereafter the president and
- secretary of the board of county school commissioners shall report to
- the comptroller the condition of the school, the number of
- instructors, and the number of pupils enrolled, on or before the
- twentieth day of January in each year.
-
- SEC. 3. _And be it enacted_, That the comptroller of the treasury,
- after receiving the certificate of approval concerning the county
- Manual Training school, or Manual Training department, according to
- the provisions of the second section of this act, is hereby authorized
- and directed to issue his warrant upon the treasurer of the state for
- the sum of fifteen hundred dollars, payable to the order of the
- treasurer of the board of county school commissioners of the county
- filing the certificate of approval aforesaid, out of any moneys in the
- state treasury not otherwise appropriated, on the first day of October
- in each year, for the support of said Manual Training school, or
- Manual Training department.
-
- SEC. 4. _And be it enacted_, That the county Manual Training school,
- or the Manual Training department and the school to which it is
- attached, shall be under the management and control of the board of
- county school commissioners.
-
- SEC. 5. _And be it enacted_, That it shall be the duty of the board of
- county school commissioners of each county in this state, whenever a
- suitable building, or room or rooms connected with one of the colored
- schools of said county, shall be provided by the county to accept the
- same, if in the judgment of the said board there is any necessity
- therefor, and thereafter to provide for the maintenance of such member
- [number] of separate colored industrial schools as in their judgment
- may be needed, and the salaries of such teachers as may be required
- for that purpose shall be paid out of the general fund and the state
- aid hereinafter provided.
-
- SEC. 6. _And be it enacted_, That whenever any such separate colored
- industrial school or schools are opened in any county, the president
- and secretary of the board of county school commissioners of said
- county shall report the fact to the secretary of the state board of
- education, and the state board of education shall without delay
- proceed to appoint a proper person well qualified for such service, to
- visit the said school or schools and give a certificate of approval of
- its condition and the plan upon which it is conducted, and thereafter
- the president and secretary of the said board shall report to the
- comptroller of this state the condition of said school or schools, the
- number of instructors and the number of pupils enrolled during the
- school year last ended, on or before the 20th day of August in each
- year.
-
- SEC. 7. _And be it enacted_, That the comptroller of the treasury upon
- receiving the certificate of approval concerning the county colored
- industrial school or schools, as aforesaid, according to the
- provisions of the sixth section of this act, is hereby authorized and
- directed to issue his warrant upon the treasurer of the state for the
- sum of fifteen hundred dollars, payable to the order [of the]
- treasurer of the board of county school commissioners of the county,
- upon the filing of the certificates of approval aforesaid, out of any
- moneys in the state treasury not otherwise appropriated, on the first
- day of October in each year, for the support of said colored
- industrial school or schools, and thereafter the said industrial
- school or schools shall be under the management and control of the
- said board of county school commissioners.
-
- SEC. 8. _And be it enacted_, That no entire appropriation for the
- benefit of any Manual Training school, provided for under this act,
- shall be paid as authorized, after the first annual appropriation,
- unless said school have had an average daily attendance of thirty
- scholars for the preceding year; and in case said attendance shall
- fall short of said number, then there shall only be paid towards the
- maintenance of said school at the rate of fifty ($50.00) dollars for
- each scholar of its daily average annual attendance, to be determined
- by the report hereinbefore required to be made to the comptroller.
-
- SEC. 9. _And be it enacted_, That no appropriation for the benefit of
- the colored industrial schools of any county, provided for under this
- act, shall be paid after the first annual appropriation, unless the
- average daily attendance at such school or schools shall have been,
- for the preceding year, at least thirty scholars; and in case said
- attendance shall fall short of said number, then there shall be paid
- to the treasurer of the county school commissioners maintaining said
- school or schools, only at the rate of fifty ($50.00) dollars a
- scholar, for the daily average annual attendance at the same, to be
- determined by the report hereinbefore required to be made to the
- comptroller.
-
- Approved April 7, 1898.”
-
-The report of the state superintendent of public instruction for
-Michigan, for the year 1897, shows that Kindergartens exist in the
-public schools of the following cities and towns: Cities of over 4000
-population as shown by state census of 1894--Albion, Big Rapids,
-Cadillac, Calumet, Detroit, Escanaba, Grand Haven, Grand Rapids,
-Holland, Ionia, Ironwood, Ishpeming, Jackson, Menonimee, Mt. Clemens,
-Muskegon, Negamee, Niles, St. Joseph, Traverse City, West Bay City,
-Wyandotte--twenty-two cities of over 4000 population. The twenty-four
-cities and towns with less than 4000 population as shown by state census
-of 1894, and having Kindergartens in their public schools, are: Algonac,
-Alma, Au Sable, Caro, Crystal Falls, Dowagiac, Fremont, Greenville,
-Hartford, Houghton, Ithaca, Lake Linden, Lake View, Mancelona,
-Manistique, Montague, Morenci, Nashville, Pentwater, Reed City, Sand
-Beach, Stanton, Union City, Vassar. Such of these cities and towns as
-furnished reports will be found in the accompanying tables; from the
-others no data was received.
-
-Two thoroughly equipped Manual Training schools are projected: one, to
-be in Pullman, Illinois, is to result from a bequest in the will of the
-late Mr. George M. Pullman, who left a large sum for its construction,
-and an annuity of $25,000 for its maintenance; the other school is to be
-built by the Calumet and Hecla Mining Company, at Calumet, Michigan.
-Both these schools will be free, and will probably become a part of the
-public-school system of their respective towns.
-
-The legislature of Massachusetts in 1898 passed an act establishing a
-trade-school for weavers, to be located at Lowell, Massachusetts,
-provided the city would raise half the money necessary for its
-construction, the state to pay the other half. This is the first
-well-defined movement in this country to establish public trade-schools
-to teach the trades prevailing in the locality of the school. Europe has
-many such schools.
-
-
-MANUAL TRAINING IN RUSSIA.
-
-There is, as yet, no established national school system in Russia. The
-school systems of Finland and other Russian dependencies are provincial
-and local. An imperial decree of March 7, 1888, however, contained an
-elaborate plan for elementary national education, in which Manual
-Training, Technical, and Trade education were given not only prominence
-but precedence. The doctrine of state aid to educational institutions
-is, however, fully and liberally recognized. Manual Training was founded
-in Russia in 1868, as mentioned in the first edition of this work, by M.
-Victor Della Vos, and revived and extended in 1884 by the then Minister
-of Finance, who sent two teachers to Naäs, Sweden, to take a six weeks’
-course of instruction, and a workshop for boys’ hand labor was the same
-year established in connection with the Teachers’ Institute in St.
-Petersburg. In 1885 this was made a permanent feature of Teachers’
-Institute work, and an annual grant of 3000 rubles ($1659) was voted;
-and in 1887 a course in metal work was added to this school. In 1888
-three normal courses for instructing teachers in Manual Training were
-instituted and subsidized by the imperial government. One of these at
-Novaia Ladoga trains both city and country school-teachers; at Riga,
-city teachers only, while at Kiev only country teachers are trained. The
-instruction of teachers in Manual Training was also made part of the
-teachers’ institutes at Glookhov, Vilna, and Orenboorg in 1889. Besides
-these there were in 1890 eleven vacation institutes, training two
-hundred and fifty teachers for the work of imparting manual instruction.
-These teachers’ institutes, vacation and permanent (or normal schools),
-have increased rapidly and received rich subsidies from the imperial
-treasury. In 1891 the Russian Minister of War introduced Manual Training
-into all the cadet schools. The most recent available data indicate the
-introduction of Manual Training into one hundred and sixteen
-establishments, as follows: four teachers’ institutes, fourteen
-teachers’ seminaries, four intermediate schools, forty-four higher
-public schools, and thirty-four elementary common schools. A more recent
-report--which, however, is not at hand--is said to show remarkable
-developments in Manual Training in common and rural schools. A brief
-survey of technical and trade schools in Russia follows.
-
-The technical schools at Moscow and St. Petersburg are imperial schools
-of university grade, richly endowed, and reputed to be the best equipped
-schools in Europe. The oldest and best technical school in Moscow below
-university rank, and making no attempt to teach trades, is the Komisarof
-Technical School, founded in 1865 by two railroad contractors. It now
-receives government aid, and has about four hundred pupils. The Society
-for the Promotion of Technical Education in 1873 founded a school called
-the “Mechanical Handicraft School of Moscow.” The government contributes
-$1000 per year to this school. There are five technical schools having a
-grade of academic work comparable with our high schools--the Komisarof
-Technical School of Moscow, mentioned above, founded in 1865; the Lodz,
-in 1869; Irkootsk, 1873; Kungursk, 1877; and the Omsk, in 1882. The five
-schools had 1052 students at date of latest available report.
-Trade-schools of grammar grade, twenty-three in number, had 2474 pupils.
-Of these schools three were established in 1868; one in 1871; two in
-1872; one in 1873; one in 1874; one in 1875; two in 1877; one in 1878;
-two in 1879; one in 1880; two in 1883; two in 1885; three in 1886; one
-in 1887. Trade-schools of primary grade, sixty-three in number, with
-2562 pupils. One was established in 1865; one in 1866; two in 1867; one
-in 1870; one in 1871; three in 1872; two in 1873; five in 1874; six in
-1875; one in 1876; six in 1877; four in 1878; three in 1879; two in
-1880; two in 1881; four in 1882; five in 1883; five in 1884; one in
-1885; one in 1886; four in 1887; two in 1888; one in 1889.
-
-
-MANUAL TRAINING IN FINLAND.
-
-Finland was the birthplace of the man who first devised and practised
-that method of education known as Sloyd--a form of Manual Training.
-
-Otto Cygneans, of Helsingfors Teachers’ Seminary, after a thorough study
-of Froebel and Pestalozzi (to whom he gives ample credit), originated in
-1858 a system for carrying the education of the hand beyond the
-kindergarten into all grades of schools. To Finland also belongs the
-credit of being the first country to officially recognize the value of
-such education. Since 1866 (sometimes stated 1868) Manual Training
-(Sloyd) has been compulsory in all the elemental and normal schools of
-Finland. In 1896 there were four normal schools with 569 students, and
-75,712 pupils taking Manual Training in the elementary schools of the
-cities. Statistics of rural schools are not obtainable. In addition to
-these, there were in 1896 forty-two separate and distinctively
-Manual-training high-schools, with 1030 pupils, besides eight industrial
-schools, with 56 teachers and 380 pupils. All are public schools. There
-are technical and trade schools of all grades, from the Polytechnic
-School at Helsingfors to the elementary trade and weaving schools. There
-are seven schools where navigation is taught, twelve weaving, dyeing,
-and sewing schools, supported wholly or in part by the government,
-fourteen elementary technical schools, five high-grade technical
-schools, and ten trade-schools other than weaving and navigation.
-Government aid is granted to all of these schools.
-
-
-MANUAL TRAINING IN ENGLAND.
-
-The activity of Germany along the line of trade and technical schools,
-immediately following the Centennial Exposition at Philadelphia, alarmed
-the people of England, producing in 1882 what has been termed a
-“Technical education scare.” The friends of Manual Training, acting upon
-this popular and commercial anxiety, secured the passage of the
-“Technical Instruction Act of 1889.” By the terms of this act the
-schools organized under it were not to be trade-schools; and the
-construction put upon the expression “Manual Instruction” makes the term
-practically synonymous with our term Manual Training. The following
-table shows the growth of these schools. The growth of cooking schools
-is also statistically represented in the table.
-
- ----+-----------------------++---------------------------------
- | MANUAL INSTRUCTION || SCHOOLS OF COOKERY AND
- DATE| NUMBER OF SCHOOLS || DOMESTIC SCIENCE
- ----+-----------+-----------++-----------+-----------+---------
- | | Number of || | |
- | Number of | Schools || Number of | Number of |
- | Schools |Established|| Schools | Schools |
- |Existing in| During ||Existing in|Established|Number of
- YEAR| Year Named| Year Named|| Year Named|During Year| Pupils
- ----+-----------+-----------++-----------+-----------+---------
- 1876| .. | .. || 29 | 29 | ..
- 1877| .. | .. || 125 | 96 | ..
- 1878| .. | .. || 178 | 53 | ..
- 1879| .. | .. || 223 | 45 | ..
- 1880| .. | .. || 276 | 53 | ..
- 1881| .. | .. || 299 | 23 | ..
- 1882| .. | .. || 347 | 48 | ..
- 1883| .. | .. || 420 | 73 | 1,251
- 1884| .. | .. || 541 | 121 | 7,597
- 1885| .. | .. || 715 | 174 | 17,754
- 1886| .. | .. || 812 | 97 | 24,526
- 1887| .. | .. || 921 | 109 | 30,431
- 1888| .. | .. || 1,086 | 165 | 42,159
- 1889| .. | .. || 1,355 | 269 | 57,539
- 1890| 30 | 30 || 1,554 | 199 | 66,820
- 1891| 145 | 115 || 1,796 | 242 | 68,291
- 1892| 285 | 140 || 2,113 | 317 | 90,794
- 1893| 430 | 145 || 2,419 | 306 | 108,192
- 1894| 677 | 247 || 2,634 | 215 | 122,325
- 1895| 949 | 272 || 2,775 | 141 | 134,930
- | [136] | || | |
- ----+-----------+-----------++-----------+-----------+---------
-
- [136] The number of pupils taking Manual Training cannot be given; as
- an indication, however, it may be said that the London School Board
- reports that in 1895, 30,508 boys were instructed in wood work in
- London schools alone.
-
-Governmental aid to drawing and Manual Training, when incorporated in
-the curriculum of day grammar-grade schools, evening “continuation
-schools,” and teachers’ training colleges, is bestowed through the
-executive department, styled “The Science and Art Department.” Special
-attention is paid to training teachers in the teachers’ colleges, so
-that they will be able to give instruction in Manual Training. This is
-specially true to grammar-grade teachers. In 1894 56 teachers’ colleges
-were giving Manual Training to 4,434 teacher-pupils, the government
-granting $13,290 in aid of such training. In 1895, the science and art
-department, upon examinations aided 910 elementary Manual-training
-schools, giving instruction to 67,470 pupils; the amount of aid granted
-was $81,537.
-
-In 1890 a law was passed empowering county councils to use the surplus
-from duties on liquor to aid Manual-training and technical schools.
-Many districts use the “liquor money” to establish purely
-Manual-training schools, attaching them to municipal technical schools.
-Generally, however, the “liquor money” goes to technical and art
-schools. The report for 1895 shows $5,699,046 applied by local
-authorities to technical instruction under the “liquor money” law.
-Scotland secured in 1887 a law empowering local authorities to levy a
-tax of a penny in the pound for the support of technical schools. In
-1889 a similar law was passed for England. The Welsh law of 1889
-organizing intermediate schools, recognizes and defines Manual Training.
-These acts led up to the “liquor money” law referred to.
-
-The City and Guilds of London Institute, organized in 1876, is the
-principal private promoter of technical education in England. This
-organization has founded three schools of its own, besides aiding
-liberally similar schools in all parts of the kingdom. With the
-exception of the well-known South-Kensington school, the Manchester
-school, and the Birmingham schools, the technical schools of England, as
-well as its Manual-training schools and kindergartens, are of recent
-origin. Huddersfield Technical School, founded as a mechanics’ institute
-in 1841, is another exceptionally old and especially good school of its
-class.
-
-
-MANUAL TRAINING IN SWITZERLAND.
-
-As each canton regulates its own school system, the federal constitution
-requiring only that education must be obligatory and free, the same
-diversity of conditions exists in the cantons of Switzerland that is
-found in the states of our own Union:--
-
-Thus in the canton of Geneva, kindergartens and Manual-training schools
-are a part of the public-school system, entirely supported by public
-funds, and Manual Training is compulsory for all male pupils, in all
-grades of the public schools. The gradual advance from kindergarten work
-to primary, grammar, and high-school, makes a complete course in Manual
-Training in the schools of Geneva--perhaps the most complete to be found
-in any single public-school system. In other cantons, however,
-kindergartens exist generally as private institutions, aided by public
-funds and contributions from societies and individuals. The growth of
-kindergartens in Switzerland by years cannot be shown from any data at
-hand; the following table, however, shows the status at the date of most
-recent available data:
-
-PUPILS AND TEACHERS IN KINDERGARTENS OF SWITZERLAND
-
- -----------------------+-------------+---------+---------
- | Number of | |
- | Separate |Number of|Number of
- CANTON |Kindergartens| Pupils | Teachers
- -----------------------+-------------+---------+---------
- Zurich | 61 | 3,532 | 79
- Berne | 62 | 2,550 | 63
- Lucerne | 3 | 260 | 6
- Uri | 1 | .. | ..
- Schwytz | 4 | 91 | 4
- Unterwalden | 2 | 85 | 2
- Zug | 5 | 188 | 6
- Freyburg | 10 | 912 | 10
- Soleure | 8 | .. | ..
- Basel Town | 32 | 2,117 | 46
- Basel Land | 8 | 452 | 8
- Appenzell Outer Rhodes | 16 | 843 | 19
- Appenzell Inner Rhodes | 1 | 60 | 2
- Grisons | 2 | 80 | 4
- Aargau | 13 | .. | 13
- Ticino | 23 | 1,351 | 43
- Vaud | 160 | 4,000 | 160
- Valais | 3 | 249 | 3
- Neuchâtel | 36 | 997 | 36
- Geneva | 65 | 3,872 | 85
- -----------------------+-------------+---------+---------
- Total | 515 | 21,639 | 589
- -----------------------+-------------+---------+---------
-
-Manual Training for boys was introduced into the Switzerland schools in
-1884 by M. Rudin, who in that year instructed a class of forty teachers;
-in 1891 over one hundred teachers were taking a Manual-training course
-under his instruction. The following table shows the growth of Manual
-Training to 1889, or five years after its introduction. More recent data
-are unfortunately not available.
-
-MANUAL-TRAINING CLASSES IN SWITZERLAND
-
- ------------+---------+---------+---------
- |Number of|Number of|Number of
- CANTON | Classes | Pupils | Teachers
- ------------+---------+---------+---------
- Zurich | 19 | 305 | 13
- Basel | 32 | 558 | 19
- Saint Gall | 6 | 122 | 8
- Schaffhausen| 2 | 120 | 2
- Grisons | 2 | 48 | 2
- Thurgau | 2 | 46 | 1
- Soleure | .. | 40 | 1
- Aargau | 1 | .. | 1
- Berne | 5 | 175 | 5
- ------------+---------+---------+---------
-
-Classes in Manual Training are reported from the cantons of Vaud,
-Neuchâtel, Appenzell, Freyburg, and Glarus; but statistics are not
-given. Manual Training for girls has been an integral part of the public
-schools of Switzerland for many years, and in practically all of the
-cantons this instruction is obligatory. The instruction consists in
-knitting, sewing, mending, cutting, and fitting, with lectures on
-house-keeping, and was introduced into the schools rather for its
-industrial use than in recognition of its educational value. Switzerland
-early recognized the importance of technical instruction and the
-development of artisan skill. The Municipal School of Art at Geneva was
-founded in 1751, and is intended as a school for working-men. It is the
-oldest in Switzerland. The working-man’s school at Berne was founded in
-1829, and, though a private institution, it is subsidized by the federal
-government. The Polytechnic School at Zurich was founded by the federal
-government in 1854. The Industrial School in that city, founded in 1873
-by a society, is subsidized by the city, canton, and federal government.
-“The Tecknikum” of Winterthur, probably the most complete of its class
-of schools, was founded as a cantonal institution in 1873. The most
-extensive are the technical institutions for the education of
-working-men. The government began the establishment of these at the
-beginning of this century. By 1865, ninety-one had been established; in
-1889, eleven hundred and eighty-four of these schools, having 26,716
-pupils, were reported. Trade-schools have sprung up everywhere, adapting
-themselves to local industries and common needs. The School of
-Watchmaking, at Fleurier, was founded as a private institution in 1850,
-but has been municipal property since 1875. Municipal Schools of
-Watchmaking exist at Chaux-de-Fonds, 1865; St. Imier, 1866; Locle, 1868;
-Neuchâtel, 1871; Bienne, 1872; Porentruy, 1883, is a municipal and state
-school, as is also that at Soleure, 1884. The Trade School for Women is
-a private institution of Basel, founded in 1879; that of Berne, in 1888.
-These schools are founded by Societies for the Advancement of Public
-Utility, and teach women the millinery and dress-making trades, and give
-instruction in household work, and all the means by which women can
-become self-supporting. The societies have also founded numerous
-House-keeping Schools, and Schools for Domestic Servants.
-
-No attempt is here made to give a complete list of Switzerland’s
-trade-schools, or the efforts being made to advance the skill of her
-artisans. It is but proper, however, to mention the latest efforts to
-overcome the difficulties growing out of the decline in apprenticeship.
-In 1884 the Mannheim Trade Unions asked for a committee of investigation
-into the condition of the small trades. The committee reported,
-recommending the adoption of a suggestion received from the Karlsruhe
-Trades Union. It was in effect, that master-workmen who are willing to
-train apprentices systematically, according to regulations prescribed by
-school authorities, shall be aided by the state treasury. In 1888 Baden
-appropriated 5000 marks per annum for this purpose, and in 1892
-twenty-two trades, or one hundred and twenty-two workshops, having one
-hundred and eighty apprentices, were subsidized. In 1895 the
-appropriation was increased. In 1898 the federal government of
-Switzerland adopted the plan and purposes to greatly extend it. The
-result of this is, practically, that every skilled master-workman who
-desires may become to a certain extent a public-school teacher, and
-every factory or workshop is, or may become, a school-house.
-
-
-MANUAL TRAINING IN GERMANY.
-
-The officials of the regular school systems of Germany, while for some
-years past active in advancing trade-schools, have never recognized
-Manual Training as worthy a place in the public schools, except as
-regards female handiwork, which is everywhere a part of the course in
-grammar and high schools for girls. Individuals, and “societies for the
-promotion of practical education,” must therefore take the initiative in
-Manual Training, and this results either in private schools, or in
-persuading municipal or state authorities to annex a Manual-training
-department to some public school.
-
-Of the 328 Manual-training schools for boys existing in 1892, 126 were
-independent schools, and 202 were annexes attached to other educational
-institutions of various kinds. Special societies maintain 50 schools and
-72 annexes, of the above total, while municipal authorities maintain 70
-schools and state authorities 66 annexes. The growth by years since 1878
-is shown in the following table:
-
- -------------+-----------+-------------
- ESTABLISHED |Independent| Annexes to
- | Schools |Other Schools
- -------------+-----------+-------------
- Prior to 1878| .. | 26
- 1878 | 1 | ..
- 1879 | 3 | ..
- 1880 | 4 | 4
- 1881 | 9 | 6
- 1882 | 4 | 3
- 1883 | 2 | 6
- 1884 | 3 | 10
- 1885 | 2 | 11
- 1886 | 1 | 9
- 1887 | 8 | 11
- 1888 | 13 | 11
- 1889 | 19 | 23
- 1890 | 21 | 30
- 1891 | 27 | 36
- 1892 | 9 | 16
- -------------+-----------+-------------
- Total | 126 | 202
- -------------+-----------+-------------
-
-In 1892 there were 285 teachers and 7374 pupils in the independent
-schools; 363 teachers and 6841 pupils in the annexes, or 648 teachers
-and 14,235 pupils in both. While something had been done in Germany in
-the way of trade-schools prior to that date, the general interest and
-official zeal was created by the Centennial Exhibition at Philadelphia
-in 1876, when Professor Reuleaux cabled to Bismarck, “Our goods are
-cheap but wretched.” The various states began to inaugurate the
-educational system that had made the manufactures of France so superior
-to those of her competitor, and from 1879 to 1890 over 50 trade-schools
-were established in Prussia.
-
-Some of the German states, notably Saxony and Würtemberg, had early
-established trade-schools. In 1837 three royal labor-schools were
-established by the state of Saxony; one in 1838, and two in 1840.
-Special schools for instruction in weaving, embroidery, and lace-making
-were established; one in 1835, one in 1857, one in 1861, one in 1866,
-and one in 1881. Of the 32 trade-schools in Saxony seven have been
-established since 1886. In the 20 “_Kleinstaaten_” or so-called small
-states of Germany there were, in 1895, 218 trade-schools having 2047
-pupils. Practically all of these have been established since 1879. The
-city of Berlin in 1895 reported 21 trade-schools with 8992 pupils, 332
-teachers, and expenditures (exclusive of state aid) for these schools of
-$129,102; besides $80,339 spent for trade education in so-called
-“continuation” schools. In February, 1897, the number of students
-attending these schools in Berlin was 14,750, or 1 per cent. of the
-population.
-
-It will be interesting, in view of the antagonistic attitude of the
-school authorities to the introduction of Manual-training methods in
-public schools from kindergartens up, to note how long Germany will
-follow the trade-school experiment of France, without learning, as did
-France, to fit her boys for the trade-schools by putting their little
-hands to school in the kindergarten, the primary school, and so on
-through grammar and high school; so that by the time the trade-school
-comes in to differentiate and accentuate special skill, the boy will
-have learned equally the use and control of muscle and of mind.
-
-The highest results of trade-schools upon a nation’s manufactures, and
-therefore upon its exports and its wealth, cannot be realized until the
-Manual-training school has furnished the educated hand as raw material
-for the trade-school to work upon. The nation that begins with the
-trade-school first will have a long and expensive lesson to learn.
-France learned it. Will Germany require as long and expensive a tuition?
-Germany has, however, the advantage, in that many of her private
-citizens, and “societies for practical education,” are, as usual, far
-more intelligent than her school authorities.
-
-
-MANUAL TRAINING IN FRANCE.
-
-The thorough reorganization of the public schools of France by the law
-of June 16, 1881, renders any reference to the prior system unnecessary
-here.
-
-By this law primary education was rendered absolutely free; and by the
-law of March 28, 1882, compulsory education for all children between the
-ages of 6 and 13 years was established. The law of October 30, 1886,
-systematized the public schools, classifying and grading them, and
-fixing a curriculum. Kindergartens admitting pupils from the ages of 2
-to 6 years were made general by this law, and in 1886-87 there were 3597
-kindergartens with 543,839 pupils. In 1895 this number had grown to 4734
-kindergartens, 714,734 pupils, and 9199 teachers, all women.
-
-The government programme contemplates that Manual Training proper shall
-begin where its elements in the kindergarten leave off, and be continued
-throughout the four grades of primary instruction. But the full purpose
-of the law seems slow of realization, for in 1890, four years after the
-passage of the law, only 400 shop-schools of primary grade had been
-established, 101 of these in Paris. Manual Training has been compulsory
-in all public high-schools of France since 1886. These may be either
-independent schools or classes annexed to an elementary school. In the
-latter case they are called _cours complémentaires_. In 1886 there were
-16,217 boys and 5150 girls in public high-schools; in 1895 there were
-21,996 boys and 8660 girls, a rise of 35 per cent. for boys and of 68
-per cent. for girls in the ten years.
-
-In the _cours complémentaires_ there were 11,518 boys and 5223 girls in
-1895, an increase of 37 per cent. for boys and 26 per cent. for girls
-over the figures for 1886. This result was not, however, accomplished at
-once. There had been the usual struggle for Manual-training schools
-before the law of 1886 made them universal and compulsory. The school
-authorities of Paris introduced sewing into the public schools in 1867,
-and in 1873 M. Salicis began the introduction of Manual Training into
-what we would term grammar-schools. Shops were annexed to the boys’
-school in the Rue Tournefort in 1873. From that time until the general
-law of 1886 the growth was gradual. There are in France a large number
-of Manual Apprenticeship schools. They are a kind of primary
-trade-school. Prior to 1880 various cities, as Paris, Havre, Rheims,
-etc., had founded apprenticeship schools. Private schools of the same
-character had been established by individuals and industrial
-associations. The law of 1880 organized these efforts, assimilated all
-these institutions, and brought them under the control of the public.
-The tendency to bring all industrial institutions, whether classical,
-manual, trade, or technical, under control of the state has been very
-marked since 1880 in France, and still more so since the law of 1886. Of
-the six industrial and house-keeping schools for girls in Paris four
-were founded by the city; the others were private institutions absorbed
-by the city--one in 1884, the other in 1886. They are of high-school
-grade, and, in addition to general domestic economy, teach special
-trades to women, such as millinery and artificial flower work. The
-nation maintains high-class trade and technical schools in all
-industries important to her commerce. And there can be no doubt that the
-excellence of her manufactures has its origin in the large number,
-variety, and excellence of her free schools. The National School of
-Watch-makers was founded in 1848 by the government of Savoy, and
-reorganized by the French government in 1890. The National Schools of
-Arts and Trades, four in number, are the oldest and most important of
-the public institutes of technology and trades. The first of these was
-founded as a private institution in 1780, and became national property
-during the First Republic. The second of these schools was established
-in 1804, the third in 1843, and the fourth completed in 1892. These
-schools instruct fully in the mechanical arts, the purpose being to
-educate at public expense thoroughly equipped superintendents and
-masters of workshops for industrial establishments. Such, too, is the
-purpose of the Central School of Arts and Manufactures at Paris, which,
-founded as a private institution in 1829, became the property of the
-state in 1857.
-
-Schools of Mining, such as the one at Houghton, Michigan, are located,
-one at Paris (National High-school of Mines); one at St. Étienne (School
-of Mines); and schools for master miners at Alais and at Douai. The
-National Conservatory of Arts and Trades, founded by the National
-Convention in 1794, began in 1819, under special ordinance of the
-government, gratuitous courses of instruction upon the application of
-the sciences and industrial arts. It is to industrial education what the
-College of France is to classicism and “pure science”--whatever that may
-mean. No attempt is here made to give a complete list of the trade and
-technical schools of France, whether public or private. They are
-exceedingly numerous, and cover every phase of industry. The purpose
-here, however, is to call attention to the fact that France began with
-trade-schools, and, after a hundred years of experimenting with trade
-and technical institutions, she reached the wisdom embodied in the laws
-of 1886 and 1890, which provide for the training of the hand of the
-child in the kindergarten and continuously throughput the school age,
-thus furnishing aptest possible pupils for her higher trade and
-technical institutes, and the greatest possible development of skill for
-her industries. The character of her manufactures shows the importance
-of the scholar in industry.
-
-
-MANUAL TRAINING IN ITALY.
-
-Discussions in 1882 and 1885 led to an official adoption of Manual
-Training in normal schools in 1892, when twenty selected teachers were
-given one month’s gratuitous training. In 1893 Sloyd was made obligatory
-in the practice department of all normal schools. In 1893, 34 men and 34
-women teachers were taking the Manual-training course at Repatrausone.
-The school authorities in Italy acting upon the English idea of teaching
-Manual Training to the teachers first, and so interest them that they
-will introduce Sloyd into the elementary schools of their districts.
-
-Beyond the statement that Manual Training was experimentally taught to
-400 pupils in Genoa in 1892, no data is at present obtainable as to the
-success of this plan. There are 194 industrial schools, seeking to teach
-special industries. In 1887 there were 419 technical schools, of more or
-less importance, and 74 institutes of secondary technology. With the
-exception of the Aldini-Valeriani institute in Bologna, founded in 1834,
-and the _Scuola Professionale_ at Foggia, established by the state in
-1872, the trade and technical schools of Italy seem to be of recent
-origin.
-
-
-MANUAL TRAINING IN BELGIUM.
-
-The law of July 1, 1879, reorganizing the public-school system of
-Belgium, made kindergartens a universal and integral part of the public
-schools. Children are admitted at 3 years of age, remaining till seven.
-“At Brussels, Liege, and Verviers, experimental transition classes
-exist, which prolong kindergarten methods in the primary grades, the
-Manual-training exercises of Froebel reappearing in the primary schools,
-and there developing into some simple form of actual hand labor, with
-paper, pasteboard, or clay. The results have been very satisfactory.” In
-1891 the city of Liege reported 4717 children attending public
-kindergartens. A normal school for training kindergarten teachers is
-maintained at Liege. In 1890 Belgium maintained 1042 kindergartens
-having 104,760 pupils. The movement to generalize Manual Training in the
-public schools began in 1882, took definite shape three years later, and
-by 1887 the state made Manual Training obligatory in all state normal
-schools, sixteen in number. Fifty cities also reported Manual Training
-established in their public schools in 1888. The more recent reports,
-while not given much to statistics, show satisfactory growth in the
-system. Schools of apprenticeship and of trade have received more
-encouragement in Belgium than Manual Training has in the schools of
-grammar and high-school grades.
-
-Apprenticeship schools to teach lace-making to the indigent peasantry
-were established by the state as early as 1776. With the introduction of
-machinery, and the expansion of industries, the character of these
-schools was changed. Abuses grew up. Academic tuition was abandoned for
-work, and the schools practically turned over to financial interests of
-the exploiters of the labor of children. A reorganization occurred in
-1890 when the state subsidized some forty of these apprenticeship
-schools, and abolished many others.
-
-Trade-schools of every variety, from the schools for fishermen at Ostend
-and Blankenberg to the famous trade-schools of Brussels, abound in
-Belgium. While these schools are for the most part private schools, they
-are usually subsidized by the city or local government. The industrial
-school at Ghent is a technical school of importance founded in 1828.
-That at Tournay was opened in 1841. These are the oldest schools of
-their type in Belgium. A new impetus was given to these schools in 1885,
-and from that date many have sprung up in all parts of the country, the
-local industries determining the character of the trade-schools. The
-trade-school at Ghent, established in 1890, is the best expression of
-modern methods, as distinguished from the early ideas represented by
-Tournay. This school was overcrowded with pupils in 1892. The state
-grants a subsidy of 6000 francs ($1158), and the province also aids the
-school. In 1889, 54 industrial schools were reported in Belgium. In 1872
-a house-keeping school for girls was established by M. Smits, of
-Couillet, the first of its kind in Belgium. In 1890 there were 160, and
-in 1892, 250 such schools, and classes in house-keeping attached to
-other schools. Practically all of these were either public schools or
-free classes in private institutions.
-
-
-MANUAL TRAINING IN AUSTRIA.
-
-In Austria no attempt is made to combine in the same institutions the
-discipline of shop-work and the academics of the public schools. The
-first shop-school was established in Vienna by a private association,
-August 10, 1883. The second followed, February 16, 1887. In 1884 a
-normal school for the training of Manual-training teachers was
-established. At Budapest a Manual-training school was organized by
-private initiative in 1886.
-
-The municipal statutes almost immediately required one such school to be
-maintained by each school district, and in 1889 there were in the twelve
-districts sixteen such schools. One unimportant trade-school dates back
-to 1871; but with the exception of the work done in Vienna and Budapest,
-and a few so-called “continuation schools” and trade-schools, nothing of
-importance was done by Austria until 1896. The activity of the empire
-since the latter date has been directed towards the establishment of
-apprenticeship schools.
-
-
-MANUAL TRAINING IN SWEDEN, NORWAY, AND DENMARK.
-
-From Finland the new educational ideals developed by Otto Cygnaeus
-spread to Sweden, and thence to the world at large. Dr. Salomon of Naäs
-introduced Manual Training (Sloyd) into his school in 1872, and in 1878
-there were 103 Sloyd schools in Sweden. In 1879 there were 163; in 1880,
-234; in 1881, 300; in 1882, 377; in 1883, 463; in 1884, 584; in 1885,
-727; in 1886, 872; in 1887, 991; in 1888, 1167; in 1890, 1278; in 1891,
-1492; in 1892, 1624; in 1893, 1787; in 1894, 1887; in 1895, 2483; or an
-increase of 2380 in 17 years. In 1877 parliament voted $4000 per annum
-to advance Sloyd instruction; in 1891 this was increased to $30,000 per
-annum, in addition to amounts given by provincial authorities,
-agricultural and private societies, and parish authorities. The Naäs
-seminary for the instruction of teachers of Sloyd (Dr. Salomon’s school)
-reports that 2627 teachers of Sloyd had been taught between 1875 and
-1896. In the Sloyd teachers training-school at Stockholm 573 women
-instructors were taught in the years from 1885 to 1897, inclusive. There
-are 32 evening and holiday schools, which in 1895 received a subsidy of
-$12,060.
-
-There is no definite data on Manual Training in Norway earlier than
-1889, though Sloyd had doubtless been introduced from adjacent countries
-prior to that time. By law, however, Sloyd was made compulsory in all
-city elementary and intermediate grade schools in 1892, and optional in
-village schools. In 1891, $5060 was given as a subsidy for teaching
-Sloyd in 178 schools. The number of students in rural elementary schools
-in which Sloyd is optional is given at 236,161; number of students in
-city schools where Sloyd is compulsory, 58,871.
-
-In 1883 the first Danish Sloyd school was established. The Copenhagen
-Seminary for instructing teachers of Sloyd was established in 1885. In
-1888, 46 schools reported Sloyd courses with 2000 pupils under
-instruction; this number in 1889 had grown to 59, and in 1896 to 114. Of
-this latter number 30 are regular Sloyd schools; the others educational
-institutions having Sloyd as a part of the course. In 1890, $4368 was
-appropriated to further the introduction of Sloyd into the schools of
-Denmark. In this connection must be mentioned the “Home Industry”
-schools of Denmark. Not less than 500 of these schools exist, generally
-attached to other schools, and supported by 400 societies for promotion
-of home industries and by state aid. It was the powerful advocacy of
-these schools by their champion, Clauson-Kaas, that delayed the
-introduction of Sloyd into Danish schools until 1883, when the influence
-of Professor Mikkelsen began to gain the ascendency. Not only was
-Clauson-Kaas a powerful man in his advocacy of these home industry
-schools, but equally vociferous and partisan in his opposition to Manual
-Training or Sloyd as a means of education and intellectual development.
-In the terrific strife of partisan school-teachers as to what
-constituted education, the schools of Denmark not only deteriorated but
-were wellnigh closed. That the home industry schools had their use is
-witnessed by the fact that practically every Danish housewife is not
-only an expert needlewoman and house-keeper, but expert in all those
-arts that go by the name of female handicraft. Grade schools and
-technical education have not developed greatly in Scandinavian
-countries. Sweden has two important schools for weaving, the Eskilstuna
-school for metal-workers, and four technical schools. Norway has two
-schools for teaching the wood-carver’s trade, two of carpentry, a school
-for mechanics, three technical schools, and four industrial schools for
-women. Apart from the numerous schools of home industries, difficult if
-not impossible to classify, Denmark has a trade-school for shoemakers,
-and one of considerable importance for watch-makers.
-
-
-MANUAL TRAINING IN THE NETHERLANDS.
-
-The normal course in the Netherlands includes Manual Training for boys,
-it being the intention to teach teachers first, and to establish Manual
-Training in the schools later. There are a large number of trade and
-apprenticeship schools, the government taking far more interest in these
-than in Manual Training. In 1895 there were twenty “_Ambachtscholen_”
-(for training tinners, carpenters, and dyers), with 2295 students. There
-are forty-eight industrial schools.
-
-
-MANUAL TRAINING IN ARGENTINE REPUBLIC.
-
-January 13, 1896, a commission was appointed to report a plan for the
-introduction of kindergartens and Manual Training into the public-school
-system. In 1897 the report was made, and its recommendations were
-enacted into a law going into effect January 1, 1898. The introduction
-of Manual Training is to begin with the national colleges, sixteen in
-number, with 2629 pupils; the normal schools, thirty-five in number,
-with 1770 pupils. Ultimately under the law Manual Training will be
-adopted in the 3749 elementary schools, having 264,294 pupils, though no
-statistics are at hand showing to what extent this has been already
-accomplished. The papers presented before the commission which sat
-through February, 1896, were upon the importance of kindergartens as a
-basis for Manual Training; Manual Training as a means of education;
-Manual Training from the hygienic standpoint, etc. Some speakers favored
-industrial rather than Manual-training schools, but the commission
-reported that the system of Sloyd used at Naäs, Sweden, with certain
-modifications to suit local conditions, was the proper one to adopt. The
-kindergarten system recommended is purely Froebelian. From one of the
-papers read before the commission it is learned that Manual Training is
-a recognized part of the course of instruction in the national colleges
-of Uruguay, and to some extent in its elementary schools. Definite data
-for Uruguay schools are not, however, at hand.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX.
-
-
- A.
-
- Abstract ideas regarded as of more vital importance than things, 185.
-
- Adam, legend of, and the stick, 157.
-
- Adams, Charles Francis, Jr., arraigns the schools of Massachusetts for
- automatism, 201; declares that, in the public schools, children are
- regarded as automatons, etc., 205.
-
- Adler, Prof. Felix, declaration of [in note], that manual training
- promotes rectitude, 142; unique educational enterprise of, in New York
- City, 342; extracts from report of, as to purposes of the “model
- school,”, 344, 345.
-
- Age of force, the, is passing away, 303.
-
- Age of science and art, the, has begun, 303.
-
- Agricola, noted for the practice of the most austere virtue, 274;
- after great services, was retired, 274.
-
- Agricultural colleges, manual training in twelve, of the State, 341.
-
- Agriculture nearly perishes in the Middle Ages--prevalence of famines,
- 281.
-
- Alabama, Agricultural and Mechanical College of, adopts manual
- training, 355.
-
- Alcibiades kept not his patriotism when he was being wronged, 255.
-
- Alison, his theory of the cause of the decline of Rome, 63.
-
- Altruism, stability of government depends upon, 135.
-
- America, discovery of, the crowning act of man’s emancipation from the
- gloom of the Dark Ages, 286; gives wings to hope, 287; startles the
- people of Europe from the deep sleep of a thousand years, 287; a great
- blow to prevailing dogmatisms, 307; completes the figure of the earth,
- rendering it susceptible of intelligent study, 307.
-
- America, early immigration to, consisted of Puritans and Cavaliers,
- Germans, Frenchmen, and Irishmen, 306; destined to become the home of
- an old civilization, 306; the manner in which the colonists of,
- treated the natives showed the Roman taint of savagery, 306; European
- social abuses exaggerated in, 323; the eyes of mankind rest upon,
- alone with hope, 323.
-
- Americans, are transplanted Europeans controlled by European mental
- and moral habitudes, 323; will not vote away their right to vote, 324,
- 325.
-
- Anaxagoras, his characterization of man as the wisest of animals
- because he has hands, 152.
-
- Ancients, reverence due them for their art triumphs, 73; temples of,
- remained long as instructors of succeeding generations, 73;
- educational theory of, contrasted with that of moderns, 123; ignorance
- of, on the subject of physiology, 153; speculative philosophy the only
- resource of, 153; slow growth of, in morals due to the fact of their
- neglect of the education of woman, 366; contempt of, for children,
- 367.
-
- Anossoff, a Russian general, experiments of, in the effort to produce
- Damascus steel, 72.
-
- Antwerp, Flemish silk-weavers of, flee to England upon the sacking of,
- 34.
-
- Apollo, bronze statue of, at Rhodes, 47.
-
- Apprentice system, the, gives skilled mechanics to England, 181.
-
- Apprentices better educated than school and college graduates, 239.
-
- Architecture, limit of, attained in Greece and Rome, 73.
-
- Aristocracy, alliance of, with the kings, 290.
-
- Arithmetic, automatism in teaching it in the schools of the United
- States, as shown by the Walton report, 197; Colonel Parker’s
- declaration in regard to the defective methods of instruction in, 206,
- 207.
-
- Arnold, John, inventor of the chronometer, 86; his ingenious watch, of
- the size of twopence and weight of sixpence, 86.
-
- Art, its cosmopolitan character, 12; the product of a sequential
- series of steps, 73; the preservation of a record of each step
- essential to progress, 73; printing makes every invention in, the
- heritage of all the ages, 286; triumphs due to the laborer, 294;
- ignored in educational systems, 326.
-
- Artisan, the, embodies the discoveries of science in things, 13; more
- deserving of veneration than the artist, 74; regarded with disdain by
- statesmen, lawyers, _littérateurs_, poets, and artists, 185; education
- of, more scientific than that of merchants, lawyers, judges, etc.,
- 227; training of, is objective, 231; intuitively shrinks from the
- false, and struggles to find the truth, 231; always in the advance,
- 242.
-
- Artists more highly esteemed than engineers, machinists, and artisans,
- 185.
-
- Arts, the fine, not so fine as the useful, 74; can exist legitimately
- only as the natural outgrowth of the useful arts, 279; the so-called
- fine arts must wait for the expansion and perfection of the useful
- arts, 383; civilization and the, are one, 384.
-
- Arts, the useful, finer than the so-called fine arts--their processes
- more intricate, 74; no limit to their development except the
- exhaustion of the forces of nature, 74; neglect of, by all the
- governments of the world is amazing, 176; Plato’s contempt of, 176; no
- instruction is given in the public schools, 181; slavery’s brand of
- shame still upon, 190; no such failure of the, as there is of justice,
- 227; the true measure of civilization, 247; depend upon labor, 278;
- precede the fine arts, 279; unknown in the Middle Ages, 281;
- stagnation in, is the death of civilization, 283.
-
- Athenians and Spartans as thieves, 255.
-
- Atkinson, Edward, declares that the perfection of our almost automatic
- mechanism is achieved at the cost not only of the manual but of the
- mental development of our men, 201.
-
- Attention--the equivalent of genius, 380.
-
- Aurelius, Marcus, sublime moral teachings of, 138.
-
- Austria, Emperor of, has a suit of clothes made from the fleece in
- eleven hours, 87; increases her debt each year, 296.
-
- Authority, in the Middle Ages, chilled courage, 284.
-
- Automata, of the ancients--hint of modern automatic tools in, 8; of
- the moderns, triumphs of mechanical genius, 86.
-
- Automatism, of mind and body, 191; of mind promoted by the environment
- of modern life, 192; promotion of, by the schools, 193; in the schools
- of Norfolk County, Mass., as shown by the Walton report, 196; as shown
- in the Walton report in grammar, in arithmetic, in reading, in
- penmanship, in spelling, and in composition, 197, 198, 199; a final
- and conclusive test of the prevalence of, in the schools, 204.
-
-
- B.
-
- Babylon, the hundred brazen gates of, 55; influence of ideas of, in
- full force in the United States down to the time of the emancipation
- proclamation of President Lincoln, 190.
-
- Bacon, Lord, the school he wished for, 2; his aphorism, 4; his
- apothegm on the sciences, 13; condemns the old system of education,
- 126; his opinion of the universities, 127; his proposal that a college
- be established for the discovery of new truth, 185; his proposal to
- bring the mind into accord with things, 245; foresees the kindergarten
- and the manual training school, 245; celebrated aphorism of, has had
- but little influence upon the methods of our public schools, 325; the
- basis of his philosophy of things, 374.
-
- Bacon, Roger, his daring prediction of mechanical wonders, 98.
-
- Ballot, power of, in the United States, 324.
-
- Baltimore, Md., manual training in, 342.
-
- Bamberger, Mr. G., Principal of the Workingman’s School, New York
- City--extracts from report of, on purposes of the school, 343, 344.
-
- Barnesville, O., manual training in, 342.
-
- Belfield, Dr. Henry H., Director of the Chicago Manual Training
- School, 346; his early appreciation of the mental value of manual
- training, 348; extracts from the inaugural address of, 348-351.
-
- Bell, Sir Charles, his great discovery of the muscular sense, 146; his
- definition of the office of the sixth sense, 146.
-
- Bells, that of Pekin, China, 47; that of Moscow, 47; they show an
- intimate knowledge of the founder’s art, 48.
-
- Bernot, M., inventor of file-cutting machine, 91.
-
- Bessemer, Sir Henry, his birth and early training, 162; his appearance
- in London, a poor young man--his first invention, 162; as young
- Gladstone enters the Treasury, he retires an unsuccessful suitor for
- the just reward of genius and toil, 163; his burning sense of outrage,
- 163; announcement of his discovery of a new process in steel-making,
- 164; his declaration that he could make steel at the cost of iron
- received with incredulity, 165; his process of steel-making a complete
- success in 1860, 165; compared with Mr. Gladstone, 165, 166;
- description of the process that revolutionized the steel manufacture,
- 166, 167; value of process of, 167; the government of England slow in
- honoring, 168; comparison between the life and services of, to man and
- those of Mr. Gladstone and Mr. Disraeli, 168, 169; stands for the new
- education, 169.
-
- Black-walnut, its natural history studied in the wood-turning
- laboratory, 36; its structure, growth, and uses, 37; the poet Bryant’s
- great tree, 37.
-
- Blatchford, E. W., President of the Chicago Manual Training School
- Association, 346.
-
- Blatchford Literary Society, an organization of students of the
- Chicago Manual Training School, 348.
-
- Blow, Miss S. E., in formulating the theory of the kindergarten,
- describes the method equally of the savage and the manual training
- school, 218, 219.
-
- Board of Trade of Chicago, the speculative trades in futures on, are
- fifteen times more than the sales of grain and provisions, 322.
-
- Body, contempt of the, by the ancients, led to contempt of manual
- labor, 155.
-
- Book-makers, the, writing the lives of the old inventors in the temple
- of fame, 171.
-
- Books, the sure promise of universal culture, 287; the precursor of
- the common school, 287.
-
- Boston, the streets of, in which patriots had struggled for liberty,
- now echoed the groans of the slave, 311; manual training in, 341.
-
- Boy, the civilized, is not trained in school for the actual duties of
- life, 181; is taught many theories, but not required to put any of
- them in practice, 181; is in danger of the penitentiary until he
- learns a trade or profession, 181, 182.
-
- Boys, ninety-seven in a hundred, who graduate from the public schools
- and embark in mercantile pursuits, fail, 227.
-
- Brain, the, its absorbing and expressing powers--diagram illustrating,
- 193; the healthy education of, consists in giving to the expressing
- side power equal to that of the absorbing side, 193, 194; the
- functions of the absorbing side extended, while those of the
- expressing side are restricted--diagram illustrating, 194; functions
- of the expressing side of, increased by adding drawing and the manual
- arts, 195.
-
- Bramah, Joseph, inventor of automatic tools, 84.
-
- Breighton helps to solve the steam-power problem, 15.
-
- Bridge, the first iron, across the Severn, one hundred years old, but
- likely to last for centuries, 241.
-
- Bridgman, Laura, used the finger alphabet in her dreams, 150.
-
- Brindley, James, sketch of the life of, 172; a common laborer--a
- millwright’s apprentice--a man of honor--an illiterate, but a genius
- and an originator of great canal enterprises, 172-175; the engineer of
- the Duke of Bridgewater, 173; his “castle in the air” and “river hung
- in the air,” 173; his obstinacy, poverty, and poor pay for splendid
- services of which he was robbed by the duke, 174; his life and career
- typical of a score of biographies presented in Mr. Smiles’s “Lives of
- the Engineers,” 175.
-
- Bronze, castings of, in the ruins of Egypt and Greece, 46.
-
- Brooklyn Bridge illustrates the necessity of practical training for
- the civil engineer, 97.
-
- Brown, John, Captain, in the presence of his exultant but
- half-terrified captors, 235; defying the constitution, the laws, and
- public sentiment in the interest of the cause of justice, 236.
-
- Bruno, his fate, condemned by the Inquisition and burned as a heretic,
- 178; persecution of, a link in the chain of progress, 287.
-
- Buckle, Henry Thomas, his testimony to the practical uses of
- imagination, 38; his scathing arraignment of English statesmen and
- legislators, 160; his declaration that the best English laws are those
- by which former laws are repealed, 187; his declaration in regard to
- the obstinacy and stupidity of English legislators, 242.
-
- Budget, the European, shows that the standing armies are the
- overshadowing feature of the situation, 290; the portion of, that goes
- to the maintenance of the standing armies, 291.
-
- Burgos, manufactures of, destroyed by the expulsion of the Moors from
- Spain, 283.
-
-
- C.
-
- Cæsar preferred to Cato, whose patriotism was above question, 274;
- commentaries of, in all the world’s universities, 275.
-
- Caligula, his pleasure in witnessing the countenances of dying
- gladiators, 138.
-
- Camillus honored in the early days of Rome, 274.
-
- Carlyle, his apostrophe to tools, 7.
-
- Carpenter’s laboratory, class of students at the black-board in,
- discussing the history and nature of certain woods, 21; working
- drawings of the lesson put on the black-board by the instructor in,
- 25; parts of the lesson executed by the instructor in, 25; new tools
- introduced, and their care and use explained, 25; the students at
- their benches in, making things, as busy as bees, 26; a call to order
- and a solution of the main problem of the day’s lesson, 26; a tenon
- too large for its mortise, 29.
-
- Caste, a tendency to, disclosed in all history, 248; illustration of,
- the earliest--the chief of the brawny arm, 248; illustrations of, in
- savage and half-civilized communities, 248, 249; in Egypt--in India,
- 249; in the United States, 313.
-
- Castile, manufactures of, destroyed by the expulsion of the Moors from
- Spain, 283.
-
- Castle of the Middle Ages, the home of music and chivalry, 280.
-
- Cato a type of Roman persistence in the path of conquest, 264;
- patriotism and virtue of, 274.
-
- Centennial Exposition, exhibit of models of tool-practice in the
- Imperial Technical School, Moscow, Russia, at the, 331.
-
- Charcoal, the forests of England swept away to provide it for the
- smith’s and smelter’s fires, in the early time, 63.
-
- Charlemagne, attempt of, to reconstruct a worn-out civilization, 280;
- neglect of the education of the people the cause of the failure of,
- 280.
-
- Chatham, Lord, declaration of, that the American colonies had no right
- to make a nail or a horseshoe, 203.
-
- Chicago, comparison of, with ancient Rome, 138.
-
- Chicago Manual Training School, description of building, 1; its main
- purpose intellectual development, 3; theory of, 4; engine-room of, 14;
- engine of, doing duty as a school-master, 14; an epitome of, in the
- engine-room, 15; its purpose not to make mechanics, but men, 38;
- conditions of admission to, 106; detail of questions used in
- examination of candidates for the first class in, 106-110; curriculum
- of, 110, 111; optional studies of, 111; blending of manual and mental
- instruction in, 111; missionary character of, 111; the only
- independent educational institution of the kind in the world, 345;
- owes its origin entirely to laymen, 345; established by an association
- of merchants, manufacturers, and bankers, 345, 346; incorporated April
- 11, 1883, 346; corner-stone of, laid September 24, 1883, 346; opened
- February 4, 1884, 340; officers and trustees of association of, 346;
- object of, mental and manual culture, 347; equipment of, 347; library
- of, 347; Dr. Henry H. Belfield director of, 348.
-
- _Chicago Tribune_, criticism of the methods of the public schools by
- the, 346; columns of, opened to the author, 346; effect of advocacy of
- manual training by the, 346.
-
- Child, the, becomes father of the man, in the cradle, the nursery, and
- at the fireside, 365; contempt of, by the ancients, 367.
-
- Chipping, filing, and fitting laboratory, 88; course in the, 88; the
- ante-room to the machine-tool laboratory, 88.
-
- Christian religion, the, its failure to save Rome, 140.
-
- Cicero, his doctrine of the universal brotherhood of man, 139;
- forecasts the doom of the Roman Republic, but has no remedy for the
- public ills to propose, 272; without moral courage, 273.
-
- Cincinnatus found at the plough, 268.
-
- Cities, rapid concentration of population in, 137; plague-spots on the
- body politic, 137; dominated by selfishness, 137; statistics of
- increase of population in, 313, 314; the chief sources of society
- disturbances, 314.
-
- City, the modern, the despair of the political economist, 137; the
- centre of vice, 137; pen-picture of its vices and crimes, 140; picture
- of vice in, 314.
-
- City of New York, College of, manual training in, 352; first report of
- the industrial educational association of, gives a list of thirty-one
- schools in, where industrial education is furnished (_note_), 352.
-
- Civil engineer, the modern, must be familiar with all the processes of
- the machine-tool shop, 97; his works may be amended, but never
- repealed, 187; more competent than the railway president, the lawyer,
- the judge, or the legislator, 225; trained in things, 225.
-
- Civilization, progress of, depends upon progress in invention and
- discovery, 65; a growth from the state of savagery, 131; evils of,
- flow from mental development wanting the element of rectitude, 132;
- contrast presented by that of Italy in the fifteenth century, and that
- of America in the nineteenth, 234; difference between, and barbarism,
- 244; the useful arts the true measure of, 247; the product of
- education, 248; of Greece sprang from mythology and ended in anarchy,
- 254; languishes in an atmosphere of injustice, 278; the trinity upon
- which it rests is justice, the useful arts, and labor, 278; American,
- has not borne new social fruits, 323.
-
- Clark, John S., his elaborate exposition of the defects of existing
- educational methods, 193, 194, 195.
-
- Claudius, under the favor of, Seneca amassed a vast fortune, 273.
-
- Clement, Joseph, great English inventor of the eighteenth century, 84;
- his two improvements in the slide-rest, and the medals he received for
- them, 92.
-
- Cleveland, O., manual training in, 342.
-
- Coal, subject of production, cost, demand, and supply discussed in
- forging laboratory, 62; history of application of, to useful arts, 63;
- prejudice against use of mineral, in the beginning of the seventeenth
- century, 64; smelting with mineral, successfully introduced in England
- in 1766, 66.
-
- Coalbrookdale Iron-works, mineral coal first used at, for smelting
- purposes, 65, 66.
-
- Columbus, in proving that the world is round, frees mankind, 286;
- sounds the death-knell of intellectual slavery, 286, 287.
-
- Comenius, the school he struggled in vain to establish, 2; his theory
- of learning by doing, 13; condemns the old system of education, 126;
- his definition of education, 127; foresees the kindergarten and the
- manual training school, 245.
-
- Commerce, early, of America, so insignificant that in 1784 eight bales
- of cotton shipped from South Carolina were seized by the custom
- authorities of England on the ground that so large a quantity could
- not have been produced in the United States, 203.
-
- Commercial Club, the, founds the Chicago Manual Training School, 2;
- guarantees $100,000 for its support, 3; meeting of, March 25, 1882,
- 346.
-
- Common-school system of the United States, glaring defects of, shown
- by the Walton report, 197, 198, 199.
-
- Composition, automatism in teaching, in the schools of the United
- States, as shown by the Walton report, 199.
-
- Compton, Prof. Alfred G., on the exacting nature of the demands made
- upon instructors by the new education, 352.
-
- Concrete, progress can find expression only in the, 151, 152; a lie
- always hideous in the, 224.
-
- Connecticut, manual training in State Normal School, 342; legislature
- of, adopts manual training as part of the course of public
- instruction, 360.
-
- Contempt, in the Middle Ages, withered hope, 284.
-
- Convent, of the Middle Ages, the home of religion and of art, 280.
-
- Cook County Normal School, Ill., manual training in, 342.
-
- Cooley, Lieut. Mortimer E., letter of, to the author on effects of
- manual training in the University of Michigan, 363.
-
- Cordova the abode of wealth, learning, refinement, and the arts, 282.
-
- Corporate power unduly promoted by reckless legislation on the subject
- of land in the United States, 320.
-
- Corporations, a creation of yesterday, the product of steam, 320;
- almost as indestructible as landed estates, 320; men trained from
- generation to generation to the care of, 320.
-
- Cort, Henry, an English inventor of the eighteenth century, 84;
- experiments of, with a view to the improvement of English iron, 115.
-
- Cotton-gin, the, trebled the value of the cotton-fields of the South,
- 160.
-
- Cotton Exchange of New York, speculative trades in futures on, thirty
- times more than the actual cotton sales, 322.
-
- Crane, R. T., Vice-President of the Chicago Manual Training School
- Association, 346.
-
- Cranege, the Brothers, inventors of the reverberatory furnace, 66.
-
- Crerar, John, Trustee of the Chicago Manual Training School
- Association, 346.
-
- Crusaders, their astonishment at the splendors of Constantinople, 285;
- they expected to meet with treachery and cruelty--they found chivalry
- and high culture, 285; they returned to Europe relieved of many
- illusions, 285, 286.
-
- Crusades, the, pitiful and prolific of horrors as they were, shed a
- great light upon Europe, 285; brought the men of the West face to face
- with a progressive civilization, 285.
-
-
- D.
-
- Dædalus, invention of turning ascribed to, by the Greeks, 33.
-
- Damascus blades, the most signal triumph of the art of the smelter and
- the smith, 72; the material of which they were made, and their
- temper, 72; first encountered by Europeans during the Crusades, 72;
- triumphs of genius not less pronounced than the Athena of Phidias, 74.
-
- Dark Ages, the shame of, caused by the neglect of the useful arts, 64;
- maxims of Machiavelli explain the fact of the existence of, 284; gloom
- of, dispelled by the discovery of America, 286.
-
- Darwin, Charles, declares that a complex train of thought cannot be
- carried on without the aid of words, 149; law of reversion of, in
- operation during the decay of the Roman civilization, 275.
-
- Da Vinci, Leonardo, took up the work of Archimedes, and the science of
- mechanics made progress, 287.
-
- De Caus helps to solve the steam-power problem, 15.
-
- Della Vos, M. Victor, Director of the Imperial Technical School,
- Moscow, 121; testimony of, as to value of manual training, 121; author
- of the laboratory process of tool instruction, 331.
-
- Democratic idea, the, not new when adopted in America, 309.
-
- Democratic principle in the United States Government does not prevent
- class distinctions, 313.
-
- Denmark appropriates money for teaching hand-cunning in the schools,
- 368.
-
- Denver (Col.) University, manual training in, 355.
-
- Dickens, Charles, his pen-picture of “Tom All-alone’s”--philosophy of,
- 315.
-
- Dinwiddie, Prof. H. H., his account of the manner in which the
- Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas was revolutionized in the
- interest of manual training, 359.
-
- Disasters, mercantile and other, show that business is done by the
- “rule of thumb,” 214.
-
- Disraeli (Lord Beaconsfield), his tribute to the value of the
- imagination as a useful quality, 38; his alternations of political
- power with Mr. Gladstone--from Liberalism to Toryism an easy
- transition, 164; England heaps honors upon him while it neglects Mr.
- Bessemer, 168; comparison between the life services of, to man and
- those of Sir Henry Bessemer, 169.
-
- Doane, John W., Trustee of the Chicago Manual Training School
- Association, 346.
-
- Dogmatist, the, no place for, in the modern order of things, 124.
-
- Domestic economy made a department of the Iowa Agricultural College,
- 360; part of the curriculum of the Le Moyne Normal Institute, 362.
-
- Draper, Dr. John W., profound observation by, 377; drudgery and
- humility, the value of, 374.
-
- Drawing, thoroughness of training in, 16; definition of, 16; sketches
- of certain geometric forms, 17; working drawings, pictorial drawings,
- and designs applied to industrial art, 18; its æsthetic element, 18;
- geometry its basis, examples of, 18; from objects in the school
- laboratories, 19; value of, as an educational agency, 19; language of,
- common to all draughtsmen--pen-picture of class in, 20; first step of
- expression, 208.
-
- Drayton, W. Heyward, historical sketch of origin of manual training in
- Girard College by, 353-355.
-
- Dudley, Dud, inventor of machinery for the application of mineral coal
- to smelting purposes, 64; sketch of career of, 64, 65; combinations
- against, by the charcoal iron-masters, 64, 65; furnaces of, destroyed
- by mobs, and their owner reduced to beggary and driven to prison, 64,
- 65.
-
- Dun, R. G., & Co., statistics of, in relation to commercial failures,
- 211.
-
-
- E.
-
- Ear not a more important organ than the hand because situated nearer
- the brain, 154.
-
- Eau Claire, Wis., manual training in, 342.
-
- Edict of Nantes, revocation of, drove artisans to England, 34.
-
- Education, the philosopher’s stone in, 2; laying the foundation of, in
- labor, 3; the power to do some useful thing the last analysis of, 12;
- definition of, 12; confined to abstractions in the past, 13; the
- new--claims made in its behalf, 105; universal, a modern idea, 123;
- difference in systems of, constitutes difference between ancient and
- modern civilizations, 123, 124; every child entitled to receive, 124;
- certain fundamentals of, upon which all are agreed, 125; Rousseau’s
- definition of, 125; begins at birth and continues to the end of life,
- 126; Froebel’s definition of, 126; old system of, condemned by Bacon,
- Comenius, Rousseau, Pestalozzi, and Froebel, 126; of woman more
- important than that of man, 128; develops innate mental qualities and
- forms character, 130; all, is both mental and moral, 133; any system
- of, that does not produce altruism is vicious, 136; first step in, to
- eliminate selfishness and put rectitude in its place, 136; a system
- of, consisting exclusively of mental exercises, promotes selfishness,
- 141; methods of, controlled by the Classicism of the Renaissance, 154;
- of the hands as well as the brain necessary, 172; the old, designed to
- make lawyers, doctors, priests, statesmen, _littérateurs_, and poets,
- 179; that is not practical, in the Age of Steel, is nothing, 179; not
- broad enough on the expressing side of the brain, 194; illustrations
- of defects of, shown by the Walton report, 196, 197, 198, 199; in
- existing systems of, the memory is cultivated while the reason is
- allowed to slumber, 200; defective methods of, result in vast
- mercantile and railway disasters, 215; defective morally, since the
- truth is to be found only in things, 224; the New England system of,
- very defective, but to it the country owes the quality of its
- civilization, 235; in South Carolina the monopoly of a class, 235; a
- scientific system of, would have averted the War of Rebellion in the
- United States, and kept down the debt of England, 237; why popular, is
- provided for by the State, 237; the sole bulwark of the State, 238;
- the best is the cheapest, 239; of New England does not produce great
- lawyers, great judges, or great legislators, 239; exclusively mental,
- stops far short of the objective point of true, 243; the last
- analysis of, is art, 243; any system of, which separates ideas and
- things, is radically defective, 244; the object of, is the generation
- of power, 244; the system of, which does not teach the application of
- facts to things, is unscientific, 245; among the ancients, was
- confined to a small class, and consisted of selfish maxims for the
- government of the many, 253; of the Greeks responsible for the
- destruction of Greek civilization, 256; defects of the Roman, 265;
- Roman, deified selfishness and so realized its last analysis--total
- depravity, 267; a false system of, wrecks the Roman civilization, 277;
- scientific, essential to the salvation of the trinity upon which
- civilization rests, 278; how to make it universal in Europe, 292, 293;
- possible only in Europe through the disbandment of the standing
- armies, 295; in Germany, has taught the people to hate standing
- armies, 298, 299; is causing the emigration of Germany’s best
- citizens, 302; is the arch-revolutionist whose march is irresistible,
- 302; the new, will come in as the standing armies go out, 304; had
- made little progress at the time of the organization of civil society
- in America, 309; the system of, under which the kings and ruling
- classes of Europe had been trained to selfishness, cruelty, and
- injustice, put into the New England common schools, 309; sordid view
- of, generally held in the rural districts of New England, 310; Herbert
- Spencer’s view of the prevailing methods of, 310; positive ill effects
- of the prevailing methods of, 310, 311; a false system of, in the
- United States, led to political incongruities of the grossest
- character, 311; complete failure of, to promote rectitude, 311;
- defects of system of, in the United States, shown by the ignorance and
- crimes of legislators, 317; may be made universal through the ballot,
- 324; all property may be taken for, by the ballot, 324; American, is
- scant in quantity and poor in quality, 325; no radical change in
- methods of, for 3000 years, 325; a complete revolution in, essential
- to social reform, 327; must begin with the child and be directed by
- the mother, 366; the new, becomes one aggressive force, 372; the new,
- confided to the teachers of the old régime, 372; the first of human
- considerations, 373; its professors should be the most learned of
- human beings, 373; the new, maxims of, 375; what form and character
- shall our education take?, 377; the old, was designed to make masters,
- the new to make men, 378; universality and equality of, the first and
- last essential, 384.
-
- Edward III. of England uses the smiths at the siege of Berwick, 72.
-
- Egypt, how the castes of, arose, 249; progress of the civilization of,
- 249; civilization of, the product of education, 250; selfishness the
- basis of the system of education of, 250; wealth, commerce, and
- military and naval power of, 250; learning of, 251; luxury of, 251;
- conquered by Persia, 251, 252; no provision in, for the training of
- woman, 366.
-
- Electricity must be “harnessed” at the forge and in the shop to enable
- it to do its work, 170.
-
- Elizabeth, Queen, use of iron by, to defeat the Spanish Armada, 61.
-
- Emerson, his declaration that Napoleon was typical of the modern man,
- 134; his observation that during the Crusades “the banker with his
- seven per cent. drove the earl out of his castle,” 286.
-
- Emigrant, the, withdraws his support from the fatherland, 290.
-
- Emigration, social questions cannot much longer be settled by, 299.
-
- Empire, art of mechanism greatest of modern times, 61.
-
- England, history of the early iron manufacture of, 63; decline of the
- iron industry of, during the seventeenth century, 65; the people of,
- import their pots and kettles, 65; workshops of, originate great
- inventions during the period 1740-1840, 115; apprentices of, become
- learned men, 115; material condition of, 250 years ago, 158, 159;
- civilization and transformation of--how accomplished, 159; studded
- with workshops, filled with automatic machines through the apprentice
- system, 181; debt of, to the French and Flemish immigrants, 185;
- constitution of, grew out of the feudal system, 190; safer to shoot a
- man than a hare in, 190; school system of, indescribably poor, 224; a
- scientific system of education in, would have averted wars and kept
- down the national debt of, 237; criminal laws of, 241; draws from her
- people a larger _per capita_ revenue than any nation of Europe, 297;
- has nearly reached the limit of the power of her people to pay taxes,
- 297; land system of--its terrible effect upon the English, Scotch, and
- Irish, 317.
-
- English history, the great names in--the names without which there
- would have been no English history, 175.
-
- Enterprise, in the Middle Ages, the slave of superstition and
- ignorance, 277.
-
- Epictetus, lofty patriotism of, 139.
-
- Equality, social and educational, essential to an ideal civilization,
- 375.
-
- Europe, face of, and civilization of, changed during the Crusades,
- 286; growth of the middle class of, 286; the artisan became a factor
- in the social problem of, 286; art treasures of, destined to follow in
- the track of her fleeing population, 294; may restore to productive
- employments three millions of men, 302; may place at the disposal of
- her educators seven hundred million dollars per annum, instead of
- seventy million dollars, as at present, 302; may extinguish her
- national debts in fifty-four years, 303; progress in, previous to the
- discovery of America, 307, 308.
-
- Ewing, Mrs. Emma P., Dean of the Domestic Economy Department of the
- Iowa Agricultural College, 361; on the importance of the study of
- domestic economy, 361, 362.
-
- Expression, power of, quite as important as that of absorption, 208;
- susceptible of being made clear only in things, 208.
-
- Eye, not a more important organ than the hand, because it is situated
- nearer the brain, 154.
-
-
- F.
-
- Fairbank, N. K., Trustee of the Chicago Manual Training School
- Association, 346.
-
- Faneuil Hall, slavery justified in, 311.
-
- Feudalism emasculated human energy, 281; the ruin of, set thousands of
- serfs free, 290.
-
- Field, Marshall, Treasurer of the Chicago Manual Training School
- Association, 346.
-
- File, the, older than history, dating back to the Greek mythological
- period, 91; of the Swiss watch-makers, 91; dexterity of the
- hand-working cutter of, 91; invention of file-cutting machine in 1859,
- 91.
-
- Finland, all the schools of, give instruction in hand-cunning, 368.
-
- Fire, legend in regard to its discovery, 62.
-
- Foley, Thomas, on the excellence of the laboratory methods of
- instruction, 217, 218.
-
- Force, new elements of, to be discovered and applied to the needs of
- man, 180.
-
- Forging, laboratory of, 58; pen-picture of a class of students in, 61;
- story of the origin of the Turkish Empire related by the instructor
- in, 61; the management of the forge fires in, 62; lessons in, on the
- black-board and at the forges, in detail, 66; the instructor in, at
- the forge, 69; questions by the students in, 69; the school-room
- converted into a smithy which resounds with the clang of sledges, 69,
- 70; healthful effects of the exercise--the anvil chorus, 70; the tests
- of merit in, applied, 75; the instructor in, gives a lecture on the
- steam-hammer, 75; extent of the course in, 77.
-
- Founding, laboratory of, 45; history of the art of, 46; first applied
- to bronze, 46; lesson of the day, casting a pulley, 48; the process in
- detail, 51; pen-picture of the students pouring the steaming metal
- into moulds, 52.
-
- France, permanently weakened by the increase of her national debt,
- 296; debt, statement of--what the war with Germany cost her, 296;
- cannot double her debt again and make her people pay interest on it,
- 297; a law of, makes manual training obligatory, 368; supports a
- school for training teachers of manual training, 368; Prof. G. Solicis
- the chief supporter of manual training in, 368.
-
- Franklin, the famous selfish maxims of, 311.
-
- Froebel, the school be struggled in vain to establish, 2; first
- applies Rousseau’s ideas to school life, 126; his definition of
- education, 126; condemns the old system of education, 126; a character
- of, 127; his discovery of the superior fitness of woman for the office
- of teacher, 127, 128; foresees the manual training school, 245; it was
- reserved for him to rescue woman from the scorn of the ages, 367.
-
- Fuller, William A., Secretary of the Chicago Manual Training School
- Association, 346.
-
- Fulton, Robert, an American inventor, 84.
-
-
- G.
-
- Galileo, persecution of, for his great discovery, 177, 178;
- persecutors of, believed and trembled, 287.
-
- Galton, Francis, declaration of, that brain without heart is
- insufficient to achieve eminence, 134; his testimony to the great
- value of artisan immigration, and the worthless character of political
- refugees, 186; his neglect of the artisan class in his speculations on
- the subject of the science of life, 186, 187; reason of his neglect of
- the artisan class stated by Horace Mann--the influence of slavery,
- 188.
-
- George III. an expert wood-turner, 34; gives John Arnold five hundred
- guineas for a miniature watch, 86.
-
- Germanicus noted for the highest public virtue, 274; after great
- services, is exiled and poisoned, 274.
-
- Germany, Emperor of, experience of, in a needle factory, illustrative
- of the delicacy of mechanical operations, 240.
-
- Germany, foundation of her educational system, 295, 296; superior
- training of her people enabled her to humiliate France, 296; freedom
- from debt of, the significant feature of the European situation, 296;
- low rate of taxation in, 296; weakness of, through emigration, 297;
- the educated subject of, has become a thoughtful citizen, who rebels
- against the standing army, and flees from it, 297, 298; high value of
- citizenship of, 298; citizenship freely abandoned, because the
- educated German revolts at the standing army, 298; the military
- records of, show the cause of German emigration to be disgust of the
- policy of international hate, 299; increase in the number of military
- delinquents in, is the measure of the growth of German intelligence,
- 300; the chief power of, becomes her chief weakness, 300; cannot
- recoup her losses to America through gains from neighboring countries,
- on account of the policy of international hate, 300, 301; losing the
- flower of her population--the strong--the weaklings, the paupers, the
- aged, and the infirm remain, 301; is growing weaker each year, 301;
- agitation on the subject of manual training in, 368.
-
- Gibbon on the wealth of the Saracens in Spain, 283.
-
- Girard College, manual training in, 353; Dr. Runkle’s influence in
- promoting the adoption of manual training in, 354.
-
- Gladiatorial games, atrocities of, in Rome, contrasted with the
- sublime precepts of Seneca, Plutarch, and Marcus Aurelius, 138; extent
- of slaughter of animals at their celebration, 138.
-
- Gladstone, William Ewart, political power and popularity of, 161;
- enters upon his long official career as young Henry Bessemer retires
- from the Stamp-office without his just reward, 163; a great orator,
- and a great financier, a talker, a maker of laws and treaties,
- constantly in the public eye, 163; in office and out of office, 163,
- 164; from Toryism to Liberalism--an easy transition, 164; compared
- with Sir Henry Bessemer, 165, 166; England heaps honors upon him while
- she neglects Mr. Bessemer, 168; comparison of the life and services
- of, to man, with those of Mr. Bessemer, 169; stands for the old system
- of education, 169; admission of, that the great mechanics of England
- had no aid from the government, 175.
-
- Gold, once the king of metals, surrenders its sceptre to iron, 124.
-
- Goss, William F. M., his exposition of the methods of the manual
- training school in detail, 219, 220, 221, 222; pronounced success of
- the Manual Training Department of Purdue University, under
- directorship of, 341.
-
- Grammar, automatism in teaching, in the common schools of the United
- States, as shown in the Walton report, 197; criticism of Colonel
- Parker on methods of instruction in, 206.
-
- Great Powers of Europe all hampered by great debts, 296.
-
- Greece, Egypt the University of, 251; every intellectual Greek made a
- voyage to Egypt, 251; the destiny of, was controlled by
- renegades--there was disloyalty in every camp, a traitor in every
- army, and a band of traitors in every besieged city, 254; the orators
- of, never refused bribes, and oratory ruled in, 255; philosophy and
- education of, responsible for decay of the civilization of, 256;
- ruined by metaphysics and rhetoric, 256; no schools in, for girls,
- 366.
-
- Greeks, the people of youth, 254; religion and patriotism of, 254;
- were treacherous, cruel, and their sense of honor dull, 254; they
- enslaved women and robbed the bodies of the slain on the battle-field,
- 254; declaration of Thucydides that there was neither promise that
- could be depended upon, nor oath that struck them with fear, 255; in
- the Pantheon the highest niche was reserved for the God of Gain, 255;
- the early, were pirates, and some sold themselves into slavery, so
- great was their lust of gold, 255; armies of the, bribed by Persia,
- 255; young, taught the arts of sophistry in the schools of rhetoric,
- 256; never emerged from the savage state, 256.
-
- Guttenberg and the printing-press, 152.
-
-
- H.
-
- Habit, all reforms must encounter the stolid resistance of, 191.
-
- Hand, it is through the, alone, that the mind impresses itself upon
- matter, 141; the skilled, confers benefits upon man, 141; and the mind
- are natural allies, 144; tests the speculations of the mind by the law
- of practical application, 144; explodes the errors of the mind, 144;
- finds the truth, 145; if it works falsely, publishes its own guilt in
- the false thing it makes, 145; Dr. Wilson’s graphic picture of the
- versatility of the, 145; not less the guide than the agent of the
- mind, 145; influences the mind through the muscular sense, 148; how
- its habit of labor leads to the discovery of the truth and the
- exposure of the false, 149; the preserver of the power of speech
- through the endless succession of objects it presents to the mind,
- 151; the, ceasing to labor in the arts, to plant and to gather, speech
- would degenerate into a mere iteration of the wants of savages
- subsisting on fruits, 151; the most potent agency in the work of
- civilization, 152; mobility of, multiplies its powers in a geometrical
- ratio, 154; contempt of, an inheritance from the speculative
- philosophy of the Middle Ages, 155; the works of, comprise all the
- visible results of civilization, 155; marvels wrought by the, 155,
- 156; James MacAlister on the power and versatility of the [_note_],
- 156; wields the mechanical powers--its works, 158; the wise counsel of
- the practical, steadies the mind, 225; not a nicer instrument than the
- mind, 240; the, stands for use, for service, and for integrity, 376;
- its drill and discipline more highly educative than any exclusively
- academic course, 376; through it alone man impresses himself upon
- Nature, 378; is refined and spiritualized by the sense of touch, 379;
- the multitudinous works of the, 379, 380.
-
- Hand-work, difficulties of, illustrated, 86; educative value of, 375.
-
- Hargreaves, James, inventor of the “spinning-jenny,” 84.
-
- Herbert, the famous selfish maxim of, 311.
-
- Hero, of Alexandria, the inventor of the steam-engine, 14.
-
- Hero, the, is an honest man, 233; the, in education, 385.
-
- Herodotus, his description of the hundred brazen gates of Babylon, 55;
- his contempt for the artisan, 56.
-
- Heroes, the thin ranks of, constitute the measure of the poverty of
- the systems of education that have prevailed among mankind, 234; are
- normally developed men who honor the truth everywhere, 234; the fact
- that they are honored after death evidence of progress, 234.
-
- Heroism rendered grand by contrast with the debased standards of
- public judgment, 233.
-
- Herophilus opens the way to an intelligent study of the mind, 153.
-
- Hippocrates opens the way to an intelligent study of the mind, 153.
-
- Holtzapffels, speculation of, as to the origin of the invention of the
- lathe, 33.
-
- Honesty, only another name for heroism, 233; scientific education will
- make it universal, 233.
-
- Hood, Tom, his song of the shirt, 87.
-
- Huntsman, Benjamin, an English inventor of the eighteenth century, 84;
- sketch of the career of, 116; his invention of cast-steel, and its
- effect upon the Sheffield cutlery market, 116; how his secret was
- stolen, 117; declines a membership of the Royal Society, 117; how
- resplendent his name is now, 171.
-
-
- I.
-
- Ideas are mere vain speculations till embodied in things, 243; and
- things are indissolubly connected, 244.
-
- Ignorance, illustration of, in the opposition of a Roman Emperor to
- the use of improved machinery, 178; reverences the past, never doubts,
- is suspicious, an enemy of all progress, 179; in the schools of
- Norfolk County, Mass., 197.
-
- Illinois Penitentiary, statistics of show that four out of five of the
- inmates of have no handicraft, 182.
-
- Imagination, Buckle’s tribute to the, 38; Disraeli on Sir Robert
- Peel’s want of, 38; Disraeli’s career an illustration of the value of,
- 39; the discovery of America appealed powerfully to the, 287; blazes
- the path to glorious achievements, 287.
-
- Imperial Technical School, Moscow, manual training adopted as part of
- curriculum of the, in 1868, 331; sketch of the history of manual
- training in, by Director Della Vos, 331-333.
-
- India, how the castes of, arose, 249.
-
- Injustice, civilization languishes in an atmosphere of, 278.
-
- Inquisition, the, its persecution of Galileo, 177, 178.
-
- Instructors, lack of competent, in the new education, 352, 353.
-
- Intelligence, the basis of morality, 113.
-
- Inventions, a growth, 14; each step of constitutes a link in the chain
- of progress, 187; contain the germs of imperishable truth, 243.
-
- Inventive genius, to the, mankind owes more than to the philosophers,
- _littérateurs_, professors, and statesmen of all time, 84.
-
- Inventor, the, produces a machine that will make a thousand things in
- the time required by the hand-worker to make one, 86; helps on the
- cause of progress, 160; rules the world, 161; his works are never
- repealed, 187; is always in the advance, 242.
-
- Iowa, Agricultural College of, makes domestic economy a part of its
- curriculum, 360; faculty and course of study in the department of
- domestic economy of, 360, 361.
-
- Iron, Locke’s famous apothegm on the value of, 45; the most potent
- instrument of power, 61; use of by Queen Elizabeth to defeat the
- Spanish Armada, 61; the equivalent of civilization, 62; is king, and
- the smelter and smith are his chief ministers, 62; to make a ton of,
- required hundreds of cords of wood before the introduction of “pit”
- coal for smelting purposes, 63; the foundation of every useful art,
- 81.
-
- Italy, government of, during the Middle Ages, consisted of a menace
- and a sneer, 284.
-
-
- J.
-
- Jacobson, Col. Augustus, on the demand for a more comprehensive system
- of education, 180; on the proper equipment of the boy upon leaving
- school, 209.
-
- Jerusalem, when conquered, its smiths and other craftsmen were carried
- away as captives by the Babylonians, 70.
-
- Jews, learning of, exerted an ameliorating influence upon the darkness
- of the Middle Ages, 285.
-
- Judges, training of, is exclusively subjective, 230; rendered selfish
- by subjective processes of thought, 231; venerate the past, 242.
-
- Justice assumes the place of selfishness in the mind of the hero, 233;
- cause of the failure of, 242.
-
-
- K.
-
- Keith, Edson, Trustee of Chicago Manual Training School Association,
- 340.
-
- Kindergarten, the, father of the manual training school, 5; fills a
- place unoccupied until the time of Froebel, 126; educational
- principles of, susceptible of universal application, 126; analysis of,
- 128; leads logically to the manual training school, 129; method of, is
- scientific, 207; method of, is the expression of ideas in things, 245;
- realizes the dream of Bacon, Comenius, and Pestalozzi, 245; exhibits
- of work of, at the meeting of the National Educational Association in
- 1884, 342; endorsed by the National Educational Association, 363; the
- growth of, prevented by prejudice and indifference, 367.
-
- Kings, alliance of, with the aristocracy, 286.
-
-
- L.
-
- Labor class, the real flower of a population, 293; all other classes
- depend upon the, 294; a drain upon the, is a drain upon the most vital
- resource of the State, 294; where the flower of gathers, wealth most
- abounds, 294.
-
- Labor, manual, scorn of, among the ancients, 56; its slow recovery of
- independence, its destined dignity through scientific and art culture,
- 57; repugnance to, has multiplied dishonest practices, 155; respect
- for, would be increased by the adoption in the public schools of a
- comprehensive system of mechanical training, 182; cause of the scorn
- of--the slavery of the laborer, 188; of to-day alone maintains the
- value of property, 252; of men cheaper than that of cattle, in Rome,
- 266; the useful arts depend upon, 278; the foundation of national
- prosperity, 293; essential to triumphs in literature, music, and the
- fine arts, 293; not gold and silver, is the source of wealth, 294;
- draws to itself the art treasures of the world, 294, 295; contempt of,
- inculcated by educational systems, 326.
-
- Laborer, the, degraded through slavery, 10; contempt of, ingrained in
- the public mind, 177; contempt of, leads inevitably to social
- disintegration, 247; the battles of antiquity were contests for the
- possession of, 253; reduced to slavery in Rome, 265; spurned in Rome,
- 266; the useful arts decline if he is degraded, 278, and advance if he
- is honored, 278; the standing armies of Europe have cost him all his
- noble ambitions, 295; surplus of, goes to the tax-gatherer, 295;
- forced to sacrifice his desire for education, his love of the
- beautiful, of dignity, and of a home adorned by art, 295.
-
- Laborers thrown into the arena in Rome to be scrambled for, 269.
-
- Landed estates, effect of concentration of, in a few hands, 320; vast,
- conferred upon a few corporations in the United States--double the
- area of that owned by the lords of England, Scotland, and Ireland,
- 321.
-
- Language, thought impossible without, 150; changes in, arise out of
- new discoveries in science and new inventions in art, 151; stagnates
- when the State ceases to advance, 151; invention of, 248; when nations
- shall dwell together in unity there will be but one, 299 [_note_].
-
- Lawyers more highly esteemed than civil engineers, machinists, and
- artisans, 185; training of, is exclusively subjective, 230; rendered
- selfish by subjective processes of thought, 231; look for precedents
- in an age whose civilization perished with its language, 242.
-
- Layard, discoveries of, in the ruins of Nineveh, 46.
-
- Learning, the revival of exalted abstractions and debased things, 374.
-
- Legislation, restrictive, in England, to prevent the conversion of
- timber into charcoal for smelting purposes, 63; the best, in England,
- is that by which former statutes were repealed, 226; of the United
- States no better than that of England, 226; cause of failure of, 242;
- reckless, in the United States, on the subject of the public domain,
- 319; of the States of the Union vicious and corrupt, 322.
-
- Legislators, not the authors of English progress, 159; Buckle’s
- scathing arraignment of, 160; wiser in the statutes they repeal than
- in those they enact, 226, 227; training of, is exclusively subjective,
- 230; rendered selfish by subjective processes of thought, 231; become
- selfish, and venerate the past, 242; refuse to grant reforms until
- awed into submission, 242.
-
- Le Moyne Normal Institute, manual training and domestic economy in,
- 356.
-
- Life Insurance, ethical aspect of, 214.
-
- Literature, full of maxims in honor of selfishness, 134; polite, must
- rest upon a basis of general culture, or it is valueless, 279.
-
- _Littérateurs_ more highly esteemed than civil engineers, machinists,
- and artisans, 185.
-
- Livy characterizes Valerius as the first man of his time, 264;
- deplores the decay of virtue, 272.
-
- Lloyd, Henry D., his history of the land system of the United
- States--syllabus of, 317; opening paragraphs of the history of the
- United States by, 318, 319; declaration of, that we must hereafter
- find freedom in the society of the good, 326.
-
- Locke, the school he dreamed of, 2; famous apothegm of, on iron, 45.
-
- Locomotive, the--stands for the brotherhood of man, 376.
-
- Locomotives, no such failure of, as there is of legislation, 227.
-
- Lombardy, five famines in, 281.
-
- Louis XVI. an expert locksmith, 34.
-
- Lubbock, Sir John, on the skill of the savage, 216.
-
- Lucan, his gospel of universal love, 139.
-
- Lucretia, political effects of the tragic fate of, 264.
-
- Luther, the reformation of, opened the way to the last analysis of
- dissent in America, 309.
-
-
- M.
-
- MacAlister, James, declaration of, that there has been but little
- change in the ideas that have controlled our methods of education in
- four hundred years, 154; his graphic description of the power and
- versatility of the hand [_note_], 156; observation of, that a skilled
- hand, to the majority of men, is quite as important as a well-filled
- head, 208; has revolutionized the public schools of Philadelphia in
- two years, 355; one of the most accomplished as well as sternly
- practical educators in the United States, 357; opinion of, that every
- child should receive manual training, 358; opinion of, that the great
- principles which underlie the system mean nothing less than a
- revolution in education [_note_], 358, 364.
-
- Macaulay’s, Lord, analysis of the Baconian philosophy, 377.
-
- Machiavelli, philosophy formulated by, 284; political maxims of, not
- invented by him, 284; maxims of, atrocious character of, 284, 285;
- maxims of, promote barbarism, 285.
-
- Machines, automatic, nails, screws, pins, and needles flying from the
- fingers of, by the thousand million, 82; more powerful to be
- constructed in the future, 180.
-
- Machine-tool laboratory, the students of, enter upon a most important
- inquiry, 82; the study of minute and ponderous tools in, 83; delicacy
- of the processes of, 91; the poverty of words as compared with things
- asserted in, 91; silence of, how eloquent, 91, 92; a screw-engine
- lathe taken to pieces in, 92; improvements in the lathe explained in,
- 92; fundamental and auxiliary tools of, explained, 93; course of
- training in, orderly, 93; students work from their own drawings in,
- 94; why skill is required to handle steam-driven tools of the, 94;
- aspect of the, when in repose, 97; aspect of the, when steam is on,
- 98; pen-picture of students of, 99; students of, at work on graduating
- projects in, 100; dream of instructor in, 100-103; completing
- graduating projects in, 103, 104.
-
- Machine-tool shop, the modern, an aggregation of hand-tools made
- automatic, and driven by steam, 8; revolution in the useful arts
- caused by the, 78; what this creation of modern times, a huge
- automaton with steam coursing through its veins, does, 78-81; its
- arms, its hands, its brain, its food, and its products, 81; lines of
- modern development converge in the, 81; human pursuits widely
- diversified by, 82.
-
- Macomber, A. E., on the Toledo Manual Training School, 365.
-
- Madrid, people of, threatened with starvation, 283; lost half its
- population in the seventeenth century, 283.
-
- Maine, Sir Henry--his tribute to things, 379.
-
- Man, the two states of--with and without tools--contrasted, 7; the
- gulf between the civilized and savage, spanned by the
- seven-hand-tools, 8; the wisest of animals because he has hands, 152;
- the most powerful of animals because he has hands, 157; powers of,
- increased by steam, 161; the most highly civilized, familiar with all
- the arts, 278; in the Middle Ages, shrunk into a state of moral
- cowardice and intellectual lethargy, 284.
-
- Mann, Horace, cause of the degradation of labor stated by, 5; reason
- for the scorn of labor given by, _in extenso_, 188.
-
- Manual training, promotes rectitude, 132; promotes altruism because it
- is objective, 141; its effects relate to the human race, 141; Prof.
- Felix Adler in support of its tendency to promote rectitude, 142; idea
- of, grasped by the Ionic philosopher, 153; exactly what it is, 200; is
- natural and hence efficient, 218; required to render mental operations
- more true, 225; possible in Europe only through the disbandment of the
- standing armies, 295; in all the technical schools of Russia, 333;
- theory of, by Dr. John D. Runkle, 338; in the Massachusetts Institute
- of Technology, 333, 334; in the St. Louis school, 338, 339; in twelve
- of the State agricultural colleges, 341; in Purdue University, 341; in
- Boston and Milford, Mass., New Haven, and the State Normal School,
- Conn., Omaha, Neb., Eau Claire, Wis., Moline, Peru, and the Cook
- County Normal School, Normal Park, Ill., Montclair, N. J., Cleveland
- and Barnesville, O., San Francisco, Cal., and Baltimore, Md., 342;
- exhibits of work of, at the meeting of the National Educational
- Association in 1884, 342; in Prof. Felix Adler’s Workingman’s School,
- 342; in Chicago, 345; Dr. Belfield on the mental effect of, 350; in
- the Pennsylvania State College, 351; Prof. Louis E. Reber in support
- of, 351, 352; in the College of the City of New York, 352; in
- thirty-one schools in the city of New York [_note_], 352; in the
- Tulane University, 353; in the Miller School at Crozet, Va., 353; in
- Girard College, 353; in the Alabama Agricultural and Mechanical
- College, 355; in the Denver (Col.) University, 355; in the public
- schools of Philadelphia, 356; in twenty-four of the States of the
- Union, 359; in the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas, 359;
- part of the course of public instruction by Massachusetts and
- Connecticut, 360; in the Le Moyne Normal Institute, 362; in the
- University of Michigan, 363; laid on the table by the National
- Educational Association, 363, 364; in the State University, Cleveland,
- and Toledo, O., 364; is leading captive the imagination of the
- American people, 367; the purpose of, in the schools of Europe, 368;
- progress of--its extent greater than its quality, 372; acquisition by
- the hand of the arts through which man expresses himself in things,
- 380; a series of educational generalizations in things, 380.
-
- Manual training school the child of the kindergarten, 5; destined to
- unite science and art, 5; its highest text-books tools, 7; must be
- made part of the public system of education, 112; gain of the pupil
- of, 122; pupil of, constructs a machine, breathes into it the breath
- of life, and with it moves mountains, 201; methods of, twenty times
- more valuable than the unscientific methods of the trade-shop, 219;
- pupil of, is an investigator, his reasoning opens new fields of
- thought with every stroke of the chisel, 220; pupil of, gets as much
- again intellectual benefit from the laboratory as he would if the
- laboratory equivalent in time were given to book study, 221;
- laboratory exercises of, a great strain upon the mental constitution,
- and hence highly educational, 222; pupils of, love it--an incident,
- 223; method of the, is the expression of ideas in things, 245;
- realizes the idea of Bacon, Comenius, Pestalozzi, and Froebel, 245.
-
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology, its models of mechanical
- manipulation presented by the Emperor of Russia, 66; first institution
- of learning in the United States to adopt manual training, 333; manual
- training adopted by, in 1876, 334; resolution of thanks for a series
- of models, presented by the Emperor of Russia, adopted by, 334, 335.
-
- Massachusetts, legislature of, adopts manual training as part of the
- public school course of, 360.
-
- Maudslay, Henry, his improvement of the lathe made it the king of the
- machine-tool shop, 33; without his slide-rest Watt’s engine could not
- have been made, 35; through his slide-rest alone the mechanic is able
- to make two things exactly alike, 92; slide-rest of, an automaton
- truer than the human eye, more cunning than the human hand, 200, 201.
-
- Maudsley, Dr. Henry, on the contribution of the muscular sense to
- mental operations, 147; on the impossibility of thinking without
- physical expression, 149.
-
- Mechanic, the, who makes a machine that multiplies products is in the
- front rank of the civilizers of the race, 160; prospects of the
- skilled, in life, 170; did more to hasten the world’s progress from
- 1740 to 1840 than all the statesmen of previous ages, 171; splendid
- career which this age opens to the educated, 182; tremendous power
- wielded by, 183; has wrought an industrial revolution, 185; works of,
- reflect honor upon, 187; stands the test of scrutiny better than the
- merchant, 225; trained in things, 225.
-
- Mechanics, skilled, the use of automatic tools increases rather than
- diminishes the demand for, 94; of the early time had none of the
- advantages of the manual training school, 172; their sufferings and
- misfortunes, 172; no such failure of, as there is of merchants, 227;
- thoroughness of training of, 239.
-
- Mediæval period, the speculative philosophy of, still projects its
- baleful influence over our institutions of learning, 185; graphic
- picture of society in, by Winwood Reade, 280, 281; the art of war only
- flourished in, 281; precarious condition of the serfs in--fate of--to
- be killed in battle or die of starvation, 281; causes of the moral and
- intellectual darkness of the, 281, 282; causes of the moral and
- intellectual torpor of the people of, 284; conferred upon man two
- great blessings, and left a legacy of evil, 289; degradation of woman
- in the, 366.
-
- Memory cultivated at the expense of the reason, 200.
-
- Men sold for sixpence apiece in Asia, 269.
-
- Menander, lofty moral precepts of, 139.
-
- Mental acquirement, a, is a theorem--something to be proved, 144.
-
- Mental development, law of, 131; which is most conducive to, doing
- things, or memorizing words, 376.
-
- Mental training, exclusively, does not produce a symmetrical
- character, 244.
-
- Merchants, percentage of failure of, in Chicago from 1870 to 1881,
- 211; three per cent. of, only, succeed, 211; ninety-seven per cent.
- of, go to the wall, 212; cost of failures of, borne by the public,
- 212; ninety-seven per cent. of, mistake their avocation, 212; failure
- of, made too easy, 213; honor of, in France [_note_], 213;
- ninety-seven in one hundred fail, 225; cause of failures of, 229;
- selfishness of--do not seek for justice, or to find truth, 230; who
- compromise with their creditors, and subsequently accumulate fortunes,
- rarely repay the forgiven debt, 230; cause of failure of, 242.
-
- Mercury, bronze statue of, at the Museum of Naples, 47.
-
- Michigan, University of, manual training in, as described by
- Instructor Lieut. M. E. Cooley, 363.
-
- Microscope, the work of the hand, 156.
-
- Milford, Mass., manual training in, 342.
-
- Miller Manual Training School, the, of Crozet, Va., 353.
-
- Mind, the, mental laws of, 132, 133; moral laws of, 133; and the hand
- are natural allies, 144; indulges in false logic without instant
- detection, 145; the hand its moral rudder, its balance-wheel, 145;
- influenced by the hand through the muscular sense, 148; steadied by
- the wise counsel of the practical hand, 225; steadied and balanced by
- the study of things, 225; devises a watch, and the hand makes it, 240;
- fails when it attempts to execute its devices, 240; succeeds when the
- hand executes its plans, but fails in merchandizing, law, and justice,
- 240; should not be stored with facts unless they are to be applied to
- things, 245; how it began to assert its empire over matter, 249.
-
- Moline, Ill., manual training in, 342.
-
- Montclair, N. J., manual training in, 342.
-
- Moors, the, in Spain in the Middle Ages constituted a glowing
- exception to the general prevalence of superstition and ignorance,
- 282; skilled in all the arts, 282.
-
- Morality, springs from intelligence, 113; is not a mere sentiment, a
- barren ideality, 142; of Christ and Paul, 142; is a vital principle
- whose exemplification consists in doing justice, 142; cannot be
- acquired by memorizing a series of maxims, 143; of a community is in
- the ratio of its intelligence, 238.
-
- Morrissey, John, his brief autobiography, 314, 315.
-
- Mother, the, in the arms of, the infant mind rapidly unfolds, 365.
-
- Moulding, the oldest of human discoveries, 46.
-
- Murray, Matt, inventor of flax machinery, 84.
-
- Muscular sense, the, its discovery by Sir Charles Bell, 146; its power
- over the movements of the frame--walking, etc., 146; Dr. Henry
- Maudsley on the, 147; actions of essential elements in mental
- operations, 147; sharpened to marvellous fineness by constant use,
- 148; if trained in the direction of truth, it will react in the
- direction of rectitude, on the mind, 148, 149.
-
- Mushet, David, an English inventor and author, 84; his discovery of
- the value of black band iron-stone, 117; his papers on iron and steel,
- 117; sprung from the labor class, 117.
-
- Mythology, the highest place in its Pantheon given to Vulcan, the God
- of Fire, 70.
-
-
- N.
-
- Napoleon, the incarnation of selfishness, 134, 135; the infamous,
- plundered the conquered capitals of Europe, 294.
-
- Nasmyth, James, invented the steam-hammer in 1837, and applied the
- principle of it to the pile-driver in 1845, 76.
-
- Nation, the, that degrades labor is ripe for destruction, 253; that
- loses its population by emigration is in its decadence, 294.
-
- National debts of Europe, amount of, thirty years ago, 286; doubled
- since 1850, 290; cause of the rapid increase of, 290; represent a
- series of colossal crimes against the people, 291; with relation to
- them, the people are divided into two classes--one class owns them,
- the other class pays interest on them, 291; in one class they are a
- vested right, in the other a vested wrong, 291; how they can be paid,
- and education promoted at the same time, 292; can be paid only by
- disbanding the standing armies, 295; will reduce their governments to
- bankruptcy unless standing armies are disbanded, 296.
-
- National Educational Association, manual training exhibits at, 1884,
- meeting of, 342; meeting of 1885 adopts a resolution endorsing the
- kindergarten, 363; illogical action of, in laying upon the table a
- resolution endorsing manual training, 363, 364.
-
- Nations, the rise, progress, and decay of, 252, 253; sink as the
- column of debt rises, 297.
-
- Neilson, James B., inventor of the hot-blast, 84; revolutionizes the
- processes of iron manufacture, 117; sprang from the labor class, and
- is made a member of the Royal Society, 117.
-
- New England, system of education of, moulded the character of the
- civilization of the United States, 235; difference between the
- civilization of, and that of South Carolina, measured by the
- difference in their respective educational systems, 235; educational
- system of, is unscientific, 239.
-
- New Haven, Conn., manual training in, 342.
-
- Newcomen helps to solve the steam-power problem, 15.
-
- Nineveh, bronze castings recovered from the ruins of, 46.
-
- Nobility above price in the eleventh century, for sale in the
- thirteenth, and soon afterwards offered as a gift, 286.
-
- Norway appropriates money for teaching hand-cunning in the schools,
- 368.
-
-
- O.
-
- Object teaching, example of, 4; the corner-stone of the kindergarten
- and the manual training school, 129; an analysis of, with examples,
- 200.
-
- Observation, the power of, resides chiefly in the hand, 380.
-
- Ohio, high rank of, industrially, 364; making great strides towards a
- more practical system of education, 364; State University of, manual
- training in, 364; prosperity of the Case School of Applied Science in,
- 364; manual training schools of Cleveland and Toledo, in, 364.
-
- Omaha, Neb., manual training in, 342.
-
-
- P.
-
- Palissy, Bernard, sketch of his career, 231, 232, 233; burns the
- furniture of his house in the cause of art, 232; is cast into prison
- for heresy--his defiance of King Henry III., 232; dies in the Bastile,
- 233; was right, and his devotion to art rendered him immortal, 233,
- 234; struggle of, over the furnace in the cause of art, was mentally
- and morally normal, while the opposition he encountered was abnormal,
- 234; mind of, was developed normally, while the minds of the millions
- of men who permitted him to die unfriended were developed abnormally,
- 234; willing to starve for his art, and ready to die for his faith,
- 234.
-
- Papin helps to solve the steam-power problem, 15.
-
- Paris Exposition, exhibit of models of tool practice in the Imperial
- Technical School, Moscow, Russia, at the, 331.
-
- Parker, Col. Francis W., declares that the application of science to
- methods of instruction would produce a radical change in all school
- work, 205; his forcible exposition of the defects of prevailing
- methods of instruction, 205, 206, 207; asserts that teachers are
- faithful, honest, and earnest, but ignorant of the history and science
- of education, 207, 364.
-
- Patriotism can be indulged with good reason only in the United States,
- 323.
-
- Penmanship, automatism in teaching, in the schools of the United
- States, as shown by the Walton report, 198.
-
- Pennsylvania State College, manual training in the, 351.
-
- Pennsylvania State Prison, statistics--five-sixths of the inmates of,
- had attended public schools, and the same number were without trades,
- 182.
-
- Pericles boasted that he could not be bribed, but robbed all Greece to
- embellish Athens, and was convicted of peculation and fined, 255.
-
- Persia, no provision in, for either the mental or moral training of
- woman, 366; the boy in, excluded from the presence of his father till
- the fifth year, 367.
-
- Peru, Ill., manual training in, 342.
-
- Pestalozzi, the school he struggled in vain to establish, 2; his
- definition of education, 12; his condemnation of the old system of
- education, 126; foresaw the kindergarten and the manual training
- school, 245.
-
- Phidias familiar with the turning lathe, 33.
-
- Philadelphia, manual training made part of the public school system
- of, 353; rules of the public schools of, 355, 356; report of a
- committee of the Board of Education of, in regard to manual training,
- 356, 357; hand-training introduced into the public schools of, 358.
-
- Philosophers, the, little time to speculate with, 180.
-
- Philosophy established on a scientific basis--the study of natural
- phenomena, 153; of the Greeks scorned both science and art, 257.
-
- Physical development, law of, 131.
-
- Pile-driver, the steam-hammer principle applied to the, 76; power of
- the, 76.
-
- Pilgrims, the product of the progress of all the ages, 308.
-
- Pine, in the forest and in lumber, 21; description of the tree by the
- son of a lumberman, 21; uses of, commerce in, supply of, 22; sources
- of information of students in regard to--newspapers and encyclopedias,
- 25.
-
- Plato, his theory of the divine origin of caste, 123; blinded by
- half-truths, 124; how he was controlled by his environment, 124; his
- theory of the importance of early training, 125; his contempt for the
- useful arts, 176, 177, 369; regarded the soul’s residence in the body
- as an evil, 256; opinion of, that the majority is always dull and
- always wrong, 280; the creation of his Divine Dialogues depended upon
- the useful arts, 383.
-
- Pliny, affection of, for his slaves, 139.
-
- Plutarch, sublime moral teachings of, 138; on the death of his
- daughter, 139.
-
- Poets, the, little time to sentimentalize with, 180; more highly
- esteemed than civil engineers, machinists, and artisans, 185.
-
- Poole, Dr. William F., courtesy of, to the students of the Chicago
- Manual Training School, 348.
-
- Poverty, its final abolition depends upon the multiplication of the
- useful arts, 383.
-
- Power, generation of, the object of education, 244; to generate and
- store up either mental or physical, not to be exerted, is a waste of
- energy, 245.
-
- Printing, the art of, essential to progress in the useful arts, 73;
- not so necessary to progress in the so-called fine arts, 73; removes
- the seal from the lips of learning, 286; makes every discovery in
- science and every invention in art the heritage of all the ages, 286;
- the invention of, paralyzed authority, 287.
-
- Progress, if Guttenberg had rested content with an idea, there would
- have been no printing-press, 152; if Watt, Stephenson, and Fulton had
- stopped at words, there would have been neither railways nor
- steamships, 152; dates from the beginning of the seventeenth century,
- 153; slow until within one hundred years, 153; due not to the men who
- make laws, but to the men who make things, 160; of the world towards a
- higher appreciation of the value of the useful arts, 172; of moral
- ideas shown by the honors lavished upon the memory of heroes, 234; can
- find expression only in things, 243; the path of, a rugged road, 381;
- its steps consist of improvements in the useful and beautiful arts,
- 382; the lines on which educational, is to be sought, 385.
-
- Property, no security for, in a community devoid of education, 237;
- intelligence alone confers a sacred character upon, 237; may be
- protected by a hired soldiery, or by public sentiment enlightened by
- education, 238; the main purpose of governments is to protect, but
- nearly all the governments of history have been destroyed in the
- effort to fulfil this function of their existence, 238; in slaves,
- failure of the United States to protect, 238; rights of, in English
- land, about to be disturbed, 238; not sacred unless honestly acquired
- and honestly held, 238; all in the United States may be devoted to
- education by the ballot, 324.
-
- Prudence, extreme, consistent with rectitude, 136; selfishness deified
- under the name of, 311.
-
- Public lands of the United States squandered by Congress, 317; history
- of waste of, by Henry D. Lloyd, in the _Chicago Tribune_, 317, 318,
- 319.
-
- Public schools of New England, 309; the old system of education put
- into the, 303; popular idea of the, 310; neither science nor art
- taught in the, 310; revived the Greco-Roman subjective system, 310.
-
- Public schools of the United States, attendance in, not
- compulsory--some children enter them, and some do not, 316; leave out
- that which most nearly concerns the business of life, 325.
-
- Pugilist, how John Morrissey became a, 314, 315.
-
- Pullman, George M., Trustee of the Chicago Manual Training School
- Association, 346.
-
- Purdue University, pronounced success achieved in manual training in,
- under the directorship of Professor Goss, 341.
-
-
- R.
-
- Railroad, the, influence of, upon the destinies of mankind, 170; taxes
- to the utmost nearly every department of the useful arts, 171;
- incompetency of management of, as shown by shrinkage in values of
- stocks of, 210; in the proprietor of, the two great elements of modern
- power, land and steam, are united, 321; proprietor of the, is a king,
- 321; monstrous claims of the proprietor of, 315.
-
- Reading, automatism of teaching, in the schools of the United States,
- as shown by the Walton report, 197; Colonel Parker declares that
- prevailing methods of instruction in, are “utterly opposed to a
- mental law about which there can be no dispute,” 206.
-
- Reason, in existing systems of education, allowed to slumber, 200.
-
- Reber, Prof. Louis E., in support of manual training, 352.
-
- Reform--demand for, 371.
-
- Revolution--educational, 1883-4, 371.
-
- Richard I. presents King Arthur’s sword Excalibar to Tancred, 71.
-
- Right, of the poor child to equal education sacred, 376.
-
- Roberts, Richard, a great English inventor of the eighteenth century,
- 84.
-
- “Rocket,” the, George Stephenson’s first locomotive, 118.
-
- Roebuck, Dr. John, a patron of Watt, 84.
-
- Roman aristocrats, were refined and accomplished, 276, 277; savage
- contest for supremacy among the, 277.
-
- Roman civilization the product of all that had gone before, 260.
-
- Roman literature, possessed no saving quality, 275; did not represent
- the Roman people, 275.
-
- Roman State, the, slavery the corner-stone of, 265.
-
- Romans, the, had no peer either in courage or fortitude, 264; vices
- of, shown in the character of Appius, the Decemvir, 264; virtues of,
- shown in the character of Virginius, 265; sense of justice of,
- swallowed up in lust of power, 266; early triumphs of industrial, 268;
- indebted to slaves for all the arts, 269; philosophy of, so shallow as
- to render them callous to the great crimes upon which the State
- rested, 272; debasing influence of the Greek philosophy upon, 274;
- under the Empire rewarded vice and punished virtue, 274; preferred
- Cæsar, Caligula, and Nero to Cato, Germanicus, and Agricola, 274;
- retrograded towards a state of savagery under the Empire, 275; became
- absolutely selfish, and hence totally depraved, 276.
-
- Rome, the decline of, caused by the failure of the fuel supply, and by
- her neglect of the useful arts, 63, 64; had she possessed great
- mechanics her fall might have been averted, 64; her civilization
- culminated at the limit of the application of iron to the useful arts,
- 83; a pen-picture of the decline of, 83; her splendors and her
- degradation, 138; fall of, stopped the study of physiology, 153; the
- dominion of, logical--vigorous but pitiless, 263; all the great races
- mingled in, 264; laws of, show the stamina of her people, 265; supply
- of laborers for, maintained by depopulating conquered countries, 265;
- in the train of the legions returning to, were men, women, and
- children destined to slavery, 265; laws of, in regard to slaves,
- terrible, 265; for the free citizen of, to labor with his hands was
- more disgraceful than to die of starvation, 266; free citizen paupers
- of, crying “bread and circuses,” 266; education in, confined to
- politics and war, 266; became the great robber nation of the world,
- 266; was on the land what Greece had been on the sea--a pirate, 266;
- the spoil of conquered countries used to bribe courts, senators, and
- the populace, 267; nothing safe in, from the hand of rapacity, 267;
- grew rich through plunder, and poor in public and private virtue,
- 267; bribery in, 268; great social change in, after the fall of Greece
- and Carthage and the reduction of Asia, 268; summary of the causes of
- the fall of, 268; scenes immediately preceding the fall of, 269, 270;
- the seat of all the world’s learning, 270; the wise men of, powerless
- to help their fellow-men, because their philosophy was false, 270;
- metaphysical philosophy of, 270, 271; the philosophy of, furnished an
- excuse for slavery, 271; suffrage in, the subject of open traffic,
- 271, 272; noted men of, ignorant of the cause of the disorders which
- afflicted the body politic, 272; in the city of, vice reigned supreme,
- while in the provinces there was a middle class by whom all the
- domestic virtues were practised, 314; no culture in, for girls till
- late in the Empire, 366.
-
- Romulus and Remus, legend of, 259.
-
- Rousseau, the school he described, 2; his opinion that the poor need
- no education, 124; his theory of the vital importance of early
- training, 125; his definition of education, 125; his appreciation of
- the importance of the education of woman, 125, 126; his condemnation
- of the old system of education, 126; declaration of, that education is
- nothing but habit, 245.
-
- Runkle, Dr. John D., his declaration that public education should
- touch practical life in a larger number of points, 202; the founder of
- manual training in the United States, 333; excerpts from the report
- of, in 1876, recommending the adoption of manual training by the
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 333, 334; letter of, to the
- author, containing an exposition of the theory of manual training,
- with an account of its origin in the mind of, 337, 338; assists in
- introducing manual training into Girard College, 354.
-
- Ruskin, on finding the truth in things [_note_], 145; on disciplining
- the fingers in the laboratory of the goldsmiths [_note_], 148; on
- learning by labor what the lips of man could never teach [_note_],
- 152; tribute of, to labor [_note_], 161; on rogues, a manufactured
- article [_note_], 237; on how national debts bear upon labor [_note_],
- 291; on how standing armies are supported [_note_], 293.
-
- Russia, arbitrary act of, in 1770, in relation to the export of iron,
- 115; solves the problem of tool instruction by the laboratory process,
- 331; manual training introduced into all the technical schools of,
- 333.
-
- Russia, Emperor of, presents one hundred models of mechanical
- manipulations to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 69; offers
- John Arnold five thousand dollars for a duplicate of his George III.
- watch, 86.
-
-
- S.
-
- San Francisco, Cal., manual training in, 342.
-
- Sankey Canal, the, authorized upon condition that boats plying upon it
- should be drawn by men only, 179.
-
- Saracens, the friends of education, of science, and art, 282;
- inventors of cotton-paper, promoters of all the industries, including
- agriculture, 282, 283; driven from the soil they had made to blossom
- like the rose, 283; ameliorating influence of, upon the ignorance and
- superstition of the Middle Ages, 285.
-
- Savage, the, how he is trained, 9; helplessness of, 11; how he is
- taught to hunt and fish, 176; is taught what he needs to know in his
- condition, and nothing else, 181; if his education were as
- unscientific as that of the civilized boy, the race would perish, 215;
- ninety-nine times in a hundred he traces the footsteps of his enemy in
- the forest, 215, 216; education of, is scientific, 216; in the
- practical character of the training of, consists its excellence, 217;
- mystery which envelops skill of, solved, 219; ignorant, in his
- primitive state, of all the arts, 278.
-
- Savonarola, the hater of abuses in the Roman Catholic Church, 234; at
- the death-bed of Lorenzo de Medici, 235; shaking thrones and making
- proud prelates tremble, 235.
-
- Savory helps to solve the steam-power problem, 15.
-
- Saw-mills, opposition to their introduction in England, 178.
-
- School, of the future, 2; proposed by Ruskin [_note_], 180.
-
- Schools, the, have not moved forward with events, 154; are still
- dominated by mediæval ideas of speculative philosophy, 154; as an
- industrial agency are a failure, 202; were established as a bulwark of
- liberty, 202; denounced, 371; must be transformed from the ornamental
- type of Greece into laboratories for the development of useful men and
- women, 384; a vast number of, have been dedicated to the new
- education--are they to be developed into ideal schools?, 385.
-
- Schoolmaster, the, and the Reformer, 371; the old, and the new
- education, 375.
-
- Schools of England, arraignment of, by Herbert Spencer, 325.
-
- Schwab, Dr. Erasmus, and “The Work School in the Common School,” 368.
-
- Science, effect of divorce of, from art, 11; through printing every
- discovery in, becomes the heritage of future ages, 286.
-
- Scientific education, simplicity of, 207, 208; difference between, and
- unscientific, 217; description of, by Miss S. E. Blow, 218, 219; is
- natural education, 223; brightens, stimulates, and develops, while
- automatic stupefies, 223, 224.
-
- Scientist, the, a public benefactor, 160; studies the stars, the
- earth, and the air in the light of the flames of persecution, 287.
-
- Scott, Frank J., contributor to the fund for the founding of the
- Toledo, Ohio, Manual Training School, 364.
-
- Scott, Jesup W., the founder of the Toledo Manual Training School,
- 358.
-
- Scott, Maurice, contributor to the fund for the founding of the Toledo
- Manual Training School, 364.
-
- Scott, William F., contributor to the fund for the founding of the
- Toledo Manual Training School, 364.
-
- Sculpture, limit of, reached in Greece, 73.
-
- Scythians, among the, the iron sword was a god, 70.
-
- Segovia, manufactures of, destroyed by the expulsion of the Moors from
- Spain, 283.
-
- Seligman, Mr. Joseph, munificence of, established Professor Adler’s
- Workingman’s School in New York City on a firm basis, 345.
-
- Selfishness, the arch-enemy of virtue, 134; maxims in honor of, 134;
- Napoleon a colossal example of the folly of, 135; in conflict with the
- true spirit of civilization, 135; causes revolutions and destroys
- governments, 135; is blind of one eye--sees only one side of a cause,
- 136; let not prudence be confounded with, 136; extreme, the synonym of
- depravity, 136; promoted by prevailing systems of education, 136;
- promoted by a mercantile career, 230; of the lawyer, the judge, and
- the legislator, 230, 231; as it recedes from the mind, justice assumes
- its appropriate place as the controlling element in human conduct,
- 233; the source of all social evil, 247; transformed Roman courage
- into cruelty, and Roman fortitude into brutal stoicism, 266;
- transformed the government of Rome from a pure democracy into an
- oligarchy of wealth, 276; vanquishes itself in Rome, 277; the
- equivalent of savagery, 277; deified under the name of prudence, 311;
- calling it prudence led to confounding right and wrong, 311; effects
- of, in the nineteenth century the same as in the first, 312; the mind
- charged with, through subjective educational processes, 326; ends in a
- struggle which ends in a revolution, 326.
-
- Seneca, sublime moral precepts of, contrasted with the horrors of the
- gladiatorial games, 138; his doctrine of humanity, 139; ignores
- slavery, the slave, the laborer, and the useful arts, 268; morals of,
- glittering generalities, politics of, practical, 269; put money in his
- purse, 269; charged with complicity in the Piso conspiracy, and
- banished for the crime of adultery, 269.
-
- Serfs of the Middle Ages the mercenary troops of the modern State,
- 290.
-
- Service--the greatest thing in the moral world, 378.
-
- Seville, silk industry of, 292; looms of, silenced in the seventeenth
- century, 283.
-
- Sewing-machine, the, its accuracy, 87; it illustrates the
- interdependence of the practical arts, 87; it multiplies garments
- beyond the power of figures to express, 87.
-
- Sheffield, Lord, his estimate of the value of Henry Cort’s
- improvements in iron and the steam-engine of Watt, 115; his
- declaration of the purpose of the establishment of the American
- colonies, 202.
-
- Sheffield, town of, its insignificance in 1715, 116; its manufacturing
- importance now, 116.
-
- Skill being prolific of good should be brought to bear upon
- educational systems, 132.
-
- Slavery existed in the United States when Horace Mann declared it to
- be the cause of the degradation of labor and the laborer, 189; aided
- by England in its struggle for survival, 189; influence of, not yet
- extinct, 189; has kept its brand of shame upon the useful arts for
- thousands of years, 190; how the Egyptian was reduced to, 250; and
- labor were synonymous terms in Rome, 265; a state of, is a state of
- war, 265; confounded with freedom in the United States, 311; negroes
- escaping from, called fugitives from justice, 311; justified in
- Faneuil Hall, the cradle of liberty, 311; tried only by the test of
- self-interest, 312; in the North it faded away, in the South it
- flourished, 312; climate conditions, not education, saved this
- continent from the scourge of, 312, 313; question of continuance of,
- in the United States, settled by violence, as savages settle
- controversies, 313.
-
- Slaves, in Rome, laws in relation to, 265; a million killed in the
- course of the servile rebellion in Sicily, 265; exposed to wild beasts
- in the arena for the popular amusement, 265; all industrial pursuits
- in Rome carried on by, 266; labor of, in Rome, cheaper than that of
- cattle, 266; construct all the great public works in Rome, 269; strike
- for liberty in Rome, and are slaughtered, 271; clank of the chains of,
- in the streets of Boston, 311.
-
- Smeaton helps to solve the steam-power problem, 15; the best workman
- of his time, 85.
-
- Smiles, Samuel, declares that the automata of the Middle Ages led to
- the useful automatic tools of the eighteenth century, 35; his peculiar
- views about Maudslay’s great invention, 36; his history of the Dutch
- and German mechanics who contributed to the solution of the problem of
- the application of mineral coal to smelting purposes, 64; his graphic
- picture of the versatility of the smith, 71; his pen-picture of the
- steamship _Warrior_ “breasting the billows of the North Sea,” 85;
- shows the true springs of English greatness in his “Lives of the
- Engineers,” 172; shows the origin of useful arts in England in his
- great work on the Huguenots, 185.
-
- Smith, the, gives direction to the course of Empire, 62; a man of
- great consequence in England in the early time, 71; name of, descends
- to more families than that of any other profession, 71; versatility
- of, 71, 72; conducts the engineering at the siege of Berwick, 72;
- ancient, kin to all the ages through his works, 74.
-
- Social evils, are the product of defective education, 325.
-
- Social problems, solution of, to be sought through a radical change in
- educational methods, 248; the railway and factory are new factors in,
- 321; of America cannot be settled as those of Europe are, by
- emigration, 326.
-
- Solicis, Prof. G., the chief supporter of manual training in France,
- 368.
-
- South Carolina, educational system of, confined to a class, as opposed
- to universal education in New England, 235.
-
- Spain, ruined by the expulsion of the Moors, 283; destitution in the
- chief cities of, 283; danger that the royal family of, would go hungry
- to bed, 283; is bankrupt, 296.
-
- Speculation, rages on the exchanges of all large American cities, 322;
- affects every class in the community, 322; stimulates bad passions,
- and creates a distaste for labor, 322.
-
- Speculative philosophy, only resource of the ancients, 153; dominated
- the world from the fall of Rome to the time of Bacon, 153.
-
- Speech, must be incarnate in things or it is dead, 141; man would lose
- the power of, if his words should cease to be realized in things, 149;
- dependent upon objects for its existence, 150; has its origin not less
- in external objects than in the mind, 150; would be lost if the senses
- should cease to be impressed by things, 150; freedom of, and of
- thought, catch-penny phrases, 192.
-
- Spelling, automatism in teaching, in the schools of the United States,
- as shown by the Walton report, 198, 199.
-
- Spencer, Herbert, on the defects of the schools of England, 325; the
- contrast between his views and the dictum of Dr. Dwight of Yale
- University, 374; pointed out, the analogy between early methods of
- education and barbarism, 377.
-
- Standing armies, a legacy of evil from the Middle Ages, 289; recruited
- from the ranks of the serfs, 290; the dominant feature of European
- public economy, 290; number of, 290; collateral evils of, 290;
- responsible for illiteracy and pauperism, 292; what they cost and what
- they stand in the way of, 293; how they are supported [_note_], 293;
- an assumption of the barbarism of man, 300; stand in the way of
- education and prosperity, 303; must everywhere soon disappear before
- the march of education, 303; are as abnormal in Europe as slavery was
- in the United States, 303, 304; are the instruments of tyranny, the
- last analysis of selfishness, 304; the result of the Greco-Roman
- methods of education, 304.
-
- State, a, growth of, depends upon progress in the practical arts, 151;
- ceasing to advance, its language ceases to grow, becomes stationary,
- stagnates, 151.
-
- Statesmen, not the authors of English progress, 159; Buckle’s scathing
- arraignment of, 160; more highly esteemed than civil engineers,
- machinists, and artisans, 185.
-
- Statutes, that wear out in a year, 241.
-
- Steam, power of, known to the ancients, 14; makes all civilized
- countries prosperous and great, 161; must be harnessed at the forge
- and in the shop to enable it to do its work, 170; power exerted by, in
- the manufactories of Great Britain equal to the manual labor of four
- hundred millions of men, 184; may be likened to an idea which finds
- expression through the engine--a thing, 245; the railway and the
- factory two great products of, 321.
-
- Steam-hammer, the, in works of Mr. Crane, Chicago, 75; in Pittsburg,
- Pa., and at Krupp’s cast-steel works, Essen, Germany, 75; invention
- of, in 1837, its accuracy, power, and delicacy, 76; application of the
- principle of, to the pile-driver in 1845, 76.
-
- Steamship, the, influence of, upon the destinies of mankind, 170.
-
- Steel, Age of, great enterprises of the, dwarf the merely ornamental
- branches of learning, 179.
-
- Steele, Prof. A. J., Principal of the Le Moyne Normal
- Institute--letter of, to the Author, 362.
-
- Stephenson, George, inventor of the locomotive, 84; sketch of his
- remarkable career, 118, 119; declines knighthood and a membership in
- the Royal Society, 119; the founder of the railway system of the
- world, 119.
-
- Stephenson, Robert, an English railway engineer, 84.
-
- Stick, Adam and the, 157; the symbol and instrument of power, 158.
-
- Stoics and philosophers of Rome, lofty moral sentiments of, in
- contrast with the Roman vices, 139.
-
- Suetonius, portrays the cruelties of the Cæsars, but hints at no cause
- therefor inherent in the social system, 272.
-
- Suffrage, love of country in the United States is a due appreciation
- of the right of, 323; in the universality of the right of, lies the
- power of correcting all social evils, 324; destined to preservation
- forever in the United States, 324; attempt to limit, in New York
- accounted for by the prevalence of European ideas, 324; the right of,
- can be taken from the American people only by force, 324; standard of,
- lowered by ignorance and depravity, 325; when better informed it will
- be more honest, 325; with increased intelligence it will gain the
- power to grapple with social abuses, 325.
-
- Superstition, how it arose through ignorance and selfishness, 249.
-
- Sweden, five hundred _slöjd_ schools in, in 1882, 368; supports a
- school for the training of teachers of _slöjd_ schools at Nääs, 369.
-
- Syria, the founders, smiths, and all the artisans of, were slaves, 56.
-
-
- T.
-
- Tacitus, his account of the execution of four hundred slaves for the
- murder of one man, 265; his lament at the decline of public virtue,
- 267; is silent on the subject of the infamy of slavery, and on the
- shame of degrading labor, 272.
-
- Tancred the Crusader pays for King Arthur’s sword Excalibar “four
- great ships and fifteen galleys,” 71.
-
- Tarquins, the banishment of the, 264.
-
- Telegraph, the, influence of, upon the destinies of mankind, 170.
-
- Telephone, the work of the hand, 156.
-
- Telescope, the work of the hand, 155.
-
- Texas, Agricultural and Mechanical College of, 359.
-
- Theodoric, attempt of, to reconstruct the Roman civilization, 279; the
- order evoked from chaos by, to chaos soon returned, 280.
-
- Theorem, a, always a question solved, 144.
-
- Things both the subject and occasion of speech, 151; regarded as of
- less vital importance than abstract ideas, 185; the false, easily
- detected in--examples, 224; the study of, steadies and balances the
- mind, 225; the truth revealed only in, 243; ideas are mere vain
- speculations till embodied in, 243; the habit of expressing ideas in,
- should be formed in the schools, 245; the truths that are hidden in,
- 378; the integrity of the mind can be maintained only by the
- submission of its immature judgments to the verification of, 379; the
- source of ideas, 379; essential to spiritual development, 384.
-
- Thinking, acting is the complement of, 244.
-
- Thought, must be incarnate in things, or it is dead, 141; is not even
- present to the thinker until he has set it forth, out of himself, 150;
- independent, of all mental processes the most difficult--habit,
- tradition, and reverence for antiquity unite to forbid it, 192.
-
- Thoughts must be expressed to have influence, 244; may be expressed
- most forcibly in things, 244.
-
- Thucydides arraigns the Greeks as falsifiers and perjurers, 255.
-
- Thurston, Robert H., on the tremendous power wielded by the mechanic,
- 183.
-
- Toledo, O., Manual Training School, inception of, due to the
- generosity of the late Jesup W. Scott and his three sons, 364;
- connected with the public high-school, 364, 365; students of, consist
- of both sexes, 365; the course for girls in, 365.
-
- Toledo, Spain, woollen manufactures of, transferred by the exiled
- Moors to Tunis, 283.
-
- “Tom All-alone’s” in “Bleak House”--social philosophy of, 315.
-
- Tool practice, quickens the intellect, 114; engenders a thirst for
- wisdom, 114; history of, in England confirms this view, 114; the
- foundation of James Watt’s culture, 119; George Stephenson’s career an
- illustration of the intellectual effect of, 119; testimony of the
- Director of the Artisans’ School at Rotterdam, Holland, as to
- intellectual effect of, 121; testimony of Dr. Woodward, Director of
- the St. Louis Manual Training School, as to intellectual effect of,
- 121; testimony of M. Victor Della Vos, Director of the Imperial
- Technical School of Moscow, as to intellectual effect of, 121; effect
- of, as shown by the experience of the Mechanic Art School at Komotan,
- Bohemia, 122.
-
- Tools, influence of, upon modern civilization, 9; represent the steps
- of human progress, 10; the great civilizing agency of the world, 11.
-
- Touch, the master sense, whence all the other senses spring, 380;
- reigns throughout the body, and is the token of life in every part,
- 381; is the fundamental sense, the mother-tongue of, language, 381;
- its versatility, 381.
-
- Townships of New England, their establishment logical, 309.
-
- Tradition, tyranny of, 124.
-
- Truth, the struggle after, 233; the love of, natural, 233; heroes
- honor it, 234; conspicuous through efforts to suppress it, 287.
-
- Tulane, Paul, founder of the Tulane University of New Orleans, La.,
- 353.
-
- Tulane University, manual training a prominent feature in the, 353.
-
- Turkish Empire, story of its origin through the art of forging, 61.
-
- Tweedism, what made it possible in the city of New York, 315.
-
- Types, through the medium of, the voice of genius is destined to reach
- to the ends of the earth, 286.
-
-
- U.
-
- United States, the, not at the front in the race of nations for
- industrial supremacy, 203; comparison of imports and exports of, with
- those of England, 203; industrially ill-balanced, 204; suffering from
- a paucity of skilled labor, 204; educational system of, very poor, as
- shown by the statistics of railway and commercial disasters, 224;
- educational system of, as poor morally as mentally, 224; neglect of
- education by, the most astonishing fact in the history of, 235; a
- scientific educational system forced upon the South by, would have
- averted the war of rebellion, 237; could not protect property in
- slaves, 238; social conditions in, similar to those prevailing in
- Europe, 313; illiteracy in, 313; increase of illiteracy in, 313; every
- sixth man who votes in, is unable to write his name, 313; land system
- of, rivals that of England in injustice, 317; history of the land
- system of, by Henry D. Lloyd, in the _Chicago Tribune_, 317-319; the
- sentiment of patriotism justifiable only in, 323; the soldier of, is a
- citizen of, 323, 324.
-
- Universities, the men who have transformed the face of the earth came
- not from the, 185; Bacon’s caustic remark in relation to the, 185; on
- Bacon’s plan would have united science and art, 185.
-
- Use--the greatest thing in the material world, 378.
-
-
- V.
-
- Valerius, died so poor that he was buried at the public charge, 268.
-
- Venus, made the wife of Vulcan, the God of Fire, 70.
-
- Von Kaas, Rittmeister Claussen, lectures on the subject of manual
- training in Germany, 368.
-
- Vulcan, the God of Fire, given Venus to wife, the father of Cupid, 70.
-
-
- W.
-
- Waif, the, description of, by John Morrissey, 314; destined to become
- an equal citizen, 315; made Tweedism in New York City possible, 315;
- pollutes the fountains of justice, 315, 316; menaces the government
- with destruction, 316; permitted by the hundred thousand to develop
- into a savage, 316; power of, to tax civilized people, 316.
-
- Walton, George A., report of, in regard to investigation of the
- schools of Norfolk County, Mass., 196-199.
-
- Wars, modern, of European nations involve no principle, 290.
-
- Washington University, manual training department of, established in
- 1878, 338, 339; excerpts from the prospectus of, 1882-83, showing the
- progress of manual training, 339, 340; founding of manual training
- department of, due to the energy and foresight of Dr. Woodward first,
- and second, to the donations of private citizens, 340, 341.
-
- Watch Company, Elgin National, makes a thousand watches a day--all
- perfect, 87; makes two hundred thousand watch-screws in a few minutes,
- 87.
-
- Watt, James, the last link in the chain of steam-engine inventors, 15;
- Dr. Draper’s eulogy of, 15; chief difficulty of, in perfecting the
- steam-engine, 84, 85; Smeaton’s opinion that the engine of, could not
- be made to work with hand-made tools, 85; sketch of the life and
- career of, 119, 120; a dull boy in school, 120; tribute of Sir Walter
- Scott to the greatness of, 120; every incident in the life of, now
- eagerly sought for, 171.
-
- Weaving Machinery, improved, opposition to introduction of, in
- England, 178.
-
- Whitney, Eli B., inventor of the cotton-gin, 84.
-
- William the Conqueror, his appreciation of the importance of land
- proprietorship, 317.
-
- Williams, Roger, the champion of absolute freedom of thought and
- speech, 309.
-
- Wilson, Dr. George, his panegyric on the hand, 145.
-
- Wisdom, the power of discriminating between what is true and what is
- false, 152; the hand used as the synonym of, because it is only in the
- concrete that the false is sure of detection, 152.
-
- Woman, tremendous influence of, upon the destinies of the human race,
- 125; neglect of past ages to educate, a crime, 125; education of, more
- important than that of man, 128; condition of, in a state of savagery,
- 249; reform in education must begin with, 365; the education of, more
- imperative than that of man, 365; neglect of the education of, among
- the ancients, 366; degradation of, in the Middle Ages, 366; contempt
- of, by Bacon, Swift, Addison, and Johnson, 366; Shakespeare’s tribute
- to, 366; Ruskin’s worship of, 366; the purity of the home and the
- efficiency of the school depends upon, 367; in the van where the
- imagination leads, 367; less selfish than man, 367; intuitions of,
- truer, ideals higher, sense of justice finer, and of duty stronger
- than those of man, 367; the teacher of man from the cradle to the
- grave, 367.
-
- Woodward, Dr. C. M., Director of the St. Louis Manual Training School,
- 121; statement of, as to intellectual effect of manual training, 121;
- his account of the origin of the St. Louis school, 339.
-
- Wood-turning laboratory, radical change of, from carpentry--from
- angles to spherical, cylindrical, and eccentric forms, 30; the value
- in the arts of the lathe, 30; its mythical origin, 33; its application
- and uses among the ancients, 34; fashionable in the sixteenth and
- seventeenth centuries in England and France, 34; purpose of, is not
- to make turners, but to educate boys, 39; the machinery of, in motion,
- 39; pen-picture of the students in, 39; the lesson in detail in, 40;
- the students at their lathes in, 43; the instructor passes upon the
- work of the class in, 44.
-
- Wootz, or Indian steel, produced near Golconda, and used in the
- fabrication of Damascus blades, 72; millions of dollars expended in
- efforts to produce the equal of, 72.
-
- Words, weakness of, 141; cannot attain to definiteness save as living
- outgrowths of realities, 150; easy to juggle with, and make the worse
- appear the better reason, 224; educational systems still train in,
- rather than in things, 325, 326.
-
- Workingman’s School and Free Kindergarten of New York City, the most
- comprehensive educational institution in the world, 342; scope of,
- 343; purpose of, identical with that of the manual training school,
- 343; methods of instruction in the, 343, 344.
-
-
- Y.
-
- Yarranton, Andrew, according to Patrick Edward Dove, was the founder
- of English political economy, 175.
-
-
- Z.
-
- Zenophon, after conducting the retreat of the Ten Thousand, led a
- detachment of Greeks on a pillaging expedition, 255.
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
- Inconsistencies in spelling, hyphenation, etc. (including in proper
- names) have been retained, except as mentioned below.
-
- Depending on the hard- and software and their settings used to read
- this text, not all elements may display as intended.
-
- As explained in the Preface, the book contains both endnotes per
- chapter and footnotes. This distinction has been kept in this text,
- with the endnotes being numbered E1, E2, E3, ... and the footnotes
- having numbers 1, 2, 3, ....
-
- Page 85, “Machine-made tools were unknown ...: either the closing
- quote mark is missing, or the opening quote mark was included
- erroneously.
-
- Page 169: there is a footnote marker * on this page, but no footnote.
-
- Page 179, paragraph starting When labor was only another name ... and
- related foot- and endotes: several quote marks appear to be lacking.
-
- Page 180, Footnote 36: there probably should have been a closing quote
- mark after ... exercises of humanity.
-
- Page 327, Endnote [E31]: there is no marker in the text for this note.
-
- Page 400, Minnesota, Minn.: as printed in the source document;
- probably an error for Minneapolis, Minn.
-
- Page 464, Zenophon: the text consistently uses Xenophon.
-
-
- Changes:
-
- Illustrations and footnotes have been moved out of text paragraphs.
-
- Some obvious minor typographical and punctuation errors have been
- corrected silently.
-
- Table of Contents: Several page numbers have been corrected to the
- book’s actual page numbers.
-
- Page 6, Endnote 1: closing quote mark inserted after ... principles of
- scientific education.
-
- Page 13: closing quote mark inserted after ... be learned by doing
- them.
-
- Page 58: ... accessaries, as anvils, ... changed to ... accessories,
- as anvils, ....
-
- Page 77, Endnote 2: opening quote mark inserted before The inquiry of
- truth ....
-
- Page 171: Maudslay, Clement Murray, Nasmyth changed to Maudslay,
- Clement, Murray, Nasmyth.
-
- Page 194: Opening quote mark inserted before Applying our popular
- schemes ....
-
- Page 257: Endnote marker numbering [E1] corrected to [E11] to conform
- to endnotes for this chapter.
-
- Page 392, footnote [125]: Of the 51 cities tabulated ... changed to Of
- the 54 cities tabulated ....
-
- Page 432: Chicago Manual Training School, equipment of: 341 changed to
- 347.
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Mind and Hand, by Charles H. Ham</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Mind and Hand</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em;'>Manual Training the Chief Factor in Education</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Charles H. Ham</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: December 29, 2021 [eBook #67039]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Tim Lindell, Harry Lamé and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MIND AND HAND ***</div>
-
-<div class="tnbox">
-
-<p class="noindent">Please see the <a href="#TN">Transcriber&#8217;s Notes</a> at the end of this text.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent blankbefore75">The cover image has been created for this text, and is in the public domain.</p>
-
-</div><!--tnbox-->
-
-<div class="x-ebookmaker-drop"><!--scr only-->
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="container w30em">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-</div><!--scr only-->
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="container w30em" id="Frontis">
-
-<img src="images/illo001.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<div class="illotext w10em">
-<p class="caption"><i>Yours faithfully<br />
-Charles Henry Ham</i></p>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-
-<h1><b>MIND AND HAND</b><br />
-<span class="fsize60"><i>MANUAL TRAINING<br />
-THE CHIEF FACTOR IN EDUCATION</i></span></h1>
-
-<p class="center highline3 blankbefore2"><span class="smcap">By</span> CHARLES H. HAM</p>
-
-<p class="center highline15 blankbefore2"><span class="fsize70">BEING THE THIRD EDITION OF</span><br />
-“MANUAL TRAINING, THE SOLUTION<br />
-OF SOCIAL AND INDUSTRIAL PROBLEMS”</p>
-
-<p class="center highline5 fsize70 sstype"><b>ILLUSTRATED</b></p>
-
-<div class="container logo">
-<img src="images/illo002.jpg" alt="Publisher's logo" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="center highline2"><span class="fsize80">NEW YORK ⁛ CINCINNATI ⁛ CHICAGO</span><br />
-<span class="gesp2">AMERICAN BOOK COMPANY</span></p>
-
-</div><!--titlepage-->
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="copyright">
-
-<p class="center highline2 fsize70">Copyright, 1886, by <span class="smcap">Harper &amp; Brothers</span>.<br />
-Copyright, 1900, by <span class="smcap">Charles H. Ham</span>.<br />
-<i>All rights reserved.</i><br />
-W. P. 5</p>
-
-</div><!--copyright-->
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Pageiii">[iii]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="frontmatter nobreak">PREFACE TO THE THIRD EDITION.</h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p>The work of which this is the third edition has been
-before the public of this country, England, and all English-speaking
-countries since 1886&mdash;thirteen years. As
-it proposes a revolution in educational methods, it was not
-to be presumed that it would escape criticism. But, while
-the reviews of it have been numerous, they have, on the
-whole, been very generous. My most radical postulates
-have, however, been received by educators of the old régime
-with expressions of emphatic dissent. In presenting
-the third edition of the work I have, therefore, thought
-it wise to support the text with many high authorities in
-the form of foot-notes. As was to be expected, my analysis
-of Greek history and character provoked the severest
-criticism. It is regarded, indeed, as conclusive evidence
-of gross ignorance of the entire subject. To meet the
-charge of ignorance, I have made a large number of citations
-from Herodotus, Thucydides, Xenophon, Plutarch,
-and others&mdash;authors consulted, originally, in the preparation
-of this part of the work. I may venture to observe,
-with due deference to those schoolmen who regard the
-ancient Greeks as an ideal people, that I have searched
-contemporaneous history in vain for evidence of the verity
-of this claim; and I am hence constrained to adhere
-firmly to the extreme views expressed in the text. And
-if these views are correct, it follows that the passion for<span class="pagenum" id="Pageiv">[iv]</span>
-Greek models in education is not only a mental dissipation,
-but a moral crime.</p>
-
-<p>The other new notes are commended to the careful
-consideration of the reader, as the fruit of my added
-years of research and reflection.</p>
-
-<p>The <a href="#Page387">Appendix</a> contains a compilation, in tabular form,
-of all the facts obtainable from original sources, through
-the aid of a skilled statistician, showing the physical
-progress of Manual Training in this country, and the
-chief countries of Europe, during the last fifteen years.</p>
-
-<p>In this edition the disguise of the first edition is dropped.
-In that edition a certain school was referred to as
-“the Chicago school,” whereas it was, in fact, purely an
-ideal school, which had no existence except in the mind
-of the author. But it embodied educational theories and
-ideas of Comenius and other great men which the author
-desired to see adopted. That desire not having been realized,
-I content myself here by quoting the observation
-of Oscar Browning as to the proneness of the school-master
-to neglect opportunities: “The more we reflect
-on the method of Comenius, the more shall we see that
-it is replete with suggestiveness, and we shall feel surprised
-that so much wisdom can have lain in the path of
-school-masters for two hundred and fifty years, and that
-they never stooped to avail themselves of its treasures.”</p>
-
-<p>It is proper to state that the terms “Kindergarten,”
-“Manual Training,” and “The New Education,” are used
-throughout the work as equivalents.</p>
-
-<p>The change of title to “Mind and Hand: Manual
-Training the Chief Factor in Education”&mdash;is made in
-response to the common and just criticism of the original
-title as too narrow for the broad treatment of the subject
-which characterized the text.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Pagev">[v]</span></p>
-
-<p>The notes prepared especially for this edition will be
-found at the ends of the chapters to which they respectively
-belong.</p>
-
-<p>Wherever in this work apparent discrimination in favor
-of the male sex is indulged through the employment of
-the pronoun “he,” “his,” or “him,” rather than the corresponding
-feminine parts of speech, it is merely apparent,
-not real; for I urge the co-education of the sexes
-as I urge the co-education of Mind and Hand, because
-the woman is the complement of the man as the hand is
-the complement of the mind. For I believe, with John
-Stuart Mill, that “The true virtue of human beings is
-fitness to live together as equals; and to enable them to
-live together as equals, they must be associated in education”;
-and with Mary Wollstonecraft, that “Virtue will
-never prevail in society till the morals of both sexes are
-founded on reason, and till the affections common to both
-are allowed their due strength by the discharge of mutual
-duties.”</p>
-
-<p class="right highline2 padr2"><span class="smcap">The Author.</span></p>
-
-<p class="fsize90"><span class="smcap">New York City</span>, <i>March, 1900</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Pagevi">[vi-<br />vii]
-<a id="Pagevii"></a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak frontmatter">PREFACE TO FIRST EDITION.</h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p>In 1879 I read a paper before the Chicago Philosophical
-Society on the subject of “The Inventive Genius;
-or, an Epitome of Human Progress.” The suggestion of
-the subject came from Mr. Charles J. Barnes, to whom I
-desire in this public way to express my obligation for an
-introduction to a profoundly interesting study, and one
-which has given a new direction to all my thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>At the conclusion of my labors in the preparation of
-the paper, I realized the force of Bacon’s remark, that
-“the real and legitimate goal of the sciences is the endowment
-of human life with new inventions and riches.”</p>
-
-<p>In tracing the course of invention and discovery, I
-found that I was moving in the line of the progress of
-civilization. I found that the great gulf between the
-savage and the civilized man is spanned by the seven
-hand-tools&mdash;the axe, the saw, the plane, the hammer, the
-square, the chisel, and the file&mdash;and that the modern
-machine-shop is an aggregation of these tools driven by
-steam. I hence came to regard tools as the great civilizing
-agency of the world. With Carlyle I said, “Man
-without tools is nothing; with tools he is all.” From
-this point it was only a step to the proposition that, It is
-through the arts alone that all branches of learning find
-expression, and touch human life. Then I said, The true
-definition of education is the development of all the powers<span class="pagenum" id="Pageviii">[viii]</span>
-of man to the culminating point of action; and this power
-in the concrete, the power to do some useful thing for
-man&mdash;this must be the last analysis of educational truth.</p>
-
-<p>These ideas are not new. They pervade Lord Bacon’s
-writings, are admirably formulated in Rousseau’s
-“Emile,” and were restated by Mr. Herbert Spencer
-twenty-five years ago. More than this, Comenius, Pestalozzi,
-and Froebel attempted to carry them into practical
-operation in the school-room, but with only a small
-measure of success. It remains for the age of steel to
-show how powerless mere words are in the presence of
-things, and so to emphasize the demand for a radical
-reform in educational methods.</p>
-
-<p>In 1880 my attention was drawn to the Manual Training
-Department of the Washington University of St.
-Louis, Mo. In that school I found the realization of Bacon’s
-aphorism, “Education is the cultivation of a just
-and legitimate familiarity betwixt the mind and things.”
-I made an exhaustive study of the methods of the St.
-Louis school, and reached the conclusion that the philosopher’s
-stone in education had been discovered. The columns
-of the <i>Chicago Tribune</i> were opened to me, and
-I wrote constantly on the subject for the ensuing three
-years. Meantime the Chicago Manual-Training School
-(the first independent institution of the kind in the world)
-was founded and opened, and the agitation spread over
-the whole country, and indeed over the whole civilized
-world.</p>
-
-<p>This work was commenced two years ago. I found
-the labor much more arduous than I anticipated, and its
-completion has hence been delayed far beyond the time
-originally contemplated for placing it in the hands of a
-publisher. It may be summarized briefly as consisting<span class="pagenum" id="Pageix">[ix]</span>
-of four divisions: 1. A detailed description of the various
-laboratory class processes, from the first lesson to the
-last, in the course of three years. 2. An exhaustive argument
-<i>a posteriori</i> and <i>a fortiori</i> in support of the
-proposition that tool practice is highly promotive of intellectual
-growth, and in a still greater degree of the
-upbuilding of character. 3. A sketch of the historical
-period, showing that the decay of civilization and the
-destruction of social organisms have resulted directly
-from defects in methods of education. 4. A brief sketch
-of the history of manual training as an educational force.</p>
-
-<p>To Dr. John D. Runkle, of the Massachusetts Institute
-of Technology, the founder of manual training as an educational
-institution in this country, I cannot express
-too strongly my deep obligation for valuable suggestions
-and constant encouragement. To him also am I indebted
-for nearly all my illustrations, as also particularly for
-the excellent portrait of M. Victor Della Vos, the founder
-of the new system of education in Russia. I am also
-under obligations to Col. Augustus Jacobson, a leading
-advocate of the new education, for constant counsel and
-support, as also to Dr. Henry H. Belfield, Director of the
-Chicago Manual Training School, and Mr. John S. Clark,
-of Boston.</p>
-
-<p>Of the authors consulted, I cannot forbear mention of
-Lord Bacon, Rousseau, and Herbert Spencer, whose great
-works constitute the foundation of the new system of education
-according to nature. Nor can I omit to acknowledge,
-with all the emphasis of which words are susceptible,
-my obligations to Mr. Samuel Smiles. His works,
-from the lives of the engineers to the shortest of his biographies,
-constitute an inexhaustible treasure-house of
-facts from which I have drawn without stint. Mr. Smiles<span class="pagenum" id="Pagex">[x]</span>
-has traced the springs of English greatness to their true
-source, the workshop. I have attempted to continue his
-office by showing that the workshop is a great educational
-force, and hence that its educational element ought to
-be incorporated in the system of public instruction.</p>
-
-<p>The propositions of the following pages involve an educational
-revolution destined to enlighten, and so ultimately
-to redeem manual labor from the scorn of the
-ages of slavery, and, in the end, to render the skilled laborer
-worthy of high social distinction, thus presenting
-at once a solution not only of the industrial question but
-of the social question.</p>
-
-<p class="right highline2 padr2"><span class="smcap">Charles H. Ham.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Pagexi">[xi]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak frontmatter">INTRODUCTION TO THE THIRD EDITION<br />
-<span class="fsize70"><span class="smcap">By Col. Francis W. Parker</span>,<br />
-Principal of the Chicago Normal School.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p>The last twenty-five years have brought much of intrinsic
-value into American education. Rapid increase
-in population and ever-changing conditions have made
-imperative demands for schools adequate to self-government.</p>
-
-<p>The Kindergarten led the way to other substantial reforms
-in education, and called attention to the actual needs
-of childhood. It proved conclusively that hand-work is
-one of the dominant interests of the child, and demonstrated
-the absolute dependence of brain-growth upon
-Manual Training.</p>
-
-<p>Manual Training is thus a direct outcome and sequence
-of the Kindergarten. It supplies a need for which there
-is no substitute. The belief that that which is begun in
-the Kindergarten should be continued and expanded in
-all upper grades, forces itself more and more upon thoughtful
-minds. Modern psychology brings its potent evidence
-as to the tremendous value of the work of the hand in the
-building of the brain. The trend of educational thought
-will always be in the direction of hand training as a fundamental
-element in education.</p>
-
-<p>Twenty-five years ago Manual Training was little known
-in this country as a factor in education. Charles H. Ham,<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexii">[xii]</span>
-imbued with a fervid patriotism, saw clearly that one of
-the intrinsic needs of education&mdash;an absolute necessity in
-the evolution of a democracy&mdash;is the training of the whole
-being, hand, brain, and soul, through educative work. He
-was, indeed, a pioneer, beginning his work when there was
-very little attention given to this important subject, and
-at a time, too, when it was opposed by nearly all leading
-educators.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Ham, together with Colonel Jacobson, brought a
-strong influence to bear upon the Commercial Club of
-Chicago, to found a Manual-Training school. This school
-is now a department of the Chicago University and has
-been in successful operation for thirteen years. There
-are in Chicago to-day the Armour Institute, the Lewis
-Institute, and the Jewish Manual-Training School, all
-prominent and well established. There is also a high
-school for Manual Training in connection with the public
-schools, and, best of all, there are indications which show
-that hand-work is making its way throughout the grades.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Ham, without doubt, had a strong influence upon
-the late George M. Pullman, which led him to provide,
-through his will, for a Manual-Training school for the
-children of the city which he built.</p>
-
-<p>Manual-Training schools are now maintained in almost
-every city in the Union. Much remains to be done before
-Manual Training takes its true place in education.
-The majority of these schools now in existence are for
-boys who have graduated from the grammar school, which
-leaves the years between six and fourteen with little or
-no hand-work. Thus the most important period for brain-growth
-through hand activity is neglected.</p>
-
-<p>The future of Manual Training is to introduce hand-work
-as the principal factor in the first four years’ work,<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexiii">[xiii]</span>
-to be continued in the four years of the grammar grades,
-and correlated with all other subjects. Indeed, the ideal
-is to introduce Manual Training in all courses of study,
-from the Kindergarten to the University, inclusive.</p>
-
-<p>The patrons of Cook County Normal School owe to
-Mr. Ham the establishment of Manual Training in connection
-with the primary grades of the school, nearly fifteen
-years ago; for without the practical aid he gave it,
-it could not have been accomplished at that time. The
-children&mdash;indeed, all the people of this country&mdash;owe
-him an immense debt of gratitude for his heroic championship
-of hand-work.</p>
-
-<p>Manual Training gives a true dignity to labor; it calls
-attention to the place of hand-work in human progress,
-and as civilization goes on it will have a higher and still
-higher place in the hearts of the people.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Pagexiv">[xiv-<br />xv]
-<a id="Pagexv"></a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak frontmatter">CONTENTS.</h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<div class="toc">
-
-<p class="chapter">CHAPTER I.<br />THE IDEAL SCHOOL.</p>
-
-<p class="contents">Its Situation. &mdash; Its Tall Chimney. &mdash; The Whir of Machinery and Sound
-of the Sledge-hammer. &mdash; The School that is to dignify Labor. &mdash; The Realization of the
-Dream of Bacon, Rousseau, Comenius, Pestalozzi, and Froebel. &mdash; The School that fitly represents the Age of
-Steel.<span class="righttext"><a href="#Page1">Page 1</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="chapter">CHAPTER II.<br />THE MAJESTY OF TOOLS.</p>
-
-<p class="contents">Tools the highest Text-books. &mdash; How to Use them the Test of
-Scholarship. &mdash; They are the Gauge of Civilization. &mdash; Carlyle’s Apostrophe to
-them. &mdash; The Typical Hand-tools. &mdash; The Automata of the
-Machine-shop. &mdash; Through Tools Science and Art are United. &mdash; The Power of
-Tools. &mdash; Their Educational Value. &mdash; Without Tools Man is Nothing; with Tools he is
-All. &mdash; It is through the Arts alone that Education touches Human
-Life.<span class="righttext"><a href="#Page7">7</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="chapter">CHAPTER III.<br />THE ENGINE ROOM.</p>
-
-<p class="contents">The Corliss Engine. &mdash; A Thing of Grace and Power. &mdash; The Growth of Two
-Thousand Years. &mdash; From Hero to Watt. &mdash; Its Duty as a
-School-master. &mdash; The Interdependence of the Ages. &mdash; The School in
-Epitome.<span class="righttext"><a href="#Page14">14</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="chapter">CHAPTER IV.<br />THE DRAWING-ROOM.</p>
-
-<p class="contents">Twenty-four Boys bending over the Drawing-board. &mdash; Analysis and Synthesis in
-Drawing. &mdash; Geometric Drawing. &mdash; Pictorial Drawing. &mdash; The Principles of
-Design. &mdash; The Æsthetic in Art. &mdash; The
-<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexvi">[xvi]</span>Fundamentals. &mdash; Object and Constructive
-Drawing. &mdash; Drawing for the Exercises in the Laboratories. &mdash; The Educational Value of
-Drawing. &mdash; The Language of Drawing. &mdash; Every Student an expert Draughtsman at the end of
-the Course.<span class="righttext"><a href="#Page16">16</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="chapter">CHAPTER V.<br />THE CARPENTER’S LABORATORY.</p>
-
-<p class="contents">The Natural History of the Pine-tree. &mdash; How it is Converted into Lumber, what it is
-Worth, and how it is Consumed. &mdash; Where the Students get Information. &mdash; Working Drawings
-of the Lesson. &mdash; Asking Questions. &mdash; The Instructor Executes the
-Lesson. &mdash; Instruction in the Use and Care of Tools. &mdash; Twenty-four Boys Making
-Things. &mdash; As Busy as Bees. &mdash; The Music of the Laboratory. &mdash; The
-Self-reliance of the Students.<span class="righttext"><a href="#Page21">21</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="chapter">CHAPTER VI.<br />THE WOOD-TURNING LABORATORY.</p>
-
-<p class="contents">A Radical Change. &mdash; From the Square to the Circle; from Angles to Spherical,
-Cylindrical, and Eccentric Forms. &mdash; The Rhythm of Mechanics. &mdash; The Potter’s Wheel of the
-Ancients and the Turning-lathe. &mdash; The Speculation of Holtzapffels on its Origin. &mdash; The
-Greeks as Turners. &mdash; The Turners of the Middle Ages. &mdash; George III. at the
-Lathe. &mdash; Maudsley’s Slide-rest, and the Revolution it wrought. &mdash; The Natural History of
-Black-walnut. &mdash; The Practical Value of Imagination. &mdash; Disraeli’s Tribute to it; Sir
-Robert Peel’s Want of it. &mdash; The Laboratory animated by Steam. &mdash; The Boys at the
-Lathes. &mdash; Their Manly Bearing. &mdash; The Lesson.<span class="righttext"><a href="#Page30">30</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="chapter">CHAPTER VII.<br />THE FOUNDING LABORATORY.</p>
-
-<p class="contents">The Iron Age. &mdash; Iron the King of Metals. &mdash; Locke’s
-Apothegm. &mdash; The Moulder’s Art is Fundamental. &mdash; History of
-Founding. &mdash; Remains of Bronze Castings in Egypt, Greece, and Assyria. &mdash; Layard’s
-Discoveries. &mdash; The Greek Sculptors. &mdash; The Colossal Statue of Apollo at
-Rhodes. &mdash; The Great Bells of History. &mdash; Moulding and Casting a
-Pulley. &mdash; Description of the Process, Step by Step. &mdash; The Furnace
-Fire. &mdash; Pouring the Hot Metal into the Moulds. &mdash; A Pen Picture of the
-Laboratory. &mdash; Thus were the Hundred Gates of Babylon cast. &mdash; Neglect of the Practical
-Arts by Herodotus. &mdash; How Slavery has degraded Labor. &mdash; How Manual Training is to dignify
-it.<span class="righttext"><a href="#Page45">45</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="chapter">CHAPTER VIII.<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexvii">[xvii]</span><br />THE FORGING LABORATORY.</p>
-
-<p class="contents">Twenty-four manly-looking Boys with Sledge-hammer in Hand &mdash; their Muscle and
-Brawn. &mdash; The Pride of Conscious Strength. &mdash; The Story of the Origin of an
-Empire. &mdash; The Greater Empire of Mechanics. &mdash; The Smelter and the Smith the Bulwark of the
-British Government. &mdash; Coal &mdash; its Modern Aspects; its Early History; Superstition
-regarding its Use. &mdash; Dud. Dudley utilizes “Pit-coal” for Smelting &mdash; the Story of his
-Struggles; his Imprisonment and Death. &mdash; The English People import their Pots and
-Kettles. &mdash; “The Blast is on and the Forge Fire sings.” &mdash; The Lesson, first on the
-Black-board, then in Red-hot Iron on the Anvil. &mdash; Striking out the Anvil Chorus &mdash; the
-Sparks fly whizzing through the Air. &mdash; The Mythological History of Iron. &mdash; The Smith in
-Feudal Times. &mdash; His Versatility. &mdash; History of Damascus Steel. &mdash; We
-should reverence the early Inventors. &mdash; The Useful Arts finer than the Fine Arts. &mdash; The
-Ancient Smelter and Smith, and the Students in the Manual-training School.<span class="righttext"><a href="#Page58">58</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="chapter">CHAPTER IX.<br />THE MACHINE-TOOL LABORATORY.</p>
-
-<p class="contents">The Foundery and Smithy are Ancient, the Machine-tool Shop is Modern. &mdash; The Giant,
-Steam, reduced to Servitude. &mdash; The Iron Lines of Progress. &mdash; They converge in the Shop;
-its triumphs from the Watchspring to the Locomotive. &mdash; The Applications of Iron in Art is the Subject of
-Subjects. &mdash; The Story of Invention is the History of Civilization. &mdash; The Machine-maker
-and the Tool-maker are the best Friends of Man. &mdash; Watt’s Great Conception waited for Automatic Tools; their
-Accuracy. &mdash; The Hand-made and the Machine-made Watch. &mdash; The Elgin (Illinois) Watch
-Factory. &mdash; The Interdependence of the Arts. &mdash; The making of a Suit of
-Clothes. &mdash; The Anteroom of the Machine-tool Laboratory. &mdash; Chipping and
-Filing. &mdash; The File-cutter. &mdash; The Poverty of Words as compared with
-Things. &mdash; The Graduating Project. &mdash; The Vision of the
-Instructor.<span class="righttext"><a href="#Page78">78</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="chapter">CHAPTER X.<br />MANUAL AND MENTAL TRAINING COMBINED.</p>
-
-<p class="contents">The new Education is all-sided &mdash; its Effect. &mdash; A Harmonious
-Development of the Whole Being. &mdash; Examination for Admission to the Chicago School. &mdash; List
-of Questions in Arithmetic, Geography, and <span class="pagenum" id="Pagexviii">[xviii]</span>
-Language. &mdash; The Curriculum. &mdash; The Alternation of Manual and Mental
-Exercises. &mdash; The Demand for Scientific Education &mdash; its
-Effect. &mdash; Ambition to be useful.<span class="righttext"><a href="#Page105">105</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="chapter">CHAPTER XI.<br />THE INTELLECTUAL EFFECT OF MANUAL TRAINING.</p>
-
-<p class="contents">Intelligence is the Basis of Character. &mdash; The more Practical the Intelligence the
-Higher the Development of Character. &mdash; The use of Tools quickens the Intellect. &mdash; Making
-Things rouses the Attention, sharpens the Observation, and steadies the Judgment. &mdash; History of Inventions
-in England, 1740-1840. &mdash; Poor, Ignorant Apprentices become learned Men. &mdash; Cort, Huntsman,
-Mushet, Neilson, Stephenson, and Watt. &mdash; The Union of Books and Tools. &mdash; Results at
-Rotterdam, Holland; at Moscow, Russia; at Komotau, Bohemia; and at St. Louis, Mo. &mdash; The Consideration of
-Overwhelming Import.<span class="righttext"><a href="#Page113">113</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="chapter">CHAPTER XII.<br />THE EDUCATION OF WOMEN A NECESSITY.</p>
-
-<p class="contents">The Difference between Ancient and Modern Systems of Education. &mdash; Plato Blinded by
-Half-truths. &mdash; No place in the present order of things for Dogmatisms. &mdash; Education begins
-at Birth. &mdash; The Influence of Women extends from the Cradle to the Grave. &mdash; The Crime of
-Crimes. &mdash; Neglect to educate Woman. &mdash; The Superiority of Women over Men as
-Teachers. &mdash; Froebel discovered it. &mdash; Nature designed Woman to Teach; hence the Importance
-of Fitting her for her Highest Destiny.<span class="righttext"><a href="#Page123">123</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="chapter">CHAPTER XIII.<br />THE MORAL EFFECT OF MANUAL TRAINING.</p>
-
-<p class="contents">Mental Impulses are often Vicious; but the Exertion of Physical Power in the Arts is always
-Beneficent &mdash; hence Manual Training tends to correct vicious mental Impulses. &mdash; Every
-mental Impression produces a moral Effect. &mdash; All Training is Moral as well as
-Mental. &mdash; Selfishness is total Depravity; but Selfishness has been Deified under the name of
-Prudence. &mdash; Napoleon an Example of Selfishness. &mdash; The End of Selfishness is Disaster;
-but Prevailing Systems of Education promote Selfishness. &mdash; The Modern City an Illustration of
-Selfishness. &mdash; The Ancient City. &mdash; Existing Systems of Education Negatively
-Wrong. &mdash; Manual Training supplies the lacking Element. &mdash; The Objective must take the
-Place of the Subjective in Education. &mdash; Words without Acts are as dead as Faith without
-Works.<span class="righttext"><a href="#Page130">130</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="chapter">CHAPTER XIV.<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexix">[xix]</span><br />THE MIND AND THE HAND.</p>
-
-<p class="contents">The Mind and the Hand are Allies; the Mind speculates, the Hand tests its Speculations in
-Things. &mdash; The Hand explodes the Errors of the Mind &mdash; it searches after Truth and finds
-it in Things. &mdash; Mental Errors are subtile; they elude us, but the False in Things stands
-self-exposed. &mdash; The Hand is the Mind’s Moral Rudder. &mdash; The Organ of Touch the most
-Wonderful of the Senses; all the Others are Passive; it alone is Active. &mdash; Sir Charles Bell’s Discovery of
-a “Muscular Sense.” &mdash; Dr. Henry Maudsley on the Muscular Sense. &mdash; The Hand influences
-the Brain. &mdash; Connected Thought impossible without Language, and Language dependent upon Objects; and all
-Artificial Objects are the Work of the Hand. &mdash; Progress is therefore the Imprint of the Hand upon Matter
-in Art. &mdash; The Hand is nearer the Brain than are the Eye and the Ear. &mdash; The Marvellous
-Works of the Hand.<span class="righttext"><a href="#Page144">144</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="chapter">CHAPTER XV.<br />THE POWER OF THE TRAINED HAND.</p>
-
-<p class="contents">The Legend of Adam and the Stick with which he subdued the Animals. &mdash; The Stick is the
-Symbol of Power, and only the Hand can wield it. &mdash; The Hand imprisons Steam and Electricity, and keeps them
-at hard Labor. &mdash; The Destitution of England Two Hundred and Fifty Years ago: a Pen
-Picture. &mdash; The Transformation wrought by the Hand: a Pen Picture. &mdash; It is due, not to Men
-who make Laws, but to Men who make Things. &mdash; The Scientist and the Inventor are the World’s
-Benefactors. &mdash; A Parallel between the Right Honorable William E. Gladstone and Sir Henry
-Bessemer. &mdash; Mr. Gladstone a Man of Ideas, Mr. Bessemer a Man of Deeds. &mdash; The Value of
-the latter’s Inventions. &mdash; Mr. Gladstone represents the Old Education, Mr. Bessemer the
-New.<span class="righttext"><a href="#Page157">157</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="chapter">CHAPTER XVI.<br />THE INVENTORS, CIVIL ENGINEERS, AND MECHANICS OF ENGLAND, AND ENGLISH PROGRESS.</p>
-
-<p class="contents">A Trade is better than a Profession. &mdash; The Railway, Telegraph, and Steamship are more
-Potent than the Lawyer, Doctor, and Priest. &mdash; Book-makers writing the Lives of the Inventors of last
-Century. &mdash; The Workshop to be the Scene of the Greatest Triumphs of Man. &mdash; The Civil
-Engineers of England the Heroes of English Progress. &mdash; <span class="pagenum" id="Pagexx">[xx]</span>The
-Life of James Brindley, the Canal-maker; his Struggles and Poverty. &mdash; The Roll of
-Honor. &mdash; Mr. Gladstone’s Significant Admission that English Triumphs in Science and Art were won without
-Government Aid. &mdash; Disregarding the Common-sense of the Savage, Legislators have chosen to learn of Plato,
-who declared that “The Useful Arts are Degrading.” &mdash; How Improvements in the Arts have been met by Ignorant
-Opposition. &mdash; The Power wielded by the Mechanic.<span class="righttext"><a href="#Page170">170</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="chapter">CHAPTER XVII.<br />POWER OF STEAM AND CONTEMPT OF ARTISANS.</p>
-
-<p class="contents">A few Million People now wield twice as much Industrial Power as all the People on the Globe exerted a
-Hundred Years ago. &mdash; A Revolution wrought, not by the Schools and Colleges, but by the
-Mechanic. &mdash; The Union between Science and Art prevented by the Speculative Philosophy of the Middle
-Ages. &mdash; Statesmen, Lawyers, Littérateurs, Poets, and Artists more highly esteemed than Civil Engineers,
-Mechanics, and Artisans. &mdash; The Refugee Artisan a Power in England, the Refugee Politician
-worthless. &mdash; Prejudice against the Artisan Class shown by Mr. Galton in his Work on “Hereditary
-Genius.” &mdash; The Influence of Slavery: it has lasted Thousands of Years, and still Survives.
-<span class="righttext"><a href="#Page184">184</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="chapter">CHAPTER XVIII.<br />AUTOMATIC CONTRASTED WITH SCIENTIFIC EDUCATION.</p>
-
-<p class="contents">The Past tyrannizes over the Present by Interposing the Stolid Resistance of Habit. &mdash;
-Habits of Thought like Habits of the Body become Automatic. &mdash; There is much Freedom of Speech but very
-little Freedom of Thought: Habit, Tradition, and Reverence for Antiquity forbid it. &mdash; The Schools educate
-Automatically. &mdash; A glaring Defect of the Schools shown by Mr. John S. Clark, of Boston. &mdash;
-The Automatic Character of the Popular System of Education shown by the Quincy (Mass.) Experiment. &mdash;
-Several Intelligent Opinions to the same Effect. &mdash; The Public Schools as an Industrial Agency a
-Failure. &mdash; A Conclusive Evidence of the Automatic and Superficial Character of prevailing Methods of
-Education in the Schools of a large City. &mdash; The Views of Colonel Francis W. Parker. &mdash;
-Scientific Education is found in the Kindergarten and the Manual-training School. &mdash; “The Cultivation of
-Familiarity betwixt the Mind and Things.”<span class="righttext"><a href="#Page191">191</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="chapter">CHAPTER XIX.<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexxi">[xxi]</span><br />AUTOMATIC CONTRASTED WITH SCIENTIFIC
-EDUCATION &mdash; <i>Continued.</i></p>
-
-<p class="contents">The Failure of Education in America shown by Statistics of Railway and Mercantile Disasters.
-&mdash; Shrinkage of Railway Values and Failures of Merchants. &mdash; Only Three per Cent. of those
-entering Mercantile Life achieve Success. &mdash; Business Enterprises conducted by Guess: Cause, Unscientific
-Education. &mdash; Savage Training is better because Objective. &mdash; Mr. Foley, late of the
-Massachusetts Institute of Technology, on the Scientific Character of Manual Education &mdash; Prof. Goss, of
-Purdue University, to the same Effect &mdash; also Dr. Belfield, of the Chicago Manual-training School.
-&mdash; Students love the Laboratory Exercises. &mdash; Demoralizing Effect of Unscientific Training.
-&mdash; The Failure of Justice and Legislation as contrasted with the Success of Civil Engineering and
-Architecture.<span class="righttext"><a href="#Page210">210</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="chapter">CHAPTER XX.<br />AUTOMATIC CONTRASTED WITH SCIENTIFIC EDUCATION &mdash; <i>Continued.</i></p>
-
-<p class="contents">The Training of the Merchant, the Lawyer, the Judge, and the Legislator contrasted with that of the
-Artisan. &mdash; The Training of the Merchant makes him Selfish, and Selfishness breeds Dishonesty. &mdash;
-Professional Men become Speculative Philosophers, and test their Speculations by Consciousness. &mdash;
-The Artisan forgets Self in the Study of Things. &mdash; The Search after Truth. &mdash; The Story
-of Palissy. &mdash; The Hero is the Normal Man; those who Marvel at his Acts are abnormally Developed.
-&mdash; Savonarola and John Brown. &mdash; The New England System of Education contrasted with that of the
-South. &mdash; American Statesmanship &mdash; its Failure in an Educational Point of
-View. &mdash; Why the State Provides for Education; to protect Property. &mdash; The British
-Government and the Land Question. &mdash; The Thoroughness of the Training given by Schools of Mechanic Art and
-Institutes of Technology as shown in Things. &mdash; Story of the Emperor of Germany and the
-Needle-maker. &mdash; The Iron Bridge lasts a Century, the Act of the Legislator wears out in a
-Year. &mdash; The Cause of the Failures of Justice and Legislation. &mdash; The best Act is the Act
-that Repeals a Law; but the Act of the Inventor is never Repealed. &mdash; Things the Source and Issue of Ideas;
-hence the Necessity of Training in the Arts.<span class="righttext"><a href="#Page229">229</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="chapter">CHAPTER XXI.<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexxii">[xxii]</span><br />EDUCATION AND THE SOCIAL
-PROBLEM &mdash; HISTORIC.<br /><i>EGYPT AND GREECE.</i></p>
-
-<p class="contents">Fundamental Propositions. &mdash; Selfishness the Source of Social Evil; Subjective Education
-the Source of Selfishness and the Cause of Contempt of Labor; and Social Disintegration the Result of Contempt of Labor and
-the Useful Arts. &mdash; The First Class-distinction &mdash; the Strongest Man ruled; his First
-Rival, the Ingenious Man. &mdash; Superstition. &mdash; The Castes of India and
-Egypt &mdash; how came they about? &mdash; Egyptian Education based on Selfishness. &mdash;
-Rise of Egypt &mdash; her Career; her Fall; Analysis thereof. &mdash; She Typifies all the
-Early Nations: Force and Rapacity above, Chains and Slavery below. &mdash; Their Education consisted of Selfish
-Maxims for the Government of the Many by the Few, and Government meant the Appropriation of the Products of Labor.
-&mdash; Analysis of Greek Character &mdash; its Savage Characteristics. &mdash; Greek
-Treachery and Cruelty. &mdash; Greek Venality. &mdash; Her Orators accepted
-Bribes. &mdash; Responsibility of Greek Education and Philosophy for the Ruin of Greek
-Civilization. &mdash; Rectitude wholly left out of her Scheme of Education. &mdash; Plato’s Contempt
-of Matter: it led to Contempt of Man and all his Works. &mdash; Greek Education consisted of Rhetoric and Logic;
-all Useful Things were hence held in Contempt.<span class="righttext"><a href="#Page247">247</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="chapter">CHAPTER XXII.<br />EDUCATION AND THE SOCIAL PROBLEM &mdash; HISTORIC.<br /><i>ROME.</i></p>
-
-<p class="contents">Vigor of the Early Romans &mdash; their Virtues and Vices; their Rigorous Laws; their
-Defective Education; their Contempt of Labor. &mdash; Slavery: its Horrors and Brutalizing
-Influence. &mdash; Education Confined to the Arts of Politics and War; it transformed Courage into Cruelty, and
-Fortitude into Stoicism. &mdash; Robbery and Bribery. &mdash; The Vices of Greece and Carthage
-imported into Rome. &mdash; Slaves construct all the great Public Works; they Revolt, and the Legions Slaughter
-them. &mdash; The Gothic Invasion. &mdash; Rome Falls. &mdash; False Philosophy and
-Superficial Education promoted Selfishness. &mdash; Deification of Abstractions, and Scorn of Men and
-Things. &mdash; Universal Moral Degradation. &mdash; Neglect of Honest Men and Promotion of
-Demagogues. &mdash; The Decline of Morals and Growth of Literature. &mdash; Darwin’s Law of
-Reversion, through Selfishness to Savagery. &mdash; Contest between the Rich and the Poor. &mdash;
-Logic, Rhetoric, and Ruin.<span class="righttext"><a href="#Page263">263</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="chapter">CHAPTER XXIII.<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexxiii">[xxiii]</span><br />EDUCATION AND THE SOCIAL
-PROBLEM &mdash; HISTORIC.<br /><i>THE MIDDLE AGES.</i></p>
-
-<p class="contents">The Trinity upon which Civilization Rests: Justice, the Arts, and Labor; and these Depend upon Scientific
-Education. &mdash; Reason of the Failure of Theodoric and Charlemagne to Reconstruct the Pagan
-Civilization. &mdash; Contempt of Man. &mdash; Serfdom. &mdash; The Vices of the Time:
-False Philosophy, an Odious Social Caste, and Ignorance. &mdash; The Splendid Career of the Moors in Spain, in
-Contrast. &mdash; Effect upon Spain of the Expulsion of the Moors. &mdash; The Repressive Force of
-Authority and the Atrocious Philosophy of Contempt of Man. &mdash; The Rule of Italy &mdash; a
-Menace and a Sneer. &mdash; The work of Regeneration. &mdash; The Crusades. &mdash; The
-Destruction of Feudalism. &mdash; The Invention of Printing. &mdash; The Discovery of America.
-&mdash; Investigation. &mdash; Discoveries in Science and Art.<span class="righttext"><a href="#Page278">278</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="chapter">CHAPTER XXIV.<br />EDUCATION AND THE SOCIAL PROBLEM &mdash; HISTORIC.<br /><i>EUROPE.</i></p>
-
-<p class="contents">The Standing Army a Legacy of Evil from the Middle Ages. &mdash; It is the Controlling
-Feature of the European Situation. &mdash; Its Collateral Evils: Wars and Debts. &mdash; The Debts
-of Europe Represent a Series of Colossal Crimes against the People; with the Armies and Navies they Absorb the Bulk of the
-Annual Revenue. &mdash; The People Fleeing from them. &mdash; They Threaten Bankruptcy; they Prevent
-Education. &mdash; Germany, the best-educated Nation in Europe, losing most by Emigration. &mdash;
-Her People will not Endure the Standing Army. &mdash; The Folly of the European International Policy of Hate.
-&mdash; It is Possible for Europe to Restore to Productive Employments 3,000,000 of men, to place at the
-Disposal of her Educators $700,000,000, instead of $70,000,000 per annum, and to pay her National Debts in Fifty-four Years,
-simply by the Disbandment of her Armies and Navies. &mdash; The Armament of Europe Stands in the Way of Universal
-Education and of Universal Industrial Prosperity. &mdash; Standing Armies the Last Analysis of Selfishness; they
-are Coeval with the Revival during the Middle Ages of the Greco-Roman Subjective Methods of Education. &mdash;
-They must go out when the New Education comes in.<span class="righttext"><a href="#Page289">289</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="chapter">CHAPTER XXV.<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexxiv">[xxiv]</span><br />EDUCATION AND THE SOCIAL
-PROBLEM &mdash; HISTORIC.<br /><i>AMERICA.</i></p>
-
-<p class="contents">An Old Civilization in a New Country. &mdash; Old Methods in a New System of
-Schools. &mdash; Sordid Views of Education. &mdash; The highest Aim Money-getting. &mdash;
-Herbert Spencer on the English Schools. &mdash; Same Defects in the American Schools. &mdash;
-Maxims of Selfishness. &mdash; The Cultivation of Avarice. &mdash; Political Incongruities.
-&mdash; Negroes escaping from Slavery called Fugitives from Justice. &mdash; The Results of Subjective
-Educational Processes. &mdash; Climatic Influences alone saved America from becoming a Slave Empire. &mdash;
-Illiteracy. &mdash; Abnormal Growth of Cities. &mdash; Failure of Justice. &mdash;
-Defects of Education shown in Reckless and Corrupt Legislation. &mdash; Waste of an Empire of Public
-Land. &mdash; Henry D. Lloyd’s History of Congressional Land Grants. &mdash; The Growth and Power of
-Corporations. &mdash; The Origin of large Fortunes, Speculations. &mdash; Old Social Forces producing
-old Social Evils. &mdash; Still America is the Hope of the World. &mdash; The Right of Suffrage in
-the United States justifies the Sentiment of Patriotism. &mdash; Let Suffrage be made Intelligent and Virtuous,
-and all Social Evils will yield to it; and all the Wealth of the Country is subject to the Draft of the Ballot for
-Education. &mdash; The Hope of Social Reform depends upon a complete Educational Revolution.
-<span class="righttext"><a href="#Page307">307</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="chapter">CHAPTER XXVI.<br />THE MANUAL ELEMENT IN EDUCATION IN 1884.</p>
-
-<p class="contents">The Kindergarten and the Manual-training School one in Principle. &mdash; Russia solved the
-Problem of Tool Instruction by Laboratory Processes. &mdash; The Initiatory Step by M. Victor Della-Vos, Director
-of the Imperial Technical School of Moscow in 1868. &mdash; Statement of Director Della-Vos as to the Origin,
-Progress, and Results of the New System of Training. &mdash; Its Introduction into all the Technical Schools of
-Russia. &mdash; Dr. John D. Runkle, President of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, recommends the
-Russian System in 1876, and it is adopted. &mdash; Statement of Dr. Runkle as to how he was led to the adoption
-of the Russian System. &mdash; Dr. Woodward, of Washington University, St. Louis, Mo., establishes the second
-School in this Country. &mdash; His Historical Note in the Prospectus of 1882-83. &mdash; First Class
-graduated 1883. &mdash; Manual Training in the Agricultural Colleges. &mdash; In Boston, in New Haven,
-in Baltimore, in San Francisco, and other places. &mdash; Manual Training at the Meeting of the National
-Educational Association, 1884. &mdash; Kindergarten and<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexxv">[xxv]</span>
-Manual-training Exhibits. &mdash; Prof. Felix Adler’s School in New York City &mdash; the most
-Comprehensive School in the World. &mdash; The Chicago Manual-training School the first Independent Institution
-of the Kind &mdash; its Inception; its Incorporation; its Opening. Its Director, Dr. Belfield. &mdash;
-His Inaugural Address. &mdash; Manual Training in the Public Schools of Philadelphia. &mdash;
-Manual Training in twenty-four States. &mdash; Revolutionizing a Texas College. &mdash; Local
-Option Law in Massachusetts. &mdash; Department of Domestic Economy in the Iowa Agricultural College.
-&mdash; Manual Training in Tennessee, in the University of Michigan, in the National Educational Association, in
-Ohio. &mdash; The Toledo School for both Sexes. &mdash; The Importance of the Education of Woman.
-&mdash; The Slöjd Schools of Europe.<span class="righttext"><a href="#Page328">328</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="chapter">CHAPTER XXVII.<br />PROGRESS OF THE NEW EDUCATION &mdash; 1883-1899.</p>
-
-<p class="contents">Educational Revolution in 1883-4. &mdash; Urgent Demand for Reform. &mdash;
-Existing Schools denounced as Superficial, their Methods as Automatic, their System as a Mixture of Cram and Smatter.
-&mdash; The Controversy between the School-master of the Old Régime and the Reformer. &mdash; The Leaders
-of the Movement, Col. Parker, Dr. MacAlister, and others &mdash; followers of Rousseau, Bacon, and Spencer.
-&mdash; “The End of Man is an Action, not a Thought.” &mdash; The Conservative Teachers fall into
-Line. &mdash; The New Education becomes an Aggressive Force pushing on to Victory. &mdash; The
-Physical Progress of Manual Training &mdash; its Quality not equal to its Extent. &mdash; The New
-System of Training confided to Teachers of the Old Régime. &mdash; Ideal Teachers hard to find. &mdash;
-Teachers willing to Learn should be Encouraged. &mdash; The effects of Manual Training long antedate its
-Introduction to the Schools. &mdash; Bacon’s Definition of Education. &mdash; Stephenson and the
-Value of Hand-work. &mdash; Manual Training is the union of Thought and Action. &mdash; It is the
-antithesis of the Greek methods, which exalted Abstractions and debased Things. &mdash; The Rule of Comenius and
-the Injunction of Rousseau &mdash; few Teachers comprehend them. &mdash; The Employment of the Hands
-in the Arts is more highly Educative than the acquisition of the rules of Reading and Arithmetic. &mdash; What
-the Locomotive has accomplished for Man. &mdash; Education must be equal, and Social and Political Equality will
-follow. &mdash; The foundation of the New Education is the Baconian Philosophy as stated by Macaulay.
-&mdash; Use and Service are the Twin-ministers of Human Progress. &mdash; Definitions of Genius.
-&mdash; Attention. &mdash; Sir Henry Maine. &mdash; Manual Training relates to all the Arts of
-Life. &mdash; Mind and Hand. &mdash; Newton and the Apple. &mdash; The Sense of Touch
-resides in the Hand. &mdash; Robert Seidel on Familiarity with Objects. &mdash; Material Progress
-the basis of Spiritual Growth. &mdash; Plato and the<span class="pagenum" id="Pagexxvi">[xxvi]</span> Divine
-Dialogues. &mdash; Poverty, Society, and the Useful Arts. &mdash; Selfishness must give way to
-Altruism. &mdash; The Struggle of Life. &mdash; The Progress of the Arts and the final Regeneration
-of the Race. &mdash; The Arts that make Life sweet and beautiful. &mdash; The final Fundamental
-Educational Ideal is Universality. &mdash; Comenius’s definition of Schools &mdash; the Workshops of
-Humanity. &mdash; That one Man should die ignorant, who had capacity for Knowledge, is a Tragedy. &mdash;
-Mental and Manual Exercises to be rendered homogeneous in the School of the Future. &mdash; The hero of
-the Ideal School.<span class="righttext"><a href="#Page370">370</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="appind">APPENDIX<span class="righttext"><a href="#Page387">387</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="appind">INDEX<span class="righttext"><a href="#Page427">427</a></span></p>
-
-</div><!--toc-->
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Pagexxvii">[xxvii-<br />xxviii]
-<a id="Pagexxviii"></a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak frontmatter">ILLUSTRATIONS.</h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<table class="tocloi" summary="LoI">
-
-<tr>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="pagno fsize70">PAGE</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="image"><span class="smcap">Portrait of the Author</span></td>
-<td class="pagno"><i><a href="#Frontis">Frontispiece</a></i></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="image"><span class="smcap">The Laboratory of Carpentry</span></td>
-<td class="pagno"><a href="#Page23">23</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="image"><span class="smcap">Course in the Laboratory of Carpentry</span></td>
-<td class="pagno"><a href="#Page27">27</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="image"><span class="smcap">The Wood-turning Laboratory</span></td>
-<td class="pagno"><a href="#Page31">31</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="image"><span class="smcap">Course in the Wood-turning and Pattern Laboratory</span></td>
-<td class="pagno"><a href="#Page41">41</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="image"><span class="smcap">The Founding Laboratory</span></td>
-<td class="pagno"><a href="#Page49">49</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="image"><span class="smcap">Course in the Founding Laboratory</span></td>
-<td class="pagno"><a href="#Page53">53</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="image"><span class="smcap">The Forging Laboratory</span></td>
-<td class="pagno"><a href="#Page59">59</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="image"><span class="smcap">Course in the Forging Laboratory</span></td>
-<td class="pagno"><a href="#Page67">67</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="image"><span class="smcap">The Machine-tool Laboratory</span></td>
-<td class="pagno"><a href="#Page79">79</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="image"><span class="smcap">The Chipping, Filing, and Fitting Laboratory</span></td>
-<td class="pagno"><a href="#Page89">89</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="image"><span class="smcap">Course in the Machine-tool Laboratory</span></td>
-<td class="pagno"><a href="#Page95">95</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="image"><span class="smcap">The Students with their Books</span></td>
-<td class="pagno"><a href="#Page107">107</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="image"><span class="smcap">M. Victor Della-Vos, the Founder of Manual Training in Russia</span></td>
-<td class="pagno"><a href="#Page329">329</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="image"><span class="smcap">Dr. John D. Runkle, the Founder of Manual Training in the United States</span></td>
-<td class="pagno"><a href="#Page335">335</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Pagexxix">[xxix]</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetrycontainer">
-
-<p class="center highline2">POWER.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="verse indent00">“<i>His tongue was framed to music,</i><br /></span>
-<span class="verse indent2"><i>And his hand was armed with skill;</i><br /></span>
-<span class="verse indent0"><i>His face was the mould of beauty,</i><br /></span>
-<span class="verse indent2"><i>And his heart the throne of will.</i>”<br /></span>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="poemcredit">&mdash;<span class="smcap">Emerson.</span></p>
-
-</div><!--poetrycontainer-->
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page1">[1]</span></p>
-
-<p class="fauxh1"><span class="fsize150"><span class="gesp2 ws5">MIND AND HAND</span>:</span><br />
-MANUAL TRAINING THE CHIEF FACTOR IN EDUCATION.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="chapno">CHAPTER I.</span><br />
-<span class="chapname">THE IDEAL SCHOOL.</span></h2>
-
-<p class="subjects">Its Situation. &mdash; Its Tall Chimney. &mdash; The Whir of Machinery and
-Sound of the Sledge-hammer. &mdash; The School that is to dignify
-Labor. &mdash; The Realization of the Dream of Bacon, Rousseau, Comenius,
-Pestalozzi, and Froebel. &mdash; The School that fitly represents
-the Age of Steel.</p></div>
-
-
-<p>The Ideal School is an institution which develops and
-trains to usefulness the moral, physical, and intellectual
-powers of man. It is what Comenius called Humanity’s
-workshop, and in America it is becoming the natural
-center of the Public School system. The building, well-designed
-for its occupancy, is large, airy, open to the light
-on every side, amply provided with all appliances requisite
-for instruction in the arts and sciences, and finished
-interiorly and exteriorly in the highest style of useful
-and beautiful architectural effects. The distinguishing
-characteristic of the Ideal School building is its chimney,
-which rises far above the roof, from whose tall stack
-a column of smoke issues, and the hum and whir of
-machinery is heard, and the heavy thud of the sledge-hammer
-resounding on the anvil, smites the ear.</p>
-
-<p>It is, then, a factory rather than a school?</p>
-
-<p>No. It is a school; the school of the future; the
-school that is to dignify labor; the school that is to<span class="pagenum" id="Page2">[2]</span>
-generate power; the school where every sound contributes
-to the harmony of development, where the brain
-informs the muscle, where thought directs every blow,
-where the mind, the eye, and the hand constitute an
-invincible triple alliance. This is the school that Locke
-dreamed of, that Bacon wished for, that Rousseau described,
-and that Comenius, Pestalozzi, and Froebel
-struggled in vain to establish.</p>
-
-<p>It is, then, science and the arts in apotheosis. For if
-it be, as claimed, the Ideal school, it is destined to lift
-the veil from the face of Nature, to reveal her most
-precious secrets, and to divert to man’s use all her
-treasures.</p>
-
-<p>Yes; it is to other schools what the diamond is to
-other precious stones&mdash;the last analysis of educational
-thought. It is the philosopher’s stone in education; the
-incarnated dream of the alchemist, which dissolved earth,
-air, and water into their original elements, and recombined
-them to compass man’s immortality. Through it
-that which has hitherto been impossible is to become a
-potential reality.</p>
-
-<p>In this building which resembles a factory or machine-shop
-an educational revolution is to be wrought. Education
-is to be rescued from the domination of mediæval
-ideas, relieved of the enervating influence of Grecian
-æstheticism, and confided to the scientific direction of
-the followers of Bacon, whose philosophy is common
-sense and its law, progress. The philosophy of Plato
-left in its wake a long line of abstract propositions,
-decayed civilizations, and ruined cities, while the philosophy
-of Bacon, in the language of Macaulay, “has lengthened
-life; mitigated pain; extinguished diseases;
-increased the fertility of the soil; given new securities<span class="pagenum" id="Page3">[3]</span>
-to the mariner; spanned great rivers and estuaries with
-bridges of form unknown to our fathers; guided the
-thunderbolt innocuously from heaven to earth; lighted
-up the night with the splendor of the day; extended
-the range of the human vision; multiplied the power of
-the human muscles; accelerated motion; annihilated
-distance; facilitated intercourse, correspondence, all
-friendly offices, all dispatch of business; enabled man
-to descend to the depths of the sea, to soar into the air,
-to penetrate securely into the noxious recesses of the
-earth, to traverse the land in cars which whirl along
-without horses, and the ocean in ships which run ten
-knots an hour against the wind.”</p>
-
-<p>It is this beneficent work of Bacon that the Ideal
-school is to continue&mdash;the work of demonstrating to the
-world that the most useful thing is the most beautiful
-thing&mdash;discarding Plato, the apostle of idle speculation,
-and exalting Bacon, the minister of use.</p>
-
-<p>In laying the foundations of education in labor it is dignified
-and education is ennobled. In such a union there
-is honor and strength, and long life to our institutions.
-For the permanence of the civil compact in this country,
-as in other countries, depends less upon a wide diffusion
-of unassimilated and undigested intelligence than upon
-such a thorough, practical education of the masses in the
-arts and sciences as shall enable them to secure, and
-qualify them to store up, a fair share of the aggregate
-produce of labor.</p>
-
-<p>If this school shall appear like a hive of industry, let
-the reader not be deceived. Its main purpose, intellectual
-development, is never lost sight of fora moment. It
-is founded on labor, which, being the most sacred of human
-functions, is the most useful of educational methods. It<span class="pagenum" id="Page4">[4]</span>
-is a system of object-teaching&mdash;teaching through things
-instead of through signs of things. It is the embodiment
-of Bacon’s aphorism&mdash;“Education is the cultivation
-of a just and legitimate familiarity betwixt the mind
-and things.” The students draw pictures of things, and
-then fashion them into things at the forge, the bench,
-and the turning-lathe; not mainly that they may enter
-machine-shops, and with greater facility make similar
-things, but that they may become stronger intellectually
-and morally; that they may attain a wider range of
-mental vision, a more varied power of expression, and so
-be better able to solve the problems of life when they
-shall enter upon the stage of practical activity.</p>
-
-<p>It is a theory of this school that in the processes of education
-the idea should never be isolated from the object
-it represents;<a href="#Endnote1" class="fnanchor" id="EndAnchor1">[E1]</a> (1) because the idea, being the reflex perception
-or shadow of the object, is less clearly defined than
-the object itself, and (2) because joining the object and
-the idea intensifies the impression. Separated from its
-object the idea is unreal, a phantasm. The object is the
-flesh, blood, bones, and nerves of the idea. Without its
-body the idea is as impotent as the jet of steam that rises
-from the surface of boiling water and loses itself in the air.
-But unite it to its object and it becomes the vital spark,
-the animating force, the Promethean fire. Thus steam
-converts the Corliss engine&mdash;a huge mass of lifeless iron&mdash;into
-a thing of grace, of beauty, and of resistless power.
-Suppose the teacher, for example, desires to convey to
-the mind of a child having no knowledge of form an
-impression of the shape of the earth; he says, “It is
-globular.” The child’s face expresses nothing because
-there is in its mind no conception of the object represented
-by the word globular. The teacher says, “It is a<span class="pagenum" id="Page5">[5]</span>
-sphere,” with no better success. He adds, “A sphere is
-a body bounded by a surface, every point of which is
-equally distant from a point within called the centre.”
-The child’s face is still expressionless. The teacher takes
-a handful of moist clay and moulds it into the form of a
-sphere, and exhibiting it, says, “The earth is like this.”
-The child claps its hands, utters a cry of delight, and
-exclaims, “It is round like a ball!”</p>
-
-<p>This is an illustration of the triumph of object-teaching,
-the method alike of the kindergarten and the manual
-training school. As the child is father of the man,
-so the kindergarten is father of the manual training
-school. The kindergarten comes first in the order of
-development, and leads logically to the manual training
-school. The same principle underlies both. In both it
-is sought to generate power by dealing with things in
-connection with ideas. Both have common methods of
-instruction, and they should be adapted to the whole
-period of school life, and applied to all schools.</p>
-
-<p>The Ideal school, most precisely representative of the
-present age&mdash;the age of science&mdash;is dedicated to a homogeneous
-system of mental and manual training, to the
-generation of power, to the development of true manhood.
-And above all, this school is destined to unite in
-indissoluble bonds science and art, and so to confer upon
-labor the highest and justest dignity&mdash;that of doing and
-responsibility. The reason of the degradation of labor
-was admirably stated by America’s most distinguished
-educational reformer, the late Mr. Horace Mann, who said,
-“The labor of the world has been performed by ignorant
-men, by classes doomed to ignorance from sire to son; by
-the bondmen and bondwomen of the Jews, by the helots
-of Sparta, by the captives who passed under the Roman<span class="pagenum" id="Page6">[6]</span>
-yoke, and by the villeins and serfs and slaves of more
-modern times.”</p>
-
-<p>When it shall have been demonstrated that the highest
-degree of education results from combining manual
-with intellectual training, the laborer will feel the pride
-of a genuine triumph; for the consciousness that every
-thought-impelled blow educates him, and so raises him
-in the scale of manhood, will nerve his arm, and fire his
-brain with hope and courage.</p>
-
-<hr class="footnote" />
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Endnote1"><span class="label"><a href="#EndAnchor1">[E1]</a></span>
-“And the attempt to convey scientific conceptions without the
-appeal to observation, which can alone give such conceptions firmness
-and reality, appears to me to be in direct antagonism to the
-fundamental principles of scientific education.”&mdash;“Physiography,”
-[Preface], p. vii. By T. H. Huxley, F.R.S. New York: D. Appleton
-&amp; Co., 1878.</p>
-
-<p>This theory is the antithesis of that of Plato, namely; “that the simplest
-and purest way of examining things, is to pursue every particular
-by thought alone, without offering to support our meditation by
-seeing or backing our reasonings by any other corporal sense.”&mdash;Plato’s
-“Divine Dialogues,” p. 180. London: S. Cornish &amp; Co., 1839.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page7">[7]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="chapno">CHAPTER II.</span><br />
-<span class="chapname">THE MAJESTY OF TOOLS.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="subjects">Tools the Highest Text-books. &mdash; How to Use them the Test of
-Scholarship. &mdash; They are the Gauge of Civilization. &mdash; Carlyle’s Apostrophe
-to them. &mdash; The Typical Hand-tools. &mdash; The Automata of the
-Machine-shop. &mdash; Through Tools Science and Art are United. &mdash; The
-Power of Tools. &mdash; Their Educational Value. &mdash; Without Tools Man
-is Nothing; with Tools he is All. &mdash; It is through the Arts alone
-that Education touches Human Life.</p>
-
-<p>Sacred to the majesty of tools might be appropriately
-inscribed over the entrance to this Ideal school; for its
-highest text-books are tools, and how to use them most
-intelligently is the test of scholarship. To realize the
-potency of tools it is only necessary to contrast the two
-states of man&mdash;the one without tools, the other with
-tools. See him in the first state, naked, shivering with
-cold, now hiding away from the beasts in caves, and now,
-famished and despairing, gaunt and hollow-eyed, creeping
-stealthily like a panther upon his prey. Then see
-him in the poetic, graphic apostrophe of Carlyle:&mdash;“Man
-is a tool-using animal. He can use tools, can
-devise tools; with these the granite mountains melt
-into light dust before him; he kneads iron as if it were
-soft paste; seas are his smooth highway, winds and fire his
-unwearying steeds. Nowhere do you find him without
-tools; without tools he is nothing, with tools he is all!”</p>
-
-<p>What a picture of the influence of tools upon civilization!
-It is through the use of tools that man has<span class="pagenum" id="Page8">[8]</span>
-reached the place of absolute supremacy among animals.
-As he increases his stock of tools he recedes from the
-state of savagery. The great gulf between the aboriginal
-savage and the civilized man is spanned by the seven
-hand-tools&mdash;the axe, the saw, the plane, the hammer, the
-square, the chisel, and the file. These are the universal
-tools of the arts, and the modern machine-shop is an
-aggregation of them rendered automatic and driven by
-steam.</p>
-
-<p>The ancients constructed automata which were exceedingly
-ingenious. In the statues that could walk and
-talk, the Chinese puppets and the marionettes of the
-Greeks there was a hint of the modern automatic tools,
-which, driven by steam, fashion with equal accuracy the
-delicate parts of the watch and the huge segments of the
-marine engine. The ancients knew more of science than
-of art. They were familiar with the power of steam,
-but knew not how to apply it to the wants of man.
-They knew that steam would turn a spit, but they had
-not a sufficient knowledge of art to convert the power
-they had discovered into a monster of force, and train it
-to bear the burdens of commerce. They never thought
-to apply the jet of steam used to turn a spit to great
-automatic machines, and to fit into them saws and files,
-and needles and drills, and gimlets and planes, and compel
-them to do the work of thousands of men. But this
-is precisely what the modern mechanic has accomplished.
-In making a slave of steam, science and art
-have combined to free mankind.</p>
-
-<p>We marvel at the dulness of the ancients as shown in
-their failure to utilize in the useful arts the discoveries
-of science. That they should have studied the stars over
-their heads to the neglect of the earth under their feet is<span class="pagenum" id="Page9">[9]</span>
-incomprehensible to the modern mind. But will not future
-generations marvel at us? Is it not an astounding
-fact that, with a knowledge of the tremendous influence
-of tools upon the destiny of the human race so graphically
-depicted by Carlyle, the nations have been so slow
-in incorporating tool-practice into educational methods?
-The distinguishing features of modern civilization sprang
-as definitively from cunningly devised and skilfully handled
-tools as any effect from its cause. And yet the
-world’s statesmen have failed to discover the value of
-tool-practice as an educational agency. The face of the
-globe has been transformed by the union of art and
-science, but the world’s statesmen have not discerned the
-importance of uniting them in the curriculum of the
-schools. If the ancients could see us as we see them,
-they would doubtless laugh at us as we laugh at them.</p>
-
-<p>We might take a lesson from the savage. He is taught
-to fight, to hunt, and to fish, and in these arts the brain,
-the hand, and the eye are trained simultaneously. He is
-first given object-lessons, as the pupil of the kindergarten
-is taught. Then the tomahawk, the spear, and the bow
-and arrow are placed in his hands, and he fights for his
-life, or fishes or hunts for his dinner. The young Indian
-is taught all that it is necessary for him to know, and he
-is educated, practically, in the savage’s three workshops&mdash;the
-battle-field, the forest and plain, the sea and lake.
-Thus the young savage enters upon the duties of his life
-with an exact practical knowledge of them. He has not
-been taught a theory of fighting, he has used the weapons
-of warfare; he has not studied the arts of fishing and
-hunting, he has handled the spear and the bow and arrow,
-and their use is as familiar to him as the multiplication
-table is to the boy in the public school.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page10">[10]</span></p>
-
-<p>We have more and better tools than the savage possesses.
-With the aid of science and art we harness steam
-to our chariot and compel it to draw us whither we will.
-We steal fire from the clouds and make it serve us as
-a messenger. We imprison the air, and with it stop the
-flying railway train; with the aid of science and art we
-reduce the most subtile forces of nature to servitude.
-But we neither teach our youth how to master their
-elements nor how to use them.</p>
-
-<p>Tools represent the steps of human progress&mdash;in architecture,
-from the mud hut to the modern mansion; in
-agriculture, from the pointed stick used to tear the turf
-to a thousand and one ingenious instruments of husbandry;
-in ship-building, from the rudderless, sailless boat to
-the ocean steamer; in fabrics, from the matted fleece of
-the shepherd to the varied products of countless looms;
-in pottery, from the first rude Egyptian cup to the exquisite
-vase of the Sevres factory. And so of every art
-that contributes to the comfort and pleasure of man; the
-development of each has been accomplished by tools in the
-hands of the laborer.</p>
-
-<p>Since, then, man owes so much to labor, he has doubtless
-educated the laborer and showered honors upon
-him (?). On the contrary, the labor of the world has been
-performed by the most ignorant classes, by bondmen, by
-helots and captives, by serfs and slaves. The laborer has
-been held in such contempt, and been so debased by ignorance,
-that he has often violently protested against improvements
-in the tools of the trades, and with vandal
-hands destroyed the mill, the factory, and the forge erected
-to ameliorate his condition. At the top of the social
-scale the sage has studied the stars and invented systems
-of abstract philosophy; at the bottom ignorance has deified<span class="pagenum" id="Page11">[11]</span>
-itself and starved. This divorce of science from art
-has resulted in such incongruities as the Pyramids of
-Egypt and periodical famines; as the hanging gardens
-of Babylon and the horrors of Jewish captivity; as the
-Greek Parthenon and dwellings without chimneys; as
-the statues of Phidias and Praxiteles, and royal banquets
-without knives, forks, or spoons; as the Roman Forum
-and the Roman populace crying for bread and circuses;
-as Socrates, Plato, Seneca and Aurelius, and Caligula,
-Claudius, Nero and Domitian.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand the union of science with art tunnels
-the mountain, bridges the river, dams the torrent,
-and converts the wilderness into a fruitful field.</p>
-
-<p>Science discovers and art appropriates and utilizes;
-and as science is helpless without the aid of art, so art is
-dead without the help of tools. Tools then constitute
-the great civilizing agency of the world; for civilization
-is the art of rendering life agreeable. The savage may
-own a continent, but if he possesses only the savage’s
-tools&mdash;the spear and the bow and arrow&mdash;he will be
-ill-fed, ill-housed, ill-clothed, and poorly protected both
-against cold and heat. He might be familiar with all
-the known sciences, but if he were ignorant of the arts
-his state, instead of being improved, would be rendered
-more deplorable; for with the thoughts, emotions, sensibilities,
-and aspirations of a sage he would still be powerless
-to steal from heaven a single spark of fire with
-which to warm his miserable hut.</p>
-
-<p>In the light of this analysis Carlyle’s rhapsody on tools
-becomes a prosaic fact, and his conclusion&mdash;that man without
-tools is nothing, with tools all&mdash;points the way to the
-discovery of the philosopher’s stone in education. For
-if man without tools is nothing, to be unable to use tools<span class="pagenum" id="Page12">[12]</span>
-is to be destitute of power; and if with tools he is all,
-to be able to use tools is to be all-powerful. And this
-power in the concrete, the power to do some useful thing
-for man&mdash;this is the last analysis of educational truth.</p>
-
-<p>There is no better definition of education than that of
-Pestalozzi&mdash;“the generation of power.” But what kind
-of power? Not merely power to think abstractly, to
-speculate, to moralize, to philosophize, but power to act
-intelligently. And the power to act intelligently involves
-the exertion, in greater or less degree, of all the
-powers, both mental and physical. Education, then, is
-the development of all the powers of man to the culminating
-point of action. What kind of action? Action
-in art. What is art? “The power of doing something
-not taught by nature or instinct; power or skill in the
-use of knowledge; the practical application of the rules
-or principles of science.” Again we have the last analysis
-of education&mdash;“skill in the use of knowledge; the
-application of the rules or principles of science.” And
-this is tool practice.</p>
-
-<p>It is unnecessary, in an educational view, to divide
-the arts by the employment of the terms “useful” and
-“fine;” for the fine arts can only exist legitimately
-where the useful arts have paved the way. In a harmonious
-development the artist will enter on the heels
-of the artisan. Art is cosmopolitan. It is not less
-worthily represented by the carpenter with his square,
-saw, and plane, and the smith with his sledge, than by the
-sculptor with his mallet and chisel, and the painter with
-his easel and brush; both classes contribute to the comfort
-and pleasure of man; for comfort is enhanced by
-pleasure, and pleasure is intensified by comfort. It follows
-that the ultimate object of education is the attainment<span class="pagenum" id="Page13">[13]</span>
-of skill in the arts. To this end the speculations
-and investigations of philosophy and the experiments of
-chemistry lead. At the door of the study of the philosopher
-and of the laboratory of the chemist stands the
-artisan, listening for the newest hint that philosophy can
-impart, waiting for the result of the latest chemical analysis.
-In his hands these suggestions take form; through
-his skilful manipulation the faint indications of science
-become real things, suited to the exigencies of human life.</p>
-
-<p>It is the most astounding fact of history that education
-has been confined to abstractions. The schools have
-taught history, mathematics, language and literature, and
-the sciences, to the utter exclusion of the arts, notwithstanding
-the obvious fact that it is through the arts alone
-that other branches of learning touch human life. As
-Bacon has so aptly expressed it, “The real and legitimate
-goal of the sciences is the endowment of human life with
-new inventions and riches.” In a word, public education
-stops at the exact point where it should begin to apply
-the theories it has imparted. At this point the school
-of mental and manual training combined&mdash;the Ideal
-School&mdash;begins; not only books but tools are put into the
-hands of the pupil, with this injunction of Comenius;
-“Let those things that have to be done be learned by
-doing them.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page14">[14]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="chapno">CHAPTER III.</span><br />
-<span class="chapname">THE ENGINE-ROOM.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="subjects">The Corliss Engine. &mdash; A Thing of Grace and Power. &mdash; The Growth
-of Two Thousand Years. &mdash; From Hero to Watt. &mdash; Its Duty as a
-School-master. &mdash; The Interdependence of the Ages. &mdash; The School
-in Epitome.</p>
-
-<p>Let us enter the Ideal School building and take a
-bird’s-eye view of the visible processes of the new education.</p>
-
-<p>The first object that attracts attention is the engine.
-It is a “Corliss,” fifty-two horse-power, and makes that
-peculiar kind of noise which conveys to the mind of the
-observer an impression of restrained power. When the
-student, upon entering the school, is shown this beautiful
-machine he is told that it, like all other inventions, is a
-growth&mdash;the growth of at least two thousand years; that
-the power of steam was known to the ancients&mdash;the
-Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans; that Hero, a philosopher
-of Alexandria, invented a crude steam-engine before
-the beginning of the Christian era, and that the engine
-before us, which throbs and trembles under the pressure
-of its battery of steel boilers in doing duty as a school-master,
-is the latest development of Hero’s conception.
-The educational idea underlying this fact is the interdependence
-of the ages; each generation is a link between
-the past and the future. “To show,” as Philarète
-Chasles says, “that man can only act efficiently by association
-with others, it has been ordained that each inventor
-shall only interpret the first word of the problem
-he sets himself to solve, and that every great idea shall<span class="pagenum" id="Page15">[15]</span>
-be the <i>résumé</i> of the past at the same time that it is the
-germ of the future.”</p>
-
-<p>The first word of the solution of the steam-power
-problem came from Hero down the ages, through Decans,
-Papin, Savory, Newcomen, Breighton, and Smeaton,
-to Watt. To Watt is awarded the honor of the
-invention of the modern steam-engine; but the first conception
-of his engine was derived from an atmospheric
-machine through the accident of it having been placed
-in his hands for repairs. Smeaton was the inventor of
-that atmospheric engine, and his mind was one of the
-links in the chain of intelligences extending back to
-Egypt, through whose united agency the steam-engine
-became a real thing of power in the cunning hands of
-James Watt, of whom the late Dr. Draper said, “He
-conferred on his native country more solid benefits than
-all the treaties she ever made and all the battles she ever
-won.” This law governing great achievements is full of
-encouragement to the student of mechanics, for while
-the thought of compassing any great discovery or invention
-may well appall even the boldest, the most humble
-may hope through studious industry to contribute something
-to the sum of human knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>The engine-room of our school is neater than that of
-the ordinary machine-shop, but the furnace roars like
-any other, its open mouth shows a bank of glowing coals,
-and the “stoker,” with grimy hands, wipes the sweat
-from his sooty brow. The whole school is here seen in
-epitome: the “stoker” typifies the student toiling at
-the forge, and in the polished engine, exhibiting both
-grace and power in its automatic action, we see the student’s
-graduating project, a machine, the joint creation
-of brain, eye, and hand.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page16">[16]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="chapno">CHAPTER IV.</span><br />
-<span class="chapname">THE DRAWING-ROOM.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="subjects">Twenty-four Boys bending over the Drawing-board. &mdash; Analysis and
-Synthesis in Drawing. &mdash; Geometric Drawing. &mdash; Pictorial Drawing. &mdash; The
-Principles of Design. &mdash; The Æsthetic in Art. &mdash; The Fundamentals. &mdash; Object
-and Constructive Drawing. &mdash; Drawing for the
-Exercises in the Laboratories. &mdash; The Educational Value of Drawing. &mdash; The
-Language of Drawing. &mdash; Every Student an expert
-Draughtsman at the end of the Course.</p>
-
-<p>Passing from the engine-room we enter the room assigned
-to drawing,&mdash;the first step in art education&mdash;where
-twenty-four boys are bending over the drawing-board,
-pencil in hand. Every school-day for three years
-these boys will spend an hour in this room. Each division
-of drawing&mdash;free-hand and mechanical&mdash;is thoroughly
-taught. Every graduate of the institution will
-be an expert draughtsman. The room is very still, only
-the scratching sound of twenty-four pencils is heard.
-The instructor moves about among the students, with
-here and there a hint, a suggestion, a correction, or a
-word of commendation&mdash;“good.”</p>
-
-<p>Drawing is the representation on paper of the facts,
-and the appearance to the eye of forms. The exercise
-proceeds by both analysis and synthesis. A cube is divided
-into all the geometric figures of which it is susceptible,
-and these figures are imitated with the pencil on
-paper. Then the figures are reunited, and the cube is
-similarly imitated. As the child in the kindergarten is
-taught several fundamental geometric facts through the<span class="pagenum" id="Page17">[17]</span>
-use of variously subdivided cubes, so the student of
-drawing is taught by a similar process how to represent
-these fundamental facts on paper. For example (1), the
-student is taught to draw the following (sketches <a href="#Ref1">1, 2,
-and 3</a>) geometric forms
-of the square, oblong,
-and circle; (2) he is
-taught (sketches <a href="#Ref2">4, 5, 6,
-and 7</a>) to represent the
-facts of the oblong block and cylinder; (3) these facts
-are expressed as follows (sketches <a href="#Ref3">8 and 9</a>) in working
-drawings. Sketches 8 and 9 are such drawings as would
-be placed in the hands of a mechanic as plans for the
-manufacture of the solids they represent;
-and the most elaborate working
-drawings for building and mechanical
-purposes are merely the complete development
-of this division of the art.</p>
-
-<div class="container w30em">
-
-<img src="images/illo048a.png" alt="Sketch" id="Ref1" />
-
-<img src="images/illo048b.png" alt="Sketch" id="Ref2" />
-
-<img src="images/illo048c.png" alt="Sketch" id="Ref3" />
-
-<img src="images/illo048d.png" alt="Sketch" id="Ref4" />
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p>Another division of drawing consists
-in the representation of solids
-or objects as they appear to the eye or pictorially. The
-oblong block and cylinder, for example,
-appear to the eye very differently
-from their facts represented in the
-working drawings (<a href="#Ref3">sketches 8 and 9</a>),
-as thus&mdash;(sketches <a href="#Ref4">10 and 11</a>).</p>
-
-<p>The development of this division of drawing leads to
-general pictorial representation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page18">[18]</span></p>
-
-<p>Finally the mastery of the art of drawing involves a
-study of the principles of design as applied to industrial
-articles with the purpose of enhancing their value, as designs
-for wall-paper, carpets, embroideries, tapestry, textiles
-generally, and decorative work in wood. This is
-the æsthetic element in the art which appeals to and develops
-the student’s taste. It is an important feature of
-drawing, not less on this account than from the fact that
-the designer’s profession is a very lucrative one, but it is
-less important than object and constructive drawing, because
-less fundamental. Besides, object and constructive
-work in drawing come first in the order of development,
-and it is an inexorable rule of the new education to follow
-implicitly the hints of nature.</p>
-
-<p>The basis of the art of drawing is geometry, and its
-<i>a</i>, <i>b</i>, <i>c</i> consists in a knowledge of certain geometrical
-lines, curves, and angles. This knowledge is gained
-from examples on the black-board which are reproduced
-on paper. But to relieve the student of this school
-from the tedium of reproducing, hundreds of times in
-succession, the same lines, angles, and curves, object-drawing
-is introduced very early in the course; and to render
-the exercise more attractive, as well as to impress it
-more firmly upon the mind, the objects drawn during the
-day are made features of the construction lesson in the
-carpenter’s laboratory, the wood or iron turning laboratory,
-or the laboratory of founding on the following day.
-At first the objects selected for this exercise are of a very
-simple character, as a piece of plain moulding&mdash;a piece of
-elaborate moulding; parts of a drawing-board&mdash;an entire
-drawing-board; parts of a table or desk&mdash;an entire table
-or desk; parts of a draughtsman’s stool&mdash;an entire stool;
-parts of a chair&mdash;an entire chair.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page19">[19]</span></p>
-
-<p>As the student advances in the general course he advances
-in object and constructive drawing, from simple
-to complex forms. He draws, for example, various parts
-of the steam-heating apparatus, and from these draughts
-makes working drawings of patterns for moulding. These
-he works out in the Carpenter’s Laboratory, and thence
-takes them to the moulding-room, where they are used
-in the lesson given in moulding for casting. This method
-of instruction leads to a critical analysis of the entire interior
-of the school building. Each article is resolved
-into the original elements of its construction, and each
-element or part is first represented on paper, then expanded
-into working drawings, and then wrought out in
-wood and iron. Finally the student reaches the engine,
-every part of which is made the subject of exhaustive
-study; the facts of every part are represented on paper,
-working drawings of every part are made, and every part
-is reproduced in steel and iron in miniature, and, as a
-triumph of drawing, a representation on paper of the
-completed engine is produced.</p>
-
-<p>The value of drawing as an educational agency is simply
-incalculable. It is the first step in manual training.
-It brings the eye and the mind into relations of the
-closest intimacy, and makes the hand the organ of both.
-It trains and develops the sense of form and proportion,
-renders the eye accurate in observation, and the hand
-cunning in execution.</p>
-
-<p>The students are intent upon their work. The eye is
-busy acting as interpreter between the mind and the
-hand. Having conveyed the impression of an object to
-the mind, under its direction it now photographs the
-object on paper, and the hand obeying the will traces it
-out in lines. Thus the power is gained of multiplying<span class="pagenum" id="Page20">[20]</span>
-forms of things with the pencil as words are multiplied
-by types.</p>
-
-<p>Drawing is a language&mdash;the language in which art records
-the discoveries of science. It is not German, it is
-not French, it is not English&mdash;it is universal&mdash;common
-to all draughtsmen. The face of the student exhibits
-vivid flashes of intelligence as the picture reveals itself
-under his hand. Each line is a word, an angle completes
-the sentence; with a curve and a little delicate shading
-we have a paragraph. The picture begins to glow with
-thought. The student’s face flushes, his heart beats quick
-and his hand trembles. But he restrains himself, and
-adds more lines, more angles and curves, more shading,
-and the picture is complete. It stands out in bold relief,
-and looks like a real thing. If the student knows the story
-of the brazen statue of Albertus Magnus he half expects
-his picture of a locomotive to move. He listens for the
-sound of the hissing steam, and a smile lights up his face
-as the illusion vanishes. Presently he will take his drawing
-to the shop, and at the bench, the lathe, the anvil,
-and the forge, reproduce it in iron and steel, and actually
-vitalize it with steam.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page21">[21]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="chapno">CHAPTER V.</span><br />
-<span class="chapname">THE CARPENTER’S LABORATORY.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="subjects">The Natural History of the Pine-tree. &mdash; How it is Converted into
-Lumber, what it is Worth, and how it is Consumed. &mdash; Where the
-Students get Information. &mdash; Working Drawings of the Lesson. &mdash; Asking
-Questions. &mdash; The Instructor Executes the Lesson. &mdash; Instruction
-in the Use and Care of Tools. &mdash; Twenty-four Boys Making
-Things. &mdash; As Busy as Bees. &mdash; The Music of the Laboratory. &mdash; The
-Self-reliance of the Students.</p>
-
-<p>Passing from the Drawing-Room down a flight of
-stairs we enter the Carpenter’s Laboratory. Here we find
-twenty-four boys seated before a black-board. At their
-left stands the instructor with a piece of white pine in his
-hand. The piece of pine is the subject of his lecture.
-He frequently breaks the thread of his remarks to ask
-questions, and he is as frequently interrupted by questions
-from members of the class. The scene closely resembles
-an animated discussion, of which a desire to learn
-by asking questions is the chief characteristic. The discussion
-is about pine-trees and pine lumber. A pale-faced,
-city-bred boy rises to describe the pine-tree. He
-describes a fir-tree, such as may be seen in well-kept urban
-grounds and parks, and describes it in well-chosen,
-almost poetic phrase. The instructor shakes his head,
-but with a genial smile, and recognizes a boy whose face
-is tanned brown, and who rises at the nod and stands
-rather awkwardly as he speaks. He has seen the pine
-in its native wilds, and he describes quite graphically
-its long, bare trunk and slender limbs. But he says<span class="pagenum" id="Page22">[22]</span>
-nothing of its narrow, linear leaves, of a dark green color,
-nor of its woody cones, nor of the Æolian-harp-like sound
-of the wind in its branches. Why, the instructor wants
-to know, and he propounds a series of questions, the answers
-to which afford a brief sketch of the boy’s history.
-His father is a dealer in pine logs, and once this boy
-went with him into the pineries of Northern Michigan
-in mid-winter, when the landscape was white with snow,
-and there saw the huge trees sway back and forth under
-the woodman’s axe, saw them topple over, and heard the
-loud crash of their fall, saw them trimmed and sawed
-into mill-logs. He took no note of the woody cones, nor
-of the narrow leaves of the pine, nor did the sound of
-the wind in its branches make any impression upon his
-mind. He saw the pine as his father saw it, with the
-eyes of a lumberman. He learned just one thing, and
-learned it so well that he is able to tell the story of the
-pine-tree from the moment of its fall from the stump in
-the great forest to its arrival at the mill, and thence, cut
-into boards, planks, and timber, to the raft or schooner
-bound for Chicago.</p>
-
-<p>Then the different varieties of the pine-tree are enumerated,
-and the uses to which their woods are severally
-adapted mentioned. The countries which chiefly produce
-the pine-tree are named, and the climatic conditions
-most favorable to its growth briefly referred to. This
-discussion leads to the subject of commerce in pine lumber&mdash;quantity
-consumed, demand and supply, etc; and
-this in turn brings a boy to his feet with the statement
-that at the present rate of consumption the supply of
-pine in North America will be exhausted in fifty years.
-In answer to a question the boy says he read the statement
-in a newspaper. This leads to further inquiry as
-to the sources of information sought by the members of
-the class, whereupon it appears that fifteen boys have
-consulted the title “pine” in some encyclopedia with a
-view to the present lesson, and that eighteen boys have
-read the market report under the title “lumber” in a
-daily journal, in order to learn the value of white-pine
-boards. The value being stated by half a dozen boys,
-each member of the class computes the cost of the piece
-of pine in the hands of the teacher.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page23">[23]</span></p>
-
-<div class="container">
-<img src="images/illo054.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">THE LABORATORY OF CARPENTRY.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page24">[24-<br />25]
-<a id="Page25"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>Ten minutes having been consumed in the inquiry into
-the nature and value of the wood in which the lesson of
-the day is to be wrought, the instructor makes working
-drawings of the lesson on the black-board. It may consist
-of a plain joint, a mitre joint, a dove-tail joint, a
-tenon and mortise, or a frame involving all these, and
-more manipulations. In the few minutes devoted to this
-exercise any question that occurs to the mind of the student
-may be asked, and no impatience is manifested or
-felt if the questions are numerous and reiterated. But
-as a matter-of-fact very few questions are asked during
-the black-board exercise, because each student, having
-gone over every step of it in his drawing-class the day
-previous, is perfectly familiar with the subject.</p>
-
-<p>The instructor now quits the black-board for the bench,
-where, in the presence of the whole class, he executes the
-difficult parts of the lesson, still propounding and answering
-questions. If a new tool is brought into requisition,
-instruction is given in its care and use. Now the boys
-repair to their benches, throw off their coats, and seize
-their tools. In a moment the silence and repose of the
-recitation-room are exchanged for the noise and activity
-of the laboratory. A quarter of an hour ago we left
-twenty-four boys, with bowed heads, making drawings of<span class="pagenum" id="Page26">[26]</span>
-things; for a quarter of an hour we have listened to a
-peculiar kind of recitation involving much practical knowledge
-on the subject of the pine-tree and its product, lumber;
-now we stand in the presence of twenty-four boys, in
-twenty-four different attitudes of labor, making things.
-They are literally as busy as bees, using the square, the
-saw, the plane, and the chisel; they are, as the journeyman
-carpenter would say, “getting out stuff for a job.”
-The coarse, buzzing sound of the cross-cut saw resounds
-loudly through the room; above this bass note the sharp
-tenor tone of the rip-saw is heard, and the rasping sound
-of half a dozen planes throwing off a series of curling
-pine ribbons comes in as a rude refrain. The faces of the
-boys are ruddy with the glow of exercise; the pale-faced
-boy who mistook a fir-tree for a pine will have his revenge
-on the angular boy from the Michigan pinery, for he is
-doing a finer piece of work than the other.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page27">[27]</span></p>
-
-<div class="container">
-<img src="images/illo058.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">COURSE IN THE LABORATORY OF CARPENTRY.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page28">[28-<br />29]
-<a id="Page29"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>In the midst of the harmonious confusion caused by the
-use of saws, planes, mallets, and chisels, the instructor raps
-on his desk, and silence is restored; three or four boys
-stand in a group about the instructor’s desk, the others
-pause and wipe the perspiration from their brows. It is
-a picture full of interest&mdash;twenty-four boys, with flushed,
-eager faces, lifting their eyes simultaneously to the face of
-the instructor, waiting for the hint which is to come, and
-which is sure in these now active minds to result in a
-prompt solution of the main problem of the day’s lesson.
-A similar question from several boys shows the instructor
-that the lesson has not been made clear; hence the
-general explanation which follows the call to order. So
-the work goes on, with now and then an interruption.
-There is a student trying to fit a tenon into its mortise;
-he is nervous and impatient; the instructor observes him,
-foresees a catastrophe, and moves towards his bench. But
-it is too late! The tenon being forced the mortise splits,
-and the discomforted student makes a wry face. The instructor
-approaches with a word of good cheer, but with
-the warning aphorism that “haste makes waste.” The
-student’s face flushes, and he chronicles his failure as
-Huntsman, the inventor of cast-steel, did his, by burying
-the wreck under a pile of shavings, and commencing, as
-the lawyers say, <i>de novo</i>. Thus the lesson proceeds “by
-the usual laboratory methods employed in teaching the
-sciences;” the class learns the thing to be done by doing
-it. The students are at their best, because the lesson
-to be learned compels a close union between the three
-great powers of man&mdash;observation, reflection, and action.
-No student seeks aid from another, because such a course
-would be impossible without the knowledge of the whole
-class. A feeling of self-reliance is thus developed, the
-disposition to shirk repressed, and a sense of sturdy independence
-encouraged and promoted.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page30">[30]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="chapno">CHAPTER VI.</span><br />
-<span class="chapname">THE WOOD-TURNING LABORATORY.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="subjects">A Radical Change. &mdash; From the Square to the Circle; from Angles
-to Spherical, Cylindrical, and Eccentric Forms. &mdash; The Rhythm of
-Mechanics. &mdash; The Potter’s Wheel of the Ancients and the Turning-lathe. &mdash; The
-Speculation of Holtzapffels on its Origin. &mdash; The Greeks
-as Turners. &mdash; The Turners of the Middle Ages. &mdash; George III. at the
-Lathe. &mdash; Maudslay’s Slide-rest, and the Revolution it wrought. &mdash; The
-Natural History of Black-walnut. &mdash; The Practical Value of
-Imagination. &mdash; Disraeli’s Tribute to it; Sir Robert Peel’s Want of
-it. &mdash; The Laboratory animated by Steam. &mdash; The Boys at the Lathes. &mdash; Their
-Manly Bearing. &mdash; The Lesson.</p>
-
-<p>When the twenty-four boys of the Carpenter’s Laboratory
-have become expert in the use of the tools employed
-in carpentry they will be introduced to the Wood-turning
-Laboratory. The change is radical&mdash;from the square to
-the circle, from the prose to the poetry of mechanical
-manipulation. Carpentry is distinguished for its corners
-and angles, turnery for its spherical, cylindrical, and
-eccentric forms. In these forms Nature abounds and
-delights, and it is in these forms that the rhythm of
-mechanics exists. It is by the Turners that the arts are
-supplied with a thousand and one things of use and
-beauty. The machines, great and small, from the locomotive
-to the stocking-knitter&mdash;without which the work
-of the modern world could not be done&mdash;these wonderful
-contrivances, seemingly more cunning than the hand
-of man, owe their very existence to the turning-lathe.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page31">[31]</span></p>
-
-<div class="container">
-<img src="images/illo062.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">THE WOOD-TURNING LABORATORY.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page32">[32-<br />33]
-<a id="Page33"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>The skilled instructor in this department of the school
-loves to dwell upon the history of turning. Its origin is
-enveloped in the obscurity of early Egyptian traditions.
-It is the subject of one of the oldest myths, which runs
-thus: “Num, the directing spirit of the universe, and
-oldest of created beings, first exercised the potter’s art,
-moulding the human race on his wheel. Having made
-the heavens and the earth, and the air, and the sun and
-moon, he modelled man out of the dark Nilotic clay, and
-into his nostrils breathed the breath of life.”</p>
-
-<p>The Potter’s Wheel of the ancients contained the germ
-of the turning-lathe found in every modern machine-shop,
-whether for the manipulation of wood or iron. Holtzapffels
-has an ingenious speculation as to the origin of
-the invention of the lathe. In his elaborate work on
-“Turning and Mechanical Manipulation” he says,</p>
-
-<p>“It would appear probable that the origin of the lathe
-may be found in the revolution given to tools for piercing
-objects for ornament or use. At first it may be supposed
-that a spine or thorn from a tree, a splinter of
-bone or a tooth, was alone used and pressed into the
-work as we should use a brad-awl. The process would
-naturally be slow and unsuitable to hard materials, and
-this probably suggested to the primitive mechanic the
-idea of attaching a splinter of bone or flint to the end of
-a short piece of stick, rubbing which between the palms
-of his hands would give a rotary motion to the tool.”</p>
-
-<p>Of the steps of progress in invention, from the rude
-turning-tools of the ancients down to the beginning of
-the present century, when Maudslay’s improvement made
-the lathe the king of the machine-shop, little is known.
-By the Greeks the invention of turning was ascribed to
-Dædalus. Phidias, who produced the two great masterpieces
-of Greek art, Athene and Jupiter Olympius, was<span class="pagenum" id="Page34">[34]</span>
-familiar with the then existing system of wood-turning.
-In cutting figures on signets and gems in such stones as
-agate, carnelian, chalcedony, and amethyst, the Greek
-artificers used the wheel and the style. In the abundant
-ornamentation of Roman dwellings&mdash;their elaborately
-carved chairs, tables, bedsteads, sofas, and stools&mdash;there
-is ample evidence of a knowledge of the art of turning
-in wood. Improvements were made in turning-tools,
-and fine ornamental work was done by the artisans of
-the Middle Ages, to which the cathedrals and palaces
-of the time bear witness. Later, during the sixteenth
-and seventeenth centuries, turning became a fashionable
-amusement among the French nobility and gentry.
-Louis XVI. was an expert locksmith, and spent much
-of his royal time in that pursuit. The fashion extended
-to England. George III. is said to have been an expert
-wood-turner, to have been “learned in wheels and treadles,
-chucks and chisels;” and as a matter of course a pursuit
-indulged by kings was followed by many nobles.
-There is, however, no evidence that those distinguished
-amateurs made any improvements in the tools they used;
-inventions and discoveries in this as in all departments
-of art came from the other end of the social scale.
-When the Spaniards sacked Antwerp in 1585 the Flemish
-silk-weavers fled to England and set up their looms
-there; and a century later, upon the revocation of the
-Edict of Nantes, the silk industry of England received a
-new accession of refugee artisans consisting of persecuted
-Protestants. Doubtless with the Flemish weavers there
-crossed the British Channel representatives of all the
-useful arts, including that of turning; for in another
-hundred years England took the front rank among nations
-in nearly all industrial pursuits.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page35">[35]</span></p>
-
-<p>Among the great inventions and discoveries which distinguished
-the last quarter of the eighteenth century,
-Maudslay’s slide-rest attachment to the lathe was one of
-the greatest, if not the greatest. Without it Watt’s invention
-would have been of little more real service to
-mankind than the French automata of the first quarter of
-the same century&mdash;the mechanical peacock of Degennes,
-Vaucauson’s duck, or Maillardet’s conjurer. Mr. Samuel
-Smiles, in his admirable book on “Iron-workers and Tool-makers,”
-declares that this passion for automata, which
-gave rise to many highly ingenious devices, “had the
-effect of introducing among the higher order of artists
-habits of nice and accurate workmanship in executing
-delicate pieces of machinery.” And he adds, “The same
-combination of mechanical powers which made the steel
-spider crawl, the duck quack, or waved the tiny rod of
-the magician, contributed in future years to purposes of
-higher import&mdash;the wheels and pinions, which in these
-automata almost eluded the human senses by their minuteness,
-reappearing in modern times in the stupendous
-mechanism of our self-acting lathes, spinning-mules, and
-steam-engines.”</p>
-
-<p>That there was a logical connection between the two
-eras of mechanical contrivance&mdash;that of the ingenious
-automata and that of the useful modern machines&mdash;is
-extremely probable. That the refugee artisans from
-Antwerp and from France had a stimulating effect upon
-English invention and discovery there can be little doubt;
-and that the French automata, which were much written
-about, and exhibited as a triumph of mechanical genius,
-became known to and exercised an influence upon the
-minds of intelligent mechanics is equally probable. We
-are therefore surprised to find Mr. Smiles arriving at a<span class="pagenum" id="Page36">[36]</span>
-conclusion in such direct conflict with his general views
-of the gradual growth of inventions, namely, “that
-Maudslay’s invention was entirely independent of all
-that had gone before, and that he contrived it for the
-special purpose of overcoming the difficulties which he
-himself experienced in turning out duplicate parts in
-large numbers.”</p>
-
-<p>But however this may be, Mr. Maudslay’s invention
-revolutionized the workshop. Before its introduction
-the tool of the artisan was guided solely by muscular
-strength and the dexterity of the hand; the smallest variation
-in the pressure applied rendered the work imperfect.
-The slide-rest acting automatically changed all that. With
-it thousands of duplicates of the most ponderous, as well
-as the most minute pieces of machinery, are executed
-with the utmost precision. Without it the steam-engine,
-whether locomotive or stationary, would have been hardly
-more than a dream of genius; for the monster that is
-to be fed with steam can be properly constructed only by
-automatic steam-driven tools; or, as another has expressed
-it, “Steam-engines were never properly made until they
-made themselves.”</p>
-
-<p>Ten minutes are thus agreeably and profitably occupied
-by the instructor in a review of the history of a
-single invention, and its relations to the whole field of
-mechanical work.</p>
-
-<p>Another branch of the lesson consists of an inquiry into
-the natural history, qualities, value, and common uses of
-the wood which is to be the material of the day’s manipulation&mdash;black-walnut.
-Holding a piece of the purplish
-brown wood high in his hand the instructor discharges,
-as it were, a volley of questions at the class,
-“What is it called?” “Where is it found?” “How<span class="pagenum" id="Page37">[37]</span>
-large does the tree grow?” “For what is the wood
-chiefly used?” Up go a dozen hands. The owner of one
-of the hands is recognized, and he rises to tell all about
-it, but is only allowed to say “black-walnut.” The next
-speaker is permitted to say that “the black-walnut is
-found all over North America;” the next that it is more
-abundant west of the Alleghanies, and most abundant in
-the valley of the Mississippi; the next that in a forest
-it has a limbless trunk from thirty to fifty feet high,
-but in the “open” branches near the ground; the next
-that it is extensively used in house-finishing, in furniture,
-for all kinds of cabinet-work, and especially for
-gunstocks.</p>
-
-<p>Further inquiry elicits the information that the black-walnut
-is a quick-growing, large tree; that its wood is
-hard, fine-grained, durable, and susceptible of a high polish,
-and that through use and exposure it turns dark, and
-with great age becomes almost black. One student describes
-the leaves, another the fruit or nuts, and states
-that they are used in dyeing; a third states that the
-black-walnut is a great favorite for planting in the treeless
-tracts of the West, on account of its rapid growth
-and the value of its timber. When the subject appears
-to be nearly exhausted, a boy at the farther end of one of
-the forms rises timidly and tells the story of the late Mr.
-W. C. Bryant’s great black-walnut-tree at Roslyn, Long
-Island. He concludes, excitedly, “It is one hundred and
-seventy years old and twenty-five feet in circumference.”<a href="#Footnote1" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor1">[1]</a>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page38">[38]</span>
-The timid boy dwells upon his story of the “big” tree
-with evident fondness, and his eyes dilate with satisfaction
-as he resumes his seat. The circumstance of the
-great age no less than the enormous size of the tree has
-captivated his imagination. The discriminating instructor
-will not fail to note such incidents of the lesson. It
-is through them that the special aptitudes of students are
-disclosed. The instructor will always bear prominently
-in mind that the purpose of the school is not to make
-mechanics but men. Nor will he forget, as Buckle remarked,
-that Shakespeare preceded Newton. Buckle pays
-a glowing tribute to the usefulness of the imagination.
-He says, “Shakespeare and the poets sowed the seed which
-Newton and the philosophers reaped.... They drew
-attention to nature, and thus became the real founders of
-all natural science. They did even more than this. They
-first impregnated the mind of England with bold and
-lofty conceptions. They taught the men of their generation
-to crave after the unseen.”</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote1"><a href="#FNanchor1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a>
-“At Ellerslie, the birthplace of Wallace, exists an oak which
-is celebrated as having been a remarkable object in his time, and
-which can scarcely, therefore, be less than seven hundred years old.
-Near Staines there is a yew-tree older than Magna Charta (1215), and
-the yews at Fountains Abbey, in Yorkshire, are probably more than
-twelve hundred years old. Eight olive-trees still exist in the Garden
-of Olives at Jerusalem which are known to be at least eight hundred
-years old.”&mdash;“Vegetable Physiology.” By William B. Carpenter,
-M.D., F.R.S., F.G.S. London: Bell and Daldy. 1865. p. 78.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Disraeli, in his matchless biography of Lord George
-Bentinck, in summing up the character of a great English
-statesman is equally emphatic in praise of the imagination
-as a practical quality. He says,</p>
-
-<p>“Thus gifted and thus accomplished, Sir Robert Peel
-had a great deficiency&mdash;he was without imagination.
-Wanting imagination, he wanted prescience. No one
-was more sagacious when dealing with the circumstances
-before him; no one penetrated the present with more
-acuteness and accuracy. His judgment was faultless,<span class="pagenum" id="Page39">[39]</span>
-provided he had not to deal with the future. Thus it
-happened through his long career, that while he always
-was looked upon as the most prudent and safest of leaders,
-he ever, after a protracted display of admirable tactics,
-concluded his campaigns by surrendering at discretion.
-He was so adroit that he could prolong resistance
-even beyond its term, but so little foreseeing that often
-in the very triumph of his manœuvres he found himself
-in an untenable position.”</p>
-
-<p>The timid boy has imagination; if he has application
-and the logical faculty he may become an inventor, or he
-may become an artist&mdash;an engraver or a designer of works
-of art&mdash;or he may become a man of letters. To the man
-of vivid imagination and industry all avenues are open;
-Disraeli’s wonderful career offers a striking illustration
-of the truth of this proposition. The true purpose of
-education is the harmonious development of the whole
-being, and the purpose of this turning laboratory is to educate
-these twenty-four boys, not to make turners of them.</p>
-
-<p>The laboratory is a labyrinth of belts, large and small,
-of wheels, big and little, of pulleys and lathes. A student,
-at a word from the instructor, moves a lever a few
-inches, and the breath of life is breathed into the complicated
-mass of machinery. The throbbing heart of the
-engine far away sends the currents of its power along
-shafting and pulleys. The dull, monotonous whir of
-steam-driven machinery salutes the ear, and the twenty-four
-students take their places at the lathes. They are
-from fourteen to seventeen years of age, and range in
-height from undersize to “full-grown.” They look like
-little men. Their faces are grave, showing a sense of responsibility.
-They are to handle edge-tools on wood rapidly
-revolved by the power of steam. There is peril in an<span class="pagenum" id="Page40">[40]</span>
-uncautious step, and death lurks in the shafting. Of these
-dangers they have been repeatedly warned; and there is
-in their bearing that manifestation of wary coolness which
-we call “nerve,” and which in an emergency develops
-into a lofty heroism capable of sublime self-sacrifice.</p>
-
-<p>This is the very essence of education, its informing spirit.
-The student no longer thinks merely of becoming an
-expert turner; he thinks of becoming a man! All the
-powers of his mind are roused to vigorous action;
-imagination illumes the path, and reason, following
-with firm but cautious step, drives straight to the mark.
-Rapid development results from the combination of practice
-with theory&mdash;rapid because orderly, or natural. The
-knowledge acquired is at once assimilated, and becomes
-a mental resource, subject to draft like a bank account.
-But unlike a bank account it increases in the ratio of the
-frequency with which drafts are made upon it, and the
-result is the student leaves school at seventeen years of
-age with the reasoning experience of an ordinarily educated
-man of forty.</p>
-
-<p>The lesson has been announced by the instructor, its
-chief points stated and analyzed, its place in the scale (so
-to speak) of the art of turnery defined, its educational
-value to the mind, the hand, and the eye shown, and the
-points of difficulty involved so emphasized as to lead to
-painstaking care in the execution of crucial parts. The
-new tool required by the lesson is handled in presence of
-the waiting class by the instructor; the time of its invention
-stated; the name of its inventor given; the method
-of its manufacture described; and how to sharpen, take
-care of, and use it explained with such minuteness of detail
-as to insure the making of a permanent impression
-upon the minds of students.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page41">[41]</span></p>
-
-<div class="container">
-<img src="images/illo072.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">COURSE IN THE WOOD-TURNING AND PATTERN LABORATORY.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page42">[42-<br />43]
-<a id="Page43"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>The wood-turner’s case contains more than a hundred
-tools, perhaps a hundred and fifty, but not more than a
-score of them are fundamental; the others are subsidiary,
-and require very little if any explanation.</p>
-
-<p>The lesson may be one in simple turning, as a table-leg,
-the round of a chair, or parts of a section of a miniature
-garden-fence; or it may be a set of pulleys, or patterns
-for various forms of pipe. The pieces of wood to be
-wrought or manipulated lie at the feet of the student,
-and the working drawing (drawn by the student himself)
-lies on the bench before him. The piece of wood to be
-turned first is adjusted, the student touches a lever over
-his head which sets the lathe in motion, takes the required
-tool in hand, and the work begins. Guided by the automatic
-slide-rest, the sharp point of the tool chips away
-the revolving wood until it assumes the form of the
-drawing lying under the eye of the operator. Thus the
-lesson proceeds to the end of the prescribed period&mdash;two
-hours. The master watches every step of its progress.
-If a student is puzzled he receives prompt assistance, so
-that no time may be lost. Indeed the relations between
-instructor and students are such, or ought to be such, that
-the question is asked before the puzzled mind falls into a
-rut of profitless speculation through revolving in a circle.
-But if the true sequential method of study is followed
-the student rarely fails, from the vantage ground of a
-step securely taken, to comprehend the nature of the
-next step in the regular order of succession. This is the
-Russian system, and it is the method of the wood-turnery
-as well as of every department of the Manual Training
-School. Hence a certain tool having been mastered,
-the next tool in the regular order of succession is more
-easily understood, because (1) each tool contains a hint of<span class="pagenum" id="Page44">[44]</span>
-the nature of its successor, and (2) each addition to the
-student’s stock of knowledge confers an increased capability
-of comprehension.</p>
-
-<p>When the lesson is concluded the whir of the machinery
-ceases, and a great silence falls upon the class as the
-students assemble about the instructor, each presenting
-his piece of work. This is the moment of friendly criticism.
-The instructor handles each specimen, comments
-upon the character of the workmanship, points out its
-defects, and calls for criticisms from the class. These
-are freely given. There is an animated discussion, involving
-explanations on the part of the instructor of the
-various causes of defects, and suggestions as to suitable
-methods of amendment. Then the pieces of work are
-marked according to the various degrees of excellence
-they exhibit, and the class is dismissed.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page45">[45]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="chapno">CHAPTER VII.</span><br />
-<span class="chapname">THE FOUNDING LABORATORY.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="subjects">The Iron Age. &mdash; Iron the King of Metals. &mdash; Locke’s Apothegm. &mdash; The
-Moulder’s Art is Fundamental. &mdash; History of Founding. &mdash; Remains
-of Bronze Castings in Egypt, Greece, and Assyria. &mdash; Layard’s Discoveries. &mdash; The
-Greek Sculptors. &mdash; The Colossal Statue of Apollo
-at Rhodes. &mdash; The Great Bells of History. &mdash; Moulding and Casting
-a Pulley. &mdash; Description of the Process, Step by Step. &mdash; The Furnace
-Fire. &mdash; Pouring the Hot Metal into the Moulds. &mdash; A Pen Picture of
-the Laboratory. &mdash; Thus were the Hundred Gates of Babylon cast. &mdash; Neglect
-of the Useful Arts by Herodotus. &mdash; How Slavery has degraded
-Labor. &mdash; How Manual Training is to dignify it.</p>
-
-<p>As we enter the Founding Laboratory we recall Locke’s
-apothegm: “He who first made known the use of that
-contemptible mineral [iron] may be truly styled the father
-of arts and the author of plenty.” We reflect, too,
-that the mineral that has given its name to an age of the
-world&mdash;our age&mdash;is worthy of careful study.</p>
-
-<p>The Founding Laboratory, like all the laboratories of
-the school, is designed for twenty-four students. There
-are twenty-four moulding-benches, combined with troughs
-for sand, and a cupola furnace where from five hundred
-to one thousand pounds of iron may be melted.</p>
-
-<p>The students we lately parted from in the Wood-turning
-Laboratory are here. Their training has been confined
-to manipulations in wood; they are now to be made acquainted
-with iron&mdash;iron in considerable masses. They
-should know something, in outline, of the history of the
-king of metals in the Founding Laboratory. The instructor
-speaks familiarly to them, somewhat as follows:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page46">[46]</span></p>
-
-<p>The art of the founder is fundamental in its nature.
-The arts of founding and forging are, indeed, the essential
-preliminary steps which lead to the finer manipulations
-entering into all metal constructions. Whether
-forging preceded founding or founding forging is immaterial;
-both arts are as old as recorded history&mdash;much
-older indeed. Moulding, which is the first step in the
-founder’s art, should be among the oldest of human discoveries,
-since man had only to take in his hand a lump
-of moist clay to receive ocular evidence of his power to
-give it any desired form.</p>
-
-<p>Moulding for casting is closely allied to the potter’s
-art. The potter selects a clay suitable for the vessel he
-desires to mould, and the founder prepares a composition
-of sand and loam of the proper consistency to serve as a
-matrix for the vessel he desires to cast.</p>
-
-<p>The art of founding was doubtless first applied to
-bronze. The ruins of Egypt and Greece abound in the
-remains of bronze castings, an analysis of which reveals
-about the same relative proportions of tin and copper
-in use now for the best qualities of statuary bronze. The
-bronze castings of the Assyrians show a high degree of
-art. Many specimens of this fine work of the Assyrian
-founder have been rescued from the ruins of long-buried
-Nineveh&mdash;buried so long that Xenophon and his ten
-thousand Greeks marched over its site more than two
-thousand years ago without making any sign of a knowledge
-of its existence, and Alexander fought a great battle
-in its neighborhood in apparent ignorance of the fact
-that he trod on classic ground. But there, delving beneath
-the rubbish and decayed vegetation of four thousand
-years or more, Layard found great treasures of art
-in the palaces of Sennacherib and other Assyrian monarchs&mdash;vases,<span class="pagenum" id="Page47">[47]</span>
-jars, bronzes, glass-bottles, carved ivory and
-mother-of-pearl ornaments, engraved gems, bells, dishes,
-and ear-rings of exquisite workmanship, besides arms and
-a variety of tools of the practical arts.</p>
-
-<p>In Greece, in the time of Praxiteles, bronze was
-moulded into forms of rare beauty and grandeur. The
-colossal statue of Apollo at Rhodes affords an example
-of the magnitude of the Greek castings. It was cast in
-several parts, and was over one hundred feet high.
-About fifty years after its erection it was destroyed by
-an earthquake. Its fragments lay on the ground where
-it fell, nearly a thousand years; but when the Saracens
-gathered them together and sold them, there was a sufficient
-quantity to load a caravan consisting of nine hundred
-camels. One of the finest existing specimens of
-ancient bronze casting is that of a statue of Mercury discovered
-at Herculaneum, and now to be seen in the museum
-at Naples.</p>
-
-<p>During the era of church bells the founder exercised
-his art in casting bells of huge dimensions. Early in the
-fifteenth century a bell weighing about fifty tons was
-cast at Pekin, China. This bell still exists, is fourteen
-and a half feet in height and thirteen feet in diameter.
-But the greatest bell-founding feat was, however, that of
-1733, in casting the bell of Moscow. This bell is nineteen
-feet three inches in height and sixty feet nine inches in
-circumference, and weighs 443,772 pounds. The value of
-the metal entering into its construction is estimated at
-$300,000. It long lay in a pit in the midst of the Kremlin,
-but Czar Nicholas caused it to be raised, mounted
-upon a granite pedestal, and converted into a chapel.
-The methods of casting employed by the founder of
-this king of bells are not known. The bell has outlived<span class="pagenum" id="Page48">[48]</span>
-the Works where it was cast. The melting and handling
-of two hundred and twenty tons of bronze metal certainly
-required appointments, mechanical and otherwise, of
-the most stupendous character; and the existence of such
-Works presupposes an intimate acquaintance with the
-most minute details of the founder’s art, since the natural
-order of development is from the less to the greater.
-That is to say, the founder who could manipulate scores
-of tons of metal in a single great casting could doubtless
-manipulate a few pounds of metal; or, the founder who
-could cast a bell weighing two hundred and twenty tons,
-could cast pots and kettles and hundreds of other little
-useful things. What we hope to do in this school Founding
-Laboratory is to gain a correct conception of great
-things by making ourselves thoroughly familiar with
-many forms of little things in moulding and casting.</p>
-
-<p>The lesson of the day is the moulding and casting of a
-plain pulley. In the Pattern Laboratory each student has
-already executed a pattern of the pulley to be cast, and
-the pattern lies before him on his moulding-bench. Now
-the instructor, at the most conspicuous bench in the
-room, proceeds to execute the first part of the lesson,
-which consists of moulding. Taking from the trough a
-handful of sand, he explains that it is only by the use of
-sand possessing certain properties, as a degree of moisture,
-but not enough to vaporize when the metal is poured
-in, and a small admixture of clay, but not enough to
-make of the compound a loam, that the mould can be
-saved from ruin through vaporization, and, at the same
-time, given the essential quality of adhesiveness and plasticity.
-In the course of this explanation he remarks
-that the sand used in some parts of the mould is mixed
-with pulverized bituminous coal, coke, or plumbago, in
-order to give a smoother surface. Now he takes the
-“flask”&mdash;a wooden apparatus containing the sand in
-which the mould is made&mdash;and explains its construction
-and use. From this point&mdash;the sifting of facing sand on
-the turn-over board, to the final one of replacing the cope
-and securing it with keys or clamps&mdash;every step of the
-process is carefully gone through with and explained.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page49">[49]</span></p>
-
-<div class="container">
-<img src="images/illo080.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">THE FOUNDING LABORATORY.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page50">[50-<br />51]
-<a id="Page51"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>Meantime, before the moulding lesson has proceeded
-far, a fire is kindled in the furnace and it is “charged;”
-that is to say, filled with alternate layers of coal and pig-iron,
-with occasional fluxes of limestone. During the
-process of charging the furnace the instructor explains
-the principle of its construction, and shows how it operates.
-At every subsequent rest in moulding the students
-surround the furnace to witness the progress of the fire,
-the position of the layers of coal, and the state of combustion.
-They pass the furnace in procession, and each
-peeps in through the isinglass windows upon the glowing
-fire, asks a question, or a dozen questions, perhaps,
-and gives place to the next student in line. In the intervals
-of these visits to the furnace the work of making
-twenty-four moulds goes on under the eye of the
-instructor, the students explaining each step in advance.
-He is omnipresent, answering a question here, preventing
-a fatal mistake there, cheering, inspiring, and guiding
-the whole class, but never insisting upon a slavish adherence
-to strict identity in processes. And it is to be
-noted that there is in moulding more latitude for independence
-than in almost any other mechanical manipulation.
-Certain essentials there are, of course, but these
-being secured, the student may exercise his ingenuity in
-the execution of many minor details. That there is considerable
-individuality in the class may be seen by observation<span class="pagenum" id="Page52">[52]</span>
-of the different methods employed by the several
-young moulders to compass various details of the same
-general process.</p>
-
-<p>The moulds are nearly completed. The instructor
-assists a student who is found to be a little behind in his
-work, and interposes a warning against haste at the critical
-moment. Within a period of ten minutes the twenty-four
-patterns are “tapped,” loosened, and lifted from
-their beds, imperfections are carefully repaired with the
-trowel, or some other tool, channels to the pouring holes
-are cut in the surfaces, the pieces remaining in the copes
-are removed, the particles of loose sand are blown from
-the surfaces of the moulds, and the twenty-four copes
-are replaced, and secured in their correct positions with
-keys or clamps.</p>
-
-<p>A final visit is now made to the furnace. The fusion
-is found to be complete; the “pigs” are converted into
-a molten pool. It only remains to pour the hot metal
-into the moulds. The instructor seizes an iron ladle lined
-with clay, holds it under the spout of the furnace reservoir
-until it is nearly filled with the glowing fluid, lifts
-and carries it carefully across the room, and pours the
-contents into a mould. Then the students, in squads,
-after having been cautioned as to the deadly nature of
-the molten mass they are to handle, follow the example
-of their instructor. At this moment the laboratory appeals
-powerfully to the imagination. The picture it presents
-is weird in the extreme. From the open furnace
-door a stream of crimson light floods the room. The
-students wear paper caps and are bare-armed; their faces
-glow in the reflected glare of the furnace-fire; they march
-up to the furnace one by one, each receiving a ladleful
-of steaming hot metal, and countermarch to their benches,
-where they pour the contents of their ladles into the
-moulds.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page53">[53]</span></p>
-
-<div class="container">
-<img src="images/illo084.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">COURSE IN THE FOUNDING LABORATORY.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page54">[54-<br />55]
-<a id="Page55"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>Still holding his empty ladle in his hand, the instructor
-watches the progress of the lesson with keen interest
-until the last stream of metal has found its way into
-the throat of the last mould. He recalls the story of
-Vulcan, the God of Fire, and of all the arts and industries
-dependent upon it, and wonders why he was not
-depicted pouring tons of molten metal, in the foundery,
-rather than sledge in hand at the forge. Then he regards
-the class with a benignant expression of pride, begs for
-silence, and says, “Thus were the hundred brazen gates
-of ancient Babylon cast long before the beginning of
-the Christian era.” Herodotus did not think to tell us
-much of the state of the useful arts in the early time of
-which he wrote, but the brazen gates attracted his attention,
-and he described them: “At the end of each street
-a little gate is found in the wall along the river-side, in
-number equal to the streets, and they are all made of
-brass, and lead down to the edge of the river.” Could
-Herodotus have foreseen what a deep interest his readers
-of this remote time would take in the history of the useful
-arts, he would have written less about the walls, palaces,
-and temples of Babylon, and more about the artificers.
-He would have begged admission to the forges
-and founderies of the city; he would have visited the
-Assyrian founder at his work, questioned him about his
-processes, and set down his answers with painstaking
-care. Then he would have sought an introduction to
-the smithy, and from the grimy forger learned what he
-could tell of his art and of kindred arts. So the father
-of history might have made an enduring record of the
-real things which throughout all time have contributed<span class="pagenum" id="Page56">[56]</span>
-to the advancement of the human race, rather than of
-events growing out of the ambitions and passions of men&mdash;the
-rise and fall of kingdoms and empires, the varying
-fortune of battle, the treacheries, crimes, and brutalities
-of rulers, and the cringing submission of millions of subjects.
-But, alas, the founders and smiths, and all the
-other cunning artificers of the vast empire of Syria, were
-slaves! and through their ancestry for unnumbered generations
-the stigma of slavery had attached to labor.
-Ay, on the bare backs of the founders of Babylon’s brazen
-gates the popular scorn of labor had doubtless left its
-livid brand.</p>
-
-<p>With these pariahs of Assyrian society, these outcasts
-of the social circle, the great Greek historian could not
-even speak. Descended from a long line of noble Halicarnassian
-families, Herodotus felt all the prejudices of
-the hereditary aristocracy of his country. Hence he dilates
-upon the wonders of Babylon, but is silent as to its
-architects and artisans. He describes with great minuteness
-of detail the tower of Jupiter Belus, but gives no
-hint of the name of its designer and builder. He declares
-that Babylon was adorned in a manner surpassing
-any city of the time, but in regard to the artificers
-through whose ingenuity and skill such pleasing effects
-were produced he gives no sign.</p>
-
-<p>The silence of Herodotus on the subject of the useful
-arts in Babylon does not indicate a want of appreciation
-of their value, but merely shows contempt of the
-Assyrian artisan, and this not because he was an artisan,
-but because he was a slave. The story of Solon and
-Crœsus, which antedates Herodotus, whether true or a
-myth, shows that iron and artisanship were appreciated
-by both Greeks and barbarians. When Crœsus had<span class="pagenum" id="Page57">[57]</span>
-exhibited to the Greek sage his vast hoard of treasures,
-Solon said, “If another comes that hath better iron than
-you he will be master of all this gold.” Here is a recognition
-of the immense value of the arts of smelting and
-forging, coupled with a contemptuous silence regarding
-as well the smelter and the smith as the rank and file
-of the armies who should wield the swords and spears
-drawn by science from the recesses of the earth, and by
-art wrought and tempered at the forge. Through all
-the early ages the brand and scorn of slavery adhered to
-labor, while the arts, the products of labor, were often
-deified. Thus the Scythian, who from a grinning skull
-drank the warm blood of his captive, regarded with superstitious
-awe as a god the iron sword with which he cut
-off his captive’s head.</p>
-
-<p>It was only with the revival of learning, after the intellectual
-and moral gloom of the Dark Ages, that labor
-began slowly to lift its bowed head and assert itself.
-But it does not yet stand erect. It still stoops as if in
-the presence of a master. Every now and then it winces
-and cringes as if the sound of the descending lash smote
-its ear. It remains for you, students in this school of
-the arts&mdash;all the arts that make mankind good and great&mdash;it
-remains for you to brush away from the tear-stained
-face of labor all the shadows accumulated there through
-all the dead ages of oppression and slavery. It remains
-for you to make labor bold by making it intelligent. It
-remains for you to dignify and ennoble labor by bestowing
-upon it the ripest scientific and artistic culture, and
-devoting to its service the best energies of body and
-mind.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page58">[58]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="chapno">CHAPTER VIII.</span><br />
-<span class="chapname">THE FORGING LABORATORY.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="subjects">Twenty-four manly-looking Boys with Sledge-hammer in Hand &mdash; their
-Muscle and Brawn. &mdash; The Pride of Conscious Strength. &mdash; The
-Story of the Origin of an Empire. &mdash; The Greater Empire of
-Mechanics. &mdash; The Smelter and the Smith the Bulwark of the British
-Government. &mdash; Coal &mdash; its Modern Aspects; its Early History;
-Superstition regarding its Use. &mdash; Dud. Dudley utilizes “Pit-coal”
-for Smelting &mdash; the Story of his Struggles; his Imprisonment and
-Death. &mdash; The English People import their Pots and Kettles. &mdash; “The
-Blast is on and the Forge Fire sings.” &mdash; The Lesson, first on the
-Black-board, then in Red-hot Iron on the Anvil. &mdash; Striking out the
-Anvil Chorus &mdash; the Sparks fly whizzing through the Air. &mdash; The
-Mythological History of Iron. &mdash; The Smith in Feudal Times. &mdash; His
-Versatility. &mdash; History of Damascus Steel. &mdash; We should reverence
-the early Inventors. &mdash; The Useful Arts finer than the Fine Arts. &mdash; The
-Ancient Smelter and Smith, and the Students in the Manual
-Training School.</p>
-
-<p>This is the Forging Laboratory. It is only a few steps
-from the laboratory for founding, where we lately saw
-twenty-four students taking off their leather aprons after
-a two hours’ lesson in moulding and casting. Here we
-find, also, twenty-four students, but not the twenty-four
-we saw in the laboratory for founding. This class is
-more advanced. The boys are a trifle taller; they show
-more muscle, more strength, and bear themselves with a
-still more confident air.</p>
-
-<p>In the Forging Laboratory there are twenty-four forges
-with all essential accessories, as anvils, tubs, and sets of
-ordinary hand-tools.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page59">[59]</span></p>
-
-<div class="container">
-<img src="images/illo090.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">THE FORGING LABORATORY.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page60">[60-<br />61]
-<a id="Page61"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>The students, with coats off and sleeves rolled above
-their elbows, in pairs, as smith and helper, stand, sledge
-and tongs in hand, at twelve of the forges. They are
-manly-looking boys. Their feet are firmly planted, their
-bodies erect, their heads thrown a little back. Their
-arms show brawn; the muscles stand out in relief from
-the solid flesh. Their faces express the pride of conscious
-strength, and their eyes show animation.</p>
-
-<p>As we regard the class with a sympathetic thrill of
-satisfaction, the story of the origin of the Turkish Empire
-is recalled: “A race of slaves, living in the mountain
-regions of Asia, are employed by a powerful Khan
-to forge weapons for his use in war. A bold chief persuades
-them to use the weapons forged for a master to
-secure their own deliverance. For centuries after they
-had thus conquered their freedom, the Turkish people
-celebrated their liberation by an annual ceremony in
-which a piece of iron was heated in the fire, and a smith’s
-hammer successively handled by the prince and his nobles.”</p>
-
-<p>The greatest empire in the world to-day is the empire
-of the art of mechanism, and its most potent instrument
-is iron. Once the perpetuity of governments depended
-upon the mere possession of the dingy ore.
-When Elizabeth came to the throne, in the middle of
-the sixteenth century, England was almost defenceless,
-owing to the short supply of iron. Spain, much better
-equipped, hence relied confidently upon her ability to
-subdue the English. But the Virgin Queen, comprehending
-the nature of the crisis, imported iron from
-Sweden and encouraged the Sussex forges, and the Spanish
-Armada was defeated. Thus the smelter and the
-smith became the bulwark of the British government.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page62">[62]</span></p>
-
-<p>But at an earlier period the fraternity of smiths gave
-direction to the course of empire. The secret of the
-easy conquest of Britain by the Normans was their superior
-armor. They were clad in steel, and their horses
-were shod with iron. The chief farrier of William became
-an earl; and he was proud of his origin, for his coat
-of arms bore six horseshoes.</p>
-
-<p>Iron and civilization are terms of equivalent import.
-Iron is king, and the smelter and smith are his chief
-ministers. It is not known when, by whom, or how the
-art of smelting iron was discovered. As well ask by
-whom and how fire was discovered? These are secrets
-of the early morning of human life&mdash;of that time when
-man made no record of his struggles.</p>
-
-<p>In lieu of history the instructor resorts to tradition,
-repeating the following legend: “While men were patiently
-rubbing sticks to point them into arrows, a spark
-leapt forth and ignited the wood-dust which had been
-scraped from the sticks, and so fire was found.”</p>
-
-<p>Now the “helper” looks to his “blast” with keen interest;
-for the management of the forge-fire is one of
-the niceties of the smith’s art. He stirs the fire a little
-impatiently. The instructor heeds the act, but not the
-movement of impatience. On the contrary he seizes the
-occasion to introduce the subject of coal. Question follows
-question in rapid succession, and the answers are
-prompt and satisfactory, touching all modern aspects of
-the subject, namely, the magnitude of the annual “output,”
-the localities of heaviest production, the cost of
-mining; the uses, respectively, to which different qualities
-are applied, demand and supply, and market value
-or price. Here the instructor remarks that the mining,
-transportation, and sale of coal are conducted in this country<span class="pagenum" id="Page63">[63]</span>
-by a number of large corporations, with an aggregate
-capitalization and bonded indebtedness of six or seven
-hundred million dollars, and that through combinations
-between these corporations the price is often arbitrarily
-advanced. “But,” he concludes, “the discussion of
-that branch of the subject belongs more properly to the
-class in political economy.”</p>
-
-<p>The history of coal in its relation to iron smelting and
-manufacture forms a curious chapter in the vicissitudes
-of the useful arts. One hundred and fifty years ago
-not only all the smith’s fires but the smelter’s fires were
-kept up with charcoal. The forests of England were
-literally swept away, like chaff before the wind, to feed
-the yawning mouths of the iron mills. To make a ton
-of iron required the consumption of hundreds of cords
-of wood. To save the timber restrictive legislation was
-adopted, and the mills were gradually closed for want of
-fuel, until, in 1788, there was not one left in Sussex, and
-only a small number in the kingdom. Meantime the English
-iron supply came from Sweden, Spain, and Germany.
-England seemed to be following in the footsteps of the
-Roman Empire. The Romans accomplished in iron
-smelting and forging just what might be expected of
-a warlike people. They required iron for arms and
-armor, and in smelting skimmed the surface. This is
-proved by the cinder heaps, rich in ore, which they left
-in Britain. Archæologists trace the decline of Rome in
-her monuments, which show a steady deterioration in the
-soldier’s equipment. Alison attributes this decline to
-the exhaustion of her gold and silver mines. A far more
-plausible conjecture is found in the waste of timber in
-fuel for smelting purposes, and the resulting failure of
-the iron supply.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page64">[64]</span></p>
-
-<p>The fall of the Roman Empire may be accounted for
-by her neglect of the useful arts. The nation that
-converts all her iron into swords and spears shall surely
-perish. Had the city of Seven Hills possessed seven
-men of mechanical genius like Watt, Stephenson, Maudslay,
-Clement, Whitney, Neilson, and Nasmyth, her fall
-might have been averted, or if not averted, it need not
-have involved the practical extinction of civilization, thus
-imposing upon mankind the shame of the Dark Ages.</p>
-
-<p>At the beginning of the seventeenth century there was
-much ignorant prejudice against the use of mineral coal.
-It was believed to be injurious to health. All sorts of diseases
-were attributed to its supposed malignant influence,
-and at one time to burn it in dwellings was made a penal
-offence. But this prejudice did not extend to its use in
-smelting iron, and whatever there was of inventive genius
-was devoted to a solution of the problem of its adaptation
-to such purposes. Mr. Samuel Smiles has collected
-the names of the most prominent of these Dutch and
-German mechanics, namely, Sturtevant, Rovenzon, Jordens,
-Francke, and Sir Philibert Vernatt, and given each
-a niche in the temple of fame. Some of them had a true
-conception of the required processes, but they all failed
-to render the application practically available.</p>
-
-<p>It remained for Dud. Dudley to succeed in making a
-thoroughly practical application of mineral coal to iron-smelting
-purposes, and then curiously enough to fail of
-success in introducing it into general use. Dudley was
-born in 1599, in an iron-manufacturing district. His father
-owned iron-works near the town of Dudley, which
-was a collection of forges and workshops where “nails,
-horseshoes, keys, locks, and common agricultural tools”
-were made. Brought up in the neighborhood of “twenty<span class="pagenum" id="Page65">[65]</span>
-thousand smiths and workers in iron,” young Dudley
-“attained considerable knowledge of the various processes
-of manufacture.” At twenty years of age he was
-taken from college and placed in charge of a furnace and
-two forges in Worcestershire, where there was a scarcity
-of wood but an abundance of mineral coal. He began
-immediately to experiment, with a view to the substitution
-of the latter for the former, and in a year succeeded
-in demonstrating “the practicability of smelting iron
-with fuel made from pit-coal, which so many before him
-had tried in vain.” But the charcoal iron-masters combined
-to resist the new method because it cheapened the
-product. They instigated mobs to destroy Dudley’s furnaces
-one after another, as soon as they were completed,
-harassed him with lawsuits, and finally beggared and
-drove him to prison. Then they tried to wring his secret
-from him. To this attempt Cromwell, who was interested
-in furnaces in the Forest of Dean, is said to have
-been a party. But all these efforts failed, and Dudley
-died in 1684 carrying his secret with him to the grave,
-and there the secret slumbered nearly one hundred years.</p>
-
-<p>The story of Dud. Dudley, as told by Mr. Smiles in his
-“Iron-workers and Tool-makers,” is one of surpassing
-interest. It is worthy the careful perusal not only of
-every school-boy but of the philosophic student in search
-of the lessons of history, for it affords fresh evidence of
-the truth of the proposition that the progress of civilization
-depends upon progress in invention and discovery.</p>
-
-<p>Under the influence of ignorance, prejudice, and superstition
-the iron industry of England continued to decline
-until the beginning of the eighteenth century, when the
-British people imported their pots and kettles. Fifty
-years later, at the Coalbrookdale iron-works in Shropshire,<span class="pagenum" id="Page66">[66]</span>
-when the furnaces had consumed all the wood in the
-neighborhood and a fuel famine was imminent, smelting
-with mineral coal was successfully resumed, and in 1766
-two workmen of the “works”&mdash;the brothers Cranege&mdash;invented
-the reverberatory furnace, which added immensely
-to the application of coal to smelting purposes.</p>
-
-<p>But while we are discussing the history of coal we are
-consuming coal to little purpose, for the blast is on and
-the furnace fires glow like miniature volcanic craters.
-Let us to work. Before the black-board, chalk in hand,
-the instructor stands and gives out the lesson. He presents
-it in the form of drawings, complete and in detail.
-It may involve only the single process of “drawing,” or
-it may involve several processes, as “drawing,” “bending,”
-and “welding.” The first sketch, for example, represents
-a flat bar of iron, the counterpart of the bars resting
-against the several forges. The second sketch shows
-the bar wrought into the form of a cylinder. The third
-sketch shows it “drawn” or lengthened, and hence reduced
-in size. The fourth sketch presents two rods the
-united lengths of which equal the length of the original
-rod. The fifth sketch represents the two rods “bent”
-into the form of chain-links, and a sub-sketch shows the
-proper shape of the ends of the links for “welding.”
-The sixth sketch shows the two links joined and welded.</p>
-
-<p>The black-board illustrations may be omitted if the
-school is provided with a complete set of samples. The
-school of mechanic arts of the Massachusetts Institute of
-Technology has a hundred samples representing the successive
-steps in blacksmithing manipulation, including
-welding, and the welding samples consist of two parts,
-the first representing the details of the piece prepared
-for welding, and the second the welded piece. These
-samples are part of a collection of three hundred and
-twenty pieces of exquisite workmanship, covering every
-department of a complete manual training course, presented
-to the Institute in 1877 by the Emperor of Russia.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page67">[67]</span></p>
-
-<div class="container">
-<img src="images/illo098.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">COURSE IN THE FORGING LABORATORY.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page68">[68-<br />69]
-<a id="Page69"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>The black-board illustrations or the samples having
-been exhibited and explained as clearly as is possible in
-words, the instructor takes his place at one of the forges,
-and, surrounded by the class, goes through with the successive
-steps of any manipulation contained in the lesson
-which has not been actually wrought out in some previous
-lesson.</p>
-
-<p>If the manipulation is a simple one the silence is only
-broken by the sound of the blast and the stroke of the
-hammer&mdash;the students understand every turn of the iron
-and every blow struck by the instructor&mdash;but if the
-manipulation is complicated, involving a fresh principle,
-the instructor is saluted by a volley of questions, and he
-often pauses to answer them. It is the time for questions;
-the more questions now, the fewer questions when
-all the blasts shall be on, and all the sledges flying through
-the air and making music on the anvils. A question now
-may lead to the enlightenment of twenty-four students; a
-question later is sure to cost the time of twenty-four students,
-and the answer to it may enlighten only one student.</p>
-
-<p>At last the instructor drops the sledge, straightens up
-to his full height, and wipes the sweat from his brow.
-If the students respect the instructor they will respect
-labor, and they will respect the instructor if he is worthy
-of respect.</p>
-
-<p>Now the school-room is a smithy and yet it is not. It
-is neither very hot nor very smoky, for there is an exhaust
-fan in operation which vitalizes the circulation.
-But the atmosphere resounds with the clangorous strokes<span class="pagenum" id="Page70">[70]</span>
-of a dozen sledges, mingled with the sullen roar of as
-many forge-fires; and there are traces of soot on the
-walls, and pale smoke-wreaths creep along the ceilings,
-and hide in corners, and circle about columns in fantastic
-shapes. It is a smithy, but a smithy adapted, by its extraordinary
-neatness, to the manufacture of watch-springs,
-palate-arbors, and Damascus blades.</p>
-
-<p>The faces of the students are aglow with the flush of
-health-giving exercise; their brows are “wet with honest
-sweat,” their heart-beats are full and strong, and the
-crimson life-currents surge hotly through every vein to
-their very finger-tips. They strike out the anvil chorus
-in all the keys and in every measure of the scale, and
-the burning sparks fly whizzing through the air.</p>
-
-<p>At a sign from the instructor there is a pause. The
-students stand at ease and the work is inspected. This
-is the time for more questions if any student is in doubt;
-and the rest of five minutes affords opportunity for a
-brief lecture on the subject of the early history of the
-fraternity of smiths.</p>
-
-<p>Mythology gives the highest place in its pantheon to
-Vulcan, the God of Fire. For notwithstanding he is represented
-as bearded, covered with dust and soot, blowing
-the fires of his forges and surrounded by his chief ministers,
-the cyclops, he is given Venus to wife and made the
-father of Cupid. Among the Scythians the iron sword
-was a god. When Jerusalem was taken by the Babylonians
-they made captives of all the smiths and other
-craftsmen of the city&mdash;a more grievous act than the
-thousand million dollar tribute levied upon France by
-Germany at the close of the war of 1870. For to be deprived
-of the use of iron is to be relegated to a state of
-barbarism.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page71">[71]</span></p>
-
-<p>The vulgar accounted for the keenness of the first
-sword-blades on the score of magic, and the praises of
-the smiths who forged were sung with the chiefs of chivalry
-who wielded them. So highly was this mysterious
-power regarded by Tancred, the crusader, that in return
-for the present of King Arthur’s sword, Excalibar, by
-Richard I., he paid for it with “four great ships and fifteen
-galleys.”</p>
-
-<p>The smith was a mighty man in England in the early
-time. “In the royal court of Wales he sat in the great
-hall with the king and queen, and was entitled to a
-draught of every kind of liquor served.” His person
-was sacred; his calling placed him above the law. He
-was necessary to the feudal state; he forged swords
-“on the temper of which life, honor, and victory in battle
-depended.” The smith, after the Norman invasion,
-gained in importance in England. He was the chief
-man of the village, its oracle, and the most cunning workman
-of the time. His name descended to more families
-than that of any other profession&mdash;for the origin of the
-name Smith is the hot, dusty, smoky smithy, and however
-it may be disguised in the spelling, it is entitled to
-the proud distinction which its representatives sometimes
-seek to conceal.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Smiles draws the following graphic picture of the
-versatility of the smith of the Middle Ages:</p>
-
-<p>“The smith’s tools were of many sorts, but the chief
-were his hammer, pincers, chisel, tongs, and anvil. It is
-astonishing what a variety of articles he turned out of
-his smithy by the help of these rude implements. In
-the tooling, chasing, and consummate knowledge of the
-capabilities of iron he greatly surpassed the modern
-workman. The numerous exquisite specimens of his<span class="pagenum" id="Page72">[72]</span>
-handicraft which exist in our old gate-ways, church doors,
-altar railings, and ornamented dogs and andirons, still
-serve as types for continual reproduction. He was, indeed,
-the most ‘cunning workman’ of his time. But besides
-all this he was an engineer. If a road had to be
-made, or a stream embanked, or a trench dug, he was invariably
-called upon to provide the tools, and often to
-direct the work. He was also the military engineer of
-his day, and as late as the reign of Edward III. we find
-the king repeatedly sending for smiths from the Forest
-of Dean to act as engineers for the royal army at the
-siege of Berwick.”</p>
-
-<p>But the most signal triumph of the art, both of the
-smelter and the smith, is found in the famous swords of
-Damascus, whose edge and temper were so keen and perfect
-that they would sever a gauze veil floating in the
-air, or crash through bones and helmets without sustaining
-injury. These Damascus blades, long renowned in
-the East, but first encountered by Europeans during the
-crusades, in the hands of the followers of Mahomet, were
-made of Indian steel or “wootz.” This steel, produced
-in the form of little cakes weighing about two pounds
-each, in the neighborhood of the city of Golconda, in
-Hindostan, was transported on the backs of camels two
-thousand miles to the city of Damascus, and there converted
-into swords, sabres, and scimitars.</p>
-
-<p>This smith’s work has never been excelled, if equalled.
-Millions of dollars have been expended in efforts to produce
-the equal of Indian steel. Among the investigators
-of the subject the most noted was a Russian general,
-Anossoff, who died in 1851. His experiments were of
-a very elaborate and exhaustive character. They occupied
-a lifetime, and resulted in the establishment of<span class="pagenum" id="Page73">[73]</span>
-works in the Ural Mountains, on the Siberian border, for
-the production of Damascus steel by a process of his
-own invention. After General Anossoff’s death the quality
-of the steel produced at his works deteriorated.</p>
-
-<p>We should treat with reverence these obscure hints of
-the triumphs of the ancients in certain departments of
-art as suggestive of like great achievements in other directions,
-for without a knowledge of types they could
-neither teach the many what the few knew, nor preserve
-what they had acquired for the instruction of future
-ages. All art is the product of a sequential series of
-ideas, each idea containing the germ of the next; hence
-the preservation of each idea is essential to progress.
-The art of printing alone enables man to preserve such a
-record. It follows presumptively that the art of printing
-constitutes the predominant feature of difference
-between the civilization of the moderns and that of the
-ancients. And it is important to observe that the art of
-printing is far more necessary to progress in the useful
-arts than in the so-called fine arts. The ancient temples
-with their sculptured splendors&mdash;the Parthenon, the Jupiter
-Olympius, and scores of others&mdash;remained long to
-testify to the genius of Phidias, Praxiteles, and their gifted
-colleagues of the chisel. These souvenirs of Greek
-genius still serve as models for the architect and the
-sculptor. It needs no chronicle to prove that they mark
-the culmination of the fine arts. If the moderns have
-failed to excel, or even equal them, it is not because their
-conception, design, or construction involved occult processes.
-It is rather because there is a limit to the development
-of the so-called fine arts, and that limit in architecture
-and sculpture was reached in Greece more than
-two thousand years ago.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page74">[74]</span></p>
-
-<p>But with the Damascus blade, which typifies the useful
-arts, it is entirely different. It, too, is in itself a triumph
-of genius not less pronounced than the Athena of
-Phidias. But above and beyond this the arts of smelting
-and forging are so subtile as almost to elude the
-grasp of analysis. Not only the method of the fabrication
-of the Damascus blade but the processes involved
-in the production of the steel entering into its composition&mdash;all
-these are shrouded in impenetrable mystery.
-It follows that the useful arts are finer than the so-called
-fine arts. Their processes are more intricate, and
-hence more difficult of comprehension. To a solution
-of the questions presented in the course of their study
-an extended acquaintance with the sciences is essential.
-The highest departments of the fine arts, so-called, require
-only a study of the features, figure, and character
-of man, and of certain visible forms of nature, while
-the useful arts make incessant demands upon the resources
-of natural philosophy. The chemist toils in his
-laboratory, and the botanist and the geologist explore
-forest, field, and mine in search of new truths, with the
-single purpose of enlarging the sphere of the useful arts,
-and so of ministering more effectively to the ever increasing
-needs of man. Hence there can be no limit to
-the development of the useful arts except the limit to be
-found in the exhaustion of the forces of nature.</p>
-
-<p>We should, then, venerate the artisan rather than the
-artist. Let us invoke the shade of the dusky Indian
-smelter. See him in the dark recesses of the forest,
-bending in rapt attention over his furnace, or holding
-aloft a little lump of his matchless steel. Alas, he is
-dumb! His secret perished with him. But the Indian
-smelter and the Damascus smith are kin to all the inventors<span class="pagenum" id="Page75">[75]</span>
-and discoverers of all the ages. Across continents
-and seas, over trackless wastes of history&mdash;epochs during
-which ignorance and superstition prevailed and the intellect
-of man slumbered&mdash;the ancient smelter and the
-ancient smith extend their shadowy hands to the students
-in this school of the nineteenth century&mdash;extend
-them in token of the fellowship of a common struggle
-and a common hope of triumph&mdash;the struggle after
-truth<a href="#Endnote2" class="fnanchor" id="EndAnchor2">[E2]</a>, and the hope of the triumph of industry.</p>
-
-<p>The instructor raps on the black-board, and the school-room
-is at once transformed into a smithy. Again the
-forge-fires roar, and again the anvils resound under the
-stroke of the hammer. For half an hour the lesson goes
-on, and then comes the wind-up, and the several tests
-of excellence are applied to the completed task of each
-student. Form, dimensions, finish&mdash;these are the tests.
-The instructor marks the several pieces of work, makes a
-record of the result, reads the record, and is on the point
-of dismissing the class when an idea occurs to his mind
-and he enjoins silence. Taking in his hand a heavy
-sledge, and resting it on the anvil before him, he says,
-“This is a baby-hammer, and all the forging we do here
-is baby-forging. I hope soon to have an opportunity to
-take you to the great works of Mr. Crane, in this city,
-and there show you a steam-hammer which weighs a ton
-striking fifty to one hundred blows a minute&mdash;blows, too,
-that shame the fabled power of Vulcan, the God of Fire.
-At Pittsburg, Pa., there is an anvil of 150 tons weight
-which serves for forging with a 15-ton hammer. But
-the monster steam-hammer is to be found in Krupp’s cast-steel
-works at Essen, Germany. The hammer-head is 12
-feet long, 5<sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>2</sub> feet wide, 4 feet thick, weighs 50 tons, and
-has a stroke of 9 feet. The depth of the foundation<span class="pagenum" id="Page76">[76]</span>
-is 100 feet, consisting of three parts, masonry, timber,
-and iron, bolted together. Four cranes, each capable of
-bearing 200 tons, serve the hammer with material.”</p>
-
-<p>The steam-hammer was invented in 1837 by James
-Nasmyth, of England, in response to a demand for a
-hammer that would forge a steamship paddle-shaft of
-unprecedented size. The nature of the emergency being
-presented to his mind, Mr. Nasmyth conceived the idea
-of the steam-hammer instantaneously, as it were, and at
-once proceeded to sketch the child of his brain on paper.
-He was too poor to defray the cost of patenting his invention;
-nor was he able to procure the necessary funds
-for that purpose until he had seen in France a hammer
-made from his own original sketch in operation.</p>
-
-<p>The steam-hammer came rapidly into use, superseding
-all others of the ponderous sort, increasing the quantity
-of products and reducing the cost of manufacture by
-fifty per cent. It was through the steam-hammer only
-that the fabrication of the immense wrought-iron ordnance
-and the huge plates for covering ships-of-war of
-modern times became possible. In the hands of the
-giant, steam, Mr. Nasmyth’s hammer, even if it weigh
-fifty tons, is susceptible of more accurate strokes than
-the tack-hammer in the hands of the upholsterer, or the
-sledge in the hands of the most skilled blacksmith. It
-crushes tons of iron into a shapeless mass at one blow,
-and at the next drives a tack, or cracks an egg-shell in an
-egg-cup without injuring the cup.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Nasmyth, in 1845, applied the steam-hammer principle
-to the pile-driver. With this wonderful machine
-the “driving-block,” weighing several tons, descends
-eighty times a minute on the head of the pile, sending
-it home with almost incredible rapidity. The saving of<span class="pagenum" id="Page77">[77]</span>
-time as compared with the old method is in the ratio of
-1 to 1800; that is, a pile can be driven in four minutes
-that before required twelve hours.</p>
-
-<p>The course in the Forging Laboratory extends from the
-making and care of forge-fires to case-hardening iron and
-hardening and tempering steel; and competent and experienced
-instructors declare that the student in the educational
-smithy gains as much skill in a day as the smith’s
-apprentice gains in a year in the ordinary shop.</p>
-
-<hr class="footnote" />
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Endnote2"><span class="label"><a href="#EndAnchor2">[E2]</a></span>
-“The inquiry of truth, which is the love-making or wooing of it;
-the knowledge of truth, which is the presence of it; and the belief
-of truth, which is the enjoying of it&mdash;is the sovereign good of human
-nature.”&mdash;Essays of Francis Bacon&mdash;“Truth,” p. 2. London: Henry
-G. Bohn, 1852.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page78">[78]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="chapno">CHAPTER IX.</span><br />
-<span class="chapname">THE MACHINE-TOOL LABORATORY.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="subjects">The Foundery and Smithy are Ancient, the Machine-tool Shop is Modern. &mdash; The
-Giant, Steam, reduced to Servitude. &mdash; The Iron Lines of
-Progress. &mdash; They converge in the Shop; its triumphs from the Watchspring
-to the Locomotive. &mdash; The Applications of Iron in Art is the
-Subject of Subjects. &mdash; The Story of Invention is the History of
-Civilization. &mdash; The Machine-maker and the Tool-maker are the best
-Friends of Man. &mdash; Watt’s Great Conception waited for Automatic
-Tools; their Accuracy. &mdash; The Hand-made and the Machine-made
-Watch. &mdash; The Elgin (Illinois) Watch Factory. &mdash; The Interdependence
-of the Arts. &mdash; The Making of a Suit of Clothes. &mdash; The Anteroom
-of the Machine-tool Laboratory. &mdash; Chipping and Filing. &mdash; The
-File-cutter. &mdash; The Poverty of Words as compared with Things. &mdash; The
-Graduating Project. &mdash; The Vision of the Instructor.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page79">[79]</span></p>
-
-<div class="container">
-<img src="images/illo110.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">THE MACHINE-TOOL LABORATORY.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page80">[80-<br />81]
-<a id="Page81"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>The transition from the laboratories for founding and
-forging to the Machine-tool Laboratory symbolizes a
-mighty revolution in the practical arts&mdash;a revolution so
-stupendous as to defy description, and so far-reaching as
-to appall the spirit of prophecy. The foundery and the
-smithy date back to the dawn of history; the machine-tool
-shop is a creation of yesterday. About the early
-manipulations of iron mythology wove a web of fancy:
-Vulcan forged Jove’s thunderbolts, the iron sword of
-the savage was a god, and even far down the course of
-time, late in the Middle Ages, Tancred, the crusader, paid
-an almost fabulous sum for King Arthur’s famous sword
-Excalibar&mdash;but the modern machine-tool shop is a huge
-iron automaton, without sentiment, and possessing no
-poetry except the rhythmic harmony of motion. In this
-shop steam is reduced to servitude, and compelled with
-giant hands to bore, mortise, plane, polish, fashion, and
-fit great masses of iron, and, anon, with delicate fingers
-to spin gossamer threads of burnished steel. With the
-hot steam coursing through its steel-ribbed veins the
-brain of this automaton thinks the thoughts foreordained
-by its inventor; its hands do his bidding, its arms fetch
-and carry for him, its feet come and go at his beck
-and nod. This automaton feeds on iron, steel, copper,
-and brass, and produces the watch-spring and the locomotive,
-the revolver and the Krupp gun, the surgeon’s
-lancet and the shaft of a steamship, the steel pen and the
-steam-hammer, the vault-lock and the pile-driver, the
-sewing-machine and the Corliss engine. The lever which
-wakens this automaton to life, which endows its brain
-with genius and its fingers with cunning, is the rod of
-empire. All the lines of modern development converge
-in the machine-tool shop, and they are all lines of iron,
-whether consisting of a fine wire strung on poles in mid-air
-or of huge bars resting on the solid earth. Iron is
-the king of metals but the slave of man. Its magnetic
-quality guides the mariner on the sea, and its tough fibre
-and density sustain the weight of the locomotive on the
-land. It constitutes the foundation of every useful art,
-from the plough of the husbandman to the Jacquard
-loom of the weaver. But it is only in the machine-tool
-shop that the great steam-driven machines of commerce
-and manufacture can be produced. The ancients possessed
-iron, which they cast in the foundery and forged
-in the smithy; they knew the power of steam, and the
-magicians of the time amused the populace with exhibitions
-of it, but they had no machine-tool shops in which
-steam could be harnessed for the journey across continents<span class="pagenum" id="Page82">[82]</span>
-and seas. The thousand and one modern applications
-of iron to the needs of man have originated in the
-machine-tool shop. It is through these applications of
-iron, not through iron itself, that human pursuits have
-been so widely diversified, and human powers so richly
-developed and enlarged.</p>
-
-<p>The contrasts presented by the development of the
-useful arts during the last hundred years are startling:
-The toilsome journey of a day reduced to an hour with
-the maximum of comfort; the few yards of fabric painfully
-woven by hand expanded into webs of cotton, linen,
-woollen, and silk cloths, rolling from thousands of
-steam-driven looms; the stocking once requiring hours
-to make, now dropping second by second from the iron
-fingers of the knitting-machine; the nails, screws, pins,
-and needles, forged one by one in the old village smithy,
-now flying from the hands of automatic machines by the
-thousand million; the numberless stitches of the sewing-machine
-as compared with the few of the olden time,
-which made the fingers and the hearts of women ache;
-the vast crop of cereals planted, cultivated, and gathered
-into barns with iron hands in contrast with the toilsome
-processes of even fifty years ago. These are only a
-few of the many illustrations that might be given of
-progress in the useful arts, and they all emanate from
-the machine-tool shop.</p>
-
-<p>At the threshold of the most important inquiry that
-ever occupied the mind of man stand the twenty-four
-students we have followed, with more or less regularity,
-through the various laboratories which constitute the
-preliminary steps in the manual training course. It is
-the most important inquiry that ever engaged the attention
-of man, because it touches modern civilization at<span class="pagenum" id="Page83">[83]</span>
-more points than any other. It consists of an investigation
-into the subject of the diversity of the applications
-of iron in art, a study both of the minute and the ponderous
-in iron tools and machines, and it is by these tools
-and machines that the bulk of the great enterprises of
-the men of modern times are carried forward. These
-students are familiar with the details of the laboratories
-for founding and forging, but the manipulations of those
-branches of iron manufacture are coarse and heavy as
-compared with those of the Machine-tool Laboratory. In
-a word, the difference between the iron manipulations of
-the Machine-tool Laboratory and those of the founding
-and forging laboratories is the exact measure of the difference
-between the modern and the ancient systems of
-civilization.</p>
-
-<p>The ancient civilizations culminated in that of Rome.
-The Romans possessed iron, but confined their manipulations
-of it to the foundery and the smithy. Under the
-Roman empire the enterprises of man&mdash;commercial, manufacturing,
-and industrial generally&mdash;reached the limit
-marked by the applications of iron to the useful arts. It
-is not important in this connection to inquire why inventions
-and discoveries ceased. It is enough that they
-ceased. There was a pause; man, risen to a giddy height,
-looked backward instead of forward and upward; the
-struggle to advance came to an end, ambition died out of
-life, and a saturnalia of bloody crime and savage brutality
-ensued. Exhaustion followed, then stagnation, moral
-and intellectual, and then the decay of all the arts. The
-world stood still, and in that state of quiescence remained
-until printing was invented and America discovered.
-Still it waited two hundred and fifty years before receiving
-the first hint of steam-driven machines and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page84">[84]</span>
-machines and the machine tool-shop, and during all that
-time progress was painfully slow. Something was required
-to give to human ambition a grand impulse, and to open to
-human energy and industry a broad field. That something
-did not come until the middle of the eighteenth century,
-and it should never be forgotten that it came then through
-the humble men of the workshop. To their inventive
-genius mankind owes more than to all the philosophers,
-<i>litterateurs</i>, professors, and statesmen of all time. These
-men of the workshop&mdash;Huntsman, Cort, Roebuck, Watt,
-Fulton, Mushet, Hargreaves, Neilson, Whitney, Bramah,
-Maudslay, Clement, Murray, Roberts, the Stephensons,
-father and son, and Nasmyth&mdash;invented machines which
-seem to rival human intelligence, and in fact far excel
-human precision in the execution of their work. In endowing
-iron with the cunning of genius and the terrific
-power of the fabled cyclops, the modern mechanic has
-revolutionized the field of human effort, transferring it
-from the foundery and the smithy to the machine-tool
-shop. It is here, and here alone, that steam-driven
-machines can be made. They may be conceived in the
-mind of a Watt or a Stephenson, but they can be made
-only by the automatic tools of a Maudslay, a Clement, a
-Bramah, or a Nasmyth. Man was helpless without steam-driven
-machines, and he could not have steam-driven machines
-until machine-made tools had been devised with
-which to make them. The experience of Watt strikingly
-illustrates this point. When he had completed his invention
-of the steam-engine, he found it nearly impossible
-to realize his idea in a working machine, owing to the
-incompetency of the workmen of that time. In reply
-to the inquiry of Dr. Roebuck, “What is the principal
-hinderance in erecting engines?” he responds, “It is always<span class="pagenum" id="Page85">[85]</span>
-the smith-work.” His first cylinder, made of hammered
-iron soldered together by a whitesmith, was a complete
-failure. But even such workmen were so scarce
-that upon the death of this “white-iron man” Watt was
-reduced almost to a state of despair. “His next cylinder
-was cast and bored at Carron, but it was so untrue that
-it proved next to useless. The piston could not be kept
-steam-tight, notwithstanding the various expedients which
-were adopted of stuffing it with paper, cork, putty, pasteboard,
-and old hats.” Smeaton, the best workman of the
-time, “expressed the opinion, when he saw the engine at
-work, that notwithstanding the excellence of the invention
-it could never be brought into general use because
-of the difficulty of getting its various parts manufactured
-with sufficient precision.” Watt constantly complained
-of “villanous bad workmanship.” “Machine-made tools
-were unknown, hence there were no good tools. Attempting
-to run an engine of the old regime, the foreman
-of the shop gave it up in despair, exclaiming, “I think
-we had better leave the cogs to settle their differences
-with one another; they will grind themselves right in
-time.” Contrast with this clumsy machine of the hand-tool
-era the Corliss engine of the present day, whose
-every movement possesses the noiseless grace of a woman
-and the conscious power of a giant; and this giant
-springs full-armed from the machine-tool shop as Minerva
-sprang from the brain of Jupiter. Mr. Smiles says,
-“When the powerful oscillating engines of the <i>Warrior</i>
-were put on board that ship, the parts, consisting of
-some five thousand separate pieces, were brought from
-the different workshops of the Messrs. Penn &amp; Sons,
-where they had been made by workmen who knew not
-the places they were to occupy, and fitted together with<span class="pagenum" id="Page86">[86]</span>
-such precision that so soon as the steam was raised and
-let into the cylinders the immense machine began as if
-to breathe and move like a living creature, stretching its
-huge arms like a new-born giant; and then, after practising
-its strength a little, and proving its soundness in
-body and limb, it started off with the power of above a
-thousand horses, to try its strength in breasting the billows
-of the North Sea.”</p>
-
-<p>The great and small tools, the automata of the machine-shop,
-are no less triumphs of mechanical genius
-than the “powerful oscillating engines of the <i>Warrior</i>.”
-The prime difficulty of the hand-worker was to make two
-things exactly alike, then followed the impossibility of
-making <i>many</i> things&mdash;the narrow limit of human capacity
-to produce. At that point the inventor appeared
-with a machine which would make a thousand things in
-the time the hand-worker required to make one, and
-each one of them the exact counterpart of every other.</p>
-
-<p>A hundred years ago John Arnold, the inventor of the
-chronometer, accomplished a marvel of patience and ingenuity
-in the form of a watch the size of twopence and
-the weight of sixpence. The workmanship was so delicate
-that he was compelled not only to fashion every
-part with his own hand, but to design and make the tools
-employed in its construction. The watch was presented
-to George III., of England, who showed his appreciation
-of Arnold’s mechanical skill in a present of five hundred
-guineas. The Emperor of Russia offered Arnold $5000
-for a duplicate of the wonderful little time-piece, which
-offer was, however, declined. It was so difficult for the
-expert watch-maker of a century ago to make two things
-exactly alike, that Arnold could not afford to undertake
-to make another miniature watch even for the exorbitant<span class="pagenum" id="Page87">[87]</span>
-price of $5000. But for ten dollars the Elgin (Illinois)
-National Watch Company will supply the Emperor of
-Russia with a machine-made watch more nearly perfect
-than Arnold’s masterpiece, and on the same day turn out
-one thousand others exactly like it. Imagine yourself
-now in the watch factory of the Elgin Company; observe
-that artisan holding in his hand a coil of fine steel wire
-weighing a pound. He approaches a machine, places one
-end of the wire in its iron fingers, presses a lever, and in
-a few minutes the coil is converted into two hundred
-thousand minute screws, each and every one as perfect
-as the best that Arnold made for his George III. gem.</p>
-
-<p>It is with the greatest effort of painstaking care that
-the expert sewing-woman draws two stitches closely resembling
-each other, yet while she is making the toilsome
-exertion of her utmost skill the sewing-machine
-sets hundreds of stitches so exactly alike that a microscopic
-examination would fail to detect the least dissimilarity.</p>
-
-<p>The sewing-machine affords an admirable illustration
-of the interdependence of the practical arts. The sewing-woman
-was able to keep pace with the slow and toilsome
-processes of the distaff and loom, but upon the
-application of steam-power to spinning and weaving the
-demand for sewing was augmented a thousand-fold. If
-the sewing-machine has not emancipated woman from
-the drudgery so pathetically depicted by Tom Hood, it
-has multiplied the production of garments almost beyond
-the power of figures to express. Note this instance illustrative
-of the triumph of automatic machinery in its
-application to manufactures. “The Emperor of Austria
-was lately presented with a suit of clothes possessing
-this remarkable history: The wool from which the garments<span class="pagenum" id="Page88">[88]</span>
-were made was clipped from the sheep only eleven
-hours before the suit was completed. At 6.08 in the
-morning the sheep were sheared; at 6.11 the wool was
-washed; at 6.37 dyed; at 6.50 picked; at 7.34 the final
-carding process was finished; at eight o’clock it was
-spun; at 8.15 spooled; at 8.37 the warp was in the
-loom; at 8.43 the shuttles were ready; at 11.10 seven
-and three-fourth ells of cloth were completed; at 12.03
-the cloth was fulled; at 12.14 washed; at 12.17 sprinkled;
-at 12.31 dried; at 12.45 sheared; at 1.07 napped;
-at 1.10 brushed; and at 1.15 prepared and ready for the
-shears and needle. At five o’clock the suit, consisting
-of a hunting-jacket, waistcoat, and trousers, was finished.”</p>
-
-<p>There is a sort of anteroom to the Machine-tool Laboratory
-with which the students are thoroughly familiar.
-It is called the Chipping, Filing, and Fitting Laboratory,
-has twenty-four vises, a great assortment of cold-chisels
-and files, and is devoted to vise work. The course in
-the Chipping Filing and Fitting Laboratory consists of a
-score or more lessons involving various file and chisel
-manipulations, as, “filing to line,” “dovetailing,” “parallel
-fitting tongues and grooves,” “ring-work and free-hand
-filing,” “chipping bevels,” “ward-filing and key-fitting,”
-“screw-filing,” “scraping,” etc., each lesson being
-so devised as to insure the introduction of variously
-shaped tools, and their application to the forms of work
-for which they are designed.</p>
-
-<p>This anteroom to the Machine-tool Laboratory is like
-most anterooms plain in its appointments, and it is also
-like the conventional anteroom, a place where the student
-does not desire to remain long. The witchery of the great
-laboratory beyond has already cast its spell over the boy
-at the vise. But there is excellent hand and eye training
-work in the Chipping, Filing, and Fitting Laboratory.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page89">[89]</span></p>
-
-<div class="container">
-<img src="images/illo120.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">THE CHIPPING, FILING, AND FITTING LABORATORY.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page90">[90-<br />91]
-<a id="Page91"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>The file is a humble tool, but it is older than history,
-dating back to the Greek Mythological period. “From
-the smallest mouse-tail file used in the delicate operations
-of the watch and philosophical instrument maker, to the
-square file for the smith’s heaviest work, there is a multifarious
-diversity in shape, size, and gauge of cutting.”
-Some of the files made by the Swiss for the watch-maker
-“are of so fine a cut that the unaided eye cannot discern
-the ridges.”</p>
-
-<p>In no department of the useful arts did the hand-worker
-attain to greater dexterity than in file-cutting.
-With a sharp-edged chisel the file-cutter made from one
-hundred and fifty to two hundred “burs” a minute, and
-they were so fine as to be traced by the sense of touch
-alone, but as straight as though ruled by a machine. The
-hand-working file-cutter held his ground until 1859,
-when a Frenchman, M. Bernot, invented a file-cutting
-machine which superseded the old method of manufacture,
-except in cases requiring delicacy of manipulation,
-reducing the cost of files to one-eighth of their former
-price.</p>
-
-<p>The lessons in the Machine-tool Laboratory will not be
-described in detail as in the other laboratories. The processes
-are so delicate and so intricate, and the resulting
-products in machines so closely approach the marvellous,
-as to beggar description. The poverty of words as compared
-with things asserts itself with unexampled force in
-the presence of a great variety of tools, each of which
-seems to be endowed with the power of reflection, and
-each of which, instead of whispering a word in your
-ear, drops into your hand a thing of use to man.</p>
-
-<p>The laboratory is silent, the tools are dumb, but how<span class="pagenum" id="Page92">[92]</span>
-eloquently they proclaim the era of comfort and luxury!
-They have no tongue, but through their lips you shall
-speak across continents and under seas. They have no
-legs, but through their aid you shall, in a race round the
-world, outstrip Mercury. The machines they make shall
-bear all your burdens; with their brawny arms they lift
-a thousand tons, and with their fingers of fairy-like delicacy
-pick up a pin; with the augur of Hercules they
-bore a channel through the mountain of granite, and
-with a Liliputian gimlet tunnel one of the hairs of your
-head.</p>
-
-<p>These ingenious tools are worthy of careful inspection
-both on account of the marvels they perform and the
-delicacy of their construction and adjustments. One
-of them, a screw-engine lathe, for example, is taken to
-pieces, and each piece described in order that the students
-may be made familiar with the construction of the
-tool, and so rendered capable of taking good care of it.
-During this inspection the instructor outlines the history
-of the tool. The main feature is the slide-rest, invented
-by Maudslay while in the employ of Bramah, the lock-maker.
-It is not too much to say that two things exactly
-alike, or near enough alike, practically, to serve the
-same purpose very well, were never produced on the old-fashioned
-turning lathe. This the instructor endeavors
-to make clear to the class. He also explains precisely
-how Maudslay’s improvement remedied the defects of
-the old-fashioned lathe. Still there remained something
-to be done to make it perfect, and putting the pieces together
-the instructor shows where Maudslay’s work ended
-and that of Clement began. Clement made two improvements
-in the slide-rest, one involving the principle
-of self-correction, for which he received the gold Isis<span class="pagenum" id="Page93">[93]</span>
-medal of the Society of Arts in 1827, and the other
-consisting of the “self-adjusting double-driving centre
-check,” for which he was awarded the silver medal of the
-same society in 1828. Thus improved or perfected, the
-slide-lathe became the acknowledged king of machine-tools,
-the self-adjusting two-armed driver taking the
-strain from the centre and dividing it between the two
-arms, and so correcting all tendency to eccentricity in
-the work.</p>
-
-<p>The Machine-tool Laboratory contains a great variety
-of tools, of which the chief are lathes, drills, and planers;
-but there are many auxiliary tools, and in the advanced
-stages of the course a single lesson often affords opportunity
-for the introduction of several of them. And, as
-in the other school laboratories, each tool, upon its first
-presentation to the class, forms the subject of a brief
-lecture&mdash;a practical lecture too, for the instructor uses
-the tool while he sketches its history and perhaps that
-of its inventor, shows what place it holds in the order
-of machine-tool development, and how admirably it is
-adapted to its particular work, and makes suggestions as
-to its care. Sometimes a lesson involves the use of a
-drawing made by the students a year before, and the
-piece of iron in which it is wrought is the product of a
-previous lesson in forging; and it may also have been
-manipulated with the file or the cold-chisel, or both, in
-the Chipping, Filing, and Fitting Laboratory.</p>
-
-<p>From the first lesson in the room devoted to drawing,
-to the last lesson in the Machine-tool Laboratory,
-the course of training is orderly, consecutive. Each step
-contains a hint of the nature of the next step, and each
-succeeding step consists of a further application of the
-principles and processes of the last preceding step. In<span class="pagenum" id="Page94">[94]</span>
-a word, the students follow their drawings through all
-the laboratories till the designs “are brought out in a
-finished state either in cast or wrought iron.”</p>
-
-<p>The lathe is the fundamental machine-tool, but a completely
-equipped machine-tool laboratory includes a great
-variety of supplementary or auxiliary tools, a thorough
-knowledge of which is essential to a good mechanical education.
-It does not follow, because these tools are in a
-large degree automatic, that skill may be dispensed with
-in their use. Many of them are very complicated in design
-and construction, and they can no more be made to
-do efficient service under an unskilled hand than a locomotive
-can be made to accomplish a series of successful
-“runs” by an unskilled “driver.” Hence every tool
-in the laboratory is made the subject of an exhaustive
-study. The principle of mechanics involved in its construction
-is expounded, a practical illustration of its
-method of operation is given, its peculiar liability to injury
-is explained, and rules for its care are carefully formulated,
-and frequently repeated.</p>
-
-<p>There is a prevalent theory that the wide application
-of so-called automatic tools to mechanical work largely
-decreases the legitimate demand for skilled mechanics,
-but it is fallacious. In the first place a thousand things
-are now made where one thing was made fifty years ago.
-In the second place the extensive use of steam and
-electricity greatly enlarges the sphere wherein accurate
-work becomes absolutely essential to human safety, and
-hence extends the field of operations of the inventive
-faculty. In the third place the cost of machine-tool
-made products having been greatly reduced, competition
-is proportionately intensified, thus narrowing the margin
-of profit, and so rendering any injury to machinery
-through want of skill in the operator relatively more
-disastrous. As a matter of fact a fine machine-tool is
-more liable than a watch to get out of order through
-careless handling, and it no more than a watch, can be
-properly repaired by a bungler. It follows that skill in
-the use of machine-tools is as essential to a successful
-mechanical career now, as skill in the use of hand-tools
-was formerly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page95">[95]</span></p>
-
-<div class="container">
-<img src="images/illo126.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">COURSE IN THE MACHINE-TOOL LABORATORY.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page96">[96-<br />97]
-<a id="Page97"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>But another conclusion follows more irresistibly, namely&mdash;that
-the mechanical engineer who devotes his attention
-to the construction and management of massive machinery,
-such as pumps, hydraulic and lever presses,
-looms, and steam-engines, whether locomotive, marine, or
-other, must, in order to be master of his profession, be thoroughly
-familiar with every step of their construction; and
-such familiarity can only be acquired by a course of practical
-study in the machine-tool shop. It is the province of
-the mechanical engineer to utilize certain forces of nature
-in the service of man, and it is only through the machine-tool
-shop that such utilization can be effected. It hence
-follows that a practical acquaintance with the manipulations
-of the machine-tool shop is an essential prerequisite
-to a successful career in the field of higher mechanics.
-The man who aspires to construct any great mechanical
-engineering work, like the Brooklyn Bridge, for example,
-must know the exact mechanical power of every
-piece of machinery he employs, as also the exact mechanical
-value of every piece of iron that enters into the
-structure; and these things he cannot know unless he
-is familiar with the entire series of iron manipulations,
-from those of the foundery to those of the machine-tool
-shop.</p>
-
-<p>The aspect of the Machine-tool Laboratory when in repose,<span class="pagenum" id="Page98">[98]</span>
-so to speak, is dull and uninteresting, not to say
-repellant. There are twenty-four engine-lathes, as many
-adjustable vises, a milling machine, and a variety of auxiliary
-tools. The lathes are supported by dingy-looking
-cast-iron frames, and under each lathe there is a chest of
-drawers containing a set of tools. Overhead there is a
-wilderness of pulleys and shafting, which seems to the
-untrained eye to have very little relation to the machines
-below. The working parts of the lathes show burnished
-steel surfaces, which reflect coldly the glare of yellow
-sunlight flooding the room. If it were moonlight instead
-of sunlight one might summon the ghosts of those daring
-men who hundreds and thousands of years ago dreamed
-audaciously of the future of applied mechanics. Roger
-Bacon must have had a vision of the machine-tool shop
-when he said, “I will now mention some of the wonderful
-works of art and nature in which there is nothing of
-magic, and which magic could not perform. Instruments
-may be made by which the largest ships, with only one
-man guiding them, will be carried with greater velocity
-than if they were full of sailors; chariots may be constructed
-that will move with incredible rapidity without
-the help of animals; a small instrument may be made to
-raise or depress the greatest weights; an instrument may
-be fabricated by which one man may draw a thousand
-men to him by force and against their will; as also machines
-which will enable men to walk at the bottom of
-seas or rivers without danger.”</p>
-
-<p>When steam is “turned on” the aspect of the Machine-tool
-Laboratory is completely changed. Steam is, indeed,
-the arch-revolutionist; it breathes the breath of life into
-inanimate things&mdash;makes them think, speak, and act. The
-low hum of unused machinery first salutes the ear; then<span class="pagenum" id="Page99">[99]</span>
-the students take their places. They are three years older
-than when we encountered them in the engine-room.
-They are from seventeen to twenty years of age. They
-are no longer boys; they are young men&mdash;robust, hearty-looking
-young men. Their bearing is very resolute&mdash;remarkably
-resolute; their attitude is erect. They are full-chested,
-muscular-armed, frank-faced young men. In the
-three years’ course now drawing to a close they have
-learned how to do many things, and hence they show a
-good degree of confidence. But the dominant expression
-on all the interesting young faces is, after all, one of modesty;
-so true is it that every acquisition of knowledge, and
-especially useful knowledge, not only stimulates desire
-to learn more, but enlightens perception as to the magnitude
-of the field of further inquiry. As the addition
-of a useful thing to the world’s stock of things creates a
-demand for a score more of useful things, so the addition
-of a fact to the student’s stock of facts not only creates a
-desire for more facts, but strengthens the mind for
-further investigation.</p>
-
-<p>It may be that there are vain statesmen, philosophers,
-priests, and kings, but we should as little expect to find
-a vain mechanic as a vain scientist.</p>
-
-<p>These twenty-four students may go out into the world
-to-morrow to make their way. Some of them will enter
-upon the stage of active life, others will continue
-their studies in higher schools of literature, science, and
-art; but whether they go or stay, if they have made the
-most of their opportunities in the Manual Training School
-they will have learned the lesson of modesty, and learned
-to respect labor, not only as a means of earning one’s
-daily bread, but as the most powerful and the most
-healthful mental and moral stimulant.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page100">[100]</span></p>
-
-<p>Steam is on, and the students standing at the lathes
-are impatient to begin. It is not a lesson in the ordinary
-sense. Each student works independently of special
-direction, for each is engaged in making a machine&mdash;the
-graduating project. The instructor is at hand, not to
-dictate but to advise, if requested. From his fund of
-experience as the elder scholar he will answer questions
-propounded by his younger fellow-students. In front of
-the students, parts of the working drawings may be seen.
-It is plain that there is to be variety in the exhibit of
-“projects.” There are several steam-engines, differing
-in model; there is a steam-pump, a punching machine,
-a lathe, an electric machine, and a steam-hammer.</p>
-
-<p>At a sign work commences&mdash;a dozen varieties of work,
-emitting a dozen tones of buzzing and whizzing. The
-instructor’s face lights up with a pleased expression as
-he notes the progress of the work. There is no sign
-of hesitation in the class; no questions are asked; the
-students seem to be driving straight to the mark. The
-instructor’s heart swells with pride; he can trust “his
-boys!” He has been regarding them with an expression
-of affection, but now his eyes wander&mdash;they have a far-away
-look. He no longer sees the students, he is looking
-beyond them. He drops into a reclining attitude,
-sighs, falls into a reverie, and dreams. In his dream he
-sees naked savages, emerging from caves, armed with
-clubs, pursuing animals. These are succeeded by men
-bearing rude stone implements&mdash;axes and hammers&mdash;and
-these in turn by men armed with bows and arrows,
-but half-clothed with skins of beasts, and crouching and
-shivering beneath the shelter of the branches of a tree
-pulled downward and secured by clods of earth. This
-picture disappears, and is replaced by a pastoral scene&mdash;a<span class="pagenum" id="Page101">[101]</span>
-vast plain covered with flocks and herds. In the
-foreground stands the shepherd, and in the distance his
-tent, consisting of skins of beasts stretched on poles, and in
-the tent door a woman sits pounding a fleece into felt.
-The shepherd, his flocks and herds, his tent, and the
-woman in the tent door, vanish like the mists of morning,
-and where the shepherd was, the husbandman is seen
-harvesting the golden grain; and in the shadow of the
-cottage which has replaced the tent a woman is grinding
-corn. The scene again changes&mdash;the plain has become
-the site of a great city. The city is protected by
-thick, high walls, surmounted with frowning battlements.
-Sentinels pace back and forth along the parapet. Huge
-helmets protect their heads, and their bodies are clothed
-in armor. Quivers full of bronze-tipped arrows depend
-from their shoulders; in their hands they carry long
-bows, and the clank, clank of their broad, two-edged,
-bronze swords breaks the dull, monotonous routine of
-their march. A brazen gate swings back noiselessly on
-brazen hinges, and, bowing to the sentinel, the dreamer as
-noiselessly glides into the city. Suddenly he feels the
-hot breath of the foundery furnace-fire, and is blinded by
-a glare of red light. Shading his eyes he sees dusky
-forms hurrying to and fro with ladles full of molten
-metal. Turning away he hears the heavy stroke of the
-sledge, and looking, beholds a dusty, smoky smithy. The
-stalwart smith drops the sledge at his side, rests one foot
-on the anvil-block, and wipes the sweat from his brow;
-the helper thrusts the cooling metal into the coals, bends
-to the bellows, and the forge-fire sings. At the sound of
-a bell the dreamer starts, the old Assyrian city falls into
-ruins, the ruins crumble into dust, and on this dust another
-city rises, flourishes, falls, and piles the dust of<span class="pagenum" id="Page102">[102]</span>
-its ruins. Over a waste of years&mdash;twenty centuries&mdash;the
-dreamer’s thought flashes, and he stands in the presence
-of the Alexandrian mechanic-philosopher. He sees Hero
-in the public street, gazing abstractedly at his condensed-air
-fountain, and follows him into his shop or laboratory,
-and observes him curiously as he toys with the model of
-a queer little steam-engine. “This is the Iron Age, but
-in its infancy,” he exclaims under his breath, as his eyes
-wander from a fine Damascus blade hanging against the
-wall to some poor hand-tools lying on the working-bench.
-“I will speak to this old man,” he continues, “and ask
-him to step into my Machine-tool Laboratory, and see my
-boys make steam-engines; it will be a revelation to him.
-Come, old friend&mdash;there&mdash;look!” And the dreamer
-looks. Does he see double? The laboratory is unchanged;
-steam is still on; the whir of machinery and
-the buzzing sound of steam-driven tools salute the ear,
-and the students are all busy at their benches finishing
-parts of “projects” and adjusting them in their places,
-But there are twenty-four other men&mdash;shades of men&mdash;in
-the laboratory. Most of them are old; some are in working
-clothes, others in full dress, wearing ribbons and orders
-of merit. Over each student one of these shades
-bends with an air of absorbing attention. The dreamer
-recognizes Papin, Fulton, Watt, and Stephenson shadowing
-the students engaged in the construction of engines.
-They beckon Hero, and he joins the group, threading his
-way timidly between the lines of lathes, and looking
-askance at the rapidly revolving wheels and flying belts.
-Over the shoulders of other students are seen the faces
-of Maudslay, Bramah, Clement, Roberts, Whitney, Nasmyth,
-Huntsman, Cort, Murray, Dudley, Yarranton, Roebuck,
-and Whitworth, besides several unfamiliar faces.<span class="pagenum" id="Page103">[103]</span>
-Suddenly they all gather about a nearly completed project&mdash;a
-stationary engine. They witness the forcing
-home of the last screw; they see the miniature machine
-made fast to the bench. Steam is let into the cylinders.
-The student’s flushed face is in sharp contrast with the
-colorless faces of the group of old men by whom he is
-surrounded. The piston-rod moves languidly&mdash;the machine
-trembles as if awaking from slumber, the shaft oscillates
-slowly, then faster, then regularly, like a strong
-pulse-beat. The project is a success&mdash;the first one completed!
-The student’s face turns pale&mdash;as pale as the
-white faces of the old men at his side. They open their
-lips as if to cheer him, but no sound escapes them. He
-breathes quick&mdash;almost gasps; his heart beats loudly; he
-tries to shout but cannot utter a word. At last he claps
-his hands! The instructor starts from his chair, rubs his
-eyes, and stares round the laboratory. All the students
-are there, gathered in a group about the finished “project,”
-but the ghostly shades of the old inventors have
-vanished like the unsubstantial fabric of a vision.</p>
-
-<p>The “projects” are not all finished on the same day.
-Some of them are far more complicated than others, and
-some students are more skilled than others. All are very
-busy. It is not improper to ask questions relating to work
-on the graduating projects; the instructor is at hand to
-answer such questions. But it is a point of honor not
-to ask a question if the difficulty can possibly be otherwise
-overcome. Hence very few questions are asked.</p>
-
-<p>The last week of the term is a very trying one to
-all concerned. The students are reticent and unusually
-silent; all are anxious, some are timid&mdash;the nervous
-tension is extreme. The instructor becomes taciturn
-under a painful sense of compulsory isolation from his<span class="pagenum" id="Page104">[104]</span>
-class, towards all the members of which he has, for three
-years, sustained fraternal rather than dictatorial relations.
-But as the projects are, one by one, completed, the atmosphere
-clears. When the student realizes that his project
-is certain to be a success, his face brightens and he is
-pleased to discuss its “points” with the instructor. The
-instructor is delighted to resume his former relations
-with the class, the feeling of constraint is dispelled, and
-the graduation-day exercises are contemplated with confidence.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page105">[105]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="chapno">CHAPTER X.</span><br />
-<span class="chapname">MANUAL AND MENTAL TRAINING COMBINED.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="subjects">The new Education is all-sided &mdash; its Effect. &mdash; A Harmonious Development
-of the Whole Being. &mdash; Examination for Admission to the
-Chicago School. &mdash; List of Questions in Arithmetic, Geography, and
-Language. &mdash; The Curriculum. &mdash; The Alternation of Manual and
-Mental Exercises. &mdash; The Demand for Scientific Education &mdash; its
-Effect. &mdash; Ambition to be useful.</p>
-
-<p>We have now passed in review all the school laboratories,
-from the engine-room, or laboratory where power
-is generated, to the Machine-tool Laboratory where power
-is utilized, or harnessed, and compelled to do the work
-of man. We have observed the student, in his first
-effort over the drawing-board, struggling laboriously to
-make a straight line, and in the Laboratory of Carpentry,
-trying with varying success to make a tenon fit the mortise,
-and we have stood by his side in the Machine-tool
-Laboratory in the moment of his triumph exhibiting his
-graduating “project”&mdash;a miniature engine throbbing under
-the pressure of steam, and doing its work with admirable
-precision. But we have seen only the manual
-side of the curriculum. The mental side is still to be
-shown. The claim made in behalf of the new education
-is that it is better balanced than the old, that it is all-sided,
-that it produces a harmonious development of the
-whole being, that it makes of the student a man fully
-furnished for the battle of life, mentally, morally, and
-physically. Accordingly the curriculum of the Manual
-Training School combines with the laboratory exercises<span class="pagenum" id="Page106">[106]</span>
-a variety of mental exercises of quite a comprehensive
-character; and first, certain mental requirements are necessary
-to admission, as witness the following from the
-first catalogue of the Chicago Manual Training School:</p>
-
-<p>“Candidates for admission to the Junior year must be at
-least fourteen years of age, and must present sufficient
-evidence of good moral character. They must pass a
-satisfactory examination in reading, spelling, writing, geography,
-English composition, and the fundamental operations
-of arithmetic as applied to integers, common and
-decimal fractions, and denominate numbers. Ability to
-use the English language correctly is especially desired.”</p>
-
-<p>The following questions were used at the first examination
-for admission to the Chicago school.</p>
-
-<h3>ARITHMETIC.</h3>
-
-<p>Transcribe work sufficient to show processes. No
-credit given for results alone.</p>
-
-<div class="exam">
-
-<p>1. Change to decimals and find the sum of <sup>4</sup>&#8260;<sub>5</sub>, <sup>5</sup>&#8260;<sub>8</sub>,
-<sup>11</sup>&#8260;<sub>16</sub>, <sup>9</sup>&#8260;<sub>20</sub>, <sup>41</sup>&#8260;<sub>50</sub>.</p>
-
-<p>2. Divide the product of 28<sup>5</sup>&#8260;<sub>7</sub> and 13<sup>4</sup>&#8260;<sub>9</sub> by the
-difference of 8<sup>5</sup>&#8260;<sub>12</sub>
-and 4<sup>4</sup>&#8260;<sub>5</sub>.</p>
-
-<p>3. Divide .00875 by 12<sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>2</sub>.</p>
-
-<p>4. Reduce .395 of a mile to integers.</p>
-
-<p>5. If a locomotive move <sup>5</sup>&#8260;<sub>8</sub> of a mile in <sup>11</sup>&#8260;<sub>12</sub> of an hour, what is its
-speed per hour?</p>
-
-<p>6. A man invested <sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>5</sub> of his money in land, .125 of it in stocks,
-$12,000 in a vessel, and had $55,500 remaining. How much did he
-invest in land?</p>
-
-<p>7. Bought a square mile of land at $75 an acre. I reserved 160
-acres of it for streets and alleys, and divided the remainder into lots
-each 66 feet front by 200 feet deep, all of which I sold for $15 per
-front foot. The expense of surveying, etc., was $2000. What did I
-gain?</p>
-
-<p>8. How many balls, each <sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>4</sub> of an inch in diameter, are equal in
-weight to a ball of the same material 1 foot in diameter?</p>
-
-<p>9. Find cost of material for making box, inside measurement 4 by
-2 by 3 feet, of inch lumber, worth $30 per M., <sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>25</sub> of the lumber purchased
-being wasted. Include in the cost 7 dozen screws at $1.80
-per gross.</p>
-
-</div><!--exam-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page107">[107]</span></p>
-
-<div class="container">
-<img src="images/illo138.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">THE STUDENTS WITH THEIR BOOKS.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page108">[108-<br />109]
-<a id="Page109"></a></span></p>
-
-<div class="exam">
-
-<p>10. What is the height of a rectangular cistern capable of containing
-600 gallons, the bottom of which is 7 by 11 feet, inside measurement?</p>
-
-</div><!--exam-->
-
-<h3>GEOGRAPHY.</h3>
-
-<div class="exam">
-
-<p>1. Name the five most populous cities of the United States in
-order of population. On what water is St. Petersburg? Dublin?
-Rome? Calcutta? Cairo?</p>
-
-<p>2. Locate the principal coal fields and iron regions of the United
-States. What minerals occur in Illinois?</p>
-
-<p>3. Draw map of Illinois, showing by what States and by what
-waters bounded. Locate the capital and the largest city of Illinois.</p>
-
-<p>4. Name the outlet of Lake Erie; of Lake Champlain; of Great
-Salt Lake; of the Black Sea; of Lake Victoria Nyanza.</p>
-
-<p>5. Compare the latitude and climate of Spain and Illinois.</p>
-
-<p>6. How does the island of Great Britain compare in area with the
-United States, or with any one of the United States which you may
-mention?</p>
-
-<p>7. How do the Alps compare in height with the Rocky Mountains?
-Name the highest peak in Europe; in North America; in
-South America; in the world.</p>
-
-<p>8. How does climate vary with altitude above the sea level? Illustrate
-by an example.</p>
-
-<p>9. What is the cause of day and night? Of changes of seasons?
-What is latitude? Longitude?</p>
-
-<p>10. When it is 11 <span class="smcap">A.M.</span> by “Central Time” in Chicago, what is the
-hour by “Eastern Time” in New York City? What is the hour in
-London? Is “Central Time” in Chicago the true time? Why?</p>
-
-<p>Or, in place of the last question: What are the termini of the
-Illinois and Michigan Canal? What waters are connected by the
-Suez Canal? Of what water route does the Suez Canal take the
-place?</p>
-
-</div><!--exam-->
-
-<h3>LANGUAGE.</h3>
-
-<div class="exam">
-
-<p>1. Correct in every particular, and give reason for each correction:</p>
-
-<div class="level2">
-
-<p><i>a.</i> The man which was sick has went to his work.</p>
-
-<p><i>b.</i> Every person should attend to their own affairs.</p>
-
-<p><i>c.</i> Such expressions sound harshly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page110">[110]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>d</i>. Between you and I, this is a real easy examination.</p>
-
-<p><i>e</i>. The cause of the tides were not wholly unknown to the ancients.</p>
-
-</div><!--exam level2-->
-
-<p>2. “Pleasantly rose next morning the sun on the village of Grand Pré.”</p>
-
-<p>How is the idea of the rising of the sun modified?</p>
-
-<p>3.</p>
-
-<div class="poetrycontainer">
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="verse indent00">“Flashed all their sabres bare,<br /></span>
-<span class="verse indent0">Flashed as they turned in air,<br /></span>
-<span class="verse indent0">Sab’ring the gunners there,<br /></span>
-<span class="verse indent0">Charging an army, while<br /></span>
-<span class="verse indent2">All the world wondered.”<br /></span>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--poetrycontainer-->
-
-<p>Change to good prose.</p>
-
-<p>4. State the meaning of each prefix and suffix in the following
-words: Emigrate; Immigrate; Illegally; Admissible; Thoughtlessness;
-Affixing.</p>
-
-<p>5. <i>a</i>. Why is the final e of “service” retained in “serviceable?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="dontshow">5. </span><i>b</i>. Write the present participle of “befit;” of “benefit.”
-What difference in spelling? Why?</p>
-
-<p><span class="dontshow">5. </span><i>c</i>. Define Ancient; Venerable; Obsolete.</p>
-
-<p>6. Write an essay on Chicago, mentioning the rapid growth of the
-city; its land and water communications; its commerce and manufactures;
-its public buildings; its institutions of learning and charity,
-and any other items which may occur to you.</p>
-
-</div><!--exam-->
-
-<p>Having passed the ordeal of the foregoing battery of
-questions the student of the Ideal School finds his mental
-exercises alternated with manual exercises throughout
-the entire course in something like the following order,
-namely:</p>
-
-<p class="schedule"><b>Junior Year.</b>&mdash;(1.) <i>Mathematics</i>&mdash;Arithmetic;
-Algebra. (2.) <i>Science.</i>&mdash;Physiology;
-Physical Geography. (3.) <i>Language.</i>&mdash;English Language and Literature; or
-Latin Reader. (4.) <i>Drawing.</i>&mdash;Freehand Model and Object; Projection; Machine;
-Perspective. (5.) <i>Shopwork.</i>&mdash;Carpentry, Joinery, Wood-Turning, Pattern-Making,
-Proper Care and Use of Tools.</p>
-
-<p class="schedule"><b>Middle Year.</b>&mdash;(1.) <i>Mathematics.</i>&mdash;Geometry.
-(2.) <i>Science.</i>&mdash;Physics. (3.) <i>Language.</i>&mdash;General
-History and Literature; or Cæsar. (4.) <i>Drawing.</i>&mdash;Orthographic
-Projection and Shadows; Line and Brush Shading; Isometric Projection and Shadows;
-Details of Machinery; Machine from Measurement. (5.) <i>Shopwork.</i>&mdash;Molding,
-Casting; Forging, Welding, Tempering; Soldering, Brazing.</p>
-
-<p class="schedule"><b>Senior Year.</b>&mdash;(1.) <i>Mathematics.</i>&mdash;Plane Trigonometry; Mechanics; Book-keeping.
-(2.) <i>Science.</i>&mdash;Chemistry; or Descriptive Geometry and Higher Algebra.<span class="pagenum" id="Page111">[111]</span>
-(3.) <i>Language, etc.</i>&mdash;English Literature, Civil Government, Political Economy; or
-Cicero, or French. (4.) <i>Drawing.</i>&mdash;Machine from Measurement; Building from
-Measurement; Architectural Perspective. (5.) <i>Machine Shopwork.</i>&mdash;Such as Chipping,
-Filing, Fitting, Turning, Drilling, Planing, etc. Study of Machinery, including
-the Management and Care of Steam Engines and Boilers.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore75">Latin and French may be taken instead of English
-Language, Literature, and History. Instruction will be
-given each year in the properties of the materials&mdash;wood,
-iron, brass, etc.&mdash;used in that year.</p>
-
-<p>Throughout the course, one hour per day, or more,
-will be given to drawing, and not less than two hours
-per day to laboratory work. The remainder of the
-school day will be devoted to study and recitation. Before
-graduating, each pupil will be required to construct
-a machine from drawings and patterns made by himself.
-A diploma will be given on graduation.</p>
-
-<p>The new education is a blending of manual and mental
-training. It recognizes the fact that science discovers
-and art utilizes, and that these two forces move the
-modern world.</p>
-
-<p>At present the Manual Training School is a missionary
-enterprise. Its purpose is to create in the public mind
-an imperative demand for the incorporation of its scientific
-methods into the public-school course of instruction.</p>
-
-<p>A vast majority of our people are employed in the
-useful arts, and distinction in every department of labor
-now depends upon scientific education. Without technical
-education or manual training the laborer of the
-future cannot hope to rise above the grade of a piece of
-automatic machinery. He falls into the routine of the
-shop like a cog or lever moved by steam. To avert this
-dire misfortune our common schools must be made
-institutions for manual as well as intellectual training.
-They must inculcate the dignity of labor not by precept<span class="pagenum" id="Page112">[112]</span>
-merely, but by example. It is not enough that schools
-of technology, polytechnic institutes, and manual training
-schools are being established here and there by private
-subscription. The supply of these classes of education
-is only a drop in the bucket to the public demand.
-Technical and manual training must be made part of the
-general public educational system. In our city high-schools
-we now fit boys for college. In those schools
-we must hereafter fit them for the colleges of art.
-When this shall have become the fashion in education
-there will be thousands of high-school graduates with
-a grand passion for mechanical pursuits&mdash;boys with
-more curiosity on the subject of the expansive force of
-steam than on the subject of “Greek roots;” with more
-ambition to invent something useful to man than to learn
-how to draw a bill in chancery; with a stronger desire
-to discover a new secret in electricity than to carry off a
-prize for the best Latin oration.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page113">[113]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="chapno">CHAPTER XI.</span><br />
-<span class="chapname">THE INTELLECTUAL EFFECT OF MANUAL TRAINING.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="subjects">Intelligence is the Basis of Character. &mdash; The more Practical the Intelligence
-the Higher the Development of Character. &mdash; The use of
-Tools quickens the Intellect. &mdash; Making Things rouses the Attention,
-sharpens the Observation, and steadies the Judgment. &mdash; History
-of Inventions in England, 1740-1840. &mdash; Poor, Ignorant Apprentices
-become learned Men. &mdash; Cort, Huntsman, Mushet, Neilson, Stephenson,
-and Watt. &mdash; The Union of Books and Tools. &mdash; Results at
-Rotterdam, Holland; at Moscow, Russia; at Komotau, Bohemia;
-and at St. Louis, Mo. &mdash; The Consideration of Overwhelming Import.</p>
-
-<p>The quality of all civilizations depends upon intelligence
-and character, or morality, in the order stated; for
-morality springs from intelligence, not intelligence from
-morality. This is an axiomatic deduction of historic
-analysis.<a href="#Footnote2" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor2">[2]</a>
-Nor would it be difficult to prove that practical<span class="pagenum" id="Page114">[114]</span>
-intelligence is more conducive to a high development
-of morals than mere theoretical intelligence. For
-is it not true that the nations most skilled in the useful
-arts are most highly cultured in morals? And if it be
-true, it constitutes a potential argument in support of
-joining to intellectual instruction in the schools a course
-of training in the elements of the useful arts. And of
-the fact which forms the basis of this argument there is
-a logical explanation.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote2"><a href="#FNanchor2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a>
-“But if we contrast this stationary aspect of moral truths with
-the progressive aspect of intellectual truths, the difference is, indeed,
-startling.... These are to every educated man recognized and notorious
-facts, and the inference to be drawn from them is immediately
-obvious. Since civilization is the product of moral and intellectual
-agencies, and since that product is constantly changing, it
-evidently cannot be regulated by the stationary agent; because when
-surrounding circumstances are unchanged, a stationary agent can
-only produce a stationary effect. The only other agent is the intellectual
-one, and that this is the real mover may be proved in two
-distinct ways: first, because being, as we have already seen, either
-moral or intellectual, and being, as we have also seen, not moral, it
-must be intellectual; and secondly, because the intellectual principle
-has an activity and a capacity for adaptation which, as I undertake
-to show, is quite sufficient to account for the extraordinary progress
-that, during several centuries, Europe has continued to make.”&mdash;Buckle’s
-“History of Civilization,” Vol. I., p. 130. D. Appleton &amp;
-Co., 1864.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Nothing stimulates and quickens the intellect more
-than the use of mechanical tools. The boy who begins
-to construct things is compelled at once to begin to think,
-deliberate, reason, and conclude. As he proceeds he is
-brought in contact with powerful natural forces. If he
-would control, direct, and apply these forces he must
-first master the laws by which they are governed; he
-must investigate the causes of the phenomena of matter,
-and it will be strange if from this he is not also led to a
-study of the phenomena of mind. At the very threshold
-of practical mechanics a thirst for wisdom is engendered,
-and the student is irresistibly impelled to investigate the
-mysteries of philosophy. Thus the training of the eye
-and the hand reacts upon the brain, stimulating it to excursions
-into the realm of scientific discovery in search
-of facts to be applied in practical forms at the bench and
-the anvil.</p>
-
-<p>The history of invention and discovery in England affords
-a striking confirmation of the truth of the proposition
-that mechanical investigation, with tools in hand,
-stimulates the intellectual faculties to the highest point<span class="pagenum" id="Page115">[115]</span>
-of activity and excellence. The germs of nearly all the
-great inventions in mechanics, the benefit of which the
-world is now enjoying in such ample measure, are directly
-traceable to the workshops of Great Britain during
-the period 1740-1840.</p>
-
-<p>England had then no popular system of education, and
-the apprentices in her shops were poor, obscure, and, at
-the start, illiterate. But to those poor apprentices the
-honor of the great inventions and discoveries of that age
-is almost wholly due. And it is a notable fact that in
-the struggle to invent tools and machines, to master the
-art of mechanism, to steal from Nature her secret forces,
-and harness and use them for the benefit of man, the
-toiling workers not infrequently became highly educated,
-intellectual giants, familiar not alone with special studies,
-but masters of many branches of learning.</p>
-
-<p>In 1770 the Russian Government, aware of the inferiority
-of English iron, and deeming Russian iron essential
-to England, directed the price of iron for export to be
-raised three hundred per cent. This arbitrary act stimulated
-invention. Henry Cort, the son of a brick-maker,
-entered upon a series of experiments, with a view to the
-improvement of English iron. They occupied several
-years, and were of a very expensive character&mdash;so expensive
-as eventually to bankrupt the man who made them.
-They were, however, so successful as to constitute a splendid
-epoch in the history of metallurgy. In 1786 Lord
-Sheffield declared that Cort’s improvements in iron, and
-the steam-engine of Watt, were of more value to Great
-Britain than the thirteen colonies of America; and in
-1862 it was estimated that those improvements had added
-three thousand million dollars to the wealth of England
-alone, to say nothing of the rest of the world of iron<span class="pagenum" id="Page116">[116]</span>
-manufacture throughout which they had been applied.
-But the only estate secured by this great man as a reward
-of his genius and a life of toil, as his biographer
-pathetically remarks, was “the little domain of six feet
-by two in which he lies buried in Hampstead churchyard.”</p>
-
-<p>In 1715 Sheffield contained two thousand inhabitants,
-of whom one-third were beggars. Its manufactures consisted
-of jews-harps, tobacco-boxes, and knives. Sheffield
-is now the chief seat of the steel manufacture of
-the world. The initial step in this great transformation
-scene was taken by Benjamin Huntsman. He was born
-in 1704, and bred to a mechanical calling. The early
-years of his life were spent in the occupation of clock
-making and repairing. He was shrewd, observant, and
-practical, and he gradually extended the scope of his
-profession to repairing, and finally to making hand-tools.
-In this branch of his trade he detected defects in the
-German steel in common use. He removed from Doncaster
-to Sheffield, and there in the privacy of his cottage
-studied metallurgy, and for years labored in secret over
-the furnace and the crucible. His numerous failures
-were subsequently found chronicled in masses of metal,
-in various stages of imperfection, buried in the earth.
-But when he emerged from his long seclusion he offered
-to his fellow-mechanics a piece of cast-steel so hard that
-they declined to work it. He sent the product of his
-works to France, and the French knives and razors made
-from it and imported into England drove the Sheffield
-cutlery from the market. Then the Sheffield cutlers
-sought to have the export of steel prohibited. Failing
-in that they stole Huntsman’s secret. This was possible,
-since the process had not been patented. The story of<span class="pagenum" id="Page117">[117]</span>
-the theft is told in a little work entitled “The Useful
-Metals and their Alloys.” It is in substance that one
-Walker, an iron-founder, “disguised himself as a tramp,
-and feigning great distress and abject poverty, appeared
-shivering at the door of Huntsman’s foundery late one
-night when the workmen were about to begin their labors
-at steel-casting, and asked for permission to warm
-himself by the furnace-fire.” He was permitted to enter,
-and when he left he carried away the secret of the inventor
-of cast-steel.</p>
-
-<p>Huntsman was a member of the Society of Friends,
-and it was doubtless on that account that he declined a
-membership of the Royal Society tendered to him in
-honor of his great discovery or invention of cast-steel.</p>
-
-<p>David Mushet’s discovery of the extraordinary value
-of black-band iron-stone in 1801 made Scotland a first-class
-iron-producing country; and Neilson’s invention of
-the hot-blast in 1828 revolutionized the processes of iron
-manufacture by vastly cheapening them. Both these
-men sprang from the labor class, and both were self-educated.
-Through almost superhuman efforts they rose
-from poverty and obscurity to fame. Mushet’s “Papers
-on Iron and Steel,” in the language of Smiles, “are
-among the most valuable original contributions to the
-literature of iron manufacture that have yet been given
-to the world;” and Neilson was made a member of the
-Royal Society in recognition of his distinguished ability
-and the great services he rendered in the cause of the
-useful arts.</p>
-
-<p>George Stephenson rose from the coal-mine to the
-summit of renown as a theoretical and practical mechanic.
-While employed in various collieries as “fireman”
-and “plugman,” he acquired a thorough knowledge of<span class="pagenum" id="Page118">[118]</span>
-the engines then in use, taking them apart, repairing, and
-putting them together again. At eighteen years of age
-he could not read. In the course of two years attendance
-at night-schools he learned to read, write, and cipher.<a href="#Footnote3" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor3">[3]</a>
-Continuing to work in collieries, he employed his
-leisure hours in studying mechanics and engineering, and
-in mending clocks and shoes. When thirty-one years of
-age he was appointed “enginewright” at Killingworth
-Colliery, at a salary of £100 a year. From this point of
-time dates his career as an inventor. His first locomotive
-was completed in 1814, and the “Rocket” made
-its trial trip in 1829. During the intervening fifteen
-years Stephenson was largely engaged in the engineering
-department of railway enterprises as well as in the prosecution
-of experiments for the perfecting of locomotive
-engines. The most eminent engineers of the time doubted
-the practicability of the locomotive, and continued
-to recommend stationary engines, while Stephenson was
-leading up to the “Rocket.” The success of the “Rocket”
-made its inventor the most famous mechanic in the
-world. For the next fifteen years he was the leading
-spirit in all the great railway enterprises of England, besides<span class="pagenum" id="Page119">[119]</span>
-being called repeatedly to Belgium and Spain as
-consulting engineer. He was offered a fellowship of the
-Royal Society, also one in the Civil Engineers’ Society,
-also knighthood by Sir Robert Peel. All these empty
-honors he declined. “I have to state,” he said, in reply
-to a request for his “ornamental initials,” “that I have
-no flourishes to my name, either before or after, and I
-think it will be as well if you merely say George Stephenson.”
-He may justly be styled the founder of the
-existing railway system of the world, which undoubtedly
-exerts more influence upon civilization than any other
-one cause or set of allied causes; and to have risen from
-the humblest station in a colliery to the dignity of founding
-such a system is sufficient evidence of a gigantic intellectual
-growth.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote3"><a href="#FNanchor3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a>
-“In conclusion, we are of opinion that special instruction which
-can be applied to the material would be at once more fruitful in good
-results and more attractive if the pupil could go from the class-room
-to the workshop (laboratory) to practically demonstrate the theories
-to which he has just been listening. In support of this opinion we
-might add the observations made in our own evening-schools, where
-the most noteworthy and rapid progress is made in those cases where
-the pupil has occasion to put into actual practice on the material
-itself the instruction which he has received in the drawing-class.”&mdash;“Report
-of Committee of Council of Arts and Manufactures of the
-Province of Quebec, created to Inquire into the Question of Practical
-Schools.”</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>James Watt was an extremely fragile child, and hence
-unable to join in the rude sports of robust children. Thus
-confined within-doors he early amused himself by drawing
-“with a pencil upon paper, or with chalk upon the
-floor.” He was also supplied with a few tools from his
-father’s carpenter’s shop, “which he soon learned to handle
-with considerable expertness.” Mr. Smiles, in his
-biography of Watt, says, “The mechanical dexterity he
-acquired was the foundation upon which he built the
-speculations to which he owes his glory, nor without this
-manual training is there the least likelihood that he would
-have become the improver and almost the creator of the
-steam-engine.”<a href="#Footnote4" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor4">[4]</a>
-In the parrot-power of learning or memorizing<span class="pagenum" id="Page120">[120]</span>
-Watt was a dull boy, and he left the grammar-school
-of his native town at an early age, never to return
-to the “halls of learning.” But while engaged in humble
-mechanical employments he perfected his education, studying
-after work-hours. He nearly starved his body, but constantly
-added to his intellectual stores. He mastered the
-principles of engineering, civil and military, studied natural
-history, criticism, art, and acquired several modern languages.
-In a word, without the aid of the schools, but
-under the stimulating influence of mechanical investigation
-and work, Watt became an accomplished and scientific
-man. When nearly eighty years of age he and Sir
-Walter Scott met. Referring to the occasion, and speaking
-of Watt, Sir Walter is reported to have said, “The
-alert, kind, benevolent old man had his attention alive to
-every one’s question, his information at every one’s command.
-His talents and fancy overflowed on every subject.
-One gentleman was a deep philologist&mdash;he talked with
-him on the origin of the alphabet as if he had been
-coeval with Cadmus; another a celebrated critic&mdash;you
-would have said the old man had studied political economy
-and belles-lettres all his life; of science it is unnecessary
-to speak&mdash;it was his distinguished walk.”</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote4"><a href="#FNanchor4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a>
-“I believe that well-advised practice in any of the constructive
-arts involving not more than one-third of the student’s time will yield
-as much mental improvement as will result if the whole time be devoted
-to study from text-books.”&mdash;Prof. Wm. F. M. Goss, six years
-Director of the Department of Practical Mechanics of Purdue University.</p>
-
-<p>“And reflect that he will learn more by one hour of manual labor
-than he will retain from a whole day’s verbal instructions.”&mdash;“The
-Emilius and Sophia” of J. J. Rousseau, Vol. II., p. 64. London:
-1767.</p>
-
-<p>“The things themselves are the best explanations. I can never
-enough repeat it, that we make words of too much consequence;
-with our prating modes of education we make nothing but praters.”&mdash;Ibid.,
-p. 46.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>These examples of remarkable intellectual development<span class="pagenum" id="Page121">[121]</span>
-in connection with tool-practice are not phenomenal.
-From the annals of invention and discovery numerous
-instances might be cited in support of the proposition
-of this chapter, that tool-practice stimulates intellectual
-growth.</p>
-
-<p>In the Artisan’s School at Rotterdam, Holland, an experience
-of seven years has demonstrated that “boys who
-are occupied one-half the day with books in the school,
-and the remaining half with tools in the laboratories,
-make about as rapid intellectual progress as those of equal
-ability who spend the whole day in study and recitation.”
-The testimony of Dr. Woodward, director of the St. Louis
-(Mo.) Manual Training School, is to the same effect. And
-in one of his reports he says, “Success in drawing or shop-work
-has often had the effect of arousing the ambition
-in mathematics and history, and <i>vice versa</i>.... The habit
-of working from drawings and to nice measurements has
-given the students a confidence in themselves altogether
-new. This is shown in the readiness with which they
-undertake the execution of small commissions in behalf
-of the school.... In fact, the increased usefulness of our
-students is making itself felt, and in several instances the
-result has been the offer of business positions too tempting
-to be rejected.”</p>
-
-<p>Of the results achieved by the Imperial Technical
-School, Moscow, Russia, M. Victor Della-Vos, director,
-speaks with the utmost confidence. He says, “And now
-(1878) we present our system of instruction, not as a
-project, but as an accomplished fact, confirmed by the
-long experience of ten years of success in its results.”
-The methods of instruction of the school at Moscow
-were introduced into all the technical schools of Russia
-in 1870.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page122">[122]</span></p>
-
-<p>A similar degree of success has attended the Royal
-Mechanic Art School at Komotau, Bohemia. The management
-says, “The school has shown the most brilliant
-proofs of usefulness, and the ends gained have been acknowledged
-at home and abroad. One proof is that in
-spite of the hard times all the pupils from Komotau
-have found occupation in different manufacturing establishments;
-and another that England, a country unsurpassed
-in the manufactures of iron and steel, has already
-sent some students to the school.”</p>
-
-<p>If the pupil in the Manual Training School makes as
-rapid progress intellectually as the pupil in the public or
-private school of corresponding grade, it follows that
-whatever skill in the use of tools is acquired, and whatever
-knowledge of practical mechanics is gained&mdash;these
-stand for the net gain of the pupil of the new system
-of education. But much more follows by implication.
-For if the few pupils of the world’s few manual
-training schools are making equal intellectual progress
-with the many pupils of the many schools of the old <i>régime</i>,
-and making such progress in a little more than half
-the study-hours, the consideration of overwhelming import
-is the loss sustained by the millions of pupils being
-trained under the old system.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page123">[123]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="chapno">CHAPTER XII.</span><br />
-<span class="chapname">THE EDUCATION OF WOMEN A NECESSITY.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="subjects">The Difference between Ancient and Modern Systems of Education. &mdash; Plato
-Blinded by Half-truths. &mdash; No place in the present order of
-things for Dogmatisms. &mdash; Education commences at Birth. &mdash; The Influence
-of Woman extends from the Cradle to the Grave. &mdash; The
-Crime of Crimes. &mdash; Neglect to educate Woman. &mdash; The Superiority
-of Women over Men as Teachers. &mdash; Froebel discovered it. &mdash; Nature
-designed Woman to Teach; hence the Importance of Fitting her
-for her Highest Destiny.</p>
-
-<p>This, from the lips of Plato, was the theory of the
-ancients: “The earth is the common mother of the human
-race, but it has pleased the gods to mix gold in the
-composition of some, silver in that of others, iron and
-copper in that of others.”<a href="#Footnote5" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor5">[5]</a> On this divinely established
-principle of caste all the ancient educational systems were
-founded. They were limited to the development of the
-few in whose composition gold was supposed to be mixed.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote5"><a href="#FNanchor5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a>
-“The Republic of Plato,” p. 114. London: Macmillan &amp; Co.,
-1881.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The idea of a universal education is modern, and all
-other differences between the ancients and moderns combined
-are as nothing to this one fundamental difference
-between the two civilizations. Plato’s ideal republic was
-based upon the assumption that the “guardians” might
-be made just and wise by educating them; but that the
-other classes might also be made just and wise by education,<span class="pagenum" id="Page124">[124]</span>
-and the State be so rendered absolutely secure, did
-not occur to the great philosopher.</p>
-
-<p>Plato was blinded by half-truths, as Rousseau was two
-thousand years later, when he said, “The poor stand in
-no need of education; that of their station is confined,
-and they cannot obtain any other.”<a href="#Footnote6" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor6">[6]</a> That men are created
-unequal intellectually is only a half-truth in an educational
-view; the whole truth is that every child is susceptible
-of the developing influence of education, and
-hence the obligation of the State to educate relates to all
-children. Plato’s simile of the gold, the silver, and the
-iron shows how autocratically even the greatest mind is
-controlled by its environment, and limited by the facts
-which constitute the basis of its generalizations. Were
-Plato teaching here, now, he would transpose the order of
-statement in his simile, since iron, not gold, is the king
-of metals. Each generation increases the world’s stock
-of facts; hence there is no place in the modern order of
-things for the dogmatist&mdash;the dogmatisms of yesterday
-become apt themes for the satires of to-day, subjecting
-their authors to ridicule. This fact should impress upon
-professional teachers, and upon all persons engaged in
-seeking to promote the cause of education, the importance
-of a reverently studious habit of mind touching the
-progress of events. The tyranny of tradition is an ever-present,
-potent influence, and only the growing mind can
-resist it.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote6"><a href="#FNanchor6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a>
-“Emilius and Sophia,” Vol. I, p. 40. London: 1767.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>But there are certain principles upon which not only
-ancient and modern educators agree, but about which
-there is no dispute between existing rival schools, as, for
-example, this proposition of Plato&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page125">[125]</span></p>
-
-<p>“The beginning is the most important part, especially
-in dealing with anything young and tender, for that is
-the time when any impression which one may desire to
-communicate is most readily stamped and taken.”<a href="#Footnote7" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor7">[7]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote7"><a href="#FNanchor7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a>
-“The Republic of Plato,” p. 65. London: Macmillan &amp; Co.,
-1881.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>And this proposition of Rousseau&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“The education of a man commences at his birth; before
-he can speak, before he can understand, he is already
-instructed.... Trace the progress of the most ignorant of
-mortals from his birth to the present hour and you will
-be astonished at the knowledge he has acquired.”<a href="#Footnote8" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor8">[8]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote8"><a href="#FNanchor8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a>
-“Emilius and Sophia,” Vol. I., p. 54. London: 1767.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>And this further proposition, also of Rousseau&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“The common profession of all men is humanity; and
-whoever is well educated to discharge the duties of a
-man cannot be badly prepared to fill up any of those
-offices that have a relation to him.”<a href="#Footnote9" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor9">[9]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote9"><a href="#FNanchor9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> Ibid., Vol. I., p 13.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The truth of these propositions being admitted, some
-conception may be formed of the tremendous influence
-exerted by woman upon the destinies of the human race.
-It extends literally from the cradle to the grave. All
-other influences combined are less potent, less comprehensive
-than this single, persistent force that creates the
-very atmosphere in which the infant mind develops,
-holding the ground alone and undisturbed until the
-child’s plastic character has been formed, receiving ineradicable
-impressions. What a crime, then, was the neglect
-of the people of past ages to educate woman! It
-is in vain that the education of man is attempted if that
-of woman is neglected. It was Rousseau who in despair
-exclaimed:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page126">[126]</span></p>
-
-<p>“How can a child be properly educated by one who
-has not been properly educated himself?”</p>
-
-<p>Since, therefore, the education of the man begins while
-he lies helpless in his mother’s arms, and since the first
-steps in this direction are the most important, and since
-some sort of education proceeds with almost inconceivable
-rapidity through all the early years of life, it follows
-that the kindergarten fills a place in the educational
-field entirely unoccupied until the time of Froebel. He
-first applied the ideas of Rousseau to school life. But
-when the kindergarten receives the child, three or four of
-the most precious educational years have already passed
-away, and at the still tender age of seven the child is
-surrendered to a very different system of training. The
-kindergarten is therefore only a brief episode in the educational
-period of the child’s life. But if it be the true
-education, it is susceptible of universal application.
-Throughout all nature the order of development is constant
-and harmonious, and the child-nature cannot in
-reason constitute an exception to this rule. Froebel said,
-“The end and aim of all our work should be the harmonious
-growth of the whole being.” If his principle is
-the true one, his method is susceptible of such modification
-and expansion as to render it applicable to the whole
-educational period. All mothers should therefore be
-trained in the principles and methods of the new education&mdash;the
-kindergarten system should prevail in all
-schools, and the kindergarten curriculum should be extended
-and adapted to all ages and grades of pupils.</p>
-
-<p>Several great minds, separated by considerable intervals
-of time, have united in condemning the old systems
-of education&mdash;Bacon, Comenius, Rousseau, Pestalozzi,
-and Froebel. Bacon, himself a university man, said,<span class="pagenum" id="Page127">[127]</span>
-“They learn nothing at the universities but to believe;”
-and he proposed that a college be appropriated to the
-discovery of new truth, “to mix like a living spring with
-the stagnant waters.” Three of these great men&mdash;Comenius,
-Pestalozzi, and Froebel&mdash;were professional teachers.
-Theoretically they were in accord with and followers
-of Bacon, and in practice they were substantially
-agreed. Comenius said, “Let things that have to be done
-be learned by doing them.” Pestalozzi said, “Education
-is the generation of power,” and Froebel said, “The end
-and aim of all our work should be the harmonious growth
-of the whole being.”</p>
-
-<p>These are very high authorities, and they are buttressed
-by seemingly impregnable educational propositions. The
-record of Froebel’s life is worthy of great weight in support
-of his theory. His devotion to the cause of education
-was absolute. He never knew a selfish aim. He
-struggled for the race, not for self. He was the victim
-of many misfortunes, but none disturbed the serenity of
-this great soul devoted to the greatest of great causes&mdash;the
-cause of education. And education to his apprehension
-was the thorough training of every faculty of the
-mind and every power of the body for the duties of actual
-practical life. His love embraced the world in its
-entirety and in all its parts. Dying, he said, “I love
-flowers, men, children, God! I love everything!” It
-was his profoundly philosophic conception of the innate
-lovableness of every natural object that made him shudder
-at the cruel distortion wrought in the natures of
-little children by false methods of education. Hence
-his intense devotion to the subject of infant training, and
-hence the excellence of the system which bears his name.</p>
-
-<p>Froebel’s most subtile discovery was the fact of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page128">[128]</span>
-superiority of women over men, as teachers. Only an
-honest, brave soul could have made this discovery, for
-tradition stood like a lion in the way, and prejudice discouraged
-investigation. But Froebel sought truth for
-truth’s sake, fearlessly defying tradition and ignoring
-prejudice; and years of experiment convinced him that
-the greatest measure of success in infant training was
-surely attainable through women. That this discovery,
-so simple, yet so big with grand possibilities, was not made
-earlier is due to the fact that there is so little really
-independent thought, so little investigation free from
-the trammels of prejudice. Now that a great mind has
-pointed the way it is obvious that Nature, having designed
-that the years of early childhood should be spent
-with the mother, must have also designed that women
-should be the chief educators of children. And it follows,
-of course, that the education of women is more
-important than that of men, since it is from them that
-children receive their first impressions, and since first
-impressions are indelibly stamped upon the infant mind,
-giving it form, color, and substance.</p>
-
-<p>In confiding to women this great trust, Froebel imposed
-upon them an incalculable weight of responsibility. It
-comprehends the destiny of the human race, involving
-the problem of its progress or retrogression.</p>
-
-<p>A common first conception of the kindergarten is&mdash;a
-convenient asylum for the children of mothers who
-desire to be relieved of their care. A more thoughtful
-study reveals its poetry and sentiment, the innocent joy
-of the assembly of pupils, the harmony of song, and the
-grace of motion in the games and dances. A final, large
-view discloses the true educational principle. The kindergarten
-is more clearly comprehended after studying<span class="pagenum" id="Page129">[129]</span>
-the manual training school&mdash;moving from the effect to
-the cause; for as the child is father of the man, so the
-kindergarten is father of the manual training school.
-The kindergarten comes first in the order of development,
-and leads logically to the manual training school.
-The same principle underlies both. In both it is sought
-to generate power by dealing with actualities. The
-corner-stone of both is object-teaching&mdash;teaching through
-things instead of through signs of things. This principle,
-common to both, is the concrete as opposed to the
-abstract. The theory of both is that, in teaching, ideas
-should never be isolated from the objects they
-represent.<a href="#Endnote3" class="fnanchor" id="EndAnchor3">[E3]</a>
-The kindergarten and the manual training school, being
-one in principle, should have common methods of instruction,
-varied sufficiently to adapt them to the whole
-range of school life.</p>
-
-<hr class="footnote" />
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Endnote3"><span class="label"><a href="#EndAnchor3">[E3]</a></span>
-“This method of object teaching is perhaps the greatest service
-which the naturalistic school has rendered to the cause of education.
-Hinted at by Rabelais and Locke, still more largely developed by
-Rousseau, it has received, in the last century, a more accurate and
-scientific form, and is probably destined to become the source of a
-new curriculum in which literature will only hold a secondary place.”&mdash;“Educational
-Theories,” p. 109. By Oscar Browning, M.A.
-New York: Harper &amp; Brothers, 1885.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page130">[130]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="chapno">CHAPTER XIII.</span><br />
-<span class="chapname">THE MORAL EFFECT OF MANUAL TRAINING.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="subjects">Mental Impulses are often Vicious; but the Exertion of Physical
-Power in the Arts is always Beneficent &mdash; hence Manual Training
-tends to correct vicious mental Impulses. &mdash; Every mental Impression
-produces a moral Effect. &mdash; All Training is Moral as well as
-Mental. &mdash; Selfishness is total Depravity; but Selfishness has been
-Deified under the name of Prudence. &mdash; Napoleon an Example of
-Selfishness. &mdash; The End of Selfishness is Disaster; but Prevailing
-Systems of Education promote Selfishness. &mdash; The Modern City an
-Illustration of Selfishness. &mdash; The Ancient City. &mdash; Existing Systems
-of Education Negatively Wrong. &mdash; Manual Training supplies the
-lacking Element. &mdash; The Objective must take the Place of the Subjective
-in Education. &mdash; Words without Acts are as dead as Faith
-without Works.</p>
-
-<p>Education, or training, has two immediate and continuous
-effects&mdash;the development of innate mental qualities
-or aptitudes and the formation of character. In an orderly
-logical system of training the development would
-be harmonious, and the resulting formation of character
-symmetrical. These are, however, ideal conditions requiring
-a perfect system of training, and students free
-from the perversions and deformities growing out of
-the law of heredity. But under any system of training
-there is progress&mdash;development and character formation.
-The aphorism, “An idle brain is the devil’s workshop,”
-expresses only a half-truth. What it means is this: if
-the mind is not well employed it will be ill employed; or
-if it is not occupied with good thoughts it will be occupied
-with evil thoughts. The mind of man is never at<span class="pagenum" id="Page131">[131]</span>
-rest, in equilibrium, even in a state of barbarism. Indeed
-this is obvious, since all civilizations are growths
-from states of savagery. But the barbaric line once passed,
-development is greatly accelerated, assuming with the
-evolution of the ages the form of a geometrical progression.
-The distinguishing characteristic of modern civilization
-is action. In so far as this action, which may be called
-the impulsive force of the spirit of the age, is natural and
-orderly, it constitutes an aid to the processes of education;
-if otherwise, it is obstructive, hindering them.</p>
-
-<p>The law of mental development is not the exact correlative
-of the law of physical development. The direct
-aim of physical training is muscular power; of mental
-training the aim is mental power and rectitude. Physical
-power is not intrinsically vicious; it becomes vicious
-only when exerted under a vicious intellectual impulse.
-But this is not necessarily true of mental power; for
-mental power may be gained quite apart from the element
-of rectitude, in which event it is vicious, and may
-be exerted in scorn of the accepted standards of right,
-truth, and justice. As a matter of fact it is often so exerted,
-and the fact that it is so exerted accounts for the
-crimes of individuals, the faults of society, and the errors
-of governments. The constitution of mental power is,
-then, complex, while that of physical power is simple. If
-mental power consists of sense perception, or understanding,
-and moral perception, or rectitude, in due proportion,
-the issue is a noble character; but if rectitude is wanting,
-the issue is an evil character. If, on the other hand, there
-is no interference with the orderly development of physical
-power, the issue of its exertion is always skill&mdash;skill
-applied in innumerable forms to the uses of man. Only
-through a mental impulse rendered vicious by the absence<span class="pagenum" id="Page132">[132]</span>
-of the element of rectitude can physical power be
-diverted from its naturally beneficent mission.</p>
-
-<p>It follows that most of the evils of civilization flow
-from an ill-balanced mental constitution&mdash;a mental constitution
-wanting the essential element of rectitude. Since,
-then, mental development, under certain widely prevailing
-conditions, is so prolific of evil, and physical development
-or skill so universally prolific of good, it is obvious
-that the beneficent influence of the latter should,
-if practicable, be brought to bear upon the former in educational
-systems. In a word, may not the two systems
-of training be so connected in the schools as to cause
-the manual to react upon the mental, with the effect of
-greatly stimulating the ethical side of the mind?</p>
-
-<p>It is not essential to our purpose to inquire whether a
-perfect system of education, and hence an ideal state of
-society, is possible. It will be sufficient if we are able to
-show wherein prevailing systems of education can be improved.</p>
-
-<p>In a former chapter we sought to show that the use of
-mechanical tools stimulates the intellect; in the present
-chapter it is our purpose to endeavor to show that manual
-training tends to the promotion of rectitude, to the
-up building of character.</p>
-
-<p>For purposes of culture the mind consists of divisions,
-as the body consists of members. It is susceptible of
-development in the line of the application of mental
-training, as any member of the body is susceptible of development
-through physical training or use. For example,
-the memory may be invigorated by the constant application
-of certain kinds of mental training, as the arm
-is strengthened by the constant use of the sledge-hammer.
-But if the mental training which stimulates the memory<span class="pagenum" id="Page133">[133]</span>
-is applied to the neglect of other lines of training, the
-memory will be strengthened at the expense of some other
-faculty of the mind, as the excessive use of the sledge-hammer
-strengthens the arm at the cost of other members
-of the body. In the one case the mind, and in the other
-the body will be deformed. In the case of the sledge-hammer
-training the muscles of the arm will stand out
-like whip-cords, while those of the legs will shrivel and
-become attenuated. In the case of the training of the
-memory that faculty will show an abnormal development,
-while some other faculty, as the power of ratiocination,
-probably, will become weak.</p>
-
-<p>It is not necessary in this connection to inquire into
-the origin of moral sentiments, or to consider the rival
-theories on the subject. However men may differ as
-between the two schools of moral philosophers&mdash;the
-sentimentalists and the utilitarians&mdash;they will agree that
-the moral side of the mind, so to speak, consists of divisions
-like the mental side; that these divisions are the
-source, respectively, of good and evil tendencies, and that
-these tendencies are susceptible of cultivation; that the
-evil may be restrained and the good developed, and <i>vice
-versa</i>. Nor will it be disputed that there is such a
-blending of the moral with the mental nature in the
-mind of man as to render any consideration of the subject
-irrational and incomplete which does not comprehend
-both, and treat them, practically, as one and the
-same. Man is so constituted, and his relations to society
-are such, that every mental impression he receives produces
-a moral effect, the character of which is, of course,
-largely dependent upon the accepted standards of right,
-truth, and justice. Hence all scholastic training is both
-mental and moral. It is moral as well as mental, whether<span class="pagenum" id="Page134">[134]</span>
-the instructor will it so or not; and that it is moral is
-well, since it is obviously true, as Galton pertinently remarks,
-that “Great men have usually high moral natures,
-and are affectionate and reverential, inasmuch as
-mere brain without heart is insufficient to achieve eminence.”</p>
-
-<p>Selfishness is the arch enemy of virtue; from it all
-forms of immorality spring, and its last analysis is total
-depravity. But literature, which is the fruitage of education,
-is full of maxims in honor of selfishness. Said the
-Dauphin to the French king, “Self-love, my liege, is not
-so vile a sin as self-neglecting.” Said Herbert, “Help
-thyself and God will help thee.” “A penny saved is as
-good as a penny earned,” said Franklin; and the grasping
-“Yankee” stretches the maxim a point in saying to
-his son, “Make money honestly if you can, but make
-money.”</p>
-
-<p>The following, also, are current maxims: “Every man
-is the architect of his own fortune;” “Every tub must
-stand upon its own bottom;” “In the race of life the
-devil takes the hindmost;” “Look to the main chance;”
-and, “Keep what you have got, and catch what you can.”
-To the same purpose is the famous old aphorism of which
-Napoleon the First was so fond, “God always favors the
-heaviest battalions.” Emerson declared that Napoleon
-represented “the spirit of modern commerce, of money,
-and material power,” and he certainly was the very incarnation
-of selfishness.<a href="#Footnote10" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor10">[10]</a>
-He had a hand of iron, and he<span class="pagenum" id="Page135">[135]</span>
-laid it heavily on all who opposed him. If it became
-necessary to imprison his enemies he imprisoned them;
-if it became necessary to kill them he cut off their heads.
-When charged with the commission of great crimes, he
-retorted, “Men of my stamp do not commit crimes!”
-“I have always marched with the opinion of great masses
-and events,” he exclaimed, with the insolence of a butcher
-exhibiting his bloody hands. Old-fashioned codes of
-morals were for those who opposed his plans, not for
-him. But the end of selfishness is disaster. It is as
-dangerous to assume to rise above moral laws as to sink
-below them; in the one case they crush, and in the other
-they undermine. “The half” is, after all, “more than
-the whole,” for “the half” may be retained, but “the
-whole” is sure to slip from the fingers of grasping avarice.
-Napoleon, who defied all mankind, expiated his
-crimes on a rock in mid-ocean. There, whining, protesting,
-and prating of injustice, he died miserably, a
-colossal example of the folly of selfishness.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote10"><a href="#FNanchor10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a>
-“‘God has granted,’ says the Koran, ‘to every people a prophet
-in its own tongue.’ Paris, and London, and New York, the spirit of
-commerce, of money, and material power, were also to have their
-prophet; and Bonaparte was qualified and sent. Every one of the
-million readers of anecdotes, or memoirs, or lives of Napoleon delights
-in the page, because he studies in it his own history.”&mdash;“Representative
-Men,” p. 221. Boston: Phillips, Sampson &amp; Co., 1858.</p>
-
-<p>It would be impossible more severely to arraign existing educational
-methods; for men are what education makes them.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Selfishness seeks to wring from society a support without
-giving to it an equivalent return. What industry
-creates and saves to society, selfishness seeks to misappropriate
-to its own use; hence selfishness is in conflict
-with the true spirit of civilization, which is the compact
-of all to protect each in his rights. Selfishness caused
-the destruction of all the governments of ancient times,
-and it has been the cause of all the revolutions of modern
-times. There can be no stability in government until
-altruism takes the place of selfishness in the world’s code<span class="pagenum" id="Page136">[136]</span>
-of ethics. The sole condition of the stability of the State
-is a disposition on the part of its people to conform to
-justice and correct moral principles in all social relations.</p>
-
-<p>Any system of education that does not tend to produce
-a state of morals conformable to this high standard is not
-merely defective; it is radically wrong, and therefore
-positively vicious. The true purpose of education is the
-harmonious development of all the powers of the man&mdash;mental,
-moral, and physical. But harmony in a selfish
-character is impossible, for selfishness is blind of one
-eye, so to speak; it considers only one side of a cause&mdash;the
-side that relates to its interest, regardless of all other
-interests. Let not prudence be confounded with selfishness.
-Prudence and selfishness are as wide apart as the
-poles. Extreme prudence is perfectly consistent with
-entire rectitude, while extreme selfishness is the synonym
-of depravity; hence the first step in education is to
-eliminate selfishness from the mind, and the next step is
-to put rectitude in its place.</p>
-
-<p>Prevailing systems of education no doubt promote the
-spirit of selfishness:<a href="#Footnote11" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor11">[11]</a>
-witness the character of the struggle
-for self-aggrandizement. It is more intense and more
-widely extended than at any period of the world’s history.<span class="pagenum" id="Page137">[137]</span>
-That it is more intense is shown by the more and
-more rapid concentration of populations in cities, where
-the struggle assumes its most intense form, and exhibits
-itself in its most threatening aspect.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote11"><a href="#FNanchor11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a>
-“In small, undeveloped societies, where for ages complete peace
-has continued, there exists nothing like what we call Government;
-no coercive agency, but mere honorary headship, if any headship at
-all. In these exceptional communities, unaggressive, and from special
-causes unaggressed upon, there is so little deviation from the virtues
-of truthfulness, honesty, justice, and generosity, that nothing beyond
-an occasional expression of public opinion by informally assembled
-elders is needful.”&mdash;“Political Institutions,” ¶¶ 437, 573; “The Sins
-of Legislators,” in “The Man <i>versus</i> the State,” p. 44. By Herbert
-Spencer. New York: D. Appleton &amp; Co.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Cities have always been plague-spots on the body politic,
-and they are not less so now than in ancient times.
-It is in cities that all dangers to the State originate;
-and the sole, fundamental reason why cities are a standing
-menace to the integrity of the social compact is the
-fact that they are dominated by selfishness. It is in
-cities that the unnatural, unwholesome desire to live
-without labor, to live by speculative enterprises, becomes
-a consuming passion, inoculating with a deeper and darker
-degree of selfishness an ever-widening circle of people;
-and selfishness at last inevitably leads to anarchy. It
-leads to anarchy and chaos because both classes of society
-become depraved&mdash;the rich and powerful through indolence
-and sensual indulgence, and the poor and wretched
-through ignorance and privation and their attendant
-mean vices.</p>
-
-<p>The modern city is the despair of the political economist.
-It grows relatively faster in population than
-the rural district, and it would be the extreme of optimism
-to declare that it grows better.<a href="#Endnote4" class="fnanchor" id="EndAnchor4">[E4]</a> It does not matter
-that the city is the centre of learning, the nursery of all
-the active intelligences which are achieving fresh triumphs
-daily in every department of science, literature,
-and art. It is also the centre of vice, and the nursery
-of every variety of crime.</p>
-
-<p>The difficulty&mdash;nay, the despair&mdash;of the situation is
-not relieved or mitigated by the undisputed fact that the
-ancient city was much worse morally and politically than
-the modern city, and hence that as between Rome and<span class="pagenum" id="Page138">[138]</span>
-Chicago there is an immense moral and political advantage
-in favor of the latter. If Chicago is retrograding
-morally and politically, what is to prevent it from sinking
-to the moral and political status of Rome under the infamous
-emperors of the period of its decadence? If the
-modern American city is rapidly degenerating, both as a
-moral force and a political institution, what is to arrest
-its downward progress? What influence is to intervene
-to reverse the order and nature of its development?</p>
-
-<p>Rome, in the very agonies of political dissolution, possessed
-all the then known arts, a splendid literature, and
-a school of philosophy whose ethical code was more lofty,
-if less human, than that of the new system which was
-struggling to replace the old. That the inconceivably
-atrocious gladiatorial games should have developed into
-such huge proportions in conjunction with the sublime
-moral teachings of Seneca, Plutarch, Marcus Aurelius,
-and a score of others, is the despair of students of Roman
-history. While they taught, emperors and people alike
-feasted their eyes on bloody orgies of men and beasts,
-on scenes of the most horrible barbarity. Caligula took
-special delight in watching the countenances of the dying,
-“for he had learned to take an artistic pleasure in
-observing the variations of their agony.” Criminals
-dressed in the skins of wild beasts were thrown to bulls
-which were maddened with red-hot irons. “Four hundred
-bears were killed in a single day under Caligula; three
-hundred on another day under Claudius. Under Nero,
-four hundred tigers fought with bulls and elephants; four
-hundred bears and three hundred lions were slaughtered
-by his soldiers. In a single day, at the dedication of the
-Colosseum by Titus, five thousand animals perished. Under
-Trajan the games continued for one hundred and<span class="pagenum" id="Page139">[139]</span>
-twenty-three successive days. Lions, tigers, rhinoceroses,
-hippopotami, giraffes, bulls, stags, even crocodiles and serpents,
-were employed to give novelty to the spectacle.”</p>
-
-<p>And yet the civilization that produced these games
-gave to the world, forever, the moral precepts of the stoics
-and philosophers. Cicero had maintained the doctrine
-of the universal brotherhood of man. “Nature ordains,”
-he says, “that a man should wish the good of every man,
-whoever he may be, for this very reason: that he is a
-man.” Menander maintained that “man should deem
-nothing human foreign to his interest.” Lucan looked
-forward to the time when “the human race will cast
-aside its weapons, and all nations learn to love.” In a
-letter on the death of his slaves Pliny exhibited feelings
-of strong human affection, and Plutarch, in a letter of
-consolation to his wife on the death of his daughter, left
-a touching record of the tenderness of his heart in the
-recital of a simple trait of the child: “She desired her
-nurse to press even her dolls to the breast. She was so
-loving that she wished everything that gave her pleasure
-to share in the best that she had.” Says Seneca, “The
-whole universe which you see around you, comprising all
-things both divine and human, is one. We are members
-of one great body.” And Epictetus, “You are a citizen
-and a part of the world. The duty of a citizen is in
-nothing to consider his own interest distinct from that
-of others.”</p>
-
-<p>The contrast between these noble moral sentiments
-and the actual life of the Roman people is truly startling.<a href="#Endnote5" class="fnanchor" id="EndAnchor5">[E5]</a>
-It is plain that the profession of lofty moral sentiments
-by a class, the possession of high literary attainments,
-and an extensive acquaintance with the arts, do not always
-afford protection against national degradation and<span class="pagenum" id="Page140">[140]</span>
-decay. Nor is it by any means certain that the Christian
-religion is destined to effect more in this regard than the
-pagan code of morals. Rome embraced religion, but its
-conversion was powerless to avert political and commercial
-destruction.</p>
-
-<p>The modern city has for guides the example of all the
-ancient civilizations and political and moral systems, and
-in addition it has, in its most vital form, the Christian
-system of morals and faith. But notwithstanding all
-these helps it is politically corrupt and morally depraved.
-Its streets are the scenes of vice scarcely less revolting
-than those of ancient Rome. It harbors an army of
-criminals which grows with its growth, and is without
-any systematized effort either to reform or abolish it.
-Indeed this army of criminals is constantly reinforced in
-an increasing ratio to the whole population from the ranks
-of the rising generation, which is to a degree enforced to
-ignorance by the inadequacy of educational facilities.<a href="#Footnote12" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor12">[12]</a>
-Its power to accumulate wealth is increasing, but this
-power is confined to relatively fewer hands, and this is
-one of the most alarming features of the situation. For
-the increase of ignorance, vice, and crime is sure to keep
-pace with the abnormal growth of estates, stimulated to
-the highest degree by dishonest business practices and
-gigantic schemes of speculation.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote12"><a href="#FNanchor12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a>
-In support of the truth of these propositions it is sufficient merely
-to allude to the late disclosures by the <i>Pall Mall Gazette</i> of the prevalence
-of revolting crimes in London, England. It is also pertinent
-to remark the attitude of hostility maintained by the higher classes
-(so called) of the English people towards the editor of the journal in
-which the disclosures were made, as significant of an alarming degeneration
-of the moral sense of the British public.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>It does not follow because prevailing methods of education<span class="pagenum" id="Page141">[141]</span>
-promote the spirit of selfishness, and hence contain
-the seeds of social and moral decay, that they are wholly
-vicious; but it does follow, if they are not positively
-wrong, that they are negatively wrong. Let us assume
-that they are only negatively wrong, that they lack an
-essential element in all mental and moral training&mdash;the
-manual element; and let us try to discover what would
-be the effect of the incorporation of this element into
-the curriculum of the schools.</p>
-
-<p>A system of education consisting exclusively of mental
-exercises promotes selfishness because such training is
-subjective. Its effects flow inward; they relate to self.
-All mental acquirements become a part of self, and so
-remain forever, unless they are transmuted into things
-through the agency of the hand.</p>
-
-<p>It is through the hand alone that the mind finally impresses
-itself upon matter. In other words, thought and
-speech must be incarnate in things or they are dead.
-The orator appeals to the people to strike for their
-rights; the people rend the air with shouts and subside
-into silence. The orator cries, “To Arms!” Again the
-people shout, and again subside into silence. The orator’s
-thoughts are of carnage, his words of flames, but
-they are as dead as if never uttered because no hand is
-raised to embody them in deeds.</p>
-
-<p>Manual training, on the other hand, promotes altruism
-because it is objective. Its effects flow outward; they
-relate not to self but to the human race. The skilled
-hand confers benefits upon man, and each benefit so
-conferred exerts the natural reflex moral influence of
-a good act upon the mind of the benefactor.<a href="#Endnote6" class="fnanchor" id="EndAnchor6">[E6]</a></p>
-
-<p>Morality is not a mere sentiment, a barren ideality. It
-is true there is a negative morality which consists in<span class="pagenum" id="Page142">[142]</span>
-refraining from the commission of wrongful acts. But
-the morality of the great ethical teachers is positive; it
-consists in doing. Christ said, “Inasmuch as ye have
-done <i>it</i> unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye
-have done <i>it</i> unto me.” Words without acts are as dead
-as faith without works. Paul said, “Though I have all
-faith, so that I could remove mountains, and have not
-charity, I am nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>Morality is a vital principle whose exemplification consists
-in doing justice; and justice is that virtue “which
-consists in giving to every one what is his due; practical
-conformity to the laws and to principles of rectitude in
-the dealings of men with each other; honesty, integrity
-in commerce or mutual intercourse.” It follows that
-morality can no more be acquired by memorizing a series
-of maxims than the art of using tools can be acquired by
-studying the laws of mechanics and of mechanism.</p>
-
-<hr class="footnote" />
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Endnote4"><span class="label"><a href="#EndAnchor4">[E4]</a></span>
-“No city was ever so deeply disgraced by its municipal government
-as the city of New York. Fourteen years ago the exposure of
-the Tweed Ring revealed a corruption in that government which had
-mastered Legislatures and courts, and was plotting to control the national
-administration; and as we write, all of the living ex-members
-of the late Board of Aldermen, except two, are held for trial for
-bribery and corruption, or are in hiding.</p>
-
-<p>“Such a shame is unprecedented. It is in itself a sharp satire
-upon popular elections, as well as upon the character and public
-spirit of New York; and the worst of it is that, bad as it is, no citizen
-probably feels himself to be humiliated, or is conscious of any
-personal responsibility. To the most stupid man, however, such
-facts forecast a constant deterioration of the situation.”&mdash;“Harper’s
-Weekly,” April 24, 1886.</p>
-
-<p id="Endnote5"><span class="label"><a href="#EndAnchor5">[E5]</a></span>
-The morality of the present age, like that of the Romans, is a
-mere theory, entirely destitute of vital force. Selfishness is still, as
-it always has been, the controlling element in human conduct, and
-selfishness and morality are utterly incompatible. Moral precepts
-are inculcated in a perfunctory way, as Greek is taught because it is<span class="pagenum" id="Page143">[143]</span>
-the fashion, but with no more idea that they will be adopted as the
-rule of life, than that the language of Homer will again be used as
-the instrument of speech. The contempt in which morality is commonly
-held is well shown by the remark of a popular lecturer, who
-said of Peter the Great, that, “viewed morally he was a monster,
-and by the gauge of decency, a brute, but a giant from the lofty
-heights of statesmanship and civilization.” How vain is the hope
-of reform while leaders of men deem it possible for statesmanship to
-be rendered lofty by a moral monster, or that the cause of civilization
-may be advanced by a brute!</p>
-
-<p id="Endnote6"><span class="label"><a href="#EndAnchor6">[E6]</a></span>
-“The artisan stands between every man, woman, and child and
-the crude materials embodied in the three kingdoms of Nature, and
-by the magic of his skill they are transformed into means serviceable
-for use. The wood in the forest, the marble in the quarry, the clay
-in the bank, the metal in the mine pass through his hands, take on
-the form of his thought, become arranged by his intelligence, and
-the product is the modern dwelling. Is there any fancy in fairy tale
-more wonderful than this? By the skill of the tanner and the shoemaker
-the raw skin is transformed into the useful shoe. Do you
-ever think of your indebtedness to these humble toilers for your
-protection and comfort? Do they ever think of the service they are
-rendering you?&mdash;a service which cannot be compensated by dollars
-and cents. The jewels which sparkle in royal crowns and add
-lustre to queenly beauty, the silks and precious stuffs which clothe
-and give new charms to the loveliness of women, owe their beauty,
-their lustre, their value to the artisan. He stands between the
-worm, the mine, and the wearer; and by the transforming power of
-his skill and patient labor they become robes of beauty and gems of
-light. But of far greater importance is the service he is rendering to
-our common humanity. He takes the material which our Heavenly
-Father has provided in such abundance, puts his thought, his intelligence,
-and he has every conceivable motive for putting his love
-and good-will toward men, into them and passing them on as tokens
-of his love and fidelity to human good. Everything he touches becomes
-a message not only of his knowledge and his skill but a fit
-embodiment of his regard for his fellow-men.”&mdash;“Mechanical Employments
-as Means of Human Culture.” Rev. Chauncey Giles.
-Eleventh Series Tracts, p. 15. Philadelphia: New Church Tract
-and Publication Society.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page144">[144]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="chapno">CHAPTER XIV.</span><br />
-<span class="chapname">THE MIND AND THE HAND.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="subjects">The Mind and the Hand are Allies; the Mind speculates, the Hand
-tests its Speculations in Things. &mdash; The Hand explodes the Errors of
-the Mind &mdash; it searches after Truth and finds it in Things. &mdash; Mental
-Errors are subtile; they elude us, but the False in Things stands self-exposed. &mdash; The
-Hand is the Mind’s Moral Rudder. &mdash; The Organ of
-Touch the most Wonderful of the Senses; all the Others are Passive;
-it alone is Active. &mdash; Sir Charles Bell’s Discovery of a “Muscular
-Sense.” &mdash; Dr. Henry Maudsley on the Muscular Sense. &mdash; The Hand
-influences the Brain. &mdash; Connected Thought impossible without Language,
-and Language dependent upon Objects; and all Artificial
-Objects are the Work of the Hand. &mdash; Progress is therefore the Imprint
-of the Hand upon Matter in Art. &mdash; The Hand is nearer the
-Brain than are the Eye and the Ear. &mdash; The Marvellous Works of
-the Hand.</p>
-
-<p>A purely mental acquirement is a theorem&mdash;something
-to be proved. As to whether the theorem is susceptible
-of proof is always a question until the doubt is
-solved by the act of doing. Hence Comenius’s definition
-of education&mdash;“Let those things that have to be done be
-learned by doing them”&mdash;is profoundly philosophical,
-since nothing can be fully learned without the final act
-of doing, owing to the fact of the incompleteness of all
-theoretical knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>The mind and the hand are natural allies. The mind
-speculates; the hand tests the speculations of the mind by
-the law of practical application. The hand explodes the
-errors of the mind, for it inquires, so to speak, by the act
-of doing, whether or not a given theorem is demonstrable<span class="pagenum" id="Page145">[145]</span>
-in the form of a problem. The hand is, therefore,
-not only constantly searching after the truth, but is constantly
-finding it.<a href="#Footnote13" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor13">[13]</a> It is possible for the mind to indulge
-in false logic, to make the worse appear the better reason,
-without instant exposure. But for the hand to work
-falsely is to produce a misshapen thing&mdash;tool or machine&mdash;which
-in its construction gives the lie to its maker.
-Thus the hand that is false to truth, in the very act
-publishes the verdict of its own guilt, exposes itself to
-contempt and derision, convicts itself of unskilfulness or
-of dishonesty.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote13"><a href="#FNanchor13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a>
-“In other cases, even by the strictest attention, it is not possible
-to give complete or strict truth in words. We could not, by any
-number of words, describe the color of a ribbon so as to enable a
-mercer to match it without seeing it. But an ‘accurate’ colorist can
-convey the required intelligence at once, with a tint on paper.”&mdash;“The
-Laws of Feesole,” Vol. I., p. 7. By John Ruskin, LL.D. New
-York: John Wiley &amp; Sons, 1879.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>There is no escaping the logical conclusion of an investigation
-into the relations existing between the mind
-and the hand. The hand is scarcely less the guide than
-the agent of the mind. It steadies the mind. It is
-the mind’s moral rudder, its balance-wheel. It is the
-mind’s monitor. It is constantly appealing to the mind,
-by its acts, to “hew to the line, let the chips fly where
-they may.”</p>
-
-<p>Dr. George Wilson says, “In many respects the organ
-of touch, as embodied in the hand, is the most wonderful
-of the senses. The organs of the other senses are passive;
-the organ of touch alone is active.... The hand
-selects what it shall touch, and touches what it pleases.
-It puts away from it the things which it hates, and beckons
-towards it the things which it desires.... Moreover,<span class="pagenum" id="Page146">[146]</span>
-the hand cares not only for its own wants, but when
-the other organs of the senses are rendered useless takes
-their duties upon it.... The blind man reads with
-his hand, the dumb man speaks with it; it plucks the
-flower for the nostril, and supplies the tongue with objects
-of taste. Not less amply does it give expression to
-the wit, the genius, the will, the power of man. Put a
-sword into it and it will fight, a plough and it will till, a
-harp and it will play, a pencil and it will paint, a pen and
-it will speak. What, moreover, is a ship, a railway, a
-light-house, or a palace&mdash;what indeed is a whole city, a
-whole continent of cities, all the cities of the globe, nay
-the very globe itself, so far as man has changed it, but
-the work of that giant hand with which the human race,
-acting as one mighty man, has executed his will.”<a href="#Footnote14" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor14">[14]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote14"><a href="#FNanchor14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a>
-“The Five Gateways of Knowledge,” p. 121. By George Wilson,
-M.D., F.R.S.E. London: Macmillan &amp; Co., 1881.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>There is a philosophical explanation of the versatility
-of the hand so graphically portrayed in the foregoing
-passage, and it is found in Sir Charles Bell’s great discovery
-of a “muscular sense.” The principle of this discovery
-is that “there are distinct nerves of sensation and of
-motion or volition&mdash;one set bearing messages from the
-body to the brain, and the other from the brain to the
-body.”</p>
-
-<p>In his work on the hand, after reviewing the line of
-argument which led to his discovery, Sir Charles says,
-“By such arguments I have been in the habit of showing
-that we possess a muscular sense, and that without it
-we could have no guidance of the frame. We could not
-command our muscles in standing, far less in walking,
-leaping, or running, had we not a perception of the condition<span class="pagenum" id="Page147">[147]</span>
-of the muscles previous to the exercise of the will.
-And as for the hand, it is not more the freedom of its
-action which constitutes its perfection, than the knowledge
-which we have of these motions, and our consequent
-ability to direct it with the utmost precision.”<a href="#Footnote15" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor15">[15]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote15"><a href="#FNanchor15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a>
-“The Hand: its Mechanism and Vital Endowments as Evincing
-Design,” p. 151. By Sir Charles Bell, K.G.H., F.R.S., L. and E.
-Harper &amp; Brothers, 1864.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>On the influence of the muscular sense, Dr. Henry
-Maudsley has these pertinent observations:</p>
-
-<p>“Those who would degrade the body, in order, as they
-imagine, to exalt the mind, should consider more deeply
-than they do the importance of our muscular expressions
-of feeling. The manifold shades and kinds of expression
-which the lips present&mdash;their gibes, gambols, and flashes
-of merriment; the quick language of a quivering nostril;
-the varied waves and ripples of beautiful emotion which
-play on the human countenance, with the spasms of passion
-that disfigure it&mdash;all which we take such pains to
-embody in art&mdash;are simply effects of muscular action....
-Fix the countenance in the pattern of a particular
-emotion&mdash;in a look of anger, of wonder, or of scorn&mdash;and
-the emotion whose appearance is thus imitated will not fail
-to be aroused. And if we try, while the features are fixed
-in the expression of one passion, to call up in the mind a
-quite different one, we shall find it impossible to do so....
-We perceive, then, that the muscles are not alone the
-machinery by which the mind acts upon the world, but
-that their actions are essential elements in our mental operations.
-The superiority of the human over the animal
-mind seems to be essentially connected with the greater
-variety of muscular action of which man is capable;<span class="pagenum" id="Page148">[148]</span>
-were he deprived of the infinitely varied movements of
-hands, tongue, larynx, lips, and face, in which he is so far
-ahead of the animals, it is probable that he would be no
-better than an idiot, notwithstanding he might have a
-normal development of brain.”<a href="#Footnote16" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor16">[16]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote16"><a href="#FNanchor16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> “Body and Mind,” p. 32. By Henry Maudsley, M.D. New
-York: D. Appleton &amp; Co., 1883.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>It is through the muscular sense that the hand influences
-the brain. According to Sir Charles the hand acts
-first. It telegraphs, for example, that it is ready to grasp
-the chisel or the sledge-hammer, or seize the pen, whereupon
-the brain telegraphs back precise directions as to
-the work to be done. These messages to and fro are
-lightning-like flashes of intelligence, which blend or fuse
-all the powers of the man, both mental and physical, and
-inform and inspire the mass with vital force.<a href="#Footnote17" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor17">[17]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote17"><a href="#FNanchor17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a>
-The goldsmith’s art was one of the finest among the ancients,
-and so continued far into the Middle Ages. The cutting of cameos,
-for example, required the highest skill and produced the most exquisite
-results. Mr. Ruskin calls attention to the fact that “all the
-great early Italian masters of painting and sculpture, without exception,
-began by being goldsmiths’ apprentices;” and that “they
-felt themselves so indebted to, and formed by, the master craftsman
-who had mainly <i>disciplined their fingers</i>, whether in work on
-gold or marble, that they practically considered him their father,
-and took <i>his</i> name rather than their own.”&mdash;“Fors Clavigera,”
-Part III., p. 291. By John Ruskin. LL.D. New York: John
-Wiley &amp; Sons, 1881.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Through constant use the muscular sense is sharpened
-to a marvellous degree of fineness, and the hand, permeated
-by it, forms habits which react powerfully upon the
-mind. If, now, during the period of childhood and youth,
-the hand is exercised in the useful and beautiful arts, its
-muscular sense will be developed normally, or in the direction<span class="pagenum" id="Page149">[149]</span>
-of rectitude, and the reflex effect of this growth
-upon the mind will be beneficent.</p>
-
-<p>It is thus that the trained hand comes at last to foresee,
-as it were, that a false proposition is surely destined to
-be exploded. The habit of rectitude gives it prescience.
-It invariably discovers, sooner or later, that a false proposition,
-when embodied in wood or iron, becomes a conspicuous
-abortion, involving in disgrace both the designer
-and the maker. A false proposition in the abstract may
-be rendered very alluring; a false proposition in the
-concrete is always hideous. One of the chief effects of
-manual training is, then, the discovery and development
-of truth; and truth, in its broadest signification, is merely
-another name for justice; and justice is the synonym of
-morality.</p>
-
-<p>It has been shown that thought and speech are dead
-unless embodied in things. It may also be asserted with
-confidence that man would lose the power of speech almost
-wholly if his words should cease to be realized in
-things. Mr. Darwin declares that “a complex train of
-thought can no more be carried on without the aid of
-words, whether spoken or silent, than a long calculation
-without the use of figures or algebra.”<a href="#Footnote18" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor18">[18]</a> And Dr. Maudsley
-says, “But neither these instances nor the case of
-Laura Bridgman can be used to prove that it is possible
-to think without any means of physical expression. On
-the contrary the evidence is all the other way. The deaf
-and dumb man invents his own signs, which he draws
-from the nature of objects, seizing the most striking outline,
-or the principal movement of an action, and using<span class="pagenum" id="Page150">[150]</span>
-them afterwards as tokens to represent the objects. The
-deaf and dumb gesticulate also as they think; and Laura
-Bridgman’s fingers worked, making the initial movements
-for letters of the finger alphabet, not only during her
-waking thoughts, but in her dreams. If we substitute
-for ‘names’ the motor intuitions, or take care to comprise
-in language all the modes of expressing thoughts,
-whether verbal, vocal writing, or gesture language, then
-it is unquestionable that thought is impossible without
-language.”<a href="#Footnote19" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor19">[19]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote18"><a href="#FNanchor18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a>
-“The Descent of Man,” p. 88. By Charles Darwin, M.A. New
-York: D. Appleton &amp; Co., 1881.</p>
-
-<p id="Footnote19"><a href="#FNanchor19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a>
-“Physiology of the Mind,” p. 480. By Henry Maudsley, M.D.
-New York: D. Appleton &amp; Co., 1883.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>As connected thoughts are impossible without words,
-or signs of words, so words are dependent upon objects
-for their existence. Says Dr. Maudsley, “Words cannot
-attain to definiteness save as living outgrowths of
-realities.”<a href="#Footnote20" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor20">[20]</a>
-And Heyse says, “Thought is not even present
-to the thinker till he has set it forth out of himself.”</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote20"><a href="#FNanchor20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a>
-“I therefore declare my conviction,” says Max Müller, “whether
-right or wrong, as explicitly as possible, that thought in one sense
-of the word, <i>i. e.</i>, in reasoning, is impossible without language.”&mdash;“Physiology
-of the Mind,” p. 480. By Henry Maudsley, M.D.
-New York: D. Appleton &amp; Co., 1883.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>It follows that language has its origin not less in external
-objects than in the mind. Objects make impressions
-upon the mind through the senses, and words serve
-as the means of preserving a record of such impressions
-and of communicating them to other minds. If, now,
-the mind should cease to receive impressions, language
-would no longer be required, since there would be nothing
-to express; and the occasion for the use of language
-ceasing to exist, the power of speech would ultimately be
-lost. The power of speech, then, depends upon a continuous<span class="pagenum" id="Page151">[151]</span>
-succession of impressions made upon the mind
-by its contact, through the senses, with matter in its
-various forms, whether in nature or in art.</p>
-
-<p>It may also be claimed that the power of speech depends
-almost entirely upon the endless succession of
-fresh objects presented to the mind by the hand. These
-form the subject as well as the occasion of speech. If
-the hand should cease to make new things, new words
-would cease to be required. The principal changes in
-language arise out of new discoveries in science and new
-inventions in art, each fresh discovery of science giving
-rise to many new things in art. Art and science react
-upon each other.<a href="#Footnote21" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor21">[21]</a> The growth of a State, its advance
-in the scale of civilization, depends upon progress in the
-practical arts. Hence the fact that, when a State ceases
-to advance, its language ceases to grow, becomes stationary,
-stagnates. In such a State there would be no occasion
-for new words. If a constantly diminishing number
-of objects were presented to the mind, speech would
-become less and less necessary. If no new objects were
-presented, no fresh impressions upon the mind would be
-made, and speech would degenerate into a mere iteration.
-If the hands should cease to labor in the arts, should
-cease to make things, should cease to plant and gather,
-the scope of speech would be still further restricted,
-would be confined to an expression of the wants of savages
-subsisting on the native fruits of field and forest.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote21"><a href="#FNanchor21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a>
-“And the great advances in science have uniformly corresponded
-with the invention of some instrument by which the power of the
-senses has been increased, or the range of action extended.”&mdash;“Physiology
-of the Mind,” p. 8. By Henry Maudsley, M.D. New York:
-D. Appleton &amp; Co., 1883.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>It comes to this, that progress can find expression only<span class="pagenum" id="Page152">[152]</span>
-in the concrete. Guttenberg had an idea that he could employ
-movable types in the production of books. Suppose
-he had been content with the mere promulgation of his
-theory in words, and that those who came after him had
-been similarly content? There would have been no
-printing-presses down to the present time. Suppose that
-Watt and Stephenson and Fulton had been content with
-the declaration, in words, of the discoveries they made
-in regard to the application of the power of steam to
-useful purposes, and that those who came after them
-had been similarly content? There would have been
-neither railways, nor steamships, nor steam-driven machinery
-of any kind down to the present time.</p>
-
-<p>As words are essential to the processes of thought, so
-objects are essential to words or living speech. And as
-all objects made by man owe their existence to the hand,
-it follows that the hand exerts an incalculable influence
-upon the mind, and so constitutes the most potent agency
-in the work of civilization. It was not without good
-reason that Anaxagoras characterized man as the wisest
-of animals because of his having hands. And what is it
-to be wise? To be wise is “to have the power of discerning
-and judging correctly, or of discriminating between
-what is true and what is false; between what is
-fit and proper and what is improper.” The hand is used
-as the synonym of wisdom because it is only in the concrete
-that the false is sure of detection, and it is through
-the hand alone that ideas are realized in things.<a href="#Footnote22" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor22">[22]</a> Again
-we have the hand as the discoverer of truth.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote22"><a href="#FNanchor22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a>
-“Let him [the youth] once learn to take a straight shaving off a
-plank, or draw a fine curve without faltering, or lay a brick level in
-its mortar, and he has learned a multitude of other matters which no
-lips of man could ever teach him.”&mdash;“Time and Tide,” p. 145. By
-John Ruskin, LL.D. New York: John Wiley &amp; Sons, 1883.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page153">[153]</span></p>
-
-<p>The assertion of the majesty of the hand by the Ionic
-philosopher of the fifth century B.C. contained the
-germ of the manual training idea of this latter part of
-the nineteenth century. Anaxagoras was unconsciously,
-no doubt, struggling toward the light, toward the inductive
-method of investigation, toward the sole avenue
-through which it is possible to study the mind, namely,
-through the body. The ignorance of the ancients on the
-subject of physiology was so dense as to leave them no
-resource save speculative philosophy. The progress
-made in the study of anatomy, and organic and inorganic
-chemistry at Alexandria, was, however, considerable. The
-foundations of a systematic physiology were being securely
-laid by Hippocrates, Herophilus, and their compeers of
-the medical profession, and the way was thus being opened
-to an intelligent study of the mind. It is highly probable
-that this growing disposition to investigate things,
-together with the increasing importance to civilization
-of the useful arts, would soon have reacted destructively
-upon the speculative philosophy of the time had not a
-series of national disasters, involving the fall of Greece
-and Rome, overwhelmed both arts and philosophy in one
-common ruin.</p>
-
-<p>From the fall of Rome to the time of Bacon speculative
-philosophy dominated the world. Progress dates
-from the beginning of the seventeenth century, but it
-was very slow until within a hundred years. Philosophy
-has now, however, found a scientific basis. Instead of
-speculating about the “theory of vitality,” it concerns
-itself with “the natural phenomena of living bodies, so<span class="pagenum" id="Page154">[154]</span>
-far as they are appreciable by the human senses and intelligence.”</p>
-
-<p>But the schools have not moved forward with events.
-Their methods are unscientific; they are still dominated
-by the mediæval ideas of speculative philosophy. One
-of the ablest educators in this country has well observed
-that “there has been very little change in the ideas
-which have controlled our methods of education, and
-these ideas were formed something like four hundred
-years ago. Like nearly all the great agencies of modern
-civilization, the established system of education dates
-from the Renaissance, and the direction given to the
-schools at that time has been followed with but slight
-modification ever since.”<a href="#Footnote23" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor23">[23]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote23"><a href="#FNanchor23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a>
-Mr. James MacAlister, Superintendent of Schools of the City of
-Philadelphia, before the American Institute of Instruction at Saratoga,
-July 13, 1882.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The justice of this arraignment of the schools for extreme
-conservatism is shown by the remark of a prominent
-educator who opposes the incorporation of manual
-training in the curriculum of the public schools. He
-says, “Some even go so far as to regard the fingers as a
-new avenue to the brain, and think that great pedagogic
-advantages will be given by the new method, so that
-boys may make equal attainments in arithmetic, reading,
-and grammar in less time.... They [teachers] will
-still find the eye and ear nearer to the brain than the
-hand.” No assumption could be more false than this,
-that the eye and the ear are more important organs than
-the hand because they are located, physically, nearer the
-brain. The attribute of mobility with which the hand is
-endowed confers upon it not only the potency of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page155">[155]</span>
-closest possible proximity, but each of the countless positions
-it may assume, together with its flexibility and
-adaptability, multiplies its powers in the order of a geometrical
-ratio.</p>
-
-<p>This disposition to undervalue the hand is an inheritance
-from the speculative philosophy of the Middle
-Ages, which was based on contempt of the body and all
-its members. The effect of this false doctrine has been
-vicious in the extreme. Contempt for the body has generated
-a feeling of contempt for manual labor, and repugnance
-to manual labor has multiplied dishonest practices
-in the course of the struggle to acquire wealth by any
-other means than manual labor, and so corrupted society.</p>
-
-<p>That man should feel contempt for the most efficient
-member of his own body is, indeed, incomprehensible,
-since contempt for the hand leads logically to contempt
-for its works, and its works comprise all the visible
-results of civilization. To enumerate the works of the
-hand would be to describe the world as it at present exists
-in contradistinction to the world in a state of nature.
-Everywhere we behold with admiration and wonder the
-marvellous triumphs of the hand, from the iron bridge
-that spans the torrent of Niagara to the steel micrometer
-that measures the millionth part of an inch. It
-matters not whether the hand is nearer or farther from
-the brain than the eye and the ear, it is able to afford
-powerful aid to them.</p>
-
-<p>Man would explore the planetary system; he lifts his
-longing eyes to the starry vault, but in vain; it is a
-sealed book! The hand fashions the telescope, adjusts
-it, places it at a convenient angle, and the milky way is
-resolved into millions of stars, “scattered like glittering
-dust on the black ground of the general heavens,” the<span class="pagenum" id="Page156">[156]</span>
-lunar mountains are measured, and the spots on the sun
-revealed. Man would study the anatomy and habits of the
-myriads of insects in which the teeming earth abounds.
-Impossible! The mechanism of the eye is not adapted
-to such a delicate operation. But the hand presents the
-microscope, and a world of hitherto unknown minute existences
-is revealed with a distinctness which permits the
-most exhaustive investigation. Thus, through the aid of
-the hand, the eye now contemplates with philosophic
-interest the ever-changing aspect of the spots on the sun
-at a distance of ninety million miles, and now imprisons
-the red ant, measuring only <sup>6</sup>&#8260;<sub>100</sub> of an inch in length, and
-studies its physiology, counting its pulsations, classifying
-its nerves and muscles, and weighing its brain. Man
-would speak with his friend or business correspondent
-miles away. Neither the voice nor the ear is adapted to
-the task. But the hand fashions and presents the telephone,
-and the conversation proceeds even in a whisper.
-It will be said that the mind devises the telescope, the microscope,
-and the telephone. True, but their construction
-would be impossible without the hand. And is it at all
-probable that the mind would have devised these admirable
-instruments if man had been made without hands?<a href="#Footnote24" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor24">[24]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote24"><a href="#FNanchor24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a>
-“The hand is the most marvellous instrument in the world; it is
-the necessary complement of the mind in dealing with matter in all
-its varied forms. It is the hand that ‘rounded Peter’s dome;’ it is
-the hand that carved those statues in marble and bronze, that painted
-those pictures in palace and church, which we travel into distant
-lands to admire; it is the hand that builds the ships which sail the
-sea, laden with the commerce of the world; it is the hand that constructs
-the machinery which moves the busy industries of this age of
-steam; it is the hand that enables the mind to realize in a thousand
-ways its highest imaginings, its profoundest reasonings, and its most
-practical inventions.”&mdash;Mr. James MacAlister, Superintendent of
-Schools of the City of Philadelphia, before the American Institute of
-Instruction at Saratoga, July 13, 1882.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page157">[157]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="chapno">CHAPTER XV.</span><br />
-<span class="chapname">THE POWER OF THE TRAINED HAND.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="subjects">The Legend of Adam and the Stick with which he subdued the Animals. &mdash; The
-Stick is the Symbol of Power, and only the Hand can
-wield it. &mdash; The Hand imprisons Steam and Electricity, and keeps
-them at hard Labor. &mdash; The Destitution of England Two Hundred
-Years ago: a Pen Picture. &mdash; The Transformation wrought by
-the Hand: a Pen Picture. &mdash; It is due, not to Men who make
-Laws, but to Men who make Things. &mdash; The Scientist and the Inventor
-are the World’s Benefactors. &mdash; A Parallel between the Right
-Honorable William E. Gladstone and Sir Henry Bessemer. &mdash; Mr.
-Gladstone a Man of Ideas, Mr. Bessemer a Man of Deeds. &mdash; The
-Value of the latter’s Inventions. &mdash; Mr. Gladstone represents the Old
-Education, Mr. Bessemer the New.</p>
-
-<p>It has been remarked that man is the wisest of animals
-because he has hands. It is equally true that he is the
-most powerful of animals because he has hands. It is
-with the hand that man has subdued all the animals.
-There is a legend to the effect that on the day when
-Adam revolted against his Maker, the animals, in their
-turn, revolted against him, and ceased to obey him.
-“Adam called on the Lord for help, and the Lord commanded
-him to take a branch from the nearest tree and
-make of it a weapon, and strike with it the first animal
-that should refuse to obey him. Adam took the branch,
-the leaves fell from it of their own accord, and he found
-himself furnished with a stick proportioned to his
-height. When the animals saw this weapon in the hands
-of the man they were seized with an instinctive fear
-mingled with wonder, and they did not dare to attack<span class="pagenum" id="Page158">[158]</span>
-him. A lion alone, bolder than the rest, leaped upon
-him to devour him, but Adam, who stood upon his
-guard, swift as lightning whirled his stick and felled him
-to the earth with a single blow! At this sight the terror
-of the other animals was so great that they approached
-him trembling, and in token of their submission licked
-the stick that he held in his hand.”<a href="#Footnote25" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor25">[25]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote25"><a href="#FNanchor25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a>
-“The Story of the Stick,” p. 2. Translated and Adapted from
-the French of Antony Réal [Fernand Michel]. New York: J. W.
-Bouton, 1875.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Throughout all the early ages the stick was both the
-symbol and the instrument of power; and it is only the
-hand that can grasp and wield the stick. The early
-kings reigned by virtue of the strong arm and the supple
-hand. They claimed to be descended from Hercules,
-and their emblem of power was a knotty stick. Nor
-does empire depend less upon the hand now than it did
-in the morning of time.</p>
-
-<p>The hand no longer grasps the knotty stick; it no
-longer menaces mankind. But it wields the mechanical
-powers. It imprisons steam and electricity, and keeps
-them at hard labor. It makes ploughs, planters, harvesters,
-sewing-machines, locomotives, and steamships. It
-digs canals, opens mines, builds bridges, makes roads,
-erects mills and factories, constructs harbors and docks,
-reclaims waste lands, and covers the globe with tracks of
-steel over which the commerce of the world is borne.</p>
-
-<p>Two hundred years ago England was destitute of
-most of these things. It had then no good dirt roads
-even, no good bridges, no canals, no public works
-worth mentioning, and scarcely any manufactories of
-importance. The post-bags were carried on horseback<span class="pagenum" id="Page159">[159]</span>
-once a week. The highways were besieged by robbers.
-One-fifth of the community were paupers. Mechanics
-worked for from sixpence to a shilling a day. The chief
-food of the poor was rye, barley, or oats. The people
-were ignorant and brutal&mdash;masters beat their servants,
-and husbands beat their wives. Teachers used the lash as
-the principal means of imparting knowledge. The mob
-rejoiced in fights of all kinds, and shouted with glee
-when an eye was torn out or a finger chopped off in
-these savage encounters. Executions were favorite public
-amusements. The prisons were full, and proved to be
-fruitful nurseries of crime.</p>
-
-<p>From little better than a wilderness, and almost a
-state of savagery, England has been transformed into a
-fruitful field, and its people raised in the scale of civilization.
-Its public works are the admiration of the
-world; its coffers are full of gold; its strong boxes are
-piled high with evidences of the indebtedness of other
-nations; its ships plough the billows of every sea, and
-bear the commerce of every land; and its manufactories,
-of vast extent, are monuments of inventive genius, industry,
-perseverance, and skill, more imposing far than
-the pyramids of Egypt or the temples of Greece and
-Rome.</p>
-
-<p>To whom do the people of England and of the world
-owe this national progress, this progress in the useful
-arts on a scale so colossal as, by comparison, to dwarf
-the achievements of all the earlier epochs of history?
-Not to statesmen or legislators. They neither dig canals,
-open mines, build railways, lay ocean cables, nor
-erect factories. The pen in their hands may be mightier
-than the sword; but it is no match for the plough and
-the reaper, the electric battery and imprisoned steam.<span class="pagenum" id="Page160">[160]</span>
-Legislators make laws but mechanics make things. On
-this subject, after an exhaustive investigation, Buckle
-says, “Seeing, therefore, that the efforts of government
-in favor of civilization are, when most successful, altogether
-negative, and seeing, too, that when these efforts
-are more than negative they become injurious, it clearly
-follows that all speculations must be erroneous which
-ascribe the progress of Europe to the wisdom of its
-rulers. This is an inference which rests not only on the
-arguments already adduced, but on facts which might be
-multiplied from every page of history.... We have
-seen that their laws in favor of industry have injured
-industry, that their laws in favor of religion have increased
-hypocrisy, and that their laws to secure truth
-have encouraged perjury.... But it is a mere matter
-of history that our legislators, even to the last moment,
-were so terrified by the idea of innovation that they refused
-every reform until the voice of the people rose
-high enough to awe them into submission, and forced
-them to grant what, without much pressure, they would
-by no means have conceded.”<a href="#Footnote26" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor26">[26]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote26"><a href="#FNanchor26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a>
-“History of Civilization in England,” Vol. I., pp. 204, 205, 361.
-By Henry Thomas Buckle. New York: D. Appleton &amp; Co.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>It is, then, clearly not to the men who make laws that
-we are indebted for progress in civilization, but to the
-men who make things. The scientist who discovers a
-new principle in physics is a public benefactor. The
-inventor who devises a new machine helps forward the
-cause of progress. Whitney’s cotton-gin trebled the
-value of the cotton-fields of the South. The mechanic
-who constructs a machine that will make ten or a hundred
-things in the time before required to make one<span class="pagenum" id="Page161">[161]</span>
-thing is in the front rank of the civilizers of the human
-race.<a href="#Footnote27" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor27">[27]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote27"><a href="#FNanchor27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a>
-“Your wealth, your amusement, your pride, would all be alike
-impossible, but for those whom you scorn or forget.... The sailor
-wrestling with the sea’s rage; the quiet student poring over his book
-or his vial; the common worker, without praise, and nearly without
-bread, fulfilling his task as your horses drag your carts, hopeless,
-and spurned of all: these are the men by whom England lives.”&mdash;“Sesame
-and Lilies,” p. 68. By John Ruskin, LL.D. New York:
-John Wiley &amp; Sons, 1884.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Inventors, not statesmen, rule the world through their
-machines, which augment the powers of man and sharpen
-his senses. Steam has made all civilized countries prosperous
-and great by vastly increasing man’s powers&mdash;by
-making him hundred-handed.<a href="#Footnote28" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor28">[28]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote28"><a href="#FNanchor28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a>
-“The causes which most disturbed or accelerated the normal
-progress of society in antiquity were the appearance of great men;
-in modern times they have been the appearance of great inventions.”&mdash;“History
-of European Morals,” Vol. I., p. 126. By William Edward
-Hartpole Lecky, M.A. New York: D. Appleton &amp; Co.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>In 1809 there was born to a distinguished baronet of
-Liverpool, England, a son. The boy was educated at
-Eton and Christ Church College, Oxford, graduating in
-1831. In 1832 the young man entered parliament. In
-1834 he took office under Sir Robert Peel. The name
-of the young man who commenced life under such
-auspicious circumstances was William Ewart Gladstone.
-For nearly half a century Mr. Gladstone was a prominent
-figure in English politics and administration.
-During that long period of time he was in the eye of the
-world, so to speak. He moulded the laws of an empire,
-repealed old statutes and made new statutes, largely
-influenced both the domestic and the foreign policy of a
-great nation, and exerted a considerable degree of control<span class="pagenum" id="Page162">[162]</span>
-over the international affairs of the continent of
-Europe.</p>
-
-<p>In 1813, four years after the birth of Mr. Gladstone,
-at Charlton, in Hertfordshire, England, Henry Bessemer
-was born. His father, Anthony Bessemer, had fled to
-England in 1792, a refugee from France. Henry Bessemer’s
-early training consisted of the rudiments of an
-ordinary education received in the parish school of the
-neighboring town of Hitchin. His father was a skilled
-mechanic and inventor, and Henry inherited the inventive
-faculty. He studied and practised the art of wood-turnery,
-producing, before arriving at the age of manhood,
-the most difficult patterns known to the art.</p>
-
-<p>At the age of eighteen, in the year 1831&mdash;the year in
-which Mr. Gladstone completed his education&mdash;young
-Bessemer appeared in London, an obscure, unknown
-stranger. He, however, secured employment as a modeller
-and designer. His attention was soon directed to
-the imperfections of government stamps, in which there
-had been no improvement since the time of Queen Anne.
-He was informed by Sir Charles Persley, of the Stamp-office,
-that the frauds in stamps probably aggregated
-one hundred thousand pounds per annum. In the evenings
-of a few months he invented and made an improved
-stamp which obviated the objections to the one
-then in use. The invention was at once adopted by the
-Stamp-office, and in lieu of a stipulated sum in payment
-therefor, young Bessemer was asked “whether he would
-be satisfied with the position of superintendent of stamps,
-with five hundred or six hundred pounds per annum?”
-The suggested appointment he agreed to accept. Meantime,
-before the contemplated change occurred in the
-Stamp-office, the young inventor devised a further improvement<span class="pagenum" id="Page163">[163]</span>
-in the new stamp, which not only made it much
-more perfect, but rendered it unnecessary for the government
-to employ a superintendent of stamps. In perfect
-good faith young Bessemer exhibited to the chief of the
-Stamp-office his new stamp, which was so palpably an improvement
-on the other that it was at once preferred and
-promptly adopted. What is more, the government not
-only declined to appoint the inventor to a place, but
-declined to give him a penny for his invention. This was
-in 1834, the year in which Mr. Gladstone began his
-long career as a representative of the British Crown.
-As young Mr. Gladstone entered the Treasury, its
-“junior lord,” young Mr. Bessemer retired from it an
-unsuccessful suitor for the just reward of genius and toil.
-He says, “Thus sad and dispirited, and with a burning
-sense of injustice overpowering all other feelings, I went
-my way from the Stamp-office, too proud to ask as a favor
-that which was indubitably my right.”<a href="#Footnote29" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor29">[29]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote29"><a href="#FNanchor29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a>
-“The Creators of the Age of Steel,” p. 20. By W. T. Jeans.
-New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1884.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>From this point, both of time and event, there is a
-very wide divergence in the lives of these great men.
-The one is a man of ideas, the other a man of deeds.
-Mr. Gladstone thinks, talks, makes treaties and laws. He
-is constantly in the public eye, and his name ever on the
-public tongue. He is regarded as a great financier; he
-is certainly a great orator. He sways the multitude with
-his eloquence. He takes distinguished part in the wordy
-contests which occur every now and then in Parliament.
-These debates are much talked of. At the conclusion
-of one of them there is a vote of want of confidence,
-and Mr. Gladstone goes out of office and Mr. Disraeli<span class="pagenum" id="Page164">[164]</span>
-comes in. At the conclusion of another of them
-there is a vote of want of confidence, and Mr. Disraeli
-goes out of office and Mr. Gladstone comes in. But
-whether Mr. Gladstone goes out and Mr. Disraeli comes
-in, or Mr. Disraeli goes out and Mr. Gladstone comes in,
-makes very little difference with the trade and commerce
-of the kingdom. The railway traffic continues in the
-one event or the other; the steamers continue to cross
-and recross the ocean; the “post” comes and goes; the
-electric current continues to act as messenger-boy; the
-telephone brings us face to face with our business correspondent
-or friend. There is, indeed, no reason why a vote
-of want of confidence in Mr. Gladstone or Mr. Disraeli
-should imply a want of confidence in steam or electricity,
-because neither Mr. Gladstone nor Mr. Disraeli ever had
-anything to do with the application of these great forces
-to the uses of man. They were entirely absorbed, the
-one in promoting the advancement of Liberalism, and
-the other in promoting the advancement of Toryism.
-And it is a curious fact, as showing the mutability of
-political opinion, that Mr. Disraeli entered public life as
-a Liberal, and subsequently became a great Tory leader;
-and Mr. Gladstone entered public life as a Tory, and subsequently
-became a great Liberal leader.</p>
-
-<p>For twenty-two years after he retired empty-handed
-from the government Stamp-office Mr. Bessemer continued
-his career as an inventor and manufacturer,
-without, however, attracting any great share of public
-attention. But in 1856 he announced that he had made
-a discovery of vast importance in the process of steel
-making.<a href="#Footnote30" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor30">[30]</a>
-For a hundred years previously the Huntsman<span class="pagenum" id="Page165">[165]</span>
-process had held the field. It yielded excellent steel but
-was very expensive. Mr. Bessemer announced that he
-could produce splendid cast-steel at about the cost of
-making iron! The announcement was received with
-much incredulity; but the “Bessemer converter” was
-exhibited, the new process shown, and the result seemed
-to confirm the verity of the claim of the inventor. Practical
-difficulties, however, postponed its complete success
-till 1860, when the new process supplanted all others.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote30"><a href="#FNanchor30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a>
-“The first patent of Sir H. Bessemer in which air is mentioned
-as the oxidizing agent is dated October 17, 1855, and other three
-months were spent in experimenting before the idea of introducing
-the air from the bottom of a large converter struck him. The patent
-embodying the latter idea is dated February 11, 1856.”&mdash;“The Creators
-of the Age of Steel,” note to p. 38. By W. T. Jeans. New
-York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1884.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Mr. Bessemer now stood at the head of the inventors
-of the world, and Mr. Gladstone, as Chancellor of the
-Exchequer under Lord Palmerston, had come to be regarded
-as one of the most skilful governmental financiers
-in Europe, which meant that he was an adept in devising
-schemes of taxation calculated to yield the most revenue
-with the least popular discontent. When it is considered
-that it is necessary for the English Minister of Finance
-to draw from the British people more than a million
-dollars every morning of the year, including Sundays,
-before either the English lord or the English peasant can
-indulge in a free breakfast, the extreme delicacy of
-the duties devolving upon him will be understood and
-appreciated. If he proposes the repeal of the soap tax
-in order to extinguish the slave-trade, he must impose
-an additional penny in the pound on malt liquors in
-order to put an end to the vice of drunkenness. He is
-constantly between Scylla and Charybdis&mdash;in keeping<span class="pagenum" id="Page166">[166]</span>
-off the one he is in danger of being swallowed up in the
-other. And if he can, at the end of the fiscal year, find
-a million dollars to apply to the liquidation of the public
-debt, he is extremely fortunate. From 1836, about the
-time Mr. Gladstone began his public career, down to
-1877, the several chancellors of the English Exchequer,
-including Mr. Gladstone, contrived to save, in the aggregate,
-about twelve million pounds sterling for this purpose.</p>
-
-<p>Let us recur a moment to the subject of the invention
-of Mr. Bessemer. It went into operation in 1860. The
-temptation to reproduce Mr. Bessemer’s own description
-of his process, which revolutionized the manufacture of
-steel, is irresistible. It is as follows:</p>
-
-<p>“The converting vessel is mounted on an axis at or
-near its centre of gravity. It is constructed of boilerplates,
-and is lined either with fire-brick, road-drift, or
-gannister, which resists the heat better than any other
-material yet tried, and has also the advantage of cheapness.
-The vessel, having been heated, is brought into the
-requisite position to receive its charge of melted metal,
-without either of the tuyeres (or air-holes) being below
-the surface. No action can therefore take place until
-the vessel is turned up (so that the blast can enter
-through the tuyeres). The process is thus in an instant
-brought into full activity, and small though powerful
-jets of air spring upward through the fluid mass. The
-air, expanding in volume, divides itself into globules, or
-bursts violently upward, carrying with it some hundredweight
-of fluid metal, which again falls into the boiling
-mass below. Every part of the apparatus trembles under
-the violent agitation thus produced; a roaring flame
-rushes from the mouth of the vessel, and as the process
-advances it changes its violet color to orange, and finally<span class="pagenum" id="Page167">[167]</span>
-to a voluminous pure white flame. The sparks, which
-at first were large, like those of ordinary foundery iron,
-change into small hissing points, and these gradually
-give way to soft floating specks of bluish light as the
-state of malleable iron is approached. There is no
-eruption of cinder as in the early experiments, although
-it is formed during the process; the improved shape of
-the converter causes it to be retained, and it not only
-acts beneficially on the metal, but it helps to confine the
-heat, which during the process has rapidly risen from
-the comparatively low temperature of melted pig-iron to
-one vastly greater than the highest known welding heats,
-by which malleable iron only becomes sufficiently soft
-to be shaped by the blows of the hammer; but here it
-becomes perfectly fluid, and even rises so much above
-the melting point as to admit of its being poured from
-the converter into a founder’s ladle, and from thence
-to be transferred to several successive moulds.”<a href="#Footnote31" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor31">[31]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote31"><a href="#FNanchor31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a>
-“The Creators of the Age of Steel,” p. 71. By W. T. Jeans.
-New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1884.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>What is the value of this process? What is the extent
-of the service rendered by Mr. Bessemer to man?
-It is estimated that in the twenty-one years first elapsing
-after the successful working of the Bessemer process, the
-production of steel by it, notwithstanding its necessarily
-slow progress, amounted to twenty-five million tons. At
-$200 a ton, the alleged saving in cost as compared with
-the old process, this represents an aggregate saving of
-$5,000,000,000. In 1882 the world’s production was
-four million tons, which at the rate named yielded a
-saving of the enormous aggregate of $800,000,000 in a
-single year.<a href="#Endnote7" class="fnanchor" id="EndAnchor7">[E7]</a>
-These sums seem almost fabulous, especially
-so since they result from simply blowing air through<span class="pagenum" id="Page168">[168]</span>
-crude melted iron for a quarter of an hour! But the
-radical character of the change wrought in the metal by
-the air-blowing process is shown by the fact that a steel
-rail is worth as much as twenty iron rails.<a href="#Footnote32" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor32">[32]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote32"><a href="#FNanchor32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a>
-“At the Birmingham meeting of the British Association in 1865,
-Sir Henry Bessemer explained that at Chalk Farm steel rails were
-laid down on one side of the line and iron rails on the other, so that
-every engine and carriage there had to pass over both steel and iron
-rails at the same time. When the first face was worn off an iron rail
-it was turned the other way upward, and when the second face was
-worn out it was replaced by a new iron rail. When Sir Henry exhibited
-one of these steel rails at Birmingham only one face of it was
-nearly worn out, while on the opposite side of the line eleven iron
-rails had in the same time been worn out on both faces. It thus appeared
-that one steel rail was capable of doing the work of twenty-three
-iron ones.”&mdash;“The Creators of the Age of Steel,” p. 93. By
-W. T. Jeans. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1884.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>All the governments of Europe honored Mr. Bessemer
-for his great invention, some by medals and orders of
-merit, and others by appropriating without compensation
-his process of steel-making. Of these latter Prussia
-stood in the front rank. England alone stood aloof.
-“A prophet is not without honor save in his own country
-and among his own kin.” From 1860 to 1872 England
-continued to load Mr. Gladstone and Mr. Disraeli
-with honors, but not until the latter year did the government
-recognize Mr. Bessemer, when the Prince of Wales
-presented him with the Albert gold medal, and in 1879
-he was knighted by the Queen.</p>
-
-<p>A comparison between the lives and services to man
-of two of the most distinguished statesmen of England,
-with the life and services, to man, of Sir Henry Bessemer,
-cannot fail to be of great value to every young man who
-possesses the power of just discrimination. But can just
-discrimination be expected of any young man entering<span class="pagenum" id="Page169">[169]</span>
-upon the stage of active life when such discrimination
-is not possessed by the public at large? For example:
-The question being propounded, What is the value of the
-combined services to man of Mr. Gladstone and Mr.
-Disraeli, as compared with those of Sir Henry Bessemer?
-ninety-nine out of a hundred men of sound judgment
-would doubtless say, “The value of the services of
-the two statesmen is quite unimportant, while the value
-of the services of Mr. Bessemer is enormous, incalculable.”
-But how many of these ninety-nine men of sound
-judgment could resist the fascination of the applause
-accorded to the statesmen? How many of them would
-have the moral courage to educate their sons for the
-career of Mr. Bessemer instead of for the career of Mr.
-Disraeli or of Mr. Gladstone?* Not many in the present
-state of public sentiment. It will be a great day for
-man, the day that ushers in the dawn of more sober views
-of life, the day that inaugurates the era of the mastership
-of things in the place of the mastership of words.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Gladstone stands for politics and statesmanship at
-their best, and his career is the product of the old system
-of education at its best. Mr. Bessemer stands for science
-and art united, and his career is the product of the new
-education.</p>
-
-<hr class="footnote" />
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Endnote7"><span class="label"><a href="#EndAnchor7">[E7]</a></span>
-But the pecuniary value of Mr. Bessemer’s discovery is not the
-consideration of chief import. Its social influence extends to the
-remotest bounds of civilization, and includes the whole human race,
-because it abridges the period of labor necessary to the production
-of a given quantity of useful things, thereby enhancing the sum of
-life’s comforts and pleasures.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page170">[170]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="chapno">CHAPTER XVI.</span><br />
-<span class="chapname">THE INVENTORS, CIVIL ENGINEERS, AND MECHANICS
-OF ENGLAND, AND ENGLISH PROGRESS.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="subjects">A Trade is better than a Profession. &mdash; The Railway, Telegraph, and
-Steamship are more Potent than the Lawyer, Doctor, and Priest. &mdash; Book-makers
-writing the Lives of the Inventors of last Century. &mdash; The
-Workshop to be the Scene of the Greatest Triumphs of Man. &mdash; The
-Civil Engineers of England the Heroes of English Progress. &mdash; The
-Life of James Brindley, the Canal-maker; his Struggles and
-Poverty. &mdash; The Roll of Honor. &mdash; Mr. Gladstone’s Significant Admission
-that English Triumphs in Science and Art were won without
-Government Aid. &mdash; Disregarding the Common-sense of the Savage,
-Legislators have chosen to learn of Plato, who declared that “The
-Useful Arts are Degrading.” &mdash; How Improvements in the Arts have
-been met by Ignorant Opposition. &mdash; The Power wielded by the
-Mechanic.</p>
-
-<p>The young man with a mechanical trade is better
-equipped for the battle of life than the young man with
-a learned profession. The prizes may not be so dazzling,
-but they are more numerous, and they are within reach.
-The skilled mechanic, with industry and prudence, is sure
-of a cottage, and the cottage may grow into a mansion,
-while the man of letters struggles so often in vain to
-mount the steps of a palace. The railroad, the telegraph,
-and the steamship exert a more potent influence upon
-the destinies of mankind than the lawyer, the doctor, and
-the priest. The giants, steam and electricity, which bear
-the great burdens of commerce, have to be harnessed to
-enable them to do their work; and to make this harness,
-the furnace, the forge, and the shop are brought into<span class="pagenum" id="Page171">[171]</span>
-requisition. The railroad alone taxes to the utmost nearly
-every department of the useful arts. To the construction
-of the passenger-coach, for instance, more than a
-hundred trades contribute the varied cunning and skill
-of their workmanship.</p>
-
-<p>This is the age of steel, and he who knows how to
-mould the king of metals into puissant forms has his
-hand nearest the rod of empire. Who would not rather
-be able to construct a Corliss engine than learn the trick
-of drawing a bill in chancery?</p>
-
-<p>There was a time, not long ago, when inventors and
-discoverers were little recognized and poorly compensated
-for their splendid achievements. But that time is
-past. The book-makers of to-day are groping about the
-old shops where the inventors of last century worked,
-and the cottages where they lived, in order to tell the
-simple story of their lives, and write their names in the
-temple of fame. Huntsman, who emerged from long
-seclusion over the furnace and crucible, and presented
-to his fellow-workmen a piece of steel which rivalled
-that of old Damascus, and drove from the British markets
-all other steels&mdash;how resplendent his name is now!
-How every incident in the life of Watt is sought for&mdash;his
-struggles, his disappointments, and his final success!
-And so of Mushet, Neilson, Bramah, Maudslay, Clement,
-Murray, Nasmyth, Stephenson, and Fulton. When Watt
-had devised his engine he found no workmen expert
-enough to make it. Then Maudslay, Clement, and Murray
-invented automatic iron hands and fingers, and endowed
-them with almost human intelligence, and far more
-than human precision, and Watt’s difficulty was removed.</p>
-
-<p>The “greasy mechanics” did more to hasten the world’s
-progress in a century&mdash;1740 to 1840&mdash;than had been accomplished<span class="pagenum" id="Page172">[172]</span>
-up to that time by all the statesmen of all
-the dead ages. But those heroes of the workshop had
-none of the opportunities afforded by the manual training
-school of the present age. They toiled many hours
-each day for a shilling or two, and lived in stuffy hovels,
-and puzzled over the <i>a</i> <i>b</i> <i>c</i> of mechanics by the light of
-a tallow-candle. Some of them gained fortunes, while
-others were robbed of the fruits of genius, and slept in
-unknown graves; but all their names are treasured and
-honored now. The world moves, and in this age it
-moves always toward a higher appreciation of the value
-of the useful arts. This country is destined to become
-a vast workshop, and in this workshop the best energies,
-the strongest vital forces of the American people are
-eventually to be exerted. How necessary, then, to educate
-the hands as well as the brain of the youth of the
-country.<a href="#Endnote8" class="fnanchor" id="EndAnchor8">[E8]</a></p>
-
-<p>Mr. Smiles, in his “Lives of the Engineers,” has shown
-us the true springs of English greatness. In telling the
-story of the struggles and triumphs of the canal-makers,
-the bridge-builders, the coal-miners, the millwrights, the
-road-makers, the harbor and dock makers, the ship-builders,
-the iron and steel makers, and the railway-builders&mdash;in
-telling this story of persistence, of nerve, and “pluck,”
-he has sketched the career of the real heroes of English
-progress. A brief sketch of the life of James Brindley
-will serve to show how these noble men wrought, how
-they suffered, and how they conquered.</p>
-
-<p>James Brindley was born in 1716. His parents were
-poor. His father was a ne’er-do-well. His mother taught
-him to be honest and industrious. James worked as a
-common laborer till he was seventeen years of age. In
-1733 he became a millwright’s apprentice&mdash;bound for<span class="pagenum" id="Page173">[173]</span>
-seven years. He was a dull boy, learning slowly, but
-before the end of his “bound” term he became the best
-workman in the neighborhood. He helped the now celebrated
-Wedgwoods out of a difficulty by inventing and
-constructing flint-mills for their works. He invented
-and constructed pumps for clearing the Clifton coal-mines
-of water&mdash;an entirely new device that opened coal
-chambers which had long been completely drowned out.
-His compensation for this class of work&mdash;the work of
-genius&mdash;was two shillings a day!</p>
-
-<p>In 1755 he built a silk-mill, in which he made several
-important improvements in machinery, etc. But this
-man, who possessed inventive genius of a high order and
-large executive ability, could neither write legibly nor
-spell correctly, and his charge for almost inestimable services
-was still, in 1757, only two to four shillings a day.
-His struggles to improve the steam-engine form a curious
-chapter in the story of his life. It was to him that the
-Duke of Bridgewater owed his success in canal-making.</p>
-
-<p>The duke was born in 1736. He was a weak and sickly
-child, his mental capacity being apparently defective
-to a degree sufficient to debar him from his inheritance
-of the family title and estates. An affair of the heart
-which resulted unfavorably rendered him morose, and
-changed his whole course of life. He abruptly quitted
-the race-track, where he had condescended even to play
-the rôle of “jockey,” and turned his attention to the improvement
-of his estates. They contained coal deposits,
-which he undertook to develop through cheapening
-transportation, and Brindley became his engineer. His
-first canal, consisting largely of aqueducts, was called
-“Brindley’s castle in the air,” and his “river hung in
-the air.” It was this “river hung in the air”&mdash;the first<span class="pagenum" id="Page174">[174]</span>
-English canal&mdash;that made the Manchester of to-day possible.
-Another canal enterprise of the duke cost more
-than a million dollars&mdash;that connecting Liverpool with
-Manchester. This latter canal yielded £80,000 per annum
-income, and it was constructed by Brindley at a
-salary of 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> a day!</p>
-
-<p>Brindley was obstinate, and often quarrelled with his
-employer about the methods of construction of great
-works; and what is more, the duke always yielded.
-He humbly submitted to every demand made by his
-engineer except a demand for compensation. Brindley’s
-“wage” rate during the many years occupied in the
-duke’s great canal enterprises was 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> per day. This,
-at all events, is the price named by Smiles in his life
-of Brindley. In a note to the work it is, however, stated
-that his stipulated pay was a guinea a day. It is agreed
-on all hands, however, that whatever the rate agreed
-upon was, Brindley was not paid, and that his heirs were
-begging unsuccessfully for his just dues long after his
-death. In a word, Brindley’s honor as an engineer being
-at stake, and it being dearer to him than any money
-consideration, he worked for nothing rather than allow
-the enterprise to fail. And the duke was parsimonious
-enough to take the engineer’s services for nothing, and
-his heirs were mean enough to refuse payment for such
-services when demanded by his widow.</p>
-
-<p>In a literary point of view Brindley was ignorant, but
-in no other respect. This was said of him by one of his
-contemporaries:</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Brindley is one of those great geniuses whom
-Nature sometimes rears by her own force, and brings to
-maturity without the necessity of cultivation. His whole
-plan is admirable, and so well calculated that he is never<span class="pagenum" id="Page175">[175]</span>
-at a loss; for if any difficulty arises he removes it with a
-facility which appears so much like inspiration that you
-would think Minerva was at his fingers’ ends.”<a href="#Footnote33" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor33">[33]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote33"><a href="#FNanchor33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a>
-“Lives of the Engineers.” By Samuel Smiles. London: John
-Murray, 1862. Vol. I., “Life of James Brindley.”</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The life of Brindley is typical of a score of biographies
-presented in the “Lives of the Engineers,” among
-which the following are especially worthy of mention:
-William Edwards, John Metcalf, John Perry, Sir Hugh
-Myddelton, Cornelius Vermuyden, Andrew Yarranton,<a href="#Footnote34" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor34">[34]</a>
-Andrew Meikle, John Rennie, John Smeaton, Thomas
-Telford, William Murdock, Dr. D. Papin, Thomas Savery,
-Dud Dudley, Matthew Boulton, and William Symington.
-These, and their natural coadjutors, the discoverers of new
-forces in nature and the inventors of new things in art, the
-iron-workers and tool-makers&mdash;these are <i>the</i> great names
-in English history. They are the names without which
-there would have been no English history worth writing.
-Mr. Gladstone once said of them, naming Brindley, Metcalf,
-Smeaton, Rennie, and Telford, “These men who
-have now become famous among us had no mechanics’
-institutes, no libraries, no classes, no examinations to
-cheer them on their way. In the greatest poverty, difficulties,
-and discouragements their energies were found
-sufficient for their work, and they have written their
-names in a distinguished page of the history of their
-country.”</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote34"><a href="#FNanchor34"><span class="label">[34]</span></a>
-“He was the founder of English political economy, the first man
-in England who saw and said that peace is better than war, that trade
-is better than plunder, that honest industry is better than martial
-greatness, and that the best occupation of a government is to secure
-prosperity at home, and let other nations alone.”&mdash;“Elements of Political
-Science.” By Patrick Edward Dove. Edinburgh: 1854.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page176">[176]</span></p>
-
-<p>The admission of Mr. Gladstone that the great achievements
-of these heroes of invention and discovery were
-won without any aid whatever, either from the government
-or the people of England, is a pregnant fact. It is
-the key-note of this work, the reason why it is written
-and published.</p>
-
-<p>The neglect of the useful arts by all the governments
-of the world, from the dawn of civilization down to the
-present time, is an impeachment of the common-sense of
-mankind as shown in the conduct of public affairs. The
-civilized man might have learned wisdom from the savage,
-who is taught to fight, to hunt, and to fish, the brain,
-the hand, and the eye being trained simultaneously. But
-he chose to learn of Plato, who in the “Republic” says to
-Glaucon, “All the useful arts, I believe, we thought degrading.”
-And further in the same work: “We shall
-tell our people, in mythical language, you are doubtless
-all brethren as many as inhabit the city, but the God
-who created you, mixed gold in the composition of such
-of you as are qualified to rule, which gives them the
-highest value, while in the auxiliaries he made silver an
-ingredient, assigning iron and copper to the cultivators of
-the soil and the other workmen. Therefore, inasmuch as
-you are all related to one another, although your children
-will generally resemble their parents, yet sometimes a
-golden parent will produce a silver child, and a silver
-parent a golden child, and so on, each producing any.
-The rulers, therefore, have received this in charge first
-and above all from the gods, to observe nothing more
-closely, in their character of vigilant guardians, than the
-children that are born, to see which of these metals enters
-into the composition of their souls; and if a child
-be born in their class with an alloy of copper or iron,<span class="pagenum" id="Page177">[177]</span>
-they are to have no manner of pity upon it, but giving
-it the value that belongs to its nature, they are to thrust
-it away into the class of artisans or agriculturists. And
-if, again, among these a child be born with an admixture
-of gold or silver, when they have assayed it they are to
-raise it either to the class of guardians or to that of auxiliaries,
-because there is an oracle which declares that
-the city shall then perish when it is guarded by iron or
-copper.”<a href="#Footnote35" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor35">[35]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote35"><a href="#FNanchor35"><span class="label">[35]</span></a>
-“The Republic of Plato,” p. 114. London: Macmillan &amp; Co.,
-1881.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>So ingrained in the public mind has this contempt for
-the artisan and laborer become in the course of ages, that
-notwithstanding the fact of the admitted kingship of
-iron among metals, and notwithstanding the fact that
-without iron the world would almost sink into a state of
-barbarism, still the opposition to the introduction of tool
-practice into the public schools is violent, and most violent
-among those classes who would be most benefited
-by it. Pending consideration of a bill by the Massachusetts
-Assembly in 1883, providing for the admission of
-manual training to the public-school curriculum, an opponent
-of the measure said: “The introduction of the
-use of tools is only another attempt to deprive the poorer
-classes of a good education. It is simply an attempt
-to overload the course of studies in the schools so that
-children shall not learn anything; so that the poor may
-be made poorer, while the children of the rich having a
-good time in the public schools may have their thought
-and health preserved for higher or special education.”</p>
-
-<p>This is a repetition of the old answer of the Inquisition
-to Galileo upon the announcement and defence of his<span class="pagenum" id="Page178">[178]</span>
-great discovery. He was summoned to Rome, and “accused
-of having taught that the earth moves, that the
-sun is stationary, and of having attempted to reconcile
-these doctrines with the Scriptures.” Bruno had been
-driven to and fro over the face of the civilized world,
-and finally burned in the year 1600 for teaching the system
-of Copernicus. Having the fear of Bruno’s fate before
-his eyes, Galileo recanted, and promised neither to
-publish nor defend his theories. But his love of science
-overcame his fear of oppression, and in 1632 he published
-his “System of the World.” Again he was summoned
-before the Inquisition, which was destined forever
-after to torment and persecute him. He was driven to
-his knees before the cardinals, consigned to prison, and
-tortured to blindness. After his death in a prison of the
-Inquisition at the age of seventy-seven years, his right to
-make a will was disputed, his body was denied burial in
-consecrated ground, and his friends were prohibited the
-privilege of raising a monument to his memory in the
-Church of Santa Croce in Florence.</p>
-
-<p>Eighteen hundred years ago a Roman emperor refused
-to sanction the use of improved machinery in the prosecution
-of a great public work, on the ground that it
-would deprive the poor of employment.</p>
-
-<p>In 1663 a Dutchman erected a saw-mill in England,
-but the hostility of the workmen compelled its abandonment.
-More than a hundred years elapsed before the
-second saw-mill was put in operation in England, and
-that was destroyed by hand-sawyers.</p>
-
-<p>The Flemish weavers who introduced improved weaving
-machinery into England in the seventeenth century
-were met by protests. One of these protests, addressed
-to Parliament, represented that the Flemish weavers had<span class="pagenum" id="Page179">[179]</span>
-“made so bould as to devise engines for working of tape,
-lace, ribbin, and such like, wherein one man doth more
-among them than seven Englishe men can doe, so as
-their cheap sale of commodities beggereth all our Englishe
-artificers of that trade and enricheth them.”</p>
-
-<p>A little more than a hundred years ago, in England,
-when the Sankey Canal, six miles long, was authorized,
-it was upon the express condition that the boats plying
-upon it should be drawn by men only.</p>
-
-<p>Illustrations of the <i>vis inertiæ</i> of ignorance might be
-multiplied indefinitely. Ignorance reverences the past.
-Ignorance never doubts. Ignorance is content; perfectly
-satisfied with its own knowledge, if the paradox may
-be allowed, it never seeks to increase it. But it is suspicious.
-In every effort to enlighten it discovers a conspiracy
-to undermine. Incapable of the intellectual effort
-of inquiry, it stagnates, and regards as a deadly enemy
-those who seek to disturb the serenity of its muddy pool.</p>
-
-<p>When labor was only another name for a state of slavery,
-to teach men to labor skilfully was merely to raise
-them to a little higher grade of servitude. Hence it is
-only at a very recent period that it has occurred to mankind
-to teach skilled labor in the schools. All educational
-systems, our own among the rest, seem to have
-been intended to make lawyers, doctors, priests, statesmen,
-<i>littérateurs</i>, poets. But this is the age of steel, the
-age of machines and machinery. Tremendous forces in
-nature have been discovered and utilized, and these discoveries
-and their utilization have so multiplied vast enterprises
-that the importance of the mere ornamental
-branches of learning is dwarfed in their presence. “This
-is the practical age, and an educational system which is
-not practical is nothing. We shall still have our Tennysons,<span class="pagenum" id="Page180">[180]</span>
-and our Longfellows, and our doctors of abstract
-philosophy; but there is little time to sentimentalize with
-the poets or speculate with the philosophers. There is
-work to do.<a href="#Endnote9" class="fnanchor" id="EndAnchor9">[E9]</a> The mine is to be explored and its treasures
-brought to the surface; more and more powerful machines
-are to be constructed to bear the burdens of commerce;
-new elements of force are to be discovered and
-applied to the constantly increasing wants of mankind.<a href="#Footnote36" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor36">[36]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote36"><a href="#FNanchor36"><span class="label">[36]</span></a>
-“To know the ‘use’ either of land or tools you must know what
-useful things can be grown from the one and made with the other.
-And therefore to know what is useful, and what useless, and be skilful
-to provide the one, and wise to scorn the other, is the first need
-for all industrious men. Wherefore, I propose that schools should
-be established wherein the use of land and tools shall be taught conclusively&mdash;in
-other words, the sciences of agriculture (with associated
-river and sea culture), and the noble arts and exercises of humanity.&mdash;“Fors
-Clavigera,” p. 302. Part. III. By John Ruskin, LL.D. New
-York: John Wiley &amp; Sons, 1881.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>On the subject of the demand for a more comprehensive
-educational system, Col. Augustus Jacobson says,
-with great force, “Youth is the expensive period of
-man’s existence. Youth produces nothing and eats all
-the time. If the youth is not trained there can hardly
-be a profit to mankind on his existence. As mankind is
-liable for, and bound to pay, his expenses, he should be
-so trained that he may repay them. He can only become
-a profitable investment by training. If he is left unskilled,
-the money spent on him is wasted. There is
-no profit on a whole generation of Spaniards or Turks.
-Mankind should be wise enough to reap the profit there
-always is in finishing raw material, by making human
-raw material into a highly finished product.”</p>
-
-<p>There are millions of intelligent little children in
-the public schools of the United States, receiving,<span class="pagenum" id="Page181">[181]</span>
-doubtless, excellent intellectual or mental training. But
-they are not being trained for the actual duties of life as
-the savage child is taught to fight, to fish, and to hunt.
-They are not taught to labor with their hands, either
-skilfully or unskilfully. They are not given instruction
-in any department of the useful arts, notwithstanding
-the fact that in the case of a vast majority of them the
-alternative of earning their bread by the labor of their
-unskilled hands, or resorting to their wits for a support,
-will be presented immediately on their entrance upon
-the stage of active life. The apprentice system gave
-skilled mechanics to England, and her splendid manufacturing
-establishments are the result. The trained
-English apprentice became an inventor, and his inventions
-and art discoveries studded the island with workshops
-filled with automatic product-multiplying machinery.</p>
-
-<p>The savage of Australia in Captain Cook’s time could
-kill a pigeon with a spear at thirty yards, but he couldn’t
-count the fingers on his right hand. The Southern Esquimau
-turns a somersault in the water in his boat with
-ease. But his more Northern brother has no canoe, and
-is ignorant of the existence of a boat; he has no use for
-a boat, because the sea in the latitude of his home is
-frozen the entire year. The savage is taught what he
-needs to know in his condition, and is taught nothing
-else; hence his skill in the few avocations he pursues.</p>
-
-<p>The civilized boy in school is taught many theories,
-but is not required to put any of them in practice; hence
-he enters upon the serious duties of life unprepared to
-discharge any of them.<a href="#Footnote37" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor37">[37]</a>
-It may be said that he is in<span class="pagenum" id="Page182">[182]</span>
-real danger of the penitentiary until he learns a profession
-or a trade. “Of four hundred and eighty-seven
-convicts consigned to the State Prison for the Eastern District
-of Pennsylvania in 1879, five-sixths had attended public
-schools, and the same number were without trades.”
-It is noticeable also that during the same period “not
-five were received who were what are called mechanics.”
-In the penitentiary of the State of Illinois four out of
-five of the convicts have no handicraft. The fact that
-the skilled workman is far more likely than the common
-laborer to keep out of the penitentiary is a powerful
-argument in favor of joining manual training to the
-mental exercises of our common schools.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote37"><a href="#FNanchor37"><span class="label">[37]</span></a>
-Discussion of the subject of technical education at a meeting of
-the Society of Arts, London, England, 1885.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Gladstone, F.R.S.: “It should be their aim in [elementary
-schools] to give such a notion of the value of materials and the use
-of tools as could afterwards be turned to use in any required direction.
-There were two great difficulties in the way of doing this.
-The first and greatest was the inveterate notion that education consisted
-of book-learning.... Another difficulty was the ignorance of
-teachers in this respect. If an endeavor were made to introduce
-some knowledge of science into schools, they generally found that
-the teachers had some kind of theoretical knowledge, but it had been
-obtained mainly from books; and what was chiefly wanted was that
-things should be taught as well as words and before words.”</p>
-
-<p>Prof. Guthrie, F.R.S.: “This method of bringing the hand and
-the mind to work together really lay at the basis of all true technical
-instruction; where the mind alone was employed the knowledge
-acquired passed away, but when the mind and the hand had
-been educated together the knowledge was never forgotten.”</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The general adoption of a comprehensive system of
-mechanical education in the public schools would quickly
-dispel the unworthy prejudice against labor which taints
-the minds of the youth of the country. The splendid
-career which this age opens to the educated mechanic
-should be made clear to the vision of every boy in the
-land, and he will see, in the tools he is taught to<span class="pagenum" id="Page183">[183]</span>
-handle, the key not only to fair success, but to wealth
-and fame. Professor Thurston, President of the American
-Society of Mechanical Engineers, thus sums up the
-mighty power wielded by the mechanic:</p>
-
-<p>“The class of men from whose ranks the membership
-of this society is principally drawn direct the labors of
-nearly three millions of prosperous people in three hundred
-thousand mills, with $2,500,000,000 capital; they
-direct the payment of more than $1,000,000,000 in annual
-wages; the consumption of $3,000,000,000 worth of raw
-material, and the output of $5,000,000,000 worth of manufactured
-products. Fifty thousand steam-engines, and
-more than as many water-wheels, at their command turn
-the machinery of these hundreds of thousands of workshops
-that everywhere dot our land, giving the strength
-of three million horses night or day.”<a href="#Footnote38" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor38">[38]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote38"><a href="#FNanchor38"><span class="label">[38]</span></a>
-Inaugural address, as President of the American Society of Engineers,
-New York, November 4, 1880.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<hr class="footnote" />
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Endnote8"><span class="label"><a href="#EndAnchor8">[E8]</a></span>
-“Deeds are greater than words. Deeds have such a life, mute
-but undeniable, and grow as living trees and fruit-trees do; they
-people the vacuity of Time, and make it green and worthy.”&mdash;“Past
-and Present,” p. 139. By Thomas Carlyle. London: Chapman
-&amp; Hall.</p>
-
-<p id="Endnote9"><span class="label"><a href="#EndAnchor9">[E9]</a></span>
-“Natural science is the point of interest now, and I think it is
-dimming and extinguishing a good deal that was called poetry.
-These sublime and all-reconciling revelations of nature will exact
-of poetry a correspondent height and scope, or put an end to it.”&mdash;Letter
-of R. W. Emerson to Anna C. L. Botta, “Memoirs of &mdash;.
-By her friends,” 8vo, pp. 459. J. Selwin, Tait &amp; Sons.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page184">[184]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="chapno">CHAPTER XVII.</span><br />
-<span class="chapname">POWER OF STEAM AND CONTEMPT OF ARTISANS.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="subjects">A few Million People now wield twice as much Industrial Power as
-all the People on the Globe exerted a Hundred Years ago. &mdash; A
-Revolution wrought, not by the Schools and Colleges, but by the
-Mechanic. &mdash; The Union between Science and Art prevented by the
-Speculative Philosophy of the Middle Ages. &mdash; Statesmen, Lawyers,
-Littérateurs, Poets, and Artists more highly esteemed than Civil
-Engineers, Mechanics, and Artisans. &mdash; The Refugee Artisan a Power
-in England, the Refugee Politician worthless. &mdash; Prejudice against
-the Artisan Class shown by Mr. Galton in his Work on “Hereditary
-Genius.” &mdash; The Influence of Slavery: it has lasted Thousands of
-Years, and still Survives.</p>
-
-<p>What the civil engineers and mechanics of England
-have done for that country the same classes here have
-done for America. It is by these classes that all civilized
-countries have been made prosperous and great. And
-the agent through which the power of man has been
-augmented a thousand-fold is steam. “In the manufactures
-of Great Britain alone, the power which steam exerts
-is estimated to be equal to the manual labor of four
-hundred millions of men, or more than double the number
-of males supposed to inhabit the globe.”<a href="#Footnote39" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor39">[39]</a> This is the
-most significant fact of all time, namely, that a few millions
-of people in a small island now wield twice as much
-industrial power as all the people on the globe exerted
-one hundred years ago. And it is a fact of the utmost<span class="pagenum" id="Page185">[185]</span>
-significance that the public educational institutions of
-England contributed scarcely anything to this industrial
-revolution, whose influence now comprehends all civilized
-countries. The men by whom it was wrought came not
-from the classic shades of the universities, but from the
-foundery, the forge, and the machine-shop. There has
-been very little change in educational methods since the
-time when Bacon said, “They learn nothing at the universities
-but to believe.” He proposed that a college be established
-and devoted to the discovery of new truth. No
-such college has, however, been established, but many new
-truths have been discovered. Suppose all the universities
-of England, of the United States, and of all other highly
-civilized countries had, from the time of Bacon, been
-conformed to his ideas, and devoted to the discovery of
-new truths? Such a course would have united science
-and art, and insured vastly greater progress, no doubt,
-than that which has actually taken place. The union of
-science with art has thus far been rendered impossible
-by reason of the wide prevalence of purely speculative
-views. The speculative philosophy of the Middle Ages
-still projects its baleful influence over our institutions of
-learning. Abstract ideas are still regarded as of more
-vital importance than things. Statesmen, lawyers, littérateurs,
-poets, and artists are more highly esteemed than
-civil engineers, machinists, and artisans. Mr. Smiles, in
-his excellent work on the Huguenots, has shown that
-England owes to the French and the Flemish immigrants
-“almost all her industrial arts and very much of the most
-valuable life-blood of her modern race.”<a href="#Footnote40" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor40">[40]</a>
-Commenting<span class="pagenum" id="Page186">[186]</span>
-upon this fact in his work on “Hereditary Genius,” Mr.
-Francis Galton says,</p>
-
-<p>“There has been another emigration from France of
-not unequal magnitude, but followed by very different results,
-namely, that of the revolution of 1789. It is most
-instructive to contrast the effects of the two. The Protestant
-emigrants were able men, and have profoundly
-influenced for good both our breed and our history; on
-the other hand, the political refugees had but poor average
-stamina, and have left scarcely any traces behind
-them.”<a href="#Footnote41" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor41">[41]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote39"><a href="#FNanchor39"><span class="label">[39]</span></a>
-“Brief Biographies: James Watt,” p. 1. By Samuel Smiles.
-Chicago: Belford, Clark &amp; Co., 1883.</p>
-
-<p id="Footnote40"><a href="#FNanchor40"><span class="label">[40]</span></a>
-“In short, wherever the refugees settled they acted as so many
-missionaries of skilled work, exhibiting the best practical examples of
-diligence, industry, and thrift, and teaching the English people in the
-most effective manner the beginnings of those various industrial arts
-in which they have since acquired so much distinction and wealth.”&mdash;“The
-Huguenots,” p. 107. By Samuel Smiles. New York: Harper
-&amp; Brothers, 1867.</p>
-
-<p id="Footnote41"><a href="#FNanchor41"><span class="label">[41]</span></a>
-“Hereditary Genius,” p. 360. By Francis Galton, F.R.S., etc.
-New York: D. Appleton &amp; Co., 1880.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>This is the testimony of a distinguished student of
-biology; and it is to the effect that the refugee artisan is
-of immense value to the country where he finds an asylum,
-while the refugee politician is of no value at all.
-We should naturally say, our author having made this
-important discovery will enlarge upon it. First of all,
-he will deduce the conclusion that if the refugee politician
-is of no value to the country where he finds an asylum,
-the home politician is an equally unimportant factor
-in the social problem. Then he will make an exhaustive
-study of the industrial class as the chief basis of his propositions
-and speculations on the subject of the science of
-life. Not at all. Mr. Galton, in his work on “Hereditary
-Genius,” offers another striking illustration of the
-repressive force of habit and the influence of popular
-prejudice. In his classifications of men according to<span class="pagenum" id="Page187">[187]</span>
-their professions, with a view to the inquiry whether
-“genius, talent, or whatever we term great mental capacity,
-follows the law of organic transmission&mdash;runs in
-families, and is an affair of blood and breed”&mdash;in such
-classifications Mr. Galton forgets for the time being that
-there is an industrial class. He runs through the entire
-social scale, from “the judges of England between 1660
-and 1865,” not omitting Lord Jeffreys, down through
-statesmen, commanders, literary men, poets, musicians,
-men of science, painters, divines, the boys in Cambridge,
-oarsmen, and wrestlers of the North Country, but has
-no word to say of the civil engineers, or of the inventors&mdash;those
-immortal men whose monuments in stone
-and iron exist in every corner of England.</p>
-
-<p>Buckles’s caustic remark, “the most valuable additions
-made to legislation have been enactments destructive
-of preceding legislation, and the best laws which
-have been passed have been those in which some former
-laws have been repealed,” does not apply to the works
-of the civil engineers, inventors, and mechanics of England
-or of any other country. Their works live after
-them and never fail to reflect honor upon them. The
-“acts” of the inventor may be amended but they are
-never repealed. Each inventive step, however short and
-apparently unimportant, constitutes a substantial link in
-the chain of progress; and it is a substantial link, because
-it invariably contains a hint of the next sequential
-step.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Galton is an original thinker of great power, and
-an untiring investigator. In contrasting the politician
-with the artisan he discriminates admirably. He finds
-that the politician is of no value, practically, to the community,
-while the artisan is of almost inestimable value;<span class="pagenum" id="Page188">[188]</span>
-and this conclusion he states curtly, without appearing to
-care a rush for the public sentiment which reverences
-politics and so-called statesmanship. But when he “makes
-up his jewels,” so to speak, on the subject of “hereditary
-genius,” Mr. Galton, as already remarked, forgets that it
-is worth while to consider the class of men who in the
-last hundred years have literally almost created a new
-world. Why is this? The late Mr. Horace Mann answered
-the question long ago, and he answered it so well
-that his answer is here reproduced <i>in extenso</i>: “Mankind
-had made great advances in astronomy, in geometry,
-and other mathematical sciences, in the writing of
-history, in oratory and in poetry, in painting and in
-sculpture, and in those kinds of architecture which may
-be called regal or religious, centuries before the great
-mechanical discoveries and inventions which now bless
-the world were brought to light; and the question has
-often forced itself upon reflecting minds why there was
-this <i>preposterousness</i>, this inversion of what would appear
-to be the natural order of progress? Why was it,
-for instance, that men should have learned the courses
-of the stars and the revolution of the planets before they
-found out how to make a good wagon-wheel? Why was
-it that they built the Parthenon and the Coliseum before
-they knew how to construct a comfortable, healthful
-dwelling-house? Why did they build the Roman aqueducts
-before they framed a saw-mill? Or why did they
-achieve the noblest models in eloquence, in poetry, and
-in the drama before they invented movable types? I
-think we have arrived at a point where we can unriddle
-this enigma. The labor of the world has been performed
-by ignorant men, by classes doomed to ignorance from
-sire to son; by the bondmen and the bondwomen of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page189">[189]</span>
-Jews, by the helots of Sparta, by the captives who passed
-under the Roman yoke, and by the villeins and serfs and
-slaves of more modern times.”</p>
-
-<p>When the great educational reformer of Massachusetts
-thus graphically pointed out slavery as the cause of
-the contempt in which the useful arts had been held
-from the dawn of history, four millions of men were
-kept in bondage, and compelled to toil under the lash
-by one of the most enlightened nations of the earth.
-Later thirteen millions of people pledged “their lives,
-their fortunes, and their sacred honor” to the perpetuation
-of slavery, and half a million soldiers marched repeatedly
-to battle to do or die in behalf of the right (?)
-of one man to buy and sell the bodies of his fellow-men.</p>
-
-<p>There is, then, a logical reason for Mr. Galton’s neglect
-of the artisan class. Slavery in its most odious form
-not only existed in the heart of a so-called “free” nation
-twenty-five years ago, but dared Liberty to a deadly
-contest. Nor were the upholders of slavery without
-moral support among the governments and peoples of
-the world. The government of England, of which Mr.
-Galton is a subject, under cover of a pretended neutrality
-aided the American slaveholders’ Confederacy in
-sweeping Freedom’s ships from the sea; and the great
-families of England, the families cited by Mr. Galton in
-support of his proposition that genius “is an affair of
-blood and breed”&mdash;those great families were well pleased
-when Freedom’s ships went down and Freedom’s armies
-retreated before the assaults of the slave confederacy.</p>
-
-<p>This somewhat extended reference to Mr. Galton is
-not intended to impugn his good faith as an author. Its
-design is simply to show that the influence of slavery is
-not yet extinct; that it still moulds ideas, controls habits<span class="pagenum" id="Page190">[190]</span>
-of thought, inspires literary men, and permeates literature.
-In a word, the cause of the contempt in which
-the useful arts were held in Babylon in the time of Herodotus
-was in full force in this country down to the
-date of the issuance of Mr. Lincoln’s proclamation of
-emancipation; and it is scarcely necessary to observe
-that the British Constitution grew out of the feudal system,
-which was only another name for slavery. It is a
-proverb in England to this day that it is safer to shoot a
-man than a hare; and the sentiment of the proverb is a
-complete justification of human bondage, since it implies
-that property rights are more sacred than the rights of
-man. Thus slavery has kept its brand of shame upon
-the useful arts for thousands of years, and the mind of
-man has been so deeply impressed thereby that it does
-not react now that slavery is extinct. Like the slave released
-from bondage, who still feels the chain, still winces
-and shrinks from the imaginary scourge, the mind of
-man continues to revolve automatically in the old channels.<a href="#Endnote10" class="fnanchor" id="EndAnchor10">[E10]</a></p>
-
-<hr class="footnote" />
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Endnote10"><span class="label"><a href="#EndAnchor10">[E10]</a></span>
-“It is related of the Scythians that they became involved in a
-contest with the descendants of certain of their slaves, who successfully
-resisted them in several battles, whereupon one of them said:
-‘Men of Scythia, what are we doing? By fighting with our slaves,
-both we ourselves by being slain become fewer in number, and by
-killing them we shall hereafter have fewer to rule over. Now,
-therefore, it seems to me that we should lay aside our spears and
-bows, and that everyone, taking a horsewhip, should go directly to
-them; for so long as they saw us with arms, they considered themselves
-equal to us, and born of equal birth; but when they shall
-see us with our whips instead of arms, they will soon learn that
-they are our slaves, and being conscious of that will no longer resist.’
-The Scythians, having heard this, adopted the advice; and the
-slaves, struck with astonishment at what was done, forgot to fight
-and fled.”&mdash;Herodotus, “Melpomene,” IV. §§ 3, 4. New York:
-Harper &amp; Brothers, 1882.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page191">[191]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="chapno">CHAPTER XVIII.</span><br />
-<span class="chapname">AUTOMATIC CONTRASTED WITH SCIENTIFIC
-EDUCATION.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="subjects">The Past tyrannizes over the Present by Interposing the Stolid Resistance
-of Habit. &mdash; Habits of Thought like Habits of the Body
-become Automatic. &mdash; There is much Freedom of Speech but very
-little Freedom of Thought: Habit, Tradition, and Reverence for
-Antiquity forbid it. &mdash; The Schools educate Automatically. &mdash; A glaring
-Defect of the Schools shown by Mr. John S. Clark, of Boston. &mdash; The
-Automatic Character of the Popular System of Education
-shown by the Quincy (Mass.) Experiment. &mdash; Several Intelligent
-Opinions to the same Effect. &mdash; The Public Schools as an Industrial
-Agency a Failure. &mdash; A Conclusive Evidence of the Automatic
-and Superficial Character of prevailing Methods of Education in
-the Schools of a large City. &mdash; The Views of Colonel Francis W.
-Parker. &mdash; Scientific Education is found in the Kindergarten and
-the Manual Training School. &mdash; “The Cultivation of Familiarity
-betwixt the Mind and Things.” &mdash; Colonel Augustus Jacobson on
-the Effect of the New Education.</p>
-
-<p>All reforms must encounter the stolid resistance of
-habit. It is not less tyrannical because it is a negative
-force. It braces itself and holds back with all its might.
-It is in this manner that the past dominates the present.<a href="#Endnote11" class="fnanchor" id="EndAnchor11">[E11]</a>
-This automatic habit of mind is precisely like certain
-automatic habits of the body which operate quite independently
-of any act of volition. For example: “When
-we move about in a room with the objects in which we
-are quite familiar, we direct our steps so as to avoid
-them, without being conscious what they are or what we
-are doing; we <i>see</i> them, as we easily discover if we try
-to move about in the same way with our <i>eyes</i> shut, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page192">[192]</span>
-we do not <i>perceive</i> them, the mind being fully occupied
-with some train of thought.”<a href="#Footnote42" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor42">[42]</a> In the same way the
-mind under certain conditions becomes an automaton,
-constantly revolving old thoughts after the causes that
-gave rise to them have ceased to operate. Piano-forte
-playing affords an excellent illustration of this automatic
-action of the mind. “A pupil learning to play the piano-forte
-is obliged to call to mind each note, but the skilful
-player goes through no such process of conscious
-remembrance; his ideas, like his movements, are automatic,
-and both so rapid as to surpass the rapidity of
-succession of conscious ideas and movements.”<a href="#Footnote43" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor43">[43]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote42"><a href="#FNanchor42"><span class="label">[42]</span></a> “Body and Mind,” p. 22. By Henry Maudsley, M.D. New
-York: D. Appleton &amp; Co., 1883.</p>
-
-<p id="Footnote43"><a href="#FNanchor43"><span class="label">[43]</span></a> Ibid., p. 26.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Freedom of speech and freedom of thought are catch-penny
-phrases. There is much of the former, but very
-little of the latter. Speech is generally the result of automatic
-thought rather than of ratiocination. Independent
-thought is of all mental processes the most difficult
-and the most rare; habit, tradition, and reverence for
-antiquity unite to forbid it, and these combined influences
-are strengthened by the law of heredity. The tendency
-to automatic action of the mind is still further
-promoted by the environment of modern life. The
-crowding of populations into cities, and the division and
-subdivision of labor in the factory and the shop, and
-even in the so-called learned professions, have a tendency
-to increase the dependence of the individual upon the
-mass of society. And this interdependence of the units
-of society renders them more and more imitative, and
-hence more and more automatic both mentally and physically.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page193">[193]</span></p>
-
-<p>Another powerful influence contributes to the same
-end. The schools educate automatically. They train
-the absorbing powers of the brain, but fail to cultivate
-the faculties of assimilation and re-creation, and neglect
-almost wholly to develop the power of expression. Mr.
-John S. Clark, of Boston, has made this point of the
-failure of the schools to train the brain-power of expression
-to its utmost, so plain that it is here reproduced in
-full, as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="container fig1" id="Fig1">
-
-<img src="images/illo224.png" alt="Diagram" />
-
-<div class="illotext">
-
-<p class="noindent fsize90">Five senses.</p>
-
-<p class="right fsize90">Tongue.</p>
-
-<p class="right padr4 fsize90">Hand.</p>
-
-</div><!--illotext-->
-
-<p class="caption">Fig. 1.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p>“Studying the functions of the brain, we find that for
-educational purposes it may be likened to an organism
-with a threefold form of working, an organism with a
-power of absorption, a power of assimilation and re-creation,
-and a power of expressing or giving out. The
-force or character of a brain is measured entirely by its
-expressing power, by what comes out of it. Examining
-a little closer, we find that the brain absorbs through all
-the five senses, while for expressing purposes it makes
-use of but two of these senses, or rather of but two
-organs of these senses&mdash;the
-tongue and the hand.
-<a href="#Fig1"><i>Fig.</i> 1</a> is a simple diagram
-representing a brain
-with the five senses placed
-on one side, as means of
-absorbing power, while on
-the other side the tongue and the hand are placed as
-organs of expressing power. The other function of
-the brain, that of assimilation and re-creation, cannot of
-course be graphically represented. It may, however, be
-said to be the result of the action of the other two functions.
-Now, the equipping of a brain, or the healthy
-education of a brain, consists in giving it expressing<span class="pagenum" id="Page194">[194]</span>
-power through the tongue and the hand, coextensive
-with the power of absorption and the power of re-creation.</p>
-
-<div class="container fig2" id="Fig2">
-
-<img src="images/illo225.png" style="width: 32em;" alt="" />
-
-<div class="illotext">
-
-<p class="noindent fsize90">Reading.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent fsize90">Mathematics.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent fsize90">Geography.
-<span class="padl10">Five Senses.</span></p>
-
-<p class="noindent fsize90">Grammar.
-<span class="righttext padr6">Tongue.</span></p>
-
-<p class="noindent fsize90">History.
-<span class="righttext">Speech.</span></p>
-
-<p class="noindent fsize90">Languages.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent fsize90">Physiology.
-<span class="righttext padr14">Hand.</span></p>
-
-<p class="noindent fsize90">Literature.
-<span class="righttext padr4">Writing.</span></p>
-
-<p class="noindent fsize90">Natural History.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent fsize90">Theoretical Sciences.</p>
-
-</div><!--illotext-->
-
-<p class="caption">Fig. 2.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p>“Applying our popular schemes of education to the
-brain, and especially those based on the 3-R idea of education,
-we find what is indicated in <a href="#Fig2"><i>Fig.</i> 2</a>, that provision
-has been made for greatly distending the absorbing side
-of the brain, while for the expressing side, the practical
-side, provision has been limited to the use of the tongue
-in speech and to the hand in writing. If now we follow
-the result of this brain equipment into practical life, we
-find that speech and writing, as means for expressing
-thought, have their applications mainly in the commercial
-and financial employments and the professions, and
-only incidentally in the industrial and mechanical employments.
-With such an inadequate and one-sided
-brain equipment it is not possible in any broad, practical
-way to bring thought or brain-power to the service
-of industry. The fact so generally admitted, that we
-are getting so few intelligent artisans or mechanics from
-our scheme of public education, that we turn out pupils
-of both sexes with a decided repugnance to industrial
-labor, is an attestation to the truth of this statement.
-The simple fact is that our education is not broad
-enough on the expressing side of the brain, that too
-much attention has been given to the absorbing side of<span class="pagenum" id="Page195">[195]</span>
-this organ, that no adequate provisions have been made
-whereby it can discharge its power in work connected
-with the industries.</p>
-
-<div class="container fig3" id="Fig3">
-
-<img src="images/illo226.png" style="width: 33em;" alt="" />
-
-<div class="illotext">
-
-<p class="noindent fsize90">Reading.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent fsize90">Mathematics.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent fsize90">Geography.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent fsize90">Grammar.
-<span class="padl12">Five Senses.</span></p>
-
-<p class="noindent fsize90">History.
-<span class="righttext padr6">Tongue.</span></p>
-
-<p class="noindent fsize90">Languages.
-<span class="righttext">Speech.</span></p>
-
-<p class="noindent fsize90">Physiology.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent fsize90">Literature.
-<span class="righttext padr4">Hand.
-<span class="padl4">Writing.</span></span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent fsize90">Natural History.
-<span class="righttext padr3">Drawing.</span></p>
-
-<p class="noindent fsize90">Theoretical Sciences.
-<span class="righttext">Manual Arts.</span></p>
-
-<p class="noindent fsize90">Practical Sciences.</p>
-
-</div><!--illotext-->
-
-<p class="caption">Fig. 3.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p>“In <a href="#Fig3"><i>Fig.</i> 3</a> a remedy for this defect is indicated in the
-addition of the study of graphic and æsthetic art, through
-drawing, and of training in the manual arts, to the previous
-brain equipment. Observe where these features
-come in the scheme&mdash;on the expressing side of the brain
-and in the service of the hand, thus giving the brain
-ample power to discharge thought in its most complete
-form for use or for beauty. With these features added
-to the brain equipment its power of expressing thought
-in all practical directions will be coextensive with its absorbing
-and re-creating powers; and just as soon as the
-public can clearly see that in the outcome of our public
-education there is no respecting of persons or of classes,
-that pupils are trained for honest labor with their hands
-as well as to living by their wits, are taught to produce
-something, to <i>create values</i> by the action of their brain
-through the work of their hands, a much deeper interest
-in public education will not only be manifested, but generous
-provisions for its support will also be given.”<a href="#Footnote44" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor44">[44]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote44"><a href="#FNanchor44"><span class="label">[44]</span></a>
-Address delivered before the Philadelphia Board of Trade and
-the Franklin Institute, June 6, 1881.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The charge that the schools educate automatically<span class="pagenum" id="Page196">[196]</span>
-rather than rationally is of such vital importance that
-it should be sustained by the best attainable proof.
-Strong proof is at hand in the history of the so-called
-Quincy (Mass.) experiment.</p>
-
-<p>In 1878 doubt of the efficiency of the schools of Norfolk
-County, long indulged, culminated in action by the
-Association of School Committees and Superintendents.
-It was insisted by certain members of the committee that
-the existing methods were “about as good as human intelligence
-could devise,” and by others that the people
-were getting “no adequate returns for the money expended
-under the system in general use.” It was resolved
-to institute a searching investigation, and the
-standard for the measurement of the acquirements of
-pupils adopted was, “a reasonable degree of ability to
-read, to write legibly, correctly, and grammatically, and
-to deal readily with simple mathematics after about eight
-years of schooling.”</p>
-
-<p>The association selected Mr. George A. Walton, an
-experienced educator, to make the examination of the
-schools of the county, and the number of pupils examined
-exceeded three thousand. In their preface to Mr.
-Walton’s report the gentlemen of the association say:</p>
-
-<p>“Publicity, discussion, and discontent are wholesome
-things to apply to school management in Massachusetts.
-That this is a fair sample of the results now accomplished
-cannot be questioned. But though they may not be flattering
-to our pride, we yet believe that they are as good
-as can be obtained in any other county in Massachusetts,
-or, indeed, of any other State where similar tests are
-applied in a similar manner. If any school authorities
-elsewhere doubt the truth of this statement, let the experiment
-be tried in the schools of their county.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page197">[197]</span></p>
-
-<p>“The questions naturally arise, What is the cause of
-this lamentable ignorance? and what is the remedy?
-The answer to the former suggests the reply to the latter.
-Too much has been attempted in the schools. There
-has been a slavish adherence to text-books, and no room
-given for freedom and originality of thought. Rules
-have been memorized, and the children taught to recite
-from the text-book, while they have not had the slightest
-conception of the true meaning of the subject....</p>
-
-<p>“The rules and exceptions in grammar are faithfully
-committed to memory, and most intricate sentences can
-be successfully analyzed, the phrases separated, and the
-modifiers named in true grammatical style, while the pupils
-who have undergone such severe training in this respect
-are unable to present their own thoughts concisely
-or clearly, or even <i>correctly</i>, upon paper. The <i>memory</i>
-is cultivated, and the <i>reason</i> allowed to slumber.</p>
-
-<p>“In arithmetic the pupils show a readiness to solve
-a problem when they are able to fit it to some rule that
-they have learned; but when they are given a simple
-question out of the regular course, they are like a ship at
-sea without rudder or compass.”</p>
-
-<p>This is the severest and most sweeping criticism ever
-passed upon our American common-school system, and it
-emanates from its friends and the friends of universal
-education.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Walton says of reading, as taught in the Norfolk
-County schools, “As for any systematic analysis by which
-the pupil learns to make a careful and independent study
-of his piece, it is but little practised in the schools even
-of the grammar grade;” and he declares that reading,
-without comprehending the ideas of which the words
-are mere signs, “is not merely useless, but dangerous,<span class="pagenum" id="Page198">[198]</span>
-just in proportion to the facility with which the words
-are called.”</p>
-
-<p>Of the results of his examinations in penmanship Mr.
-Walton says, “Most of the faults in the writing indicate
-imperfect teaching.” Of his examinations in spelling he
-says that “the commonest words are misspelled when used
-in sentences or composition, while words of difficult orthography
-are spelled with accuracy when dictated for
-spelling.” For example, he says, “The words ‘whose,’
-‘which,’ and ‘father,’ when spelled orally, were generally
-correct, but when written in sentences they were frequently,
-in many schools, in a majority of cases, erroneous.”
-No test could more clearly demonstrate the purely
-mechanical character of the methods of instruction than
-this of a comparison between the pupils’ oral and written
-spelling. The average of excellence in spelling the three
-simple words “which, whose, scholar,” of the primary
-grade for the whole county of Norfolk, as found by Mr.
-Walton, was the exceedingly low one of 55.9, the basis
-being 100.</p>
-
-<p>The ingenuity in bad spelling of this grade of pupils,
-who had been at least four years in school, is well illustrated
-by the example of the word “carriage,” written
-as follows: “Carage, carrage, craidge, caradg, carege, carriag,
-carrige;” and of the word “sleigh,” written “saly,
-slay, slaig, slaigh, slagh, slaw, sleig, sleugh, sleight, sligh,
-sley, slew, slave, sleygh;” and of the word “Tuesday,”
-written “Tusgay, tuestay, toesday;” and of the word
-“Wednesday,” written “wanesday, wedenyday, Wedernsday,
-wednest, Wenday, Wendsday, wensday, wenesday,
-wensdaw, wenze, Wenzie, Wendsstay, wenstday, Wesday,
-Whensday, winday, Windday, Winsday,” etc.</p>
-
-<p>The word “scholar” presented one hundred and sixty<span class="pagenum" id="Page199">[199]</span>
-different erroneous spellings; that of “depot” fifty, among
-which were the following: “Deappow, deppowe, deaphow,
-deapohoe, teapot, doopo,” and “bepo.” An exercise in
-spelling by both grades of pupils, the “primary,” composed
-of pupils from eight and a half to ten and a half
-years old, and the “grammar,” composed of pupils from
-twelve and a half to fifteen and a half years old, showed
-errors of which the following are examples: <i>Any</i>, spelled
-ane and enny; <i>along</i>, aloud and alon; <i>amongst</i>, amunt;
-<i>animals</i>, anables; <i>arithmetic</i>, rithmes; <i>asked</i>, asted; <i>beautiful</i>,
-beuful; <i>been</i>, ben, bene, and bin; <i>by-and-by</i>, bimeby;
-<i>coat</i>, coot, coth, cote, goat, and coate; <i>Boston</i>, bostone;
-<i>boy</i>, poy, and bou; <i>city</i>, sitty; <i>eggs</i>, ages; <i>custard-pie</i>,
-custed puy; <i>coming</i>, comin, commun, gomming, and
-comming.</p>
-
-<p>An exercise in composition developed the following
-specimen errors: “The was two boys; They was two
-boys; How is all the boys? Things that was good; They
-is not many here I know; He come to school; I see him
-yesterday; He asked cyrus what he done that day; I had
-saw him; he had wore a coat,” etc.</p>
-
-<p>The examinations in mathematics yielded similar results
-to those developed in reading, writing, spelling, and
-composition. Mr. Walton says, “If instead of this [the
-routine method of the school] the pupil should be compelled
-to deal with real things, and to find his answer by
-studying the conditions of his problem, the fiction which
-arithmetic now is to most pupils would become to them
-a reality.”<a href="#Footnote45" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor45">[45]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote45"><a href="#FNanchor45"><span class="label">[45]</span></a>
-“The New Departure in the Common Schools of Quincy,” by
-Charles F. Adams, Jr., and the “Report of Examination of Schools
-in Norfolk County, Mass.,” by George A. Walton. Boston: Estes
-&amp; Lauriat, 1881.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page200">[200]</span></p>
-
-<p>The prime difficulty is here stated. The schools deal
-in “fictions.” In the language of the Norfolk County
-committee, “The <i>memory</i> is cultivated and the <i>reason</i>
-allowed to slumber.” Now, if to every fact memorized
-the pupil were required to apply the test of reason to
-analyze it and find out its relation to other facts, and fix
-it with all its relations in his mind, he would possess certain
-solid information of an ascertained practical value.
-It is very simple. It is making the pupil think for himself
-by showing him how to think for himself instead
-of thinking for him. Of course this is object-teaching.
-In the reading-lesson the pupil is required to know the
-meaning of the words of which it is composed in order
-to read with correct expression. When required
-to spell a word orally he is also required to write it.
-In the study of arithmetic he is shown certain objects,
-blocks of cubical and other forms, and required to apply
-the rules of the book to the ascertainment of their
-contents. In grammar the analysis of the sentence is
-followed by the writing of it, and the construction of
-other sentences involving similar principles in the art of
-composition, and so on.</p>
-
-<p>This is the kindergarten system now rapidly coming
-into high favor as an essential preliminary step in education.
-It is also the system of the manual training school.
-Under this system the pupil is not merely told that the
-saw is a thin, flat piece of steel with teeth used for cutting
-boards and timbers; a saw is placed in his hand and
-he is taught to use it: and so of all the hand and machine
-tools of the trades. He stands at the forge, bends
-over the moulding-form, shoves the plane in the carpenter-shop,
-presides at the turning-lathe, that ingenious invention
-of Maudslay&mdash;an automaton truer than the human<span class="pagenum" id="Page201">[201]</span>
-eye, more cunning and more accurate than the human
-hand; executes plans for patterns and then makes the
-patterns, and finally, from the faint lines he has traced
-on paper, constructs a machine, breathes the breath of life
-(steam) into its veins, and with it moves mountains!</p>
-
-<p>In further support of the charge that the schools educate
-automatically, and hence superficially, the following
-intelligent opinions are cited:</p>
-
-<p>Charles Francis Adams, Jr., remarks that the common
-schools of Massachusetts cost $4,000,000 a year;
-and adds, “The imitative or memorizing faculties only
-are cultivated, and little or no attention is paid to the
-thinking or reflective powers. Indeed it may almost be
-said that a child of any originality or with individual
-characteristics is looked upon as wholly out of place in a
-public school.... To skate is as difficult as to write;
-probably more difficult. Yet in spite of hard teaching
-in the one case and no teaching in the other, the boy can
-skate beautifully, and he cannot write his native tongue
-at all.”<a href="#Footnote46" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor46">[46]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote46"><a href="#FNanchor46"><span class="label">[46]</span></a>
-“Scientific Common-school Education.”&mdash;<i>Harper’s Magazine</i>,
-November, 1880 (see note <a href="#Endnote12" id="EndAnchor12">[E12]</a> at end of chapter).</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Mr. Edward Atkinson says, “We are training no
-American craftsmen, and unless we devise better methods
-than the old and now obsolete apprentice system,
-much of the perfection of our almost automatic mechanism
-will have been achieved at the cost not only of the
-manual but also of the mental development of our men.
-Our almost automatic mills and machine-shops will become
-mental stupefactories.”<a href="#Footnote47" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor47">[47]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote47"><a href="#FNanchor47"><span class="label">[47]</span></a>
-“Elementary Instruction in the Mechanic Arts.”&mdash;<i>Scribner’s
-Monthly</i>, April 1881, p. 902.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Prof. Barbour, of Yale College, says, “Our schools are<span class="pagenum" id="Page202">[202]</span>
-suffering from congestion of the brain: too much thought
-and too little putting it in practice.”</p>
-
-<p>An English observer of our public schools says, “They
-teach apparently for information, almost regardless of development.
-This system develops no special individuality
-or power, forms few habits of observation, benefits
-little except the memory, and herein lies its great weakness.”</p>
-
-<p>The late Mr. Wendell Phillips said, “Our system stops
-too short, and as a justice to boys and girls as well as to
-society it should see to it that those whose life is to be
-one of manual labor should be better trained for it.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Wickersham, late Superintendent of Public Instruction
-for the State of Pennsylvania, says, “It is
-high time that something should be done to enable our
-youth to learn trades and to form industrious habits and
-a taste for work.”</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Runkle, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
-says, “Public education should touch practical
-life in a larger number of points; it should better fit all
-for that sphere in life in which they are destined to find
-their highest happiness and well-being.”</p>
-
-<p>Opinions of this character might be multiplied almost
-indefinitely. They reflect the general sentiment that, as
-an industrial agency, the public school is a failure; but
-its value as an enlightening and civilizing agency is not
-therefore underestimated. It was not established as an
-industrial agency; it was established as a bulwark of liberty,
-and nobly did it fulfil its mission. The colonial
-fathers had a horror of ignorance, and as a barrier against
-it they raised the public school. But they were without
-industrial interests in the higher departments of skilled
-labor, and without commerce in a large way. Lord Sheffield<span class="pagenum" id="Page203">[203]</span>
-said that the American colonies were founded with
-the sole view of securing to England a monopoly of their
-trade, and Lord Chatham declared that they had no right
-to manufacture even a nail or a horseshoe. Even after
-the Revolution, in 1784, the commerce of the country
-was so insignificant that eight bales of cotton shipped
-from South Carolina were seized by the customs authorities
-of England on the ground that so large a quantity
-could not have been produced in the United States!</p>
-
-<p>These humble conditions no longer exist, and to object
-to the expansion of the public-school system to meet
-the requirements of new exigencies is to ignore the logic
-and march of events. The nations are running an industrial
-race, and the nation that applies to labor the
-most thought, the most intelligence, will rise highest in
-the scale of civilization, will gain most in wealth, will
-most surely survive the shocks of time, will live longest
-in history. In the race for industrial supremacy we are
-not at the front. It is a fact to be pondered that we are
-exchanging the products of unskilled for skilled labor
-with the nations of Europe. In the course of a year, for
-example, England exports of raw material and food only
-about $150,000,000 in value, while her exports of manufactures
-aggregate about $850,000,000 in value. On the
-other hand, our exports consist almost entirely of raw
-material and food, their annual value being about
-$800,000,000, while of manufactures we export only a
-beggarly $75,000,000 worth, and our imports of manufactures
-are of the annual value of about $250,000,000.
-In crude, uneducated, unskilled labor capacity, we have
-grown much more rapidly than in the departments of
-educated, skilled labor; and in the exact ratio of this
-growth of unskilled over skilled labor, we are behind the<span class="pagenum" id="Page204">[204]</span>
-age. We are industrially ill-balanced. We are selling
-brawn and buying thought&mdash;cunning, invention, genius;
-exhausting our physical manhood and impoverishing a
-virgin soil. We are suffering from a paucity of skilled
-labor, and we hesitate to apply the needed and obviously
-adequate remedy&mdash;the training of the youth of the
-country in the elements of the useful arts, in the public
-schools.</p>
-
-<p>A final and conclusive evidence of the verity of the
-charge that prevailing methods of education are automatic,
-and hence superficial in their character, is found
-in an examination test recently made in one of the public
-schools in a large American city, in the department of
-mathematics. The superintendent begins to distrust his
-own system of abstract instruction, and resolves to test
-the acquirements of certain classes of pupils ranging from
-ten to twelve years of age. He submits a series of questions
-in number, which are promptly solved either orally
-or in chalk on the black-board, showing a complete mastery
-of the subject from the abstract side, or point of
-view. To test the practical value of the knowledge thus
-exhibited the superintendent repeats his series of questions,
-applying them to things. For example: He passes
-six cards to a pupil, and requests that one-half of them be
-returned. This question having been promptly and correctly
-answered by the return of three of them, and the
-six cards being again placed in the hands of the pupil,
-the second question is propounded, namely, “Please give
-me one-third of one-half of the cards in your hand.”
-The pupil is puzzled; he fumbles the cards nervously,
-blushes, and returns a wrong number or becomes entirely
-helpless and “gives it up.” This question, or some other
-question of similar general import, is submitted to each<span class="pagenum" id="Page205">[205]</span>
-member of the class with a like unfavorable result in
-eight or nine cases in a total of ten cases. The superintendent
-is astonished; he is more than astonished, he is
-deeply chagrined; for he knows that the kindergarten
-child of six or seven years of age, with the blocks, would
-answer his series of questions correctly eight or nine
-times in a total of ten.</p>
-
-<p>It is impossible to conceive of a more striking illustration
-of the prime defects of automatic education than is
-afforded by the foregoing described experiment. It sustains
-and justifies the severe criticism of the schools by
-Mr. Charles Francis Adams, Jr., in his magazine article
-of 1880, in the course of which he says,</p>
-
-<p>“From one point of view children are regarded as
-automatons; from another, as india-rubber bags; from
-a third, as so much raw material. They must move in
-step and exactly alike. They must receive the same
-mental nutriment in equal quantities and at fixed times.
-Its assimilation is wholly immaterial, but the motions
-must be gone through with. Finally, as raw material,
-they are emptied in at the primaries, and marched out
-at the grammar grades&mdash;and it is well!”<a href="#Footnote48" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor48">[48]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote48"><a href="#FNanchor48"><span class="label">[48]</span></a>
-“Scientific Common-school Education.”&mdash;<i>Harper’s New Monthly
-Magazine</i>, November, 1880, p. 937.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The testimony of Col. Francis W. Parker, of the Cook
-County (Illinois) Normal School, is to the same effect.
-He says,</p>
-
-<p>“The most important work of to-day is to collect, reconcile,
-and apply all the principles and methods of education
-that have been discovered in the past, into one
-science and art of teaching. This would certainly radically
-change all our school work in this country. When<span class="pagenum" id="Page206">[206]</span>
-this is done the ground will be made ready for new advances
-in the incomplete science of education. Because
-a complete science has not yet been discovered is a very
-poor reason for not applying what we already know.
-What specific changes would the application of known
-mental laws, in teaching about which all psychologists are
-in agreement, bring about? For it is only by a sharp
-comparison of what is now done according to tradition
-and custom in our schools, with that which can be done
-by the application of the simplest principles of teaching,
-that the value of the true art of instruction may be in
-some degree appreciated.</p>
-
-<p>“To illustrate this it may be mentioned that little
-children have been taught to read, in the past, and a great
-majority of them are now taught, by a method that is
-utterly opposed to a mental law, about which there can
-be no dispute among those who know anything of the
-science of teaching. I refer to the A B C method. Nearly
-three hundred years ago Comenius discovered a rule
-of teaching which may be said to embrace all rules in its
-category&mdash;‘Things that have to be done should be learned
-by doing them.’ This rule is so simple and plain that
-every one, except the teachers, has adopted and used it
-since man has lived upon the earth. If I am not very
-much mistaken, the school-master for the last fifty years
-has been incessantly inventing ways of doing things in
-the school-room by doing something else. We try to
-teach the English language by rules, definitions, analyses,
-diagrams, and parsing. Before the poor innocent child
-can write a single sentence correctly, we teach the painful
-pronunciation of words without the grasping of thought
-as reading. We vainly endeavor to give children a
-knowledge of number by teaching figures, the signs of<span class="pagenum" id="Page207">[207]</span>
-number. We cram our victim’s mind full of empty,
-meaningless words, instead of inspiring and developing
-it by the sweet and strong realities of thought. This
-futile struggle to do things by doing something else is
-to-day costing the people of this country millions and
-millions of hard-earned dollars; and it is much to be
-feared that it will one day cost their children the blessings
-of free government. This is a serious charge.</p>
-
-<p>“The three hundred thousand teachers of this country
-are as faithful, honest, and earnest as any other class of
-active workers. If, then, these great truths in education
-be at the doors of our educators, why do they not acquire
-and use them? The answer is not far to seek. Not one
-teacher in five hundred ever makes a practical, thorough
-study of the <i>history</i> of education, to say nothing of the
-science.</p>
-
-<p>“The tremendous projecting power of tradition stands
-stubbornly in the way of progress in education. It can
-only be met and overcome by the most thorough searching
-and indefatigable study of the child’s nature, and of
-the means by which the possibilities for good in God’s
-greatest creation may be realized.”<a href="#Footnote49" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor49">[49]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote49"><a href="#FNanchor49"><span class="label">[49]</span></a>
-Letter to the author under date of April, 1883, and by him reproduced
-in a communication published in the <i>Chicago Tribune</i>,
-April 23, 1883.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The change from automatic to scientific education
-ought not to be very difficult. It has been made in the
-kindergarten. It consists in substituting things in place
-of signs of things. The boys should be taught to read in
-school as he will be required to read; to write as he will
-be required to write; and to cipher as he will be required
-to cipher, when he becomes a man.</p>
-
-<p>In teaching chemistry, for example, there should be<span class="pagenum" id="Page208">[208]</span>
-a laboratory with the necessary illustrative apparatus.
-In teaching geography, in addition to the books and the
-globe, the form of the continent should be moulded in
-sand, with coast lines, mountain ranges, rivers, canals, harbors,
-cities, etc. In teaching number the pupil should
-have the things and parts of things, represented by signs,
-in his hands. In teaching mechanics the pupil should
-handle the saw, the plane, the file, the hammer, and the
-chisel, and stand at the bench, the forge, and the turning-lathe.
-It is in this way only that the pupil can be
-taught the power of expressing, as Mr. Clark puts it,
-“what has been absorbed on the receptive side.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. MacAlister illustrates the force of Mr. Clark’s diagrams
-in a sentence: “We must not close our eyes to
-the fact that by far the larger number of men in every
-civilized community are workers to whom a skilled hand
-is quite as important as a well filled head.”<a href="#Footnote50" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor50">[50]</a> The prevailing
-methods of teaching fill the head but do not provide
-for assimilation, re-creation, and expression. Now to assimilate,
-to reduce to practical value and put to use facts
-memorized, and to create, the power of expression is an
-essential prerequisite; creating is expressing ideas in concrete
-form. But under the old <i>régime</i> of education only
-two modes of expression are provided&mdash;speech and writing.
-A third mode&mdash;drawing&mdash;has been very generally
-adopted. Drawing, however, is only the first step, an
-incomplete step, so to speak, of expression. It is a sign,
-an outline, of a thing. What we want is the thing itself.
-That thing can only be produced at the forge, the bench,
-or the lathe; and this is manual training in the arts.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote50"><a href="#FNanchor50"><span class="label">[50]</span></a>
-Mr. James MacAlister, Superintendent of Schools of the City of
-Philadelphia, Pa., at the meeting of the American Institute of Instruction,
-Saratoga, N. Y., July 13, 1882.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page209">[209]</span></p>
-
-<p>What manual training will do for the pupil is expressed
-in the following terse paragraph by Col. Augustus
-Jacobson:</p>
-
-<p>“The boy leaving school should carry with him mechanical,
-business, and scientific training, fitting him for
-whatever it may become necessary for him to do in the
-world. I would secure for society the advantage of all
-the brain capacity that is born and all the training it can
-take. It is possible and practicable to let every child of
-fair capacity start in life from his school a skilled worker,
-with the principal tools of all the mechanical employments,
-an athlete with the maximum of health possible
-to him, and thoroughly at home in science and literature.
-The child so trained would, when grown, be to the ordinary
-man of to-day what Jay-Eye-See is to an ordinary
-plough-horse.”</p>
-
-<hr class="footnote" />
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Endnote11"><span class="label"><a href="#EndAnchor11">[E11]</a></span>
-“Fortunately the past never completely dies for man. Many
-may forget it, but he always preserves it within him. For, take him
-at any epoch, and he is the product, the epitome, of all the earlier
-epochs. Let him look into his own soul, and he can find and distinguish
-these different epochs by what each of them has left within
-him.”&mdash;“The Ancient City,” p. 13. By Fustel De Coulanges. Boston:
-Lee &amp; Shepard, 1882.</p>
-
-<p id="Endnote12"><span class="label"><a href="#EndAnchor12">[E12]</a></span>
-“In fact, memory comes from interest. What children are
-deeply interested in they will never forget. A boy who can never
-say his lesson by heart will remember every detail of the cricket or
-football matches in which his heart really lives.”&mdash;“Educational
-Theories,” p. 116. By Oscar Browning, M.A. New York: Harper
-&amp; Brothers, 1885.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page210">[210]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="chapno">CHAPTER XIX.</span><br />
-<span class="chapname">AUTOMATIC CONTRASTED WITH SCIENTIFIC EDUCATION&mdash;<i>Continued</i>.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="subjects">The Failure of Education in America shown by Statistics of Railway
-and Mercantile Disasters. &mdash; Shrinkage of Railway Values and Failures
-of Merchants. &mdash; Only Three Per Cent. of those entering Mercantile
-Life achieve Success. &mdash; Business Enterprises conducted by
-Guess: Cause, Unscientific Education. &mdash; Savage Training is better
-because Objective. &mdash; Mr. Foley, late of the Massachusetts Institute
-of Technology, on the Scientific Character of Manual Education &mdash; Prof.
-Goss, of Purdue University, to the same Effect &mdash; also Dr.
-Belfield, of the Chicago Manual Training School. &mdash; Students love
-the Laboratory Exercises. &mdash; Demoralizing Effect of Unscientific
-Training. &mdash; The Failure of Justice and Legislation as contrasted
-with the Success of Civil Engineering and Architecture.</p>
-
-<p>A striking illustration of the defective character of
-both public and private systems of education, in the
-United States, is afforded by the statistics of commercial,
-railway, and other business failures. In 1877 a careful
-compilation of figures in regard to the shrinkage of railway
-values showed the following result:</p>
-
-<p>“In round numbers, <i>eighteen hundred millions of dollars</i>,
-or thirty-eight per cent. of the capital reported as
-invested in two hundred of our railway companies alone,
-is wholly unproductive to the investors, and the greater
-part is wholly lost to them. This is sufficiently appalling,
-but when we consider how many companies that have
-managed to keep up the interest on their bonds have
-wholly, or almost, ceased to pay any interest on their capital
-stock, which stock, in turn, has shrunk to seventy-five,<span class="pagenum" id="Page211">[211]</span>
-fifty, twenty-five, ten, in some cases <i>five</i> per cent. of
-its par value, it will seem to be a reasonable conclusion
-that the actual shrinkage and loss to <i>somebody</i> on the
-face value of railway investments in the United States
-has been fully fifty per cent.!”<a href="#Footnote51" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor51">[51]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote51"><a href="#FNanchor51"><span class="label">[51]</span></a> <i>The Chicago Railway Age.</i></p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>In view of this startling exhibit it is evident that in
-the projection, construction, and management of the railways
-of the United States there has been gross incompetency.</p>
-
-<p>In 1881 Messrs. R. G. Dun &amp; Co., the well-known
-commercial agents, showed that of the wholesale merchants
-doing business in the city of Chicago in 1870
-fifty per cent. had failed, suspended, or compromised
-with their creditors.</p>
-
-<p>Forty years ago Gen. Dearborn, a prominent citizen
-of Chicago, declared that not more than three per cent.
-of the individuals who embark in trade end life with success.
-The success meant, doubtless, is unbroken solvency
-during the business experience of the merchant, and
-the final accumulation of a competence. The mercantile
-ranks in the United States afford many instances of individual
-merchants and firms who have settled or compromised
-with their creditors several times, and finally
-succeeded&mdash;succeeded at the expense of their creditors.
-But this is not the success meant by Gen. Dearborn.
-This statistical information, furnished by Messrs. R. G.
-Dun &amp; Co., tends to confirm, approximately, the verity
-of the common remark that in trade not one in a hundred
-succeeds.</p>
-
-<p>Let us suppose that three merchants in a hundred so
-conduct their business as never to ask their creditors for<span class="pagenum" id="Page212">[212]</span>
-a favor, never to “settle” for 50 or 25 cents, but always
-pay “dollar for dollar,” and come out in the end rich.
-This is strictly legitimate success. It would be very interesting
-to learn what becomes of the other ninety-seven
-merchants. Most of them go down after a few years,
-never again to emerge above the surface of commercial
-affairs. They live on salaries, enter the ranks of the
-speculative class, or become genteel paupers. But doubtless
-seven at least of the ninety-seven “compromise” and
-“settle” themselves over the breakers, and finally achieve
-success. So that of the ten successful merchants out of
-a hundred those who succeed at the expense of their creditors
-are as seven to three of those who win success by
-the highest degree of mercantile merit.</p>
-
-<p>With ninety utter failures, seven successes which involve
-the misfortune or wreck of others, and only three
-untarnished successes in a hundred, the general ambition
-to enter mercantile life is simply unaccountable. Of
-course the small number of successful merchants have to
-calculate upon the failures which will inevitably occur.
-They must discount the losses they are sure to incur
-through those failures&mdash;provide for them by increasing
-the otherwise sufficient profit of each transaction. In
-this way the public pays the cost of each failure. In
-other words, the consumer is taxed to pay the expense
-of ninety complete failures, and seven partial failures, in
-every hundred mercantile experiments. This expense
-aggregates scores of millions of dollars in this country
-alone, every year. The sum of losses by the failure of
-merchants in good seasons is very large, and in seasons
-of commercial depression it is vast.</p>
-
-<p>It is evident that ninety-seven in every hundred merchants
-mistake their avocation. Only three in a hundred<span class="pagenum" id="Page213">[213]</span>
-are exactly fitted for the business they undertake. They
-are morally the “fittest” who survive by virtue of ability
-and integrity; the seven who survive by levying
-contributions on their creditors may also be regarded as
-the “fittest” according to the Darwinian theory. Of the
-ninety who go down without even a struggle to “settle”
-or “compromise,” they answer to the received definition
-of dirt&mdash;“matter out of place.”</p>
-
-<p>The investigation made by Messrs. R. G. Dun &amp; Co.,
-which resulted in the statistical information here reproduced
-and commented upon, was brought about by the
-assertion in 1881 of a life-insurance agent that fifty per
-cent. of the wholesale merchants doing business in the city
-of Chicago in 1870 had meantime failed, suspended, or compromised
-with their creditors. Out of this investigation
-the question logically springs, “Is not failing in business
-made too easy?”<a href="#Footnote52" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor52">[52]</a> If “compromises,” “settlements,” and
-“failures” carry with them no disgrace, it is but natural
-that thousands should take the risk of them in the contest
-for the great prizes which are the reward of success.
-The distinction in the public mind between the three
-merchants in a hundred who succeed legitimately and
-the seven who succeed by questionable “compromises”
-or “settlements” is very slight; and too many of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page214">[214]</span>
-ninety who fail utterly retire with large sums of money
-which belong honestly to their creditors. Doubtless the
-life-insurance agent, in depicting the perils of mercantile
-ventures, urged the propriety of the merchant fortifying
-himself against disaster by insuring his life for the benefit
-of his family. This is a legitimate argument when
-addressed to the merchant in solvent condition; but the
-life-insurance agent’s intimate acquaintance with the
-shaky finances of nine-tenths of the commercial community
-teaches him that a large share of the money he receives
-in premiums, comes not from the merchant, but
-from the merchant’s creditors, who will soon be called
-upon, in the natural course of events, to consent to a
-composition of his claim, while the shaky merchant will
-retire with a paid-up policy of insurance in favor of his
-family.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote52"><a href="#FNanchor52"><span class="label">[52]</span></a>
-“Mercantile honor is held so high in some countries that the
-calamity of bankruptcy drives men mad. In France there are numerous
-instances of almost superhuman struggles on the part of
-ruined merchants to regain, by patient effort and pinching economy,
-their lost station in the business community. César Birotteau, Balzac’s
-hero of such a struggle, dies from excess of emotion in the hour
-of his triumph. ‘Behold the death of the just!’ the Abbé Loraux
-exclaims, as he regards, with lofty pride, the expiring merchant.”&mdash;“Ten-minute
-Sketches,” p. 220. By Charles H. Ham. Chicago and
-New York: Belford, Clark &amp; Co., 1884.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>It is quite plain that in nine cases out of ten the merchant
-who carries a large policy of insurance on his life
-actually pays for it out of his creditors’ instead of his
-own money. To be sure, it may be said that the nine
-merchants hope and expect to succeed, as well as the one.
-But is not it the duty of the merchant who owes large
-sums of money to think more of providing means for
-the payment of his immediate debts than of laying up a
-support for himself and family in the event of failure?
-Some disgrace ought to attach to failure in business; that
-is to say, disgrace enough to make the merchant cautious
-and economical, with a view, not to his own protection
-in the event of failure, but to the protection of his creditors,
-and of his own reputation as a business man.</p>
-
-<p>These failures, on so vast a scale, of railway enterprises,
-and the almost total wreck of mercantile ventures, show
-that the business of this country is done, as a Yankee<span class="pagenum" id="Page215">[215]</span>
-might say, “by guess,” or as the mechanic of the old
-<i>régime</i> would say, “by the rule of thumb.” The conclusion
-is hence irresistible that the youth of the United
-States are not so educated as to fit them for the conduct,
-to a successful issue, of great business enterprises. And
-this is an impeachment of what is regarded, on the whole,
-as the best system of popular education in operation in
-the world. A system of education which turns out ninety-three
-or ninety-seven men who fail, to three or seven
-men who succeed in business, must be very unscientific.
-If the savage system of education were not better adapted
-to the savage state, the savage would perish from the
-earth in the process of civilization. The savage bends
-his ear to the ground and robs the forest of its secrets,
-not three times in a hundred, but ninety and nine times.
-Ninety-nine times in a hundred he traces the footsteps
-of his enemy in the tangled mazes of the pathless
-wood.</p>
-
-<p>In “Aborigines of Australia”<a href="#Footnote53" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor53">[53]</a> Mr. G. S. Lang states
-that “one day while travelling in Australia he pointed
-to a footstep and asked whose it was. The guide glanced
-at it without stopping his horse, and at once answered,
-‘Whitefellow call him Tiger.’ This turned out to be correct;
-which was the more remarkable as the two men belonged
-to different tribes, and had not met for two years.”
-Among the Arabs it is asserted that some men know
-every individual in the tribe by his footstep. Besides
-this, every Arab knows the printed footsteps of his own
-camels, and of those belonging to his immediate neighbors.
-He knows by the depth or slightness of the impression
-whether a camel was pasturing, and therefore<span class="pagenum" id="Page216">[216]</span>
-not carrying any load, or mounted by one person only,
-or heavily loaded. The Australian will kill a pigeon
-with a spear at a distance of thirty paces. The Esquimau
-in his kayak will actually turn somersaults in the
-water. After giving many illustrations of the skill of
-various races of savages, Sir John Lubbock says,</p>
-
-<p>“What an amount of practice must be required to obtain
-such skill as this! How true, also, must the weapons
-be! Indeed it is very evident that each distinct type of
-flint implement must have been designed for some distinct
-purpose.” He adds, “The neatness with which the
-Hottentots, Esquimaux, North American Indians, etc., are
-able to sew is very remarkable, although awls and sinews
-would in our hands be but poor substitutes for needles
-and thread. As already mentioned (in page 332), some
-cautious archæologists hesitated to refer the reindeer
-caves of the Dordogne to the Stone Age, on account of
-the bone needles and the works of art which are found in
-them. The eyes of the needles especially, they thought,
-could only be made with metallic implements. Prof.
-Lartet ingeniously removed these doubts by making a
-similar needle for himself with the help of flint; but
-he might have referred to the fact stated by Cook in his
-first voyage, that the New Zealanders succeeded in drilling
-a hole through a piece of glass which he had given
-them, using for this purpose, as he supposed, a piece of
-jasper.”<a href="#Footnote54" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor54">[54]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote53"><a href="#FNanchor53"><span class="label">[53]</span></a> “Aborigines of Australia,” p. 24.</p>
-
-<p id="Footnote54"><a href="#FNanchor54"><span class="label">[54]</span></a>
-“Prehistoric Times,” pp. 544, 548. By Sir John Lubbock, Bart.,
-M.P. New York: D. Appleton &amp; Co., 1875.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The education which enables the savage to make these
-extremely nice adjustments of means to ends is scientific.
-The observation, for example, of the Arab who draws<span class="pagenum" id="Page217">[217]</span>
-such accurate conclusions from the “printed footstep of
-the camel,” if applied to the problems of civilized life,
-would result in success, not failure.</p>
-
-<p>The excellence of this savage training consists in its
-practical character, in its perfect adaptation to the end in
-view. For example, the Esquimau boy is not instructed
-in the theory of turning somersaults in the water, in his
-kayak. He sees his father perform the feat; he is given
-a kayak and required to perform it also. The result is
-early and complete success. So of the Arab. In traversing
-the desert it is important for him to read every
-sign, to translate every mark left in the sand. Upon the
-accuracy of his observation his life may often depend.
-The print of the camel’s footstep may tell him whether
-he is, soon or late, to meet friend or foe. Hence from
-early childhood his faculty of observation is trained until
-it soon becomes as delicate and nice as the sense of touch
-of a blind, deaf mute. Sir John Lubbock thinks that a
-great amount of practice must be required to achieve so
-much skill; but the results are due, probably, more to
-the nature, than to the extent, of the practice. It is the
-excellence of the training that produces results which
-excite wonder and admiration. The savage is indolent;
-he works only that he may eat, and he works well, simply
-because he has been taught objectively, instead of
-subjectively.</p>
-
-<p>The difference in results between the best and the
-poorest methods of instruction is very great, as witness
-the testimony of Mr. Thomas Foley, late instructor in
-forging, vise-work, and machine-tool work in the school
-of mechanic arts of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
-He says,</p>
-
-<p>“It is a great waste of time to spend two or three<span class="pagenum" id="Page218">[218]</span>
-years in acquiring knowledge of a given business, profession,
-or trade, that can be acquired in the short space of
-twelve or thirteen days, under a proper course of instruction.
-Twelve days of systematic school-shop instruction
-produces as great a degree of dexterity as two or more
-years’ apprenticeship under the adverse conditions which
-prevail in the trade-shop.”<a href="#Footnote55" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor55">[55]</a> The manual training methods
-are the same as those which enable the savage to
-perform such feats of skill. They are the natural and
-hence most efficient methods of imparting instruction.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote55"><a href="#FNanchor55"><span class="label">[55]</span></a>
-Report on “The Manual Element in Education,” p. 30. By John
-D. Runkle, Ph.D., LL.D., Walker Professor of Mathematics, Institute
-of Technology, Boston, Mass.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The manual training school is a kindergarten for boys
-fourteen years of age. Miss S. E. Blow, in formulating
-the theory of the kindergarten, describes the methods of
-the savage’s school, and those of the manual training
-school, as follows:</p>
-
-<p>“It is a truth now universally recognized by educators
-that ideas are formed in the mind of a child by abstraction
-and generalization from the facts revealed to him
-through the senses; that only what he himself has perceived
-of the visible and tangible properties of things
-can serve as the basis of thought; and that upon the vividness
-and completeness of the impressions made upon
-him by external objects, will depend the clearness of his
-inferences and the correctness of his judgments. It is
-equally true, and as generally recognized, that in young
-children the perceptive faculties are relatively stronger
-than at any later period, and that while the understanding
-and reason still sleep, the sensitive mind is receiving
-those sharp impressions of external things which, held
-fast by memory, transformed by the imagination, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page219">[219]</span>
-finally classified and organized through reflection, result
-in the determination of thought and the formation of
-character.</p>
-
-<p>“These two parallel truths indicate clearly that the
-first duty of the educator is to aid the perceptive faculties
-in their work by supplying the external objects best calculated
-to serve as the basis of normal conceptions, by
-exhibiting these objects from many different stand-points&mdash;that
-variety of interest may sharpen and intensify the
-impressions they make upon the mind, and by presenting
-them in such a sequence that the transition from one
-object to another may be made as easy as possible.”<a href="#Footnote56" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor56">[56]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote56"><a href="#FNanchor56"><span class="label">[56]</span></a>
-“The Kindergarten. An address, delivered April 3, 1875, before
-the Normal Teachers’ Association, at St. Louis, Mo.”</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>This admirable exposition of the theory of scientific
-education solves the mystery which has always enveloped
-savage skill. It also affords a philosophic explanation of
-the fact discovered by Mr. Foley, namely, that the student
-of the manual training school acquires as much
-knowledge in one hundred and twenty hours as the apprentice
-of the machine-shop does in two years. In a
-word, it shows exactly why scientific education is so incomparably
-superior to automatic education. Mr. Foley
-asserts, in substance, that the scientific methods of the
-manual training school are twenty times as valuable to
-the student as the unscientific methods of the trade-shop
-are to the apprentice.</p>
-
-<p>In a familiar letter to the author, Prof. Goss<a href="#Footnote57" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor57">[57]</a> shows
-why the methods of the manual training school are so
-very valuable. He says:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page220">[220]</span></p>
-
-<p>“In such a school, or course, a student is taught to perform
-a series of operations, involving practice with a variety
-of tools, on pieces of suitable material. It is not to
-be supposed that his ability to make a certain piece is
-directly valuable, for the experience of a lifetime may
-never require him to make it again. It is not expected
-that while making the piece he will learn a number of
-formulated facts relating to his work, and its application
-to other work, for that is not the best way to learn. Nor
-can we expect him to acquire a high degree of hand skill
-(accuracy and rapidity of movement combined), for this
-his limited time will not permit. But he does this: he
-works out a practical mechanical problem with every
-piece he makes. He sees how the tool should be handled,
-and how the material operated on behaves. He comes to
-understand why the tool cuts well in some directions and
-not so well in others; and all the time he queries to
-himself where it was that he saw a joint like the one he
-is making. He is an investigator&mdash;as much so as a student
-in chemistry. His mind must always guide his
-hand; his reasoning opens new fields of thought with
-every stroke of the chisel.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote57"><a href="#FNanchor57"><span class="label">[57]</span></a>
-Prof. William F. M. Goss, a graduate of the school of mechanic
-arts of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and at present instructor
-in the mechanic arts department of the Purdue University.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>“A boy ten years old, who was a member of a class
-under my direction in Indianapolis in 1883, is reported
-to have said, ‘Why, mother, I never looked at the doors
-and windows so much in all my life as I have since I began
-at the wood-working school.’</p>
-
-<p>“I tell my students how to go to work, when they are
-likely to make mistakes, and how mistakes may be avoided.
-In operating along the line directed they thoroughly
-understand what they are doing, and why they do it.
-They see on all sides of their work.</p>
-
-<p>“If I have several different tools for doing work of<span class="pagenum" id="Page221">[221]</span>
-the same character, I frequently give a student first one
-and then another, until he has tried them all. Then
-I ask him which he likes best, and why. Suppose we are
-to make a drawing-board. The class having already been
-made familiar with the principles governing the shrinkage
-and warping of woods, is asked in what way the cleats,
-to prevent warping, may best be fastened to the ends.
-The question is left open for a day or two, and sketches
-are submitted and views exchanged on the subject.</p>
-
-<p>“I frequently ask my students to pass to me, in writing,
-as many facts (not in the form of a composition) as
-they can think of regarding certain stated features of
-their work&mdash;not facts to be obtained from books, but
-from things they have seen and with which they are familiar.
-The replies are often remarkable for accuracy
-and force of statement....</p>
-
-<p>“The manual training school that does not by its work
-inspire thought and encourage investigation is poor indeed;
-the school that assumes its work to be <i>mind training
-by hand practice</i> is the ideal school, and the school
-that will succeed....</p>
-
-<p>“My answer to your second and third questions is already
-evident. I consider an hour in the shop as valuable
-for its intellectual training as an hour of book-study, and
-two hours in the shop as valuable as two hours of study.
-I do not think that a student can take two hours of shop-work
-in addition to a full course of outside study; but I
-am convinced that two hours in the shop can be made to
-take the place of one hour of study without extra burden
-to the student. Therefore, this being done, the student
-will get as much again intellectual benefit from the shop
-as he would get if the shop-work equivalent in time were
-given to book-study.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page222">[222]</span></p>
-
-<p>This description of the mental operations which accompany
-the laboratory exercises of the manual training
-school shows the intimacy of the relations existing between
-the brain and the hand. It shows how they act
-and react upon each other, and affords an explanation of
-the remark of Dr. Belfield,<a href="#Footnote58" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor58">[58]</a> that the laboratory exercises
-are in fact a great strain upon the mental constitution of
-the student. This observation of Dr. Belfield, one of the
-most distinguished teachers of the old <i>régime</i> in the
-United States, entirely justifies the claim made in behalf
-of the scientific character of manual training as an educational
-agency, for it shows that such training is in no
-sense automatic. If manual training is a great strain
-upon the mental faculties, it must be because the use of
-tools stimulates such faculties to great activity. And if
-this is true, the mental discipline derived from manual
-training must be proportionally great. This is a pivotal
-point; for if the observation of Dr. Belfield is well
-founded in fact and reason, it proves to a demonstration
-the high educational value of manual training&mdash;proves its
-superiority over all the methods of the old <i>régime</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote58"><a href="#FNanchor58"><span class="label">[58]</span></a>
-Henry H. Belfield, A.M., Ph.D., Director of the Chicago Manual
-Training School.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Prof. Goss says, “The manual training school student
-is an investigator&mdash;as much so as a student in chemistry.
-His mind must always guide his hand, his reasoning
-opens new fields of thought with every stroke of the
-chisel. He sees on all sides of his work.”<a href="#Footnote59" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor59">[59]</a>
-And Dr.<span class="pagenum" id="Page223">[223]</span>
-Belfield says that these varied operations of the mind
-cause a severe mental strain. It would be difficult to
-find a better exemplification of scientific education than
-a course of training which exercises simultaneously the
-powers of both body and mind, a course which with every
-fresh burden put upon the mind puts new vitality into
-the body. This is, indeed, the very opposite of automatic
-education, and we may well call it scientific education.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote59"><a href="#FNanchor59"><span class="label">[59]</span></a>
-“No extent of acquaintance with the meanings of words can
-give the power of forming correct inferences respecting causes and
-effects. The constant habit of drawing conclusions from data, and
-then of verifying those conclusions by observation and experiment,
-can alone give the power of judging correctly.”&mdash;“Education,” p. 88.
-By Herbert Spencer. New York: D. Appleton &amp; Co., 1883.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Another leaf from the experience of Dr. Belfield is
-worthy of reproduction here. On the 20th of February,
-1884, he took the sense of the students in his school on
-the question whether or not they should indulge in a
-vacation on Washington’s birthday anniversary. Somewhat
-to his surprise the vote was almost unanimous in the
-affirmative. He acceded to the wishes of the students,
-but no sooner was the announcement made, than he was
-besieged with applications from nearly all of them for
-permission to convert the holiday into a work-day in the
-laboratories! Dr. Belfield has been compelled to post a
-peremptory order against the occupancy of the school
-laboratories by the students on Saturdays, which are regular
-vacation days.</p>
-
-<p>Natural training is scientific training. The fondness
-of the student for the manual training school is evidence
-of its scientific character. He is fond of it because
-it is natural. Miss Blow says of the child: “Only what
-he himself has perceived of the visible and tangible properties
-of things can serve as the basis of thought, and
-upon the vividness and completeness of the impressions
-made upon him by external objects will depend the
-clearness of his inferences and the correctness of his
-judgments.” This is the education both of the kindergarten<span class="pagenum" id="Page224">[224]</span>
-and the manual training school, and it brightens,
-stimulates, and develops, while automatic education stupefies.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Foley, formerly of the Massachusetts Institute of
-Technology, declares, as the result of his experience, as
-already stated, that the scientific methods of the manual
-training school are twenty times as valuable to the student
-as the unscientific methods of the trade-shop are to
-the apprentice. But we have shown in a former chapter
-that the training of the trade-shops of England, during
-the past one hundred and fifty years, has been better than
-that of the English schools and universities; in a word,
-that England is more indebted for her greatness to her
-apprentice system than to her school system. It follows
-that the school system of England must have been almost
-indescribably poor.</p>
-
-<p>That the system of popular education in the United
-States, which is much more comprehensive, and presumably
-better, than that of England, is very poor indeed in
-results, is shown by the statistics of railway and mercantile
-disasters; and it is scarcely necessary to remark that
-these disasters show prevailing methods of education to
-be as defective morally as they are mentally. The reason
-of this is that, being automatic, they lead neither to
-the discovery of truth nor to the detection of error. It
-is easy to juggle with words, to argue in a circle, to make
-the worse appear the better reason, and to reach false
-conclusions which wear a plausible aspect. But it is not
-so with things. If the cylinder is not tight the steam-engine
-is a lifeless mass of iron of no value whatever. A
-flaw in the wheel of the locomotive wrecks the train.
-Through a defective flue in the chimney the house is set
-on fire. A lie in the concrete is always hideous; like<span class="pagenum" id="Page225">[225]</span>
-murder, it will out. Hence it is that the mind is liable
-to fall into grave errors until it is fortified by the wise
-counsel of the practical hand.</p>
-
-<p>It is obvious that the reason of the demand for the
-manual element in education is not so much that industrial
-interests require to be promoted, as that mental operations
-may be rendered more true, and hence more scientific.
-What we need more than we need a better class
-of mechanics is a better class of men&mdash;men of a higher
-grade both morally and intellectually. The study of
-things so steadies and balances the mind that the attention
-being once turned in that direction great results
-soon follow, as witness, the history of discovery and invention
-in England.</p>
-
-<p>The world moves very fast industrially, but very slow
-morally and intellectually. Mechanics stand the test of
-scrutiny far better than merchants. Civil engineers and
-architects are more competent than railway presidents,
-lawyers, judges, and legislators. The reason of this fact
-is that mechanics, civil engineers, and architects are educated
-practically in the world’s shops and the world’s
-technical schools. They are trained in things, while merchants,
-railway presidents, lawyers, judges, and legislators
-have only the automatic word-training of the schools. It
-is notorious that criminals are not punished in this country.
-Suppose there were such a failure of bridges as there
-is of justice. That is to say, suppose nine-tenths of the
-bridges constructed, whether for railway or other purposes,
-should fall within a few months of their completion.
-What would be thought of the technical schools
-whence the civil engineers graduate?</p>
-
-<p>Ninety-seven merchants in a hundred fail. Suppose
-ninety-seven buildings in a hundred, constructed under<span class="pagenum" id="Page226">[226]</span>
-the direction of architects, should tumble down over the
-heads of their occupants six months after their erection.
-The education of the architects would no doubt be regarded
-as defective.</p>
-
-<p>Buckle says of English legislation, “The best laws
-which have been passed have been those by which some
-former laws were repealed.”<a href="#Footnote60" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor60">[60]</a> It will be admitted that
-the same is true of American legislation.<a href="#Footnote61" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor61">[61]</a> In other
-words, the average legislator is wiser in the statutes he<span class="pagenum" id="Page227">[227]</span>
-repeals than in the bills he enacts. What if the incompetency
-of the legislator were paralleled by that of the
-machinist? Suppose ninety-seven in every one hundred
-locomotives should break down on the “trial-trip,” and
-be returned to the builder’s shop for remanufacture.
-Such a result would be an impeachment of the education
-of the locomotive builder.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote60"><a href="#FNanchor60"><span class="label">[60]</span></a>
-“History of Civilization in England,” Vol. I, p. 200. By Henry
-Thomas Buckle. New York: D. Appleton &amp; Co., 1864.</p>
-
-<p>“In a paper read to the Statistical Society in May, 1873, Mr. Janson,
-Vice-president of the Law Society, stated that from the statute of
-Merton (20 Henry III.) to the end of 1872 there had been passed
-18,110 public acts, of which he estimated that four-fifths had been
-wholly or partially repealed. He also stated that the number of public
-acts repealed wholly or in part, or amended, during the three years
-1870-71-72 had been 3532, of which 2759 had been totally repealed.
-To see whether this rate of repeal has continued I have referred to
-the annually issued volumes of the ‘Public General Statutes’ for the
-last three sessions. Saying nothing of the numerous amended acts,
-the result is that in the last three sessions there have been totally repealed,
-separately or in groups, 650 acts <i>belonging to the present reign</i>,
-besides many of preceding reigns....</p>
-
-<p>“Seeing, then, that bad legislation means injury to men’s lives,
-judge what must be the total amount of mental distress, physical
-pain, and raised mortality which these thousands of repealed Acts of
-Parliament represent.”&mdash;“The Man <i>versus</i> the State,” pp. 50, 51. By
-Herbert Spencer. New York: D. Appleton &amp; Co.</p>
-
-<p id="Footnote61"><a href="#FNanchor61"><span class="label">[61]</span></a>
-“So thoroughly have the conscience and intelligence of the North
-apprehended these facts [neglect to educate and enlighten the freedmen],
-that while the Nation has done nothing they have given in private
-charity, intended to remedy this evil, nearly a million dollars a
-year for nearly twenty years. This is the instinct of a people <i>versus</i>
-the stupidity of their legislators.... Of the true character of the South
-he [the author] was, like all his class, profoundly ignorant, almost as
-ignorant as the men who made the Nation’s laws.”&mdash;“An Appeal to
-Cæsar,” pp. 52, 56. By A. W. Tourgée.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Ninety-seven in every hundred boys who graduate
-from the public schools and embark in mercantile pursuits
-fail. Suppose ninety-seven in every hundred
-watches made in the American watch factories should
-prove to be worthless. The watch companies would,
-no doubt, soon be in the hands of the sheriff. But, as
-a matter of fact, the Elgin National Watch Company,
-for example, makes twelve hundred watches a day, and
-each and every one of them is an almost perfect time-keeper.</p>
-
-<p>There is, then, no such failure of the arts as there is of
-justice; no such failure of mechanics as of merchants; no
-such failure of locomotives and watches as of legislation.
-It follows that the education of artisans is better, more
-scientific, than that of merchants, judges, lawyers, and
-legislators. And this is a very significant fact when it
-is considered that the State does much for education in
-<i>belles-lettres</i> and scarcely anything for education in the
-arts and sciences.<a href="#Footnote62" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor62">[62]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page228">[228]</span></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote62"><a href="#FNanchor62"><span class="label">[62]</span></a>
-The reason why statutes fail more frequently than steam-engines
-and bridges is not wholly because the legislator has to deal with human
-nature and the mechanic with inanimate matter. Steam and
-electricity are subtle forces, but man has quickly mastered them and
-successfully applied them to a variety of uses.</p>
-
-<p>It is not to the interest of any one that the machinist should make
-a defective locomotive, for example; but it is often to the interest of
-some one that the legislator should enact vicious laws. Vicious
-statutes are enacted with a design to injure the public in order that
-certain individuals may be benefited thereby.</p>
-
-<p>If the mind should act as honestly in legislation as the hand does
-in construction, statutes would not have to be repealed yearly.</p>
-
-<p>We have fallen into the habit of regarding education as a polite
-accomplishment having very little to do with the real business of
-life; but this is not the fact. Education begins in the cradle and
-continues through life; and it makes the man what he is. If he
-goes to the penitentiary it is his education that sends him there. If
-he is sent to the General Assembly of the State or to the Congress of
-the Nation, and there helps to enact vicious laws, it is his education
-that is responsible for such laws. If the man as a citizen sells his
-franchise at the polls, or his vote in the legislative hall, for money, it
-is the education he has received that is responsible for his baseness.</p>
-
-<p>It will be said that the explanation of the greater apparent accuracy
-of the work of the hand is to be found in the fact that it
-operates upon matter while the mind deals with metaphysical subtilties.
-The contention will not be that mind is less plastic than
-matter, but that it is more difficult of comprehension. But how do
-we know this to be the fact? Where has the experiment been tried
-of honest contact mind with mind? It was not tried by the ancients.
-It is not on trial in any part of the world to-day. There is, hence,
-no place in which to seek evidence as to how mind would act upon
-mind if treated honestly, as matter is treated by the hand. But if
-the quality of selfishness is eliminated, there will be no difficulty in
-bringing all minds to an agreement, as the parts of a watch are
-brought into harmonious and useful action. And it is through the
-hand that this beneficent union is destined to be effected; for the
-hand is the source of wisdom, which is simply the power of discriminating
-between the true and the false.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page229">[229]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="chapno">CHAPTER XX.</span><br />
-<span class="chapname">AUTOMATIC CONTRASTED WITH SCIENTIFIC EDUCATION&mdash;<i>Continued</i>.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="subjects">The Training of the Merchant, the Lawyer, the Judge, and the Legislator
-contrasted with that of the Artisan. &mdash; The Training of the
-Merchant makes him Selfish, and Selfishness breeds Dishonesty. &mdash; Professional
-Men become Speculative Philosophers, and test their
-Speculations by Consciousness. &mdash; The Artisan forgets Self in the
-Study of Things. &mdash; The Search after Truth. &mdash; The Story of Palissy. &mdash; The
-Hero is the Normal Man; those who Marvel at his Acts are
-abnormally Developed. &mdash; Savonarola and John Brown. &mdash; The New
-England System of Education contrasted with that of the South. &mdash; American
-Statesmanship &mdash; its Failure in an Educational Point of
-View. &mdash; Why the State Provides for Education; to protect Property. &mdash; The
-British Government and the Land Question. &mdash; The Thoroughness
-of the Training given by Schools of Mechanic Art and Institutes
-of Technology as shown in Things. &mdash; Story of the Emperor
-of Germany and the Needle-maker. &mdash; The Iron Bridge lasts a Century,
-the Act of the Legislator wears out in a Year. &mdash; The Cause
-of the Failures of Justice and Legislation. &mdash; The best Law is the
-Act that Repeals a Law; but the Act of the Inventor is never Repealed. &mdash; Things
-the Source and Issue of Ideas; hence the Necessity
-of Training in the Arts.</p>
-
-<p>There is a cause for the failure of the merchant, the
-lawyer, the judge, and the legislator, as well as for the
-success of the artisan. And the cause must be sought in
-the courses of training, respectively, of the two classes.
-Let us assume that the artisan and the merchant, the
-lawyer, the judge, and the legislator, graduate at the same
-time from the public high school, or from Harvard or
-Yale. The merchant at once begins to trade, to buy and
-sell. He concerns himself with things only as they have<span class="pagenum" id="Page230">[230]</span>
-a value, either naturally arising from the law of demand
-and supply, or arbitrarily imposed by circumstances. His
-consideration of the relations of things is confined to the
-single question of the percentage of profit which may
-accrue to him from traffic in them. These are subjective
-processes of thought, and the merchant becomes absorbed
-in them to the exclusion of all other topics. It goes
-without saying that he becomes intensely selfish. The
-struggle is one of mercantile life or death&mdash;ninety-three
-to ninety-seven in a hundred die; three to seven survive.</p>
-
-<p>Among merchants there is, hence, very little thought
-of the subject of justice, and no effort to discover truth.
-There must, at the end of the year, be a favorable balance
-on the right side of the ledger, or the balance on the
-wrong side unerringly points the way to ruin. This is
-the post-school training of the merchant. That neither
-it nor his previous education renders him skilful we know,
-since he fails ninety-three to ninety-seven times in a hundred
-trials. That subjective training does not and never
-can promote rectitude has been shown in a former chapter
-of this work. That merchants who compromise with
-their creditors, and subsequently accumulate fortunes, very
-rarely repay the debt formerly forgiven is a notorious
-fact. A Chicago merchant who himself repaid such a
-composition debt early in his career, states, at the end of
-twenty-five years’ experience, that of compromises involving
-several hundred thousand dollars, made by him in favor
-of debtors, not one dollar has ever been repaid.</p>
-
-<p>Upon leaving school or college the lawyer, the judge,
-and the legislator at once apply themselves to books;
-their subsequent training is exclusively subjective. Their
-ideas receive color from, and are verified only by reference
-to, consciousness. Subjective truths have no relations<span class="pagenum" id="Page231">[231]</span>
-to things, and hence are susceptible of verification
-only through consciousness. They are, therefore, mere
-speculations after all, often ingenious but always problematical.
-The result of such training is selfishness&mdash;selfishness
-of a very intense character; and, as has been
-already shown, selfishness is merely another name for injustice.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand the artisan devotes himself to things.
-His training is exclusively objective. His ideas flow outward;
-he studies the nature and relations of things. In
-this investigation he forgets self because his life becomes
-a grand struggle in search of truth; and the discovery of
-truth in things, if not easy, is ultimately sure of attainment,
-since harmony is its sign, and its opposite, the false,
-is certain of exposure through its native deformity; for
-however alluring a lie may be made to appear in the abstract,
-in the concrete it is a monster unmasked.</p>
-
-<p>From the false the artisan intuitively shrinks. He can
-only succeed by finding the truth, and embodying it in
-some useful or beautiful thing which will contribute to the
-comfort or pleasure of man. Hence his watchword is utility,
-or, beauty in utility. Of the engrossing character of
-this struggle the story of Bernard Palissy affords a splendid
-illustration. Palissy was an artist, a student, and a
-naturalist, but poor, and compelled to follow the profession
-of surveying to support his family. At the age of
-thirty he saw an enamelled cup, of Italian manufacture,
-which fired his ambition. Ignorant of the nature of
-clays, he nevertheless resolved to discover enamel, and
-entered upon a laborious course of investigation and experiment
-with that end in view. After many years of
-Herculean effort and indescribable privation, which beggared
-and estranged his family, and rendered him an object<span class="pagenum" id="Page232">[232]</span>
-of ridicule among his neighbors, he achieved a grand
-success. At a critical period of his experiments, in the
-face of the indignant protests of his almost starving family,
-having exhausted his credit to the last penny, he consigned
-to the flames of his furnace the chairs, tables, and
-floors of his humble cottage, and continued to watch his
-chemicals with all-absorbing attention, while his wife in
-despair rushed through the streets making loud proclamation
-of the scandal.</p>
-
-<p>But Palissy was more than a potter; he was a Christian,
-a philosopher, and an austere reformer. Notwithstanding
-he had been petted and patronized as an ingenious
-artisan by the royal family of France, he was finally
-cast into prison under charge of heresy. It was there
-that the remarkable interview with King Henry III. occurred,
-which immortalized Palissy as a hero. “My good
-man,” said the king, “you have been forty-five years in
-the service of the queen, my mother, or in mine, and we
-have suffered you to live in your own religion, amid all
-the executions and the massacres. Now, however, I am
-so pressed by the Guise party and my people that I have
-been compelled in spite of myself to imprison these two
-poor women and you.” “Sire,” answered the old man,
-“the count came yesterday on your part, promising life
-to these two sisters upon condition of the sacrifice of
-their virtue. They replied that they would now be martyrs
-to their own honor as well as for the honor of God.
-You have said several times that you feel pity for me;
-but it is I who pity you, who have said, ‘I am compelled!’
-That is not speaking like a king. These girls and I, who
-have part in the kingdom of heaven&mdash;we will teach you
-to talk royally. The Guisarts, all your people, and yourself,
-cannot compel a potter to bow down to images of<span class="pagenum" id="Page233">[233]</span>
-clay!”<a href="#Footnote63" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor63">[63]</a> And Palissy the potter and heretic, at the age of
-seventy, died in the Bastile, proudly defying a king.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote63"><a href="#FNanchor63"><span class="label">[63]</span></a>
-“Palissy the Potter,” Vol. II., pp. 187, 188. By Henry Morley.
-Boston: Ticknor, Reed &amp; Fields, 1853.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The more absorbing the struggle for the discovery of
-truth the less room there is in the mind for selfishness;
-and as selfishness recedes, justice assumes its appropriate
-place as the controlling element in human conduct. The
-hero is an honest man, that’s all,&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetrycontainer">
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="verse indent00">“Though love repine, and reason chafe,<br /></span>
-<span class="verse indent2">There comes a voice without reply;<br /></span>
-<span class="verse indent0">’Tis man’s perdition to be safe,<br /></span>
-<span class="verse indent2">When for the truth he ought to die.”<br /></span>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--poetrycontainer-->
-
-<p>If all men were heroes&mdash;honest&mdash;there would be no occasion
-for heroism. If all education can be made scientific,
-all men can be made honest. The struggle to find
-truth is more natural than the struggle to succeed regardless
-of, or against, truth. The reason why what we
-call heroism appears so grand is this: the standards of public
-judgment have become so perverted by long custom
-in the abuse of truth, that normal conduct appears strange.</p>
-
-<p>When Palissy burned his chairs and tables in the cause
-of art, his family and his neighbors derided him, and denounced
-him as a madman, and in prison the king urged
-him, as a friend, to save himself from death by recanting
-his assertion of the right of freedom of religious opinion.
-Palissy was a hero neither to his family, his friends, nor
-his king;<a href="#Footnote64" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor64">[64]</a>
-but he was right, and his discovery and his<span class="pagenum" id="Page234">[234]</span>
-firmness rendered him immortal. We now know, three
-hundred years farther down the course of time, that Palissy’s
-struggle over the furnace in the cause of art was
-mentally and morally normal, while the opposition he
-encountered was abnormal; and that his defiance of the
-king was mentally and morally normal, while his persecution
-was abnormal and cruel.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote64"><a href="#FNanchor64"><span class="label">[64]</span></a>
-“I had nothing but reproaches in the house; in place of consolation,
-they gave me maledictions. My neighbors, who had heard of
-this affair [the failure of an experiment], said that I was nothing but
-a fool, and that I might have had more than eight francs for the
-things that I had broken; and all this talk was brought to mingle
-with my grief.”&mdash;“Palissy the Potter,” Vol. I., p. 190. By Henry
-Morley. Boston: Ticknor, Reed &amp; Fields, 1853.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Palissy’s mind was trained naturally in the direction
-of rectitude, while the minds of the millions of men who
-permitted him to die unfriended, a prisoner in the Bastile,
-were developed unnaturally. Their education was
-unscientific, and their characters were hence deformed.
-The one symmetrical character was that of Palissy, the
-lover of truth, who was ready to starve, if need be, for
-his art, and ready to die for his faith. The thin ranks
-of the so-called heroes of the ages of history constitute
-the measure of the poverty of the systems of education
-that have prevailed among mankind. These so-called
-heroes are merely normally developed men&mdash;men who
-search for the truth, and having found it, honor it always
-and everywhere. They are peculiar to no clime, to no
-country, to no age. They are cosmopolitan, and the fact
-that they are honored, after death, by succeeding ages is
-proof positive of the world’s progress, or rather of the
-progress of moral ideas.</p>
-
-<p>The civilization of Italy in the middle of the fifteenth
-century presents the most violent possible contrast to
-that of America in the last half of the nineteenth century.
-But the one produced Savonarola, the hater of
-abuses in the Roman Catholic Church, and the other<span class="pagenum" id="Page235">[235]</span>
-John Brown, the stern, uncompromising hater of human
-bondage. Four hundred years is a long period in the
-history of civilization; but the priest of the fifteenth
-century, and the farmer of the nineteenth, are as near
-of kin in spirit, as if they had been born of the same
-mother, and reared in the same moral atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p>The true hero is always inexorable&mdash;as Savonarola in
-the presence of the majesty of a dying, remorse-stricken,
-half-repentant prince, and John Brown in the presence
-of his exultant but half-terrified captors. When Lorenzo
-di Medici lay terror-stricken, on his death-bed, Savonarola
-demanded of the dying prince, as the price of absolution,
-a restoration of the liberties of the people of Florence;
-and this being refused, the priest departed without
-one word of peace.</p>
-
-<p>When John Brown, wounded and bleeding, lay a captive
-at Harper’s Ferry, listening to the taunts of angry
-Virginians, he said, calmly and firmly, “You had better&mdash;all
-you people of the South&mdash;prepare yourselves for a
-settlement of this question. It must come up for settlement
-sooner than you are prepared for it, and the sooner
-you commence that preparation the better for you. You
-may dispose of me very easily&mdash;I am nearly disposed of
-now&mdash;but this question is still to be settled&mdash;this negro
-question, I mean. The end of that is not yet.”<a href="#Footnote65" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor65">[65]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote65"><a href="#FNanchor65"><span class="label">[65]</span></a>
-“The Public Life of Captain John Brown.” p. 283. By John
-Redpath. Boston: Thayer &amp; Eldridge, 1860.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>There is nothing grander in history, whether real or
-mythological, than the picture of the humble priest of
-the fifteenth century, with no power except the justice
-of his cause, shaking thrones and making proud prelates,
-and even the Pope himself, tremble with fear! And the<span class="pagenum" id="Page236">[236]</span>
-exact parallel of this picture is found, four hundred years
-down the stream of time, in the person of the farmer,
-John Brown, defying the Constitution, law, and public
-sentiment of his country in the interest simply of the
-cause of justice.</p>
-
-<p>It has been shown through citations from the Walton
-report, as well as by the opinions of many competent
-witnesses, that the New England system of education,
-whether correct in theory or not, is, in actual operation,
-very defective. But at the time of its establishment it
-was the best system in existence. To it this country owes
-the quality of its civilization. The neglect of education
-by the Government of the United States is the most astonishing
-fact of its history. It is incomprehensible how,
-with a comparatively excellent educational system in operation,
-and in full view in the New England, Middle,
-and Western States, the National Government could calmly
-and inactively contemplate the almost entire neglect
-of popular education in the States of the South, and ignore,
-from year to year, the steadily accumulating horrors
-of ignorance and vice which were destined to lead
-to such deplorable political and social results.</p>
-
-<p>The difference between the civilization of New England
-and that of South Carolina, for example, is exactly
-measured by the difference between their respective educational
-systems. New England undertook, at a very
-early day, to educate every class of its citizens; South
-Carolina made a monopoly of education, confining it to
-a single class.</p>
-
-<p>It must be admitted that the American statesmanship
-of the whole period of our history has been scarcely less
-short-sighted than that of England under the Georges,
-which resulted in saddling upon her people a debt that<span class="pagenum" id="Page237">[237]</span>
-they can never pay. If England had provided a comprehensive
-and scientific system of popular education at
-the beginning of the eighteenth century, who doubts that
-the wars through which her debt was incurred would
-have been averted? If the Government of the United
-States had compelled the adoption of a scientific educational
-system by the States of the South, who doubts
-that slavery would have peaceably passed away, and the
-occasion for war passed away with it?</p>
-
-<p>The conspicuous failure of American statesmanship
-consists in a failure to appreciate the value of scientific
-education, it shows that good citizenship is impossible
-without good education&mdash;for good education and good
-citizenship are convertible terms. And it is easy to show,
-by the past, that to hesitate on the subject of education is
-to be lost.<a href="#Footnote66" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor66">[66]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote66"><a href="#FNanchor66"><span class="label">[66]</span></a>
-“If you examine into the history of rogues, you will find that they
-are as truly manufactured articles as anything else, and it is just because
-our present system of political economy gives so large a stimulus
-to that manufacture that you may know it to be a false one. We
-had better seek for a system which will develop honest men than for
-one which will deal cunningly with vagabonds. Let us reform our
-schools, and we shall find little reform needed in our prisons.”&mdash;“Unto
-This Last,” p. 50. By John Ruskin. New York: John
-Wiley &amp; Sons, 1883.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Why do we provide for popular education? Is it out
-of pure generosity that the rich citizen consents to be
-taxed to pay for the education of his poor neighbor’s
-children? Does the man who has no children willingly
-surrender a portion of his estate for the education of the
-children of others, as an act of benevolence? Not at all.
-There is no security for property in a community devoid
-of education and consequent intelligence. Intelligence
-alone confers upon property a sacred character. In one<span class="pagenum" id="Page238">[238]</span>
-of two ways only can property be rendered secure in the
-owner’s hands. It may be protected by a hired soldiery,
-through the force of arms,<a href="#Endnote13" class="fnanchor" id="EndAnchor13">[E13]</a> or through the force of public
-sentiment enlightened by education. The reason why
-the poor but educated citizen would not lay violent hands
-on the rich citizen’s property is the fact that he indulges
-the intelligent hope of himself acquiring property. Besides,
-the morals of a community are in the ratio of its
-intelligence. The indulgence of hope promotes self-esteem,
-and self-respect, and these qualities react ethically.</p>
-
-<p>It should be borne in mind that while one of the
-main purposes of all governments is to preserve property
-rights, nearly all the governments of history have been
-shattered in pieces in the effort to fulfil this function of
-their existence. It may be said that there is never anything
-sacred about property unless it is honestly acquired.
-All the force of our own government was exerted in a
-vain effort to protect property in slaves. England has
-been compelled to disturb the property rights of the
-Irish landlords, and this is only the prelude to an attack
-upon the property rights of her own landlords. It was
-the ignorance of the English people hundreds of years
-ago that permitted the establishment of a land system
-which is now about to crumble in pieces, and in its fail
-wreck certain property rights.</p>
-
-<p>There is nothing sacred about property unless it is honestly
-acquired and honestly held; and property can only
-be honestly acquired and honestly held, in communities
-intelligent enough to guard its acquisition, and continued
-possession, by just and adequate laws. It follows that education
-is the sole bulwark of the State, and so of property.</p>
-
-<p>The question of the first consequence is, therefore,<span class="pagenum" id="Page239">[239]</span>
-always, What is the best system of education? It is obvious,
-also, that the subject of cost should not enter into
-the discussion; that the best education is the cheapest,
-is an indisputable proposition. We have seen that the
-New England system of education, which has spread over
-the whole country, is very much better than the system
-which prevailed in those States of the Union where slavery
-continued to exist down to 1864. But we have seen,
-also, that that system is very defective; that it is automatic,
-and hence not natural, not practical, not scientific.
-It does not produce great merchants, great lawyers, great
-judges, or great legislators. That it does not, is abundantly
-shown by the fact that in mercantile life there are
-ninety-three to ninety-seven failures in every one hundred
-experiments; by the fact that there is notoriously a
-general failure of justice; and by the fact that here, as in
-Great Britain, the chief business of statesmen is the undoing
-of vicious legislation.</p>
-
-<p>There is a system of training which produces a much
-higher average of culture than that of the public schools
-and the universities. We allude to the training received
-by the students of special mechanical and technical institutions,
-and by the apprentices in trade-shops. The proof
-of this is found in the world’s railways, ships, harbors,
-docks, canals, bridges, telegraph and telephone lines, and
-in a thousand and one other manifestations of skill in
-art. In the adaptation of means to an end, and in nicety
-of construction, the mechanic and the civil engineer show,
-in innumerable ways, with what thoroughness both their
-minds and their hands have been trained. If mercantile
-operations were governed by such excellent rules in projection,
-and by such precision in execution, ninety-seven
-merchants in a hundred would not go to the wall.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page240">[240]</span></p>
-
-<p>A story has lately gone the round of the public prints
-to the effect that, during a visit to a needle factory by the
-Emperor of Germany, a workman begged a hair of his
-head, bored an eye in it, threaded it, and handed it back
-to the monarch, who had expressed surprise that eyes
-could be bored in the smaller sizes of needles. It does
-not matter whether or not this story is literally true; it
-illustrates the delicacy of modern mechanical operations.
-Hundreds of similar illustrations might be given, showing
-how marvellously skilful the hand has become.</p>
-
-<p>It is not claimed that the hand is a nicer instrument
-than the mind. As a matter of fact, in drilling the hole
-in the hair the mind and the hand work together&mdash;the
-mind directs the hand, we will say. The mind devises
-or invents a watch&mdash;every wheel, pinion, screw, and
-spring&mdash;and directs the hand how to make it, and how to
-set it up, and it ticks off the time. Why does the mind
-succeed so admirably when it employs the hand to execute
-its will, but so ill when it devises and attempts, itself,
-to execute? How is it that the mind invents a watch
-which, being made by the hand, records the hour to a
-second, ninety-nine times in a hundred, but fails ninety-three
-to ninety-seven times in a hundred to devise and
-carry into execution a mercantile venture? How is it
-that the mind invents a steam-engine consisting of a hundred
-pieces, so that, each piece being made by a different
-hand, the machine shall, when set up, ninety-nine times
-in a hundred, at once perform the work of five hundred
-horses without strain or friction, but when it grapples with
-law and fact in the chair of lawyer or judge produces
-a most pitiable wreck of justice? How is it that the
-mind devises and the hand executes with such nice adaptation
-of means to the end in view, a bridge, that resembles<span class="pagenum" id="Page241">[241]</span>
-a spider’s web, and yet bears thousands of tons
-and endures for ages, but when it undertakes to legislate
-evolves statutes that wear out in a year? The first
-iron bridge constructed spanned the Severn, in England.
-It was opened to traffic a hundred years ago, but it is
-still a stanch structure likely to stand for centuries.
-Where are the English statutes of that time? Repealed
-to give place to a long line of others which in turn have
-been repealed. When the famous iron bridge across the
-Severn was constructed, English legislators were passing
-bills to compel the American colonies to trade only with
-the mother country, and to tax them without their consent.
-Lord Sheffield said, with charming frankness, that
-the colonies were founded with the sole view of securing
-to England a monopoly of their trade; and Lord Chatham
-declared that they would not be permitted to make
-even a nail or a horseshoe.</p>
-
-<p>In 1516 Sir Thomas More denounced the criminal law
-of England, declaring that “the loss of money should not
-cause the loss of man’s life.”<a href="#Footnote67" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor67">[67]</a> But this humane and enlightened
-sentiment had so little weight that during the
-reign of Henry VIII. seventy-two thousand thieves were
-hanged&mdash;at the rate of two thousand a year. In 1785
-twenty men were executed in London at one time for
-thefts of five shillings. The Lord Chief-justice and the
-Lord Chancellor agreed that it would be dangerous to
-repeal the law punishing pilfering by youths. In 1816
-the Commons passed a bill abolishing capital punishment
-for shoplifting&mdash;stealing the value of five shillings&mdash;but
-the Lords defeated it, Lord Ellenborough, Chief-justice,<span class="pagenum" id="Page242">[242]</span>
-observing, peevishly, “They want to alter these laws
-which a century has proved to be necessary, and which
-are now to be overturned by speculation and modern
-philosophy.”<a href="#Footnote68" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor68">[68]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote67"><a href="#FNanchor67"><span class="label">[67]</span></a>
-“The History of England,” Vol. II., p. 83. By Harriet Martineau.
-Philadelphia: Porter &amp; Coates.</p>
-
-<p id="Footnote68"><a href="#FNanchor68"><span class="label">[68]</span></a>
-“The History of England,” Vol. II., p. 85. By Harriet Martineau.
-Philadelphia: Porter &amp; Coates.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The cause of these failures&mdash;of mercantile ventures, of
-justice, and of legislation&mdash;is this: Subjective mental
-processes are automatic, and hence they neither generate
-power nor promote rectitude; they enfeeble rather than
-energize the brain. Men whose characters are formed
-by such educational processes never originate anything.
-They become selfish, they venerate the past, their eyes
-are turned backward; hence, if they sometimes make a
-feeble effort to move forward they stumble. The lawyer,
-the judge, and the legislator are examples of this
-class. Their guide-books are musty folios in a dead language;
-they look for “precedents” in an age whose civilization
-perished with its language, and whose maxims
-and rules of life were long ago exploded. Such men can
-be compelled to move forward only by the lash of public
-opinion. Buckle, speaking of the reforms extorted from
-the legislators of England, says,</p>
-
-<p>“But it is a mere matter of history that our legislators,
-even to the last moment, were so terrified by the
-idea of innovation that they refused every reform until
-the voice of the people rose high enough to awe them
-into submission, and forced them to grant what without
-such pressure they would by no means have conceded.”<a href="#Footnote69" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor69">[69]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote69"><a href="#FNanchor69"><span class="label">[69]</span></a>
-“History of Civilization,” Vol. I., p. 361. By Henry Thomas
-Buckle. New York: D. Appleton &amp; Co., 1864.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>On the other hand, the inventor, the discoverer, and
-the artisan are always in the advance, and always moving<span class="pagenum" id="Page243">[243]</span>
-forward. They never look back except to catch the vital
-principle of the invention or discovery of yesterday for
-utilization in the improved machine of to-day. Their
-acts are never repealed because they never become odious.
-They never become odious because they contain the
-germs of imperishable truth. They are never false; they
-are suitable to their time and the stage of development;
-they constitute links in the chain of progress. While the
-legislator is horrified at the thought of innovation, the
-inventor, the discoverer, and the artisan are electrified
-by the discovery of a new principle in physics, and delighted
-at its application in a new invention, and its
-practical operation in a new and useful machine.</p>
-
-<p>The difference in effects upon the mental and moral
-nature, between purely mental training and mental and
-manual training combined, is susceptible of logical explanation.
-It is only in things that the truth stands
-clearly revealed, and only in things that the false is sure
-of exposure.<a href="#Footnote70" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor70">[70]</a> Hence exclusively mental training stops
-far short of the objective point of true education. For
-if it be true that the last analysis of education is art,
-progress can find expression only in things&mdash;in the work
-of men’s hands. And it is true; for ideas are mere vain
-speculations until they are embodied in things. Nor is<span class="pagenum" id="Page244">[244]</span>
-this materialism unless all civilization is material; for
-the prime difference between barbarism and civilization
-consists in the presence, in a state of civilization, of more
-things of use and beauty than are found in a state of barbarism.
-To exalt things is not materialistic; they are
-both the source and issue of ideas, and the measure of
-civilization. Ideas and things are hence indissolubly
-connected; and it follows that any system of education
-which separates them is radically defective.<a href="#Footnote71" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor71">[71]</a> Exclusively
-mental training does not produce a symmetrical character,
-because at best it merely teaches the student how
-to think, and the complement of thinking is acting. Before
-thoughts can have any influence whatever upon the
-world of mind and matter external to the mind originating
-them they must be expressed. They may be expressed
-feebly, through the voice, in words; more durably,
-and therefore more forcibly, with the pen, on paper;
-more forcibly still in drawing&mdash;pictures of things; and,
-with the superlative degree of force, in real things.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote70"><a href="#FNanchor70"><span class="label">[70]</span></a>
-“To know the truth it is necessary to do the truth.”...</p>
-
-<p>“We rightly seek the meaning of the abstract in the concrete, because
-we cannot <i>act</i> in relation to the abstract, which is only a representative
-sign; we must give it a concrete form in order to make it a
-clear and distinct idea; until we have done so we do not know that
-we really believe&mdash;only believe that we believe it. A truth is best
-certified to be a truth when we live it and have ceased to talk about
-it.”&mdash;“Body and Will,” p. 49. By Henry Maudsley, M.D. New
-York: D. Appleton &amp; Co., 1884.</p>
-
-<p id="Footnote71"><a href="#FNanchor71"><span class="label">[71]</span></a>
-“Prof. Huxley seems to hold that zoology cannot be learned with
-any degree of sufficiency unless the student practises dissection. In
-support of this position there are strong reasons. In the first place,
-the impression made on the mind by the actual objects, as seen, handled,
-and operated upon, is far beyond the efficacy of words or description.
-And not only is it greater, but it is more faithful to the
-fact. While diagrams have a special value in bringing out links of
-connection that are disguised in the actual objects, they can never
-show the things exactly as they appear to our senses; and this full
-and precise conception of actuality is the most desirable form of
-knowledge; it is truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.
-Moreover, it enables the student to exercise a free and independent
-judgment upon the dicta of the teacher.”&mdash;“Education as a Science,”
-p. 303. By Alexander Bain, LL.D. New York: D. Appleton &amp; Co.,
-1884.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The object of education is the generation of power.<span class="pagenum" id="Page245">[245]</span>
-But to generate and store up power, whether mental or
-physical, or both, is a waste of effort, unless the power is
-to be exerted. Why generate steam if there is no engine
-to be operated? Steam may be likened to an idea which
-finds expression through the engine&mdash;a thing. Why
-store the mind with facts&mdash;historical, philosophical, or
-mathematical&mdash;which are useless until applied to things,
-if they are not to be applied to things? And if they are
-to be applied to things, why not teach the art of so applying
-them? As a matter of fact, the system of education
-which does not do this is one-sided, incomplete,
-unscientific. Rousseau says, “Education itself is
-certainly nothing but habit.” If this be true, it will
-be conceded that the habit of expressing ideas in things
-should be formed in the schools, because the chief way
-in which man is benefited is through the expression of
-ideas in things. The system of education which tends to
-form this habit is that of the kindergarten and that of
-the manual training school. These systems are one in
-principle. They are not new; they at least date back to
-Bacon, who declared that he would “employ his utmost
-endeavors towards restoring or cultivating a just and legitimate
-familiarity betwixt the mind and things.” The
-kindergarten and the manual training school exactly realize
-Bacon’s idea. The idea of the manual training
-school was in the mind of Comenius when he said, “Let
-things that have to be done be learned by doing them.”
-It was in the mind of Pestalozzi when he said, “Education
-is the generation of power.” It was in the mind of
-Froebel, not less than the kindergarten, when he said,
-“The end and aim of all our work should be the harmonious
-growth of the whole being.”</p>
-
-<p>These are excellent definitions of education, and they<span class="pagenum" id="Page246">[246]</span>
-are sequential. If things that have to be done are
-learned by doing them, there will be in the course of the
-process a wholesome exercise of both body and mind,
-and this exercise will result in the generation of power&mdash;power
-to think well, and to do well; and the process
-being continued, the result cannot fail to be the harmonious
-growth of the whole being. This is scientific, as
-opposed to automatic, education.<a href="#Footnote72" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor72">[72]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote72"><a href="#FNanchor72"><span class="label">[72]</span></a>
-“Intellectual progress is of necessity from the concrete to the
-abstract. But regardless of this, highly abstract subjects such as
-grammar, which should come quite late, are begun quite early. Political
-geography, dead and uninteresting to a child, and which should
-be an appendage of sociological studies, is commenced betimes, while
-physical geography, comprehensible and comparatively attractive to
-a child, is in great part passed over. Nearly every subject dealt with
-is arranged in abnormal order&mdash;definitions and rules and principles
-being put first, instead of being disclosed, as they are in the order of
-nature, through the study of cases. And then, pervading the whole,
-is the vicious system of rote learning&mdash;a system of sacrificing the
-spirit to the letter....</p>
-
-<p>“A leading fact in human progress is that every science is evolved
-out of its corresponding art. It results from the necessity we are
-under, both individually and as a race, of reaching the abstract by
-way of the concrete, that there must be practice and an accruing
-experience with its empirical generalizations before there can be
-science.”&mdash;“Education,” pp. 61, 124. By Herbert Spencer. New
-York: D. Appleton &amp; Co., 1883.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<hr class="footnote" />
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Endnote13"><span class="label"><a href="#EndAnchor13">[E13]</a></span>
-But the protection to property afforded by arms is only temporary.
-An increase of the standing army involves an increase of ignorance
-and poverty, and the last analysis of ignorance and poverty is anarchy.
-The anarchists of Chicago [1886] were of foreign birth. They
-came to the United States from the standing-army-ridden countries
-of Europe. They were the product, the victims, of the European
-governmental system. Hence, the proposal to adopt arms as a
-remedy for anarchy is a proposal to abandon the American idea of
-government for that of Europe. To preserve the society of to-day
-from violent dissolution, it is necessary to shoot the anarchist. But
-to assure the permanence of society it is necessary to educate the
-child of the anarchist.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page247">[247]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="chapno">CHAPTER XXI.</span><br />
-<span class="chapname">EDUCATION AND THE SOCIAL PROBLEM&mdash;HISTORIC.</span><br />
-<span class="chapsubname"><i>EGYPT AND GREECE.</i></span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="subjects">Fundamental Propositions. &mdash; Selfishness the Source of Social Evil;
-Subjective Education the Source of Selfishness and the Cause of
-Contempt of Labor; and Social Disintegration the Result of Contempt
-of Labor and the Useful Arts. &mdash; The First Class-distinction &mdash; the
-Strongest Man ruled; his First Rival, the Ingenious Man. &mdash; Superstition. &mdash; The
-Castes of India and Egypt &mdash; how came they
-about? &mdash; Egyptian Education based on Selfishness. &mdash; Rise of Egypt &mdash; her
-Career; her Fall; Analysis thereof. &mdash; She Typifies all the
-Early Nations: Force and Rapacity above, Chains and Slavery
-below. &mdash; Their Education consisted of Selfish Maxims for the Government
-of the Many by the Few, and Government meant the Appropriation
-of the Products of Labor. &mdash; Analysis of Greek Character &mdash; its
-Savage Characteristics. &mdash; Greek Treachery and Cruelty. &mdash; Greek
-Venality. &mdash; Her Orators accepted Bribes. &mdash; Responsibility of
-Greek Education and Philosophy for the Ruin of Greek Civilization. &mdash; Rectitude
-wholly left out of her Scheme of Education. &mdash; Plato’s
-Contempt of Matter: it led to Contempt of Man and all
-his Works. &mdash; Greek Education consisted of Rhetoric and Logic; all
-Useful Things were hence held in Contempt.</p>
-
-<p>It is a fundamental proposition of this work that selfishness
-is the essence of depravity, and hence the source
-of all social evil; and in previous chapters it has been
-shown, argumentatively, that exclusively subjective processes
-of education tend, in a high degree, to promote selfishness.
-Another fundamental proposition of this work
-is that the useful arts are the true measure of civilization,
-and that, as they are the product of labor, contempt of
-the laborer leads inevitably to social disintegration and<span class="pagenum" id="Page248">[248]</span>
-the destruction of the State. If these propositions are
-true, the solution of all social problems is to be sought
-through a radical change in educational methods. If
-they are true, it is of the first importance that they be
-proved, not only by argument, but by the citation of such
-facts of history as bear upon the subject. Civilization is
-the product of education.<a href="#Endnote14" class="fnanchor" id="EndAnchor14">[E14]</a> If the education is good the
-product will be good, if evil the product will be evil. The
-purpose of this and the four following chapters is, therefore,
-to trace the progress of civilization, to sketch in bold
-outline the social history of man.</p>
-
-<p>The aphorism, all men are created equal, is a fine
-phrase, but its truth is reserved for realization by the
-civilization of the future. A tendency to the formation
-of class-distinctions in human society, whether savage or
-civilized, is disclosed by all history.</p>
-
-<p>The first class-distinction sprang from the physical superiority
-of one savage over his fellows. He whose powerful
-frame and commanding eye enabled him best to cope
-with the beasts of field and forest became chief of the
-tribe. He held the first place by virtue of his brawny
-arm, and the less athletic, and more timid, became his
-subjects. But he was not long without rivals. His first
-rival was the dwarf, or hunchback, who, struggling to overcome
-the misfortune of his deformity, in the seclusion of
-his mud hut, invented the stone hatchet and stone-pointed
-arrow-head. His next rival was the puny, pale-faced
-youth who converted pantomimic signs and rude gestures
-into a language of sounds, and so armed communities
-with the power of combination for mutual protection.
-Those who soonest mastered the first alphabet took high
-rank in the social circle, while those who could still only
-make themselves understood by grimaces and gestures<span class="pagenum" id="Page249">[249]</span>
-fell to the grade of ciphers in the body politic, and came
-to be looked upon as dunces in society. Thereafter the
-women, who had previously been won as wives by personal
-prowess, were more equally parcelled out. The
-savage who had invented the bow and the arrow was exempted
-from the toils of the chase, and from the general
-contention at the courting season; a wife was assigned to
-him, and his tent was supplied with game in the hope
-that he would invent some other useful thing. Thus
-mind began to assert its empire over matter, the division
-of labor commenced, and a class-distinction was formed.
-Doubtless the youth who invented language cultivated
-superstition among the ignorant, and so, increasing his already
-considerable influence, secured the first social rank.
-Hence the castes of India and Egypt, consisting, in their
-order, of the priesthood, the army, the mercantile class,
-and, at the bottom of the scale, the servile laborer.</p>
-
-<p>Of the long period of social progress from a state of
-savagery to the proud civilization of historic Egypt the
-record is faint and fragmentary. Ages passed, during
-which men struggled, and died, and left no sign&mdash;neither
-hieroglyphic character, monument, nor buried city.
-Through what mental alchemy was the savage chief transformed,
-in the course of hundreds of generations, into the
-learned, accomplished, and astute Egyptian priest, from
-whose courtly lips Herodotus received the chronicles of
-the Egyptian kings and the romantic story of the residence
-in Egypt of Helen of Troy?<a href="#Footnote73" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor73">[73]</a> How were the members
-of the savage tribe converted, one into an obedient
-soldier, another into an adroit, self-seeking merchant, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page250">[250]</span>
-another into a cringing slave? These are secrets of antiquity,
-destined, doubtless, to remain forever unrevealed.
-We do know, however, that the civilization of Egypt,
-like all other civilizations, was the product of training or
-education; and the nature of the education may be inferred
-from the character and fate of the civilization.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote73"><a href="#FNanchor73"><span class="label">[73]</span></a>
-“Herodotus, ‘Euterpe,’” II., §§ 112-116. New York: Harper &amp;
-Brothers, 1882.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Of the Egyptian system of education selfishness was
-the basis. Given chains and slavery for the lowest class
-and there were force and rapacity in the highest class.<a href="#Footnote74" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor74">[74]</a>
-Before the free-born savage was reduced to slavery and
-made to toil under the lash, whole hecatombs of lives
-were sacrificed. Before the mind of the savage was degraded
-to the baseness of slavery, his body, hacked and
-hewn, bent submissively to the scourge. For the Egyptian
-boy there was, doubtless, a “Poor Richard’s Almanack,”
-which taught him that he must “look to the main
-chance;” that “in the race of life the devil takes the
-hindmost;” and that “self-preservation is the first law of
-nature.” Thus trained he entered the ranks of the priesthood,
-one of his brothers took a commission in the army,
-and the others embarked in mercantile life. For the
-servile class there was no education beyond their several
-occupations. Each man was compelled to follow the
-trade of his father, to marry within his own class, to die
-as he was born.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote74"><a href="#FNanchor74"><span class="label">[74]</span></a>
-“The Martyrdom of Man,” p. 18. By Winwood Reade. New
-York: Charles P. Somerby, 1876.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Ruled by the priests, and the army, Egypt grew rich.
-Her commerce, conducted by means of caravans, embraced
-the whole civilized world and included all its products.
-She became a great military and naval power, her armies
-overrunning Asia, and her fleets sweeping the Indian<span class="pagenum" id="Page251">[251]</span>
-Ocean. Her victorious campaigns opened new markets
-to her commerce, and through these channels wealth
-poured into the empire. In the track of the wheels of
-the Egyptian war-chariots the Egyptian merchant quickly
-followed. At the point of the arrows of her archers
-she offered her linen goods to conquered peoples, as England,
-at the point of the bayonet, subsequently offered
-her cotton goods to prostrate India.</p>
-
-<p>In Egypt all the learning of the time was concentrated.
-It was the university of Greece. Every intellectual Greek
-made a voyage to Egypt; it was regarded as a part of
-education, as a pilgrimage to the cradle-land of their
-mythology.<a href="#Endnote15" class="fnanchor" id="EndAnchor15">[E15]</a>
-The possession of great wealth led to habits
-of luxury. The house of the Egyptian gentleman was a
-palace adorned with the triumphs of art, and devoted to
-pleasure. Its walls, its floors, and its furniture reflected
-the skill, not to say genius, of slaves&mdash;for all the manual
-labor of Egypt was performed by slaves. At the end of
-the fashionable dinner, given in the palace by its rich
-master, a mummy, richly painted and gilded, was presented
-to each guest in turn by a servant, who said, “Look
-on this; drink and enjoy thyself, for such as it is now
-so thou shalt be when thou art dead.”<a href="#Footnote75" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor75">[75]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote75"><a href="#FNanchor75"><span class="label">[75]</span></a>
-“Herodotus, ‘Euterpe,’” II., p. 78. New York: Harper &amp;
-Brothers, 1882.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>One day when the priests were sacrificing in the temples,
-and the chief officers of the army were dining with
-a contractor for army supplies, a band of mountaineers
-rushed out of the recesses of Persia and swept like a
-wind across the plains. They were dressed in leather;
-they had never tasted fruit nor wine; they had never
-seen a market; they knew not how to buy or sell. They<span class="pagenum" id="Page252">[252]</span>
-were taught three things&mdash;to ride on horseback, to hurl
-the javelin, and to speak the truth.<a href="#Footnote76" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor76">[76]</a> All Asia was covered
-with blood and flames. The allied kingdoms fell at
-once, and India and Egypt were soon afterwards added
-to the Persian empire.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote76"><a href="#FNanchor76"><span class="label">[76]</span></a>
-“Herodotus, ‘Clio,’” I., §§ 71, 136, 153. New York: Harper &amp;
-Brothers, 1882.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Egypt typifies all the early nations. In its rise, progress,
-and fall, the course of the others may be traced.
-First there is a band of hardy men whose prowess renders
-them irresistible. They are inured to toil; they practise
-all the manly virtues; they are trained to labor with
-their hands; they are taught to speak the truth. They
-lay the foundations of the State in industry<a href="#Endnote16" class="fnanchor" id="EndAnchor16">[E16]</a> and prudence;
-their children develop its resources; their children’s
-children, through many generations, gradually accumulate
-wealth. The arts flourish, and luxuries are multiplied.
-There are many great estates, and those who inherit
-them cease to labor, and, ceasing to labor, they become
-a charge upon the public; for the value of an estate
-created one hundred years ago, or one year ago, can be
-maintained in no other way than by the labor of to-day.<a href="#Footnote77" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor77">[77]</a>
-The idlers increase in number, and the struggle for
-existence, of the workers, becomes more intense. Idleness<span class="pagenum" id="Page253">[253]</span>
-breeds vice, and the public morals are debauched.<a href="#Endnote17" class="fnanchor" id="EndAnchor17">[E17]</a>
-We see this class at the feast of Belshazzar and at the
-dinner of the Egyptian <i>bon vivant</i>. On the wall of every
-such banqueting room there is an ominous handwriting,
-provided, only, that there is a Daniel to interpret it. It
-means that the nation that degrades labor, tolerates idleness,
-and deifies vice, is ripe for annihilation. If, now,
-there is on the frontier of the effete nation a virile people,
-it is only a question of time and opportunity, when they
-will make slaves of the revellers, and spoil of their inherited
-estates. The worn-out, exhausted nation disappears
-in blood and flames. The rich idler, the poor sycophant,
-the rulers and the ruled, the slave and his master, the
-priest, the soldier, the merchant, and the laborer, all go to
-destruction together.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote77"><a href="#FNanchor77"><span class="label">[77]</span></a>
-“It is not equitable that what one man hath done for the public
-should discharge another of what it has a right to expect from him;
-for one, standing indebted in himself to society, cannot substitute
-anything in the room of his personal service. The father cannot
-transmit to his son the right of being useless to his fellow-creatures....
-The man who earns not his subsistence, but eats the bread of
-idleness, is no better than a thief.... To labor, then, is the indispensable
-duty of social or political man. Rich or poor, strong or weak,
-every idle citizen is a knave.”&mdash;“Emilius and Sophia,” Vol. II.,
-pp. 92, 93. By J. J. Rousseau. London: 1767.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>In the ancient nations there was always force and rapacity
-above, and chains and slavery below. Education
-was confined to a small class, and consisted of selfish
-maxims for the government of the many, and government
-was only another name for the appropriation of the products
-of their labor. Selfishness bred injustice, and the
-practice of injustice undermined the State. Whether the
-State survived or fell was a matter of indifference to the
-slave. A slave he remained in any event&mdash;if not of
-the Egyptian then of the Persian. But the importance
-of labor is shown by those bloody revolutions. The battles
-of antiquity were contests for the possession of the
-labor class. Which nationality&mdash;the Egyptian or the
-Persian&mdash;should drive the toilers to their daily tasks;
-which should reap the fruit of the sweat of their brows;
-which should buy and sell them; which scourge them to
-their dungeons? These were the questions which agitated
-the minds of ancient rulers. They were the questions<span class="pagenum" id="Page254">[254]</span>
-which agitated the mind of Xerxes when he invaded
-Greece, with millions of followers, to encounter defeat
-at the hands of a few thousand men of a superior type.</p>
-
-<p>The Greek civilization sprung from mythology and
-ended in anarchy. In the East the Greeks were called
-the people of youth. Their religion was of the savage
-type. Their gods were immortalized men; they loved
-and hated, transgressed and suffered; they resorted to
-stratagems to compass their ends; they were a kind of
-exalted but unscrupulous aristocracy.</p>
-
-<p>Greek patriotism was narrow; each city was politically
-independent, and the citizen of one city was an alien and
-a stranger in the territory of every other. The Greeks
-were superstitious. If the omens were unfavorable the
-general refused to give battle; the plague was a visible
-sign of the wrath of the gods; the priests sacrificed perpetually;
-the oracle of Apollo outlived Grecian independence
-hundreds of years.<a href="#Endnote18" class="fnanchor" id="EndAnchor18">[E18]</a></p>
-
-<p>Grecian national festivals were childish, consisting of
-wrestling, boxing, running, jumping, and chariot-racing.
-But the victor in those games conferred everlasting glory
-upon his family and his country, and was rewarded with
-distinguished honors.</p>
-
-<p>Like savages, the Greeks were treacherous. The destiny
-of Greece was controlled by renegades. There was
-disloyalty in every camp, a Greek deserter in every opposing
-army, and a traitor, or a band of traitors, in every
-besieged Greek city.<a href="#Endnote19" class="fnanchor" id="EndAnchor19">[E19]</a> They were cruel; of their captives
-they butchered the men and enslaved the women, and
-they stripped and robbed the bodies of the slain, on the
-battle-field. Like savages they assassinated ambassadors,
-and like savages surrendered prisoners to their personal
-enemies to be massacred.<a href="#Endnote20" class="fnanchor" id="EndAnchor20">[E20]</a>
-Their sense of honor was dull.<span class="pagenum" id="Page255">[255]</span>
-Xenophon, after winning imperishable renown, in conducting
-the famous retreat of the “Ten Thousand,” led a
-detachment of them on a pillaging expedition, and so
-amassed a fortune. “My patriotism,” says Alcibiades,
-“I keep not at a time when I am being wronged.”
-“For there was neither promise that could be depended
-on, nor oath that struck them with fear,” exclaims
-Thucydides.<a href="#Footnote78" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor78">[78]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote78"><a href="#FNanchor78"><span class="label">[78]</span></a>
-“The History of the Peloponnesian War,” Vol. I., p. 210. London:
-George Bell &amp; Sons.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Venality was the predominating trait in Greek character,
-and venality unrestrained is savagery. In the Greek
-Pantheon the highest niche was reserved for the God of
-Gain. The early Greeks were pirates; they plundered
-one another; they sometimes actually sold themselves
-into slavery, so great was their lust of gold. The richest
-cities ruled the poor cities. Pericles boasted that he
-could not be bribed, but he robbed all Greece to embellish
-Athens, and was accused of peculation, tried, convicted,
-and fined. The Athenians declared that the
-Spartans were taught to steal, and the Spartans retorted
-that the best Athenians were invariably thieves. When
-Persia could no longer fight she defended her territory
-against Greek invasion with gold coins.</p>
-
-<p>The Greek orators never refused a bribe, and oratory
-ruled Greece.<a href="#Endnote21" class="fnanchor" id="EndAnchor21">[E21]</a> Greek oratory was very persuasive. A
-discriminating writer declares that, with their fine phrases
-and rhetorical expressions, the Greek orators swindled history,
-obtaining a vast amount of admiration under false
-pretences.<a href="#Footnote79" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor79">[79]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote79"><a href="#FNanchor79"><span class="label">[79]</span></a>
-“The Martyrdom of Man,” p. 88. By Winwood Reade. New
-York: Charles P. Somerby, 1876.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>For these defects in Greek character, and for the resulting<span class="pagenum" id="Page256">[256]</span>
-decay of Greek civilization, Greek philosophy and
-Greek education must be held responsible. Metaphysics
-and rhetoric ruined Greece. It was in the schools of
-rhetoric that the young Greeks received their training
-for the duties of public life. There they were taught
-the art of oratory; there they learned how to make the
-worse appear the better reason. There they were taught,
-not to expound the truth, but to indulge in the arts of
-sophistry. It was in those schools that the young Greek
-was trained to be eloquent, to win applause in the courts
-of law, not to convince the judgments of judge, or juror;
-for judicial decisions were notoriously subjects of the
-most shameful traffic.</p>
-
-<p>The element of rectitude was wholly left out of the
-Greek system of education, and hence wholly wanting in
-Greek character. The Greeks had a profound distrust
-of one another. They were dishonest; they were treacherous;
-they were cruel; they were false; and all these
-vices are peculiar to a state of savagery.<a href="#Endnote22" class="fnanchor" id="EndAnchor22">[E22]</a> In ethics they
-never emerged from the savage state, and hence in politics
-their failure was complete; for the prime condition
-of the most simple form of civil society is mutual confidence.
-But the mutual distrust of the Greeks, based on
-want of integrity, was so absolute that political unity was
-impossible, and the failure to combine the several cities
-under one government led, eventually, to the destruction
-of Greek civilization.</p>
-
-<p>To this result Greek philosophy also contributed.
-Plato’s contempt for matter was so profound that he regarded
-the soul’s residence in the body as an evil. He
-taught that the philosopher should emancipate himself
-from the illusions of sense, devoting his life to reflection,
-and surrendering his mind “to communion with its kindred<span class="pagenum" id="Page257">[257]</span>
-eternal essences.”<a href="#Endnote23" class="fnanchor" id="EndAnchor23">[E23]</a> Contempt of matter led logically
-to contempt of the physical man, and hence to contempt
-of things, the work of man’s hands. Such a philosophy
-was necessarily “in the air.” It afforded no aid to the
-sciences; for science is the product of generalizations
-from matter. It scorned art; for the arts are applications
-of the sciences in useful things. With the Greek school-master
-rhetoric was the chief part of education; with the
-Greek philosopher dialectics was the science <i>par eminence</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the Greek system of education was confined to
-rhetoric and logic&mdash;the art of speaking with propriety,
-elegance, and force, and the power of deducing legitimate
-conclusions from assumed premises.<a href="#Endnote24" class="fnanchor" id="EndAnchor24">[E24]</a> In the Greek
-schools of rhetoric there was no struggle to find the
-truth; in the schools of philosophy there was no respect
-for the evidence of the senses. The Greek orator harangued
-the jury eloquently while his client bargained
-with the court for the price of justice! The Greek philosopher
-confounded his audience with the force of his
-unanswerable logic, and appealed to his inner consciousness
-in support of the soundness of his premises!</p>
-
-<p>The explanation of Greek duplicity is found in Greek
-metaphysics. To scorn things is to disregard facts, and
-disregard of facts is contempt of the truth. Greek education
-was confined to a consideration of the subject of
-the nature and relations of abstract ideas, while the subject
-of the nature and relations of things was wholly neglected.
-Such a system of education led logically to
-selfishness, and out of selfishness grew inordinate ambition
-and greed; and these passions led, through treachery
-and dishonesty, to factional contests, which, eventuating
-in bloodshed, could only end in anarchy. Distracted<span class="pagenum" id="Page258">[258]</span>
-by the jealousies and rivalries of States constantly in hostile
-conflict, and enfeebled by the never-ending strife between
-the rich and the poor, Greece fell a prey to the
-rapacity, and lust of power, of her unscrupulous Roman
-neighbor.</p>
-
-<hr class="footnote" />
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Endnote14"><span class="label"><a href="#EndAnchor14">[E14]</a></span>
-“All the happiness of families depends upon the education of
-children, and houses rise or sink according as their children are virtuous
-or vicious.”&mdash;Plato’s “Divine Dialogues,” p. 262. London: S.
-Cornish &amp; Co., 1839.</p>
-
-<p id="Endnote15"><span class="label"><a href="#EndAnchor15">[E15]</a></span>
-“The Egyptians were, in the opinion of the Greeks, the wisest of
-mankind.”&mdash;Herodotus, “Euterpe,” II., § 160. New York: Harper
-&amp; Brothers, 1882.</p>
-
-<p>“For my part, I think that Melampus, being a wise man, both acquired
-the art of divination, and having learned many other things
-in Egypt, introduced them among the Greeks, and particularly the
-worship of Bacchus.”&mdash;Ibid, “Euterpe,” II., § 49.</p>
-
-<p>“And indeed the names of almost all the Gods came from Egypt
-into Greece.”&mdash;Ibid, “Euterpe,” II., § 50.</p>
-
-<p>“The manner in which oracles are delivered at Thebes in Egypt
-and at Dodona, is very similar; and the art of divination from victims
-came likewise from Egypt.”&mdash;Ibid, “Euterpe,” II., § 57.</p>
-
-<p>“The Egyptians were also the first who introduced public festivals,
-processions, and solemn supplications: And the Greeks learned
-these from them.”&mdash;Ibid, “Euterpe,” II., § 57.</p>
-
-<p>To the same effect, see also:</p>
-
-<table class="litref" summary="Literature references">
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">Ibid,</td>
-<td class="center">“Euterpe,”</td>
-<td class="center">II.,</td>
-<td class="left">§ 64.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="left">§ 109.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="left">§ 123.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="left">§ 160.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="left">§§ 164-166.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="left">§ 171.</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>And Ibid, “Melpomene,” IV., § 180.</p>
-
-<p id="Endnote16"><span class="label"><a href="#EndAnchor16">[E16]</a></span>
-“Amasis it was who established the law among the Egyptians
-that every Egyptian should annually declare to the governor of his
-district by what means he maintained himself; and if he failed to do
-this, or did not show that he lived by honest means, he should be
-punished with death. Solon, the Athenian, having brought this law
-from Egypt, established it at Athens; and that people still continue
-to observe it, as being an unobjectionable regulation.”&mdash;Herodotus,
-“Euterpe,” II., § 177. New York: Harper &amp; Brothers, 1882.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page259">[259]</span></p>
-
-<p id="Endnote17"><span class="label"><a href="#EndAnchor17">[E17]</a></span>
-“Lysimachus, son of Aristides the Just, and Melesias, son of
-Thucydides, to the Athenian generals, Nicias and Laches:</p>
-
-<p>“Both he and I have entertained our children with thousands of
-brave actions done by our fathers both in peace and war, while they
-headed the Athenians and their allies; but to our great misfortune
-we can tell them no such thing of ourselves. This covers us with
-shame; we blush for it before our children, and are forced to cast
-the blame upon our fathers; who, after we grew up, suffered us to
-live in effeminacy and luxury; while they were employing all their
-care for the interest of the public.”&mdash;Plato’s “Divine Dialogues,” p.
-256. London: S. Cornish &amp; Co., 1839.</p>
-
-<p id="Endnote18"><span class="label"><a href="#EndAnchor18">[E18]</a></span>
-“After the encounter between the cavalry had taken place, Agesilaus,
-on offering sacrifice the next day with a view to advancing,
-found the victims inauspicious and in consequence of this indication
-turned off and proceeded toward the coast.”&mdash;Xenophon, “Hellenics,”
-p. 369. London: George Bell &amp; Sons, 1881.</p>
-
-<p>See, also, Thucydides, Vol. II., p. 348. London: George Bell &amp;
-Sons, 1880.</p>
-
-<p>And Ibid, Vol. II., p. 484.</p>
-
-<p>And, “Plutarch’s Lives [Timoleon],” p. 177. New York: Harper
-&amp; Brothers, 1850.</p>
-
-<p id="Endnote19"><span class="label"><a href="#EndAnchor19">[E19]</a></span>
-Alcibiades to the Lacedæmonians: “And now, I beg that I may
-not be the worse thought of by any among you, because I am now
-strenuously attacking my country with its bitterest enemies, though I
-formerly had a reputation for patriotism.”&mdash;Thucydides, Vol. II., p.
-439. London: George Bell &amp; Sons, 1880.</p>
-
-<p>Of Pausanias and Themistocles, who were both traitors, Thucydides
-says: “Such was the end of Pausanias the Lacedæmonian and
-Themistocles the Athenian, <i>who had been the most distinguished of
-all the Greeks in their day</i>.”&mdash;“History of the Peloponnesian War,”
-Vol. I., pp. 75-83.</p>
-
-<table class="litref" summary="Literature references">
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">See also</td>
-<td class="center">Ibid,</td>
-<td class="center">Vol. I.,</td>
-<td class="left">p. 288.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="left">pp. 292-293.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="left">p. 304.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="left">pp. 306-307.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="left">p. 241.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">Vol. II.,</td>
-<td class="left">p. 510.</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>See also Herodotus, “Melpomene,” IV., § 142. New York: Harper
-&amp; Brothers, 1882.</p>
-
-<p id="Endnote20"><span class="label"><a href="#EndAnchor20">[E20]</a></span> “When the Corcyræans had got possession of them [prisoners
-surrendered by their allies the Athenians] they shut them up in a
-large building, and, afterward taking them out by twenties, led them<span class="pagenum" id="Page260">[260]</span>
-through two rows of heavy-armed soldiers posted on each side; the
-prisoners being bound together were beaten and stabbed by the men
-ranged in the lines, <i>whenever any of them happened to see a personal
-enemy</i>; while men carrying whips went by their side, and hastened
-on the way those that were proceeding too slowly.”&mdash;Thucydides,
-Vol. I., pp. 256-257. London: George Bell &amp; Sons, 1880.</p>
-
-<table class="litref" summary="Literature references">
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">Ibid, Vol.</td>
-<td class="left">I., p. 62.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="left">II., p. 376.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="left">II., p. 468.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="left">II., p. 495.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="left">II., pp. 510-511.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="left">II., p. 523.</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<table class="litref" summary="Literature references">
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">See also</td>
-<td class="left">Herodotus, “Terpsichore,” V., § 6.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">Ibid,</td>
-<td class="left">“Terpsichore,” V., § 21.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">Ibid,</td>
-<td class="left">“Urania,” VII., §§ 104, 105, 106.</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>See also Xenophon, “Hellenics,” p. 328. London: George Bell
-&amp; Sons, 1882.</p>
-
-<p>See also “Plutarch’s Lives [Lycurgus],” p. 42. New York: Harper
-&amp; Brothers, 1850.</p>
-
-<p id="Endnote21"><span class="label"><a href="#EndAnchor21">[E21]</a></span>
-“For the Grecians in old time, ... turned to piracy, ...
-and falling upon towns that were unfortified, ... they rifled
-them, and made most of their livelihood by this means.”...
-“For through desire of gain the lower orders submitted to be slaves
-to their betters; and the more powerful, having a superabundance
-of money, brought the smaller cities into subjection.”&mdash;Thucydides,
-Vol. I., pp. 3, 4, 5. London: George Bell &amp; Sons, 1880.</p>
-
-<p>“Yet that the boys might not suffer too much from hunger, Lycurgus,
-<i>though he did not allow them to take what they wanted without
-trouble</i>, gave them leave to steal certain things to relieve the
-cravings of nature; <i>and he made it honorable to steal as many cheeses
-as possible</i>.”&mdash;Xenophon’s “Minor Works,” p. 208. London: George
-Bell &amp; Sons, 1882.</p>
-
-<p>“Demosthenes could not resist the temptation; it made all the
-impression upon him that was expected; he received the money, like
-a garrison into his house, and went over to the interest of Harpalus.
-Next day he came into the Assembly with a quantity of wool and
-bandages about his neck; and when the people called upon him to get
-up and speak, he made signs that he had lost his voice, upon which
-some that were by said, ‘it was no common hoarseness that he got
-in the night; it was a hoarseness occasioned by swallowing gold and<span class="pagenum" id="Page261">[261]</span>
-silver.’”&mdash;“Plutarch’s Lives [Demosthenes],” pp. 594-595. New
-York: Harper &amp; Brothers, 1850.</p>
-
-<p>See also, “Plutarch’s Lives [Agesilaus],” p. 431. New York: Harper
-&amp; Brothers, 1850.</p>
-
-<table class="litref" summary="Literature references">
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">Ibid</td>
-<td class="left">[Demosthenes], p. 591.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="left">[Aristides], p. 232.</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>“And Plato, among all that were accounted great and illustrious
-men in Athens, judged none but Aristides worthy of real esteem.”&mdash;“Plutarch’s
-Lives [Aristides],” p. 243. New York: Harper &amp;
-Brothers, 1850.</p>
-
-<p>But it was Aristides who said of a public measure: “It is not just,
-but it is expedient.”</p>
-
-<p>“As to the proceedings in courts of law they [the Athenians] have
-less regard to what is just than to what is profitable to themselves.”&mdash;Xenophon’s
-“Minor Works,” pp. 235-236. London: George Bell
-&amp; Sons, 1882.</p>
-
-<p>Ibid, pp. 243, 244.</p>
-
-<p>When Mardonius the Persian consulted with the Thebans how to
-subdue Greece, they said: “Send money to the most powerful men
-in the cities, and by sending it you will split Greece into parties, and
-then, with the assistance of those of your party, you may easily
-subdue those who are not in your interest.”&mdash;Herodotus, “Calliope,”
-IX., § 2. New York: Harper &amp; Brothers, 1882.</p>
-
-<table class="litref" summary="Literature references">
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">Ibid,</td>
-<td class="left">“Urania,” VIII., §§ 128-134.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="left">“Calliope,” IX., § 44.</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>See also “Plutarch’s Lives [Pericles],” p. 123. New York: Harper
-&amp; Brothers, 1850.</p>
-
-<table class="litref" summary="Literature references">
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">Ibid,</td>
-<td class="left">“Pericles,” p. 118.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="left">“Pericles,” p. 115, <i>note</i>.</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>“Accordingly, as the Athenians state, these men while staying at
-Delphi, prevailed on the Pythian by money, when any Spartans
-should come thither to consult the oracle, either on their own account
-or that of the public, to propose to them to liberate Athens
-from servitude.”&mdash;Herodotus, “Terpsichore,” V., § 63. New York:
-Harper &amp; Brothers, 1882.</p>
-
-<p>Ibid, “Erato,” VI., §§ 72, 100.</p>
-
-<p id="Endnote22"><span class="label"><a href="#EndAnchor22">[E22]</a></span>
-Euripides makes Andromache say: “O, ye inhabitants of Sparta,
-most hated of mortals among all men, crafty in counsel, king of liars,
-concoctors of evil plots, crooked and thinking nothing soundly,
-but all things tortuously, unjustly are ye prospered in Greece. And
-what evil is there not in you? Are there not abundant murders? Are<span class="pagenum" id="Page262">[262]</span>
-ye not given to base gain? Are ye not detected speaking ever one
-thing with the tongue but thinking another? A murrain seize you!”&mdash;“The
-Tragedies of Euripides [Andromache],” Vol, II., p. 138.
-New York: Harper &amp; Brothers, 1857.</p>
-
-<p id="Endnote23"><span class="label"><a href="#EndAnchor23">[E23]</a></span>
-“Is it not by reasoning that the soul embraces truths? And
-does it not reason better than before when it is not encumbered by
-seeing or hearing, by pain or pleasure? When shut up within itself
-it bids adieu to the body, and entertains as little correspondence
-with it as possible; and pursues the knowledge of things without
-touching them.... Is it not especially upon this occasion that
-the soul of a philosopher despises and avoids the body and wants to
-be by itself?... Now, the purgation of the soul, as we were
-saying just now, is only its separation from the body, its accustoming
-itself to retire and lock itself up, renouncing all commerce with
-it as much as possible, and living by itself, whether in this or the
-other world, without being chained to the body.”&mdash;Plato’s “Divine
-Dialogues,” pp. 180, 181, 182. London: S. Cornish &amp; Co., 1839.</p>
-
-<p id="Endnote24"><span class="label"><a href="#EndAnchor24">[E24]</a></span>
-“During most of the flourishing age of Hellenistic culture the
-rhetor was the acknowledged practical teacher; and his course,
-<i>which occupied several years</i>, with the interruption of the summer
-holidays, comprised first a careful reading of classical authors, both
-poetical and prose, with explanations and illustrations. This made
-the student acquainted with the language and literature of Greece.
-But it was only introductory to the technical study of expression,
-of eloquence based on these models, and of accurate writing as a collateral
-branch of this study. When a man had so perfected himself,
-he was considered fit for public employment.”&mdash;“Old Greek Education,”
-p. 137. By J. P. Mahaffy, M. A. New York: Harper &amp;
-Brothers, 1882.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page263">[263]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="chapno">CHAPTER XXII.</span><br />
-<span class="chapname">EDUCATION AND THE SOCIAL PROBLEM&mdash;HISTORIC.</span><br />
-<span class="chapsubname"><i>ROME.</i></span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="subjects">Vigor of the Early Romans &mdash; their Virtues and Vices; their Rigorous
-Laws; their Defective Education; their Contempt of Labor. &mdash; Slavery:
-its Horrors and Brutalizing Influence. &mdash; Education Confined
-to the Arts of Politics and War; it transformed Courage into
-Cruelty, and Fortitude into Stoicism. &mdash; Robbery and Bribery. &mdash; The
-Vices of Greece and Carthage imported into Rome. &mdash; Slaves construct
-all the great Public Works; they Revolt, and the Legions
-Slaughter them. &mdash; The Gothic Invasion. &mdash; Rome Falls. &mdash; False Philosophy
-and Superficial Education promoted Selfishness. &mdash; Deification
-of Abstractions, and Scorn of Men and Things. &mdash; Universal
-Moral Degradation. &mdash; Neglect of Honest Men and Promotion of
-Demagogues. &mdash; The Decline of Morals and Growth of Literature. &mdash; Darwin’s
-Law of Reversion, through Selfishness, to Savagery. &mdash; Contest
-between the Rich and the Poor. &mdash; Logic, Rhetoric, and
-Ruin.</p>
-
-<p>In the city of the Seven Hills there was no statue to
-Pity, as at Athens. In the long line of Roman conquerors
-there was no one possessing the title to fame, of
-which, on his death-bed, Pericles boasted, namely, that
-“no Athenian had ever worn mourning on his account.”</p>
-
-<p>The dominion of Rome was logical. In the legend of
-Romulus and Remus, suckled by the she-wolf, there is a
-hint of the rugged vigor which characterized the Roman
-people, and distinguished them from the earlier nationalities.
-In all the civilizations anterior to that of Rome there
-was an element of pliability or softness which belongs to
-the youth of man. But from the day on which Romulus,<span class="pagenum" id="Page264">[264]</span>
-with the brazen ploughshare, drew a furrow around the
-Palatine, both the sinews and the souls of his followers
-hardened into maturity. The rising walls of the city, so
-the legend runs, were moistened with the life-drops of
-Remus, whose derisive remark and act cost him his life,
-his slayer exclaiming, haughtily, “So perish all who dare
-to climb these ramparts.” The rape of the Sabines, the
-conflicts which ensued with that outraged people, their
-incorporation with the conquerors, their subsequent joint
-conquests, and the shrewdness displayed in the conservation
-of the fruits of victory&mdash;these events show that man
-had attained his majority. Under the shadow of the
-walls of the Eternal City all the great races were associated
-and mingled&mdash;Latins, Trojans, Greeks, Sabines, and
-Etruscans. The Roman civilization was the product of
-all that had gone before, as it was destined to be the father
-of all that should follow it. The Roman had no
-peer either in courage or fortitude. Aspiring to universal
-dominion, he toughened himself to achieve it.
-Dooming his enemy to death or slavery, he was not less
-self-exacting, his own life, through the cup of poison,
-the sword, or the opened vein, becoming the forfeit
-equally of misfortune and shame. The tragic fate of
-Lucretia, the resulting revolution, the banishment of the
-Tarquins, and the abolition of the kingly government
-show the swiftness of Roman retribution and the terrible
-force of Roman resolution. Roman persistence in the
-path of conquest for many centuries is typified by Cato in
-his invocation of destruction upon Carthage. The masculine
-character of the Roman vices finds illustration in
-the struggle of Appius, the Decemvir, to possess the person
-of Virginia by wresting the law from its true purpose,
-the conservation of justice, and converting it into a<span class="pagenum" id="Page265">[265]</span>
-shield for lust; and the vigor of Roman virtue is exemplified
-in the act of Virginius plunging the knife into the
-heart of his beloved daughter to save her honor. The
-rigorous laws of Rome testify to the stamina of her people.
-The father to whom a deformed son was born must
-cause the child to be put to death, and any citizen might
-kill the man who betrayed the design of becoming king.</p>
-
-<p>A scientific system of education would have conserved
-and developed the noble and eliminated the ignoble traits
-of Roman character. But neither Roman education, philosophy,
-nor ethics inculcated either respect for labor or
-reverence for human rights; and hence the laborer was
-reduced to slavery, and the slave made the victim of every
-known atrocity. Slavery became the corner-stone of
-the Roman State, and slavery and labor were synonymous
-terms. The Roman supply of laborers was maintained
-by depopulating conquered countries. In the train of
-the legions, returning to Rome in triumph, there were
-not only statues, paintings, and other works of art, but
-thousands of men, women, and children destined to slavery.
-And the laws in regard to slaves were terrible, as
-laws touching slavery must always be&mdash;for a state of
-slavery is a state of war. It was a law of Rome that if
-a slave murdered his master the whole family of slaves
-should be put to death; and Tacitus relates an instance
-of the execution of four hundred slaves for the murder
-of a citizen, their master. In the course of the servile
-rebellion in Sicily a million slaves were killed; and it
-should be borne in mind that they were valuable laborers&mdash;many
-of them skilled artisans. Vast numbers of
-them were exposed to wild beasts in the arena, for the
-popular amusement. The rebellion of the gladiators was
-put down only by a resort to awful atrocities, among<span class="pagenum" id="Page266">[266]</span>
-which was the crucifixion of prisoners. The revolt of
-the allies was quelled at the cost of half a million lives.
-But slaves were plenty, for Rome had her bloody hand
-at the throat of all mankind, and her hoarse cry was,
-“Your life or your liberty!”</p>
-
-<p>Every Roman freeman was a soldier, and the cultivation
-of the land, manufactures, and all the pursuits of industry,
-were carried on by slaves. Slave labor was cheaper
-than the labor of animals; cattle were taken from
-the plough and slaughtered for beef that slaves&mdash;men&mdash;might
-take their places. Labor fell to the lowest degree
-of contempt, and the laborer was a thing to be spurned&mdash;for
-the free citizen to labor with his hands was more
-disgraceful than to die of starvation. Hence there was a
-class of citizen paupers to whom largesses of corn were
-doled out by the demagogues of the Senate and the army.
-Ultimately these citizen-paupers became so vile and filthy
-that they engendered leprosy and other loathsome diseases,
-as they dragged their palsied limbs through the
-streets of the city, crying, “Bread and circuses! bread
-and circuses!”</p>
-
-<p>Roman education was confined almost exclusively to
-the training of the sons of rich citizens in the arts of
-politics and war; and in a State where labor was despised,
-and whose corner-stone was slavery, and whose
-shibboleth was conquest, the baseness of these arts may
-be imagined but hardly described. It promoted selfishness,
-and in the course of centuries selfishness transformed
-Roman courage into cruelty, and Roman fortitude
-into brutal stoicism. The Roman sense of justice was
-swallowed up in Roman lust of power. Rome became
-the great robber nation of the world. She was on the
-land what Greece had once been on the sea&mdash;a pirate.<span class="pagenum" id="Page267">[267]</span>
-She made the streets of the cities she conquered run
-with blood. Thousands of captives she doomed to death;
-other thousands graced the triumphs of her generals, and
-the spoil saved from the fury of the flames, and the more
-ungovernable fury of the licentious soldiery, was carried
-home to the Eternal City, there to fall into the hands of
-the most cunning among the demagogues, for use in the
-bribery of courts, senators, and the populace.</p>
-
-<p>Tacitus deplored the decline of public virtue. He declared,
-mournfully, that “Nothing was sacred, nothing
-safe from the hand of rapacity.” His environment blinded
-him to the true cause of the depravity he so eloquently
-deplored&mdash;selfishness. Had he been familiar with
-the inductive method he would have found in a defective
-system of education the cause of Roman venality and corruption.
-He might thus have realized the weakness of a
-community of men who wanted the necessary force and
-virtue to depose a Tiberius and elevate to his place a
-Germanicus; or to dethrone a Domitian and crown in
-his stead an Agricola.</p>
-
-<p>Education in Rome deified selfishness, and hence realized
-its last analysis&mdash;total depravity. Of course nothing
-was sacred in a community where men were ruthlessly
-trampled underfoot! Of course nothing was “safe
-from the hand of rapacity” where the laborer was degraded
-to a place in the social scale below the leprous
-pauper whose filthy person provoked disgust, and whose
-poisonous breath, as he cried for bread, spread abroad
-disease and death!</p>
-
-<p>It was inevitable that the nation that grew rich through
-plunder should grow poor in public and private virtue.
-And such was the fact. The eagles that protected robbers
-abroad, spread their sheltering wings over defaulters,<span class="pagenum" id="Page268">[268]</span>
-bribers, and thieves at home. There had been a time in
-Rome when bribery was punishable with death, but now
-candidates for office sat at tables in the streets near the
-polling-places and openly paid the citizens for their votes.
-The change in the habits of the people was as pronounced
-as the change in the laws. The early triumphs of the
-Romans were industrial&mdash;flocks and herds; their trophies,
-obtained in single combat, consisted of spears and
-helmets. When Cincinnatus was sent for to assume
-the dictatorship he was found in his field following the
-plough. Valerius, four times consul, and by Livy characterized
-as the first man of his time, died so poor that
-he had to be buried at the public charge. But with the
-fall of Greece and Carthage, and the reduction of Asia,
-there was a great social change at Rome. The Roman
-legions not only carried home the wealth of the countries
-they conquered but the vices of the peoples they
-subdued. An ancient writer summarizes the situation
-in the following graphic sentence: “The only fashionable
-principles were to acquire wealth by every means of
-avarice and injustice, and to dissipate it by every method
-of luxury and profusion.”</p>
-
-<p>The end is not far off. The story of Persia, of Egypt,
-and of Greece is the story equally of Rome. Avarice
-and injustice, luxury and profusion do their sure work.
-The Roman civilization is more than a thousand years
-old. Asiatic wealth, the luxury and false philosophy of
-Greece, and a vicious system of education, promoting
-selfishness, have united to sap its foundations. Society
-is divided into three classes&mdash;an aristocracy based solely
-upon wealth, cruel and profligate, a mob of free citizens,
-otherwise paupers, who live by beggary and the sale of
-their votes, and laborers who are slaves.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page269">[269]</span></p>
-
-<p>On the occasion of the presentation of spectacles,
-among a variety of presents slaves (laborers) are thrown
-into the arena to be scrambled for by the free citizens!
-But men are cheap. In Asia they sell for sixpence
-apiece, and Rome has only to send an army there to get
-them for nothing. To this class, to these slaves, however,
-the Roman people are indebted for all the arts which
-make life agreeable. They construct all the great public
-works. They build the splendid roads over which the
-Roman legions follow their generals in triumph home to
-Rome. They make the aqueducts, dig the canals, and
-construct the buildings, public and private, whose remains
-still attest their magnificence&mdash;the Forum, the
-amphitheatres, and the golden house of the Cæsars.
-They build the villas overlooking the Bay of Naples, in
-which the nobles live in riot and wantonness; they cook
-the dinners given in those villas; they make the clothes
-the nobles wear, and the jewels that adorn their persons.
-They cultivate the fields, follow the plough, train and
-trim the vine, and gather in the harvest. They raise the
-corn that is distributed by the nobles among the soldiery,
-and given as a bribe to the diseased and debauched free
-citizens for their votes. They feel deeply the injustice
-of their lot, and, like men, strike for liberty. But the
-Roman legions are set on them like blood-hounds, and
-hundreds of thousands of them are slaughtered and made
-food for birds of prey, and other thousands are thrown
-into the arena to be torn by wild beasts, and still others
-are bestowed as gifts upon the populace at the games.</p>
-
-<p>The contest between the rich and the poor is at an
-end; the rich are millionaires, the poor are beggars. It
-is the story of Dives and Lazarus over again. The rich
-are clothed in purple and fine linen, and fare sumptuously<span class="pagenum" id="Page270">[270]</span>
-every day; the poor are full of sores, and live upon
-the crumbs that fall from the tables of the rich. Rome
-topples to her fall. The Gothic invader is at her gates,
-and there is no army to defend them. The barbarian
-demands a ransom. To obtain it the statues are despoiled
-of their ornaments and precious stones, and the gods of
-gold and silver are melted in the fire. The ransom is
-given, and Alaric retires. But he returns, and this time
-to pillage. The city is sacked; rich and poor, bond and
-free, are whelmed in one common ruin. At last the
-diabolic wish of the infamous Caligula is realized. The
-Roman people have but one neck, and the Goth puts his
-foot upon it. Rome falls, the victim of her own crimes,
-strangled by her own gluttony. Thus ends the first
-period of the world’s manhood&mdash;ends in exhaustion, and
-a syncope which is destined to last a thousand years.</p>
-
-<p>Long before the fall of the republic Rome had become
-the seat of all the world’s learning. In robbing conquered
-countries she not only took their gold and silver,
-a share of their people for slaves, and their works of art,
-but their libraries, their philosophy, and their literature.
-But neither the Greek nor the Roman philosophy contributed
-in the least to a solution of the pressing social
-problems of the time. The wise men of Rome were
-powerless to help either themselves or their fellow-men,
-because their philosophy was false. It was purely speculative;
-it had no body of facts to rest upon.</p>
-
-<p>The Roman educators and philosophers were almost as
-ignorant of physiology as Plato was hundreds of years
-before, hence they were unable to study the mind in the
-sole way in which it is intelligently approachable, namely,
-through its bodily manifestations. In studying the
-mind as an independent entity there could be no general<span class="pagenum" id="Page271">[271]</span>
-rules of investigation. The metaphysical philosopher did
-not study the mind of man; he explored his own mind
-merely&mdash;consulted his own inner consciousness. Hence
-there were, in Rome, as many systems of philosophy,
-more or less clearly defined and distinct, as there were
-philosophers. But they were merely metaphysical speculations,
-dreams, dependent upon purely subjective processes;
-and those processes were in turn dependent upon
-the ever-changing states of mind of each philosopher.</p>
-
-<p>It is obvious that these systems of philosophy could
-exert no influence upon the community at large, for the
-community formed no part of the subject matter of their
-speculations. But they did exert an influence, and a
-very pernicious one, upon the philosophers themselves,
-and indeed upon all the cultured men of Rome; for they
-were thereby made thoroughly selfish, and so rendered incapable
-of forming a just judgment of public affairs. In
-considering the mind apart from the body, the body naturally
-fell into utter contempt. This was the great crime
-of speculative philosophy; for in engendering a feeling
-of contempt for the human body it furnished an excuse
-for slavery. And this contempt logically included manual
-labor, for the only manual laborer was a slave; and
-it also extended to the useful arts, for all those arts were
-the work of slaves. Hence the laborer, being a slave,
-was placed lower in the social scale than the pauper who
-sold his vote for a glass of wine. And thus it came
-about that a factitious right&mdash;the right of suffrage&mdash;was
-more highly esteemed by the public than the cardinal
-virtue of industry, upon which alone the perpetuity of
-the social compact depends.</p>
-
-<p>And, again, the wretched state of public morals may be
-inferred from the fact that the right of suffrage, through<span class="pagenum" id="Page272">[272]</span>
-which the idle, leprous pauper was elevated above the
-industrious laborer and above the useful arts, was notoriously
-the subject of open traffic in the streets of Rome
-on every election day. Thus Roman philosophy landed
-the Roman people in the last ditch, for it led to the deification
-of abstract ideas and to scorn of things. That
-this utter perversion of the truth and wreck of justice
-was the cause of the decline of the Roman Empire there
-is no doubt.</p>
-
-<p>It is equally plain that the noted men of Rome were
-utterly ignorant of the cause of the disorders which afflicted
-the body politic. There is no evidence, either in
-their lives or their works, that they brought to the consideration
-of the great social problems of the time any
-practical philosophy whatever. Suetonius, with a graphic
-pen, portrays the cruelties of the Cæsars, but hints at
-no cause therefor inherent in the social system. Cicero
-forecasts the doom of the republic, but has no remedy
-to propose except that of the elevation of Pompey rather
-than Cæsar. Livy and Tacitus deplore the decay of
-public and private virtue, but are silent on the subject
-of the infamy of slavery and on the shame of degrading
-labor. The moral sentiments of Seneca and Aurelius
-are of the most elevated character, but the fact that they
-ignore slavery, the slave, the laborer, and the useful arts,
-shows either that they never thought upon those fundamental
-social questions, or that their thoughts ran in the
-popular channel; in a word, that their philosophy was
-so shallow as to render them callous to the great crimes
-upon which the Roman State rested.</p>
-
-<p>That the subjective philosophy and the defective educational
-system of the Romans rendered them selfish,
-and hence corrupt, there is abundant evidence. Cicero<span class="pagenum" id="Page273">[273]</span>
-professed the most lofty patriotism, but he was without
-moral courage. It was he who congratulated the public
-men of Rome, after the usurpation of Cæsar, upon the
-privilege of remaining “totally silent!” He regarded
-Pompey as “the greatest man the world had ever produced,”
-but deserted him in his extremity, which was
-equally the extremity of his country. He denounced
-Cæsar as the cause of the culminating misfortunes of
-Rome, but went down upon his knees to him, and rose
-to his feet only to exhaust all the resources of his matchless
-eloquence in fulsome adulation of the destroyer of
-the Republic.</p>
-
-<p>Seneca’s moral precepts are sublime, but his political
-maxims are atrocious. Witness this pretence of an all-embracing
-love for man&mdash;“Whenever thou seest a fellow-creature
-in distress know that thou seest a human
-being.” Contrast with this exalted sentiment of the
-great stoic his political maxim&mdash;“Terror is the safeguard
-of a kingdom”&mdash;and reflect that he lived under
-the reigns of Claudius and Nero. The millions of slaves
-in the Roman dominions were “human beings,” but
-Seneca had no practical regard for them as “fellow-creatures
-in distress.” His beautiful humanitarian sentiment
-was a barren ideality&mdash;it bore no fruit; but his
-brutal political maxim caused him to thrive. Under the
-favor of Claudius he amassed a vast fortune. His
-palace in the city was sumptuously furnished, his country-seats
-were splendidly appointed, and he possessed
-abundance of ready money. “There can be no happiness
-without virtue,” exclaims this prosperous Roman citizen.
-But while he pens this lofty sentiment he is accused of
-avarice, usury, and extortion, charged with complicity in
-the Piso conspiracy, and banished for the crime of adultery.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page274">[274]</span></p>
-
-<p>The debasing influence of the Greek philosophy, upon
-the Roman people, is shown by contrasting the characters
-of the distinguished men who were honored by the
-public at widely separated periods of time. Thus, during
-the period 400-350 B.C., Camillus, noted above all
-his contemporaries for the purity of his public life, was
-uninterruptedly honored with the highest offices in the
-State, and loved and respected by all classes of the community.
-But three hundred years later Cæsar, who involved
-the country in civil war to compass his ambition,
-and in which struggle liberty perished&mdash;he was preferred,
-in all the political struggles preliminary to his assumption
-of supreme power, to Cato, whose patriotism
-was unquestioned, and whose rigid virtue was proverbial
-throughout the Roman Empire. So also of a still
-later period, Agricola and Germanicus were renowned for
-the possession of the highest qualities of true manhood,
-joined to the practice in public life of the most austere
-and self-sacrificing virtue. Both served the State with
-courage, ability, and zeal; but the one, after a brilliant
-career in the West, was forced into retirement, and the
-other, after splendid services in the East, was exiled and
-poisoned.</p>
-
-<p>Previous to the introduction of the Greek philosophy,
-and the Greek education and social habits, the Roman
-people were worthy of their noblest representative&mdash;Camillus.
-At that early period of their history they
-rewarded virtue and punished vice. But during the Empire,
-after the invasion of Greek manners, they were
-unworthy of their best representatives&mdash;Cato, Germanicus,
-and Agricola. To those great and good men they
-preferred Cæsar, Caligula, and Nero: they rewarded vice
-and punished virtue. There is in this circumstance unquestionable<span class="pagenum" id="Page275">[275]</span>
-evidence of a great declension in character.
-But the remarkable fact in regard to this period of Roman
-history is that the declension in character was accompanied
-by a species of great mental growth or power.</p>
-
-<p>During this period a literature was created which has
-ever since been famous, and which still exerts a considerable
-influence upon man. Cæsar’s Commentaries, the
-Orations of Cicero, the Annals of Tacitus, Livy’s History,
-the Odes and Satires of Horace, the Meditations of Aurelius,
-and the Morals of Seneca are in all the world’s
-libraries, and, in the universities, are placed in the hands
-of the most favored youth of all the civilized countries
-of the world, as models of style and exponents of a civilization
-whence all modern civilizations sprung. But
-this literature possessed no saving quality, because in so
-far as it was elevated in morals it did not represent the
-Roman people, not even the authors themselves generally,
-as has been shown. As a matter of fact, during the
-period of the creation of the great literature of Rome,
-Darwin’s law of “reversion” was in active operation.
-There was a “black sheep” in every noble Roman family.
-Bad men appeared, not now and then, at long intervals,
-as in all civilizations, but every day and everywhere;
-and these men were political and social leaders. They
-moulded the policy of the State and set the fashion in
-society. Under their direction the Roman people retrograded
-towards a state of savagery, and savagery is but
-another name for selfishness. Selfishness in its worst
-estate is the essence of human depravity, and to that condition
-the Roman people fell, at the time when their moralists
-were inditing those sublime sentiments which still
-challenge the admiration of all great and good men.</p>
-
-<p>That the Roman people were as dead to the influence<span class="pagenum" id="Page276">[276]</span>
-of high moral sentiments as the Britons were when first
-encountered by Cæsar, shows that they had degenerated
-to a similar condition of savagery, or to a condition
-of absolute selfishness, which is its moral equivalent.
-Given a savage state, two savages and one dinner; the
-savages will fight to the death for the dinner. Given a
-state of civilization absolutely selfish, two contestants and
-one prize; each contestant will exhaust all the resources
-of artifice, duplicity, and falsehood to secure the prize.
-To this deplorable condition the Roman people were reduced
-by subjective educational processes. Selfishness
-causes the individual to seek his own interest in total disregard
-of the interest of others. Hence it tends directly
-to the disintegration of society, since the essence of the
-civil compact is the pledge of each member of the community
-that he will do no injury to his fellows. Selfishness
-violates this pledge; for to gain its end it ruthlessly
-crushes whatever appears in its path.</p>
-
-<p>In Rome selfishness did its complete work. It transformed
-the government from a pure democracy into an
-oligarchy composed of wealthy citizens, who called themselves
-nobles. By this class wealth was made the sole
-standard of social and political distinction, and in its
-presence, and through its influence, the old strife between
-the patricians and the plebeians gave way to a state of
-hostility between the rich and the poor&mdash;always the last
-analysis of social disorder. The contest was distinguished
-by assassinations, embezzlements of the public money,
-the quarrels of rival demagogues, and civil wars, and it
-culminated in Cæsar and the empire.</p>
-
-<p>The nobles, or aristocrats, who wrought the work of
-transformation, were refined and elegant in their manners,
-and accomplished in the tricks of finance, the technicalities<span class="pagenum" id="Page277">[277]</span>
-of the law, and the arts of oratory. They were
-the product of the Roman schools of rhetoric and logic,
-whose subjective methods obscured the truth, promoted
-vanity, and deified selfishness. All the guards of honor
-and rectitude having been swept away by Cæsar, a savage
-contest for supremacy ensued among the aristocrats. The
-prize for which they contended consisted of the spoil of
-the Roman legions and the product of the labor of the
-Roman slaves. This was the Roman patrimony&mdash;the
-price of blood and of the sweat of enforced toil. For
-this prize the Roman aristocrats struggled like savages
-fighting for the one dinner.</p>
-
-<p>It is the old struggle, the struggle witnessed by each,
-in turn, of the nations of antiquity&mdash;the struggle in which
-selfishness vanquishes itself. But this is a struggle of
-giants, is on a grander scale, and is more conspicuous,
-for the historian, pen in hand, records its bloody scenes.
-It is the last act in a great drama, a drama that has lasted
-a thousand years. It is the conclusion of the long struggle
-of a few large-brained, unscrupulous individuals, to
-grasp the fruits of the toil of all men. The conspirators
-are about to fail, as such conspiracies have always failed
-and must always fail, and like Samson in his blind fury
-they will pull down upon their own devoted heads the
-pillars of the temple. The struggle culminates in a hand-to-hand
-conflict for the mastery between the baffled chiefs
-of the conspiracy to enslave mankind&mdash;the supreme effort
-of selfishness&mdash;and it involves the authors and their
-victims in one common disaster. Once more it is proved
-that a false system of education, a system which exalts
-abstract ideas and degrades things, promotes selfishness;
-that selfishness is the equivalent of savagery, and that
-savagery, however refined, wrecks society.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page278">[278]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="chapno">CHAPTER XXIII.</span><br />
-<span class="chapname">EDUCATION AND THE SOCIAL PROBLEM&mdash;HISTORIC.</span><br />
-<span class="chapsubname"><i><span class="gesp2">THE MIDDLE AGES</span>.</i></span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="subjects">The Trinity upon which Civilization Rests: Justice, the Arts, and
-Labor; and these Depend upon Scientific Education. &mdash; Reason of
-the Failure of Theodoric and Charlemagne to Reconstruct the
-Pagan Civilization. &mdash; Contempt of Man. &mdash; Serfdom. &mdash; The Vices of
-the Time: False Philosophy, an Odious Social Caste, and Ignorance. &mdash; The
-Splendid Career of the Moors in Spain, in Contrast. &mdash; Effect
-upon Spain of the Expulsion of the Moors. &mdash; The Repressive
-Force of Authority and the Atrocious Philosophy of Contempt of
-Man. &mdash; The Rule of Italy &mdash; a Menace and a Sneer. &mdash; The work of
-Regeneration. &mdash; The Crusades. &mdash; The Destruction of Feudalism. &mdash; The
-Invention of Printing. &mdash; The Discovery of America. &mdash; Investigation. &mdash; Discoveries
-in Science and Art.</p>
-
-<p>Civilization languishes in an atmosphere of injustice,
-and if the injustice is gross, as slavery, for example, and
-long continued, the State perishes in the social convulsion
-which ensues. Thus perished the nations of antiquity.
-Civilization depends upon the useful arts; in
-them it had its origin, and with them it advances. The
-savage, in his most primitive state, is ignorant of all the
-arts; the most highly civilized man is familiar with, and
-under obligations to, all of them. The useful arts depend
-upon labor. If the laborer is degraded, the useful
-arts decline, as he sinks, in the social scale; if he is
-honored, they advance, as he rises. The trinity upon
-which civilization rests is, therefore, justice, the useful
-arts, and labor; and this trinity of saving forces depends
-in turn upon the scientific education of man. Rome<span class="pagenum" id="Page279">[279]</span>
-held all these things in contempt, and Rome perished.
-Anarchy ensued, and, from a state of governmental chaos,
-the feudal system was evolved. A brief analysis
-of the history of the mediæval period will show that
-education was unscientific, and consequently that justice
-was scorned, the useful arts neglected, and labor
-despised.</p>
-
-<p>Theodoric strove to stem the tide of demoralization
-which succeeded the overthrow of the pagans in Italy.
-He was a semi-barbarian, but a man of genius, and ten
-years of his youth, spent at Constantinople, taught him
-the value of civilization. Under his reign there was
-a restoration of the common industries, work on internal
-improvements was resumed, and there was a revival
-of polite literature and the fine arts. But there was
-no general prosperity because there was no general system
-of education. Polite literature must rest upon a
-basis of general culture, or it is valueless to the country
-in which it flourishes. So of the fine arts; they can exist
-legitimately only as the natural outgrowth and embellishment
-of the useful arts.<a href="#Footnote80" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor80">[80]</a> In the due order of development
-the useful precede the fine arts. Theodoric
-began the reconstruction of the exhausted Roman civilization
-from the top, and his work was a complete failure,<span class="pagenum" id="Page280">[280]</span>
-of course, because it had no foundation. It was like the
-Greek and Roman philosophy, it had no basis of things
-to rest upon. Hence the order evoked from chaos by
-the great Ostrogoth to chaos soon returned.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote80"><a href="#FNanchor80"><span class="label">[80]</span></a>
-“But it is one thing to admit that æsthetic culture is in a high
-degree conducive to human happiness, and another thing to admit
-that it is a fundamental requisite to human happiness. However
-important it may be, it must yield precedence to those kinds of culture
-which bear more directly upon the duties of life. As before
-hinted, literature and the fine arts are made possible by those activities
-which make individual and social life possible; and manifestly
-that which is made possible must be postponed to that which makes
-it possible.”&mdash;“Education,” p. 72. By Herbert Spencer. New York:
-D. Appleton &amp; Co., 1883.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Charlemagne also attempted to reconstruct a worn-out
-civilization through the revival of polite literature and
-the fine arts. He assembled at his court distinguished
-<i>littérateurs</i> from all parts of the world, with the view
-of reviving classical learning. He established a normal
-school called “The Palatine,” whence classically trained
-teachers were sent into the provinces. He constructed
-gorgeous palaces, some of which were ornamented with
-columns and sculptural fragments, the spoil of the earlier
-architectural triumphs of Italy. But he did not found
-schools for the education of the common people. The
-common people were serfs. The theory of Plato still
-prevailed, namely, that the majority is always dull, and
-always wrong; that wisdom and virtue reside in the
-minority. In pursuance of this theory, which happens,
-curiously enough, to inure to the exclusive benefit of its
-inventors and supporters, education was confined to a
-small class. The training of the masses was wholly neglected,
-and they were poor, ignorant, and brutal. The
-state of mediæval society is graphically summarized by a
-modern historian:</p>
-
-<p>“In the castle sits the baron, with his children on his
-lap, and his wife leaning on his shoulder; the troubadour
-sings, and the page and the demoiselle exchange a glance
-of love. The castle is the home of music and chivalry
-and family affection; the convent is the home of religion
-and of art. But the people cower in their wooden
-huts, half starved, half frozen, and wolves sniff at them
-through the chinks in the walls. The convent prays and<span class="pagenum" id="Page281">[281]</span>
-the castle sings; the cottage hungers and groans and
-dies.”<a href="#Footnote81" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor81">[81]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote81"><a href="#FNanchor81"><span class="label">[81]</span></a>
-“The Martyrdom of Man.” By Winwood Reade. New York:
-Charles P. Somerby, 1876.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Enterprise was the slave of superstition and ignorance.
-Some monks in Germany desired to erect a corn-mill,
-but a neighboring lord objected, declaring that the wind
-belonged to him. The useful arts were unknown and unstudied
-except by the monks, and their practice of them
-was confined chiefly to fashioning utensils for the use
-of the altar. Mankind lay in a state of intellectual and
-moral paralysis. Feudalism emasculated human energy.
-One art only flourished&mdash;the art of war. The pursuit of
-any of the useful arts, beyond that of agriculture, by the
-serfs, was impracticable, since sufficient time could not be
-spared from feudal strife for the proper tillage of the
-soil. The vassal was always subject to summary call to
-arms. If in the spring the noble wished to fight, the
-fields remained unplanted; if he wished to fight in the
-fall, the harvest remained ungathered. The serf, therefore,
-led a precarious life. If he escaped death in battle,
-he was still quite likely to die of starvation. In the fertile
-plains of Lombardy, in the first half of the thirteenth
-century, there were five famines!</p>
-
-<p>Nothing happens without due cause. The misfortunes
-suffered by the people of Europe during the Middle
-Ages did not fall upon them from the clouds. The
-moral darkness which veiled the face of justice, and the
-intellectual stupor which prevented scientific and art
-researches, are not inexplicable mysteries. The vices,
-the cruelties, the poverty, and the pitiable superstitions
-of that time were the product of a false philosophy,<span class="pagenum" id="Page282">[282]</span>
-an odious social caste, and a state of general
-ignorance.</p>
-
-<p>It happens that for hundreds of years of this period
-of wretchedness and crime there was in the heart of
-Europe an industrious, cultured, prosperous, and happy
-people. Their religion forbade the taking of usurious
-interest under terrible moral penalties; it also forbade
-“all distinctions of caste,” and enjoined full social equality.
-They were the friends of education. “To every
-mosque was attached a public school, in which the children
-of the poor were taught to read and write.” They
-established libraries in their chief cities, and were the
-patrons of the sciences and of the useful arts in all their
-forms. In a word, to the general prevalence of superstition
-and ignorance in Europe the Moors in Spain constituted
-a glowing exception.</p>
-
-<p>Wherever the Saracen went he carried science and art.
-He honored labor, and genius and learning followed in
-his footsteps. Taught by learned Jews, he studied the
-works of the ancient philosophers, and preserved and extended
-their knowledge of astronomy, chemistry, algebra,
-and geography. Cordova was the abode of wealth,
-learning, refinement, and the arts. Its mosques and palaces
-were models of architectural splendor, and its industries
-employed 200,000 families. Seville contained 16,000
-silk-looms, and employed 130,000 weavers. The banks
-of the Guadalquivir were thickly studded with those
-gems of free labor, manufacturing villages. The dyeing
-of silk and wool fabrics was carried to great perfection,
-and the Moorish metal-workers were the most expert
-of the time. The Saracen invented cotton paper, introduced
-into Spain cotton and leather manufactures, and
-promoted the cultivation of sugar-cane, rice, and the mulberry.<span class="pagenum" id="Page283">[283]</span>
-Nor did he neglect agriculture in any of its
-branches; he created a new era in husbandry. His kingdom
-in Spain was the richest and most prosperous in the
-Western world; indeed, its prosperity was in striking
-contrast with the poverty and misery of the peoples by
-whom it was surrounded. Under the third caliph its
-revenue reached £6,000,000 sterling, a sum, as Gibbon
-remarks, which in the tenth century probably surpassed
-the united revenues of all the Christian monarchs. But
-these industrious, cultured people were the descendants
-of invaders, and the Spaniards, under the influence of a
-blind and unreasoning impulse of religious and patriotic
-zeal, drove them from the soil they had literally made to
-“blossom like the rose,” and themselves relapsed into a
-state of indolence, ignorance, and poverty.</p>
-
-<p>From the effects of the persecution of a race of artificers,
-and the proscription of the useful arts, Spain has
-never recovered. She has since always been, and is to-day,
-a striking exemplification of the verity of the proposition
-that stagnation in the useful arts is the death of
-civilization. In the last half of the seventeenth century
-the people of Madrid were threatened with starvation.
-To avert the impending calamity the adjacent country
-was scoured by the military, and the inhabitants compelled
-to yield supplies. There was danger that the
-Royal family would go hungry to bed. The tax-gatherer
-sold houses and furniture, and the inhabitants were
-forced to fly; the fields were left uncultivated, and multitudes
-died from want and exposure. During the seventeenth
-century Madrid lost half its population; the
-looms of Seville were silenced; the woollen manufactures
-of Toledo were transferred by the exiled Moriscoes
-to Tunis; Castile, Segovia, and Burgos lost their manufactures,<span class="pagenum" id="Page284">[284]</span>
-and their inhabitants were reduced to poverty
-and despair.<a href="#Footnote82" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor82">[82]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote82"><a href="#FNanchor82"><span class="label">[82]</span></a>
-“The Intellectual Development of Europe,” Vol. II., Chap. II.
-By John William Draper, M.D., LL.D. New York: Harper &amp;
-Brothers; “History of Civilization in England,” Vol. II., Chap. I.
-By Henry Thomas Buckle. New York: D. Appleton &amp; Co., 1864.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Two leading causes contributed to reduce the people
-of Europe during the Middle Ages to a state of moral
-obliquity, intellectual torpor, and physical incapacity&mdash;the
-repressive force of authority and the atrocious philosophy
-of contempt of man formulated by Machiavelli.
-The one forbade scientific investigation, the other strangled
-the spirit of invention in the grip of enforced ignorance.
-Authority chilled courage, and contempt withered
-hope. Italy governed the world, and her rule consisted
-of a menace and a sneer. Under this <i>régime</i> of cruelty
-and cynicism man shrunk into a state of moral cowardice
-and intellectual lethargy.</p>
-
-<p>The political maxims which bear the name of Machiavelli
-were not invented by him. When he formulated
-them, in 1513, they had been in force in Italy a thousand
-years. These maxims explain the fact of the existence
-of a period of the world’s history known as “the Dark
-Ages.” The chief of them divides the human race into
-three classes, the members of the first of which understand
-things by their own natural powers; the second
-when they are explained to them; the third not at all.
-The third class embraces a vast majority of men; the
-second only a small number; the first a very small number.
-The first class is to rule both the other classes, the
-second by craft and duplicity, the third by authority,
-and, that failing, by force. Other maxims assume the
-despicable character of all men, and justify falsehood,<span class="pagenum" id="Page285">[285]</span>
-duplicity, cruelty, and murder, in the ruling class. A
-single proposition shows the infamy of the whole system,
-namely, “There are three ways of deciding any contest&mdash;by
-fraud, by force, or by law, and a wise man will
-make the most suitable choice.”<a href="#Footnote83" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor83">[83]</a> These are maxims not
-of civilization but of barbarism. They involve a state
-of slavery, and where slavery exists the useful arts decline,
-and ultimately perish. And so it was in the Middle
-Ages.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote83"><a href="#FNanchor83"><span class="label">[83]</span></a>
-“The Prince,” Chap. XVIII. By Niccolo Machiavelli.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Several great events led to the emancipation of the
-people of Europe from the joint reign of authority and
-contempt. The learning of the Jews and Saracens&mdash;their
-knowledge of the arts and sciences&mdash;gradually
-spread, and occupied the minds of cloistered students,
-giving to them an intellectual impulse. The Crusades,
-pitiful and prolific of horrors as they were, shed a great
-light upon Europe. They brought the men of the West
-face to face with a practical progressive civilization&mdash;a
-civilization that “filled the earth with prodigies of human
-skill.” The Crusaders were told that they would
-be led against hordes of barbarians. What astonishment
-must have seized them when they stood under the walls
-of Constantinople and beheld its splendors! Nor was
-their surprise less, doubtless, in the character of the foe
-they encountered. They had expected to meet with
-treachery and cruelty; they found chivalry, courtesy,
-and high culture.<a href="#Footnote84" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor84">[84]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote84"><a href="#FNanchor84"><span class="label">[84]</span></a>
-“The Intellectual Development of Europe,” Vol. II., pp. 135,
-136. By John William Draper, M.D., LL.D. New York: Harper
-&amp; Brothers.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>These surprises and contrasts profoundly impressed
-the Crusaders, and they returned to Europe relieved of<span class="pagenum" id="Page286">[286]</span>
-many illusions, and notably of the fallacy that the wealth
-of Eastern princes was destined to supply the waste of
-their own squandered estates. They returned, too, to
-find a new civilization in process of development. Two
-hundred years of comparative freedom from the repressive
-force of feudalism changed the face of the country
-and the character of its people. During the absence of
-the nobles, in the Holy Land, a middle class sprung into
-existence, possessing the qualities which always distinguish
-that class&mdash;thrift and prudence. The mortgaged
-estates of the Crusaders had fallen partly into their
-hands, and partly into the hands of the Crown. Towns
-had sprung up, and a commercial class and a manufacturing
-class had been formed. The artisan became a factor
-in the social problem. He offered his wares to the
-lords and ladies of the castles, and they bought themselves
-poor. As Emerson says, “The banker with his
-seven per cent. drove the earl out of his castle.” In the
-eleventh century nobility was above price, in the thirteenth
-it was for sale, and soon afterwards it was offered
-as a gift.</p>
-
-<p>The invention of printing, the art preservative of all
-arts, removed the seal from the lips of learning. The
-desire to conceal is no match for the desire to print.
-Thenceforth, through the medium of types, the voice of
-genius was destined to reach to the ends of the earth;
-and, more important still, every discovery in science, and
-every invention in art, became the sure heritage of future
-ages.</p>
-
-<p>The discovery of America was the crowning act of
-man’s emancipation. In sweeping away the last vestige
-of the theory on which patristic geography was based,
-Columbus freed mankind. In the cry of “land ho!<span class="pagenum" id="Page287">[287]</span>”
-with which he greeted the new continent, he sounded
-the death-knell of intellectual slavery. His was the last
-act in a series of acts which struck off the shackles of
-thought, and let in upon the long night of the Middle
-Ages the clear light of day. Leonardo da Vinci took up
-the interrupted work of Archimedes, and the science of
-mechanics made rapid progress. At last it was correctly
-observed that “experiment is the only interpreter of nature,”
-and the development of natural philosophy began.
-Bruno was still to be burned, and Galileo imprisoned.
-But the persecutors of those great men were no longer
-moved by mere blind zeal. They believed and trembled,
-and in seeking to drown the truth in the blood of the
-votaries of science, they rendered it more conspicuous.
-By the light of the flames which consumed the body of
-the too daring philosopher a thousand scientists studied
-the stars, the earth, and the air.</p>
-
-<p>The invention of printing paralyzed authority, and the
-discovery of America gave wings to hope. A few manuscripts
-could be locked in vaults or burned, but millions
-of books must inevitably, ultimately, find their way to
-the people. Books were, therefore, the sure promise of
-universal culture&mdash;the precursor of the common school.
-The discovery of another continent startled the people of
-Europe from the deep sleep of a thousand years, and sent
-a fresh current of blood surging through their veins. It
-seemed like a sort of new creation, and appealed powerfully
-to the imagination. And it is always the imagination
-that “blazes” the path to glorious achievements. It
-is through the imagination that men are moved to “crave
-after the unseen,” and through the imagination that the
-human mind becomes big with “bold and lofty conceptions.”
-A new world having been discovered by one man,<span class="pagenum" id="Page288">[288]</span>
-it was natural that all men should be put upon inquiry.
-Hence the era of investigation, the resulting discoveries
-of science, and their innumerable applications, through
-the useful arts, to the fast multiplying needs of man.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page289">[289]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="chapno">CHAPTER XXIV.</span><br />
-<span class="chapname">EDUCATION AND THE SOCIAL PROBLEM&mdash;HISTORIC.</span><br />
-<span class="chapsubname"><i>EUROPE.</i></span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="subjects">The Standing Army a Legacy of Evil from the Middle Ages. &mdash; It is
-the Controlling Feature of the European Situation. &mdash; Its Collateral
-Evils: Wars and Debts. &mdash; The Debts of Europe Represent a Series
-of Colossal Crimes against the People; with the Armies and Navies
-they Absorb the Bulk of the Annual Revenue. &mdash; The People
-Fleeing from them. &mdash; They Threaten Bankruptcy; they Prevent
-Education. &mdash; Germany, the best-educated Nation in Europe, losing
-most by Emigration. &mdash; Her People will not Endure the Standing
-Army. &mdash; The Folly of the European International Policy of Hate. &mdash; It
-is Possible for Europe to Restore to Productive Employments
-3,000,000 of men, to place at the Disposal of her Educators
-$700,000,000, instead of $70,000,000 per annum, and to pay her
-National Debts in Fifty-four Years, simply by the Disbandment
-of her Armies and Navies. &mdash; The Armament of Europe Stands in
-the Way of Universal Education and of Universal Industrial Prosperity. &mdash; Standing
-Armies the Last Analysis of Selfishness; they
-are Coeval with the Revival during the Middle Ages of the Greco-Roman
-Subjective Methods of Education. &mdash; They must go out
-when the New Education comes in.</p>
-
-<p>The mediæval period conferred upon man two great
-blessings&mdash;a new continent and the art of printing. It
-also left a legacy of evil. With the partition of Europe
-into great States the modern age began, and it began
-with this inheritance of evil from the Middle Ages&mdash;the
-standing army.</p>
-
-<p>The feudal lords wrecked their estates and sacrificed
-their lives during the Crusades, and a middle class arose
-and united with the kings in the government of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page290">[290]</span>
-State. But this alliance was of short duration; it soon
-gave way to an alliance which proved to be enduring&mdash;an
-alliance between the aristocracy and the kings.</p>
-
-<p>By the ruin of feudalism thousands of serfs were set
-free. Trained to arms, it was easy to make soldiers of
-them. They were accordingly converted into mercenary
-troops&mdash;mustered into the service of the new alliance
-as guards of the modern State. Thus the standing
-armies of the “great powers” originated. This legacy
-of evil has so increased in magnitude that it is, to-day,
-the dominant feature of European public economy, and
-the portentous fact of the social problem.</p>
-
-<p>The standing armies of Europe number two million five
-hundred thousand men, and their naval auxiliaries consist
-of three thousand vessels, thirty thousand guns, and
-two hundred thousand men. This is the mammoth evil
-bequeathed to Europe by the Middle Ages, and out of
-it many collateral evils have sprung, as wars, debts, and
-exorbitant tax levies.<a href="#Endnote25" class="fnanchor" id="EndAnchor25">[E25]</a></p>
-
-<p>Thirty years ago the national debts of the governments
-of Europe had risen to $9,000,000,000. Since that
-time they have almost trebled! The cause of this vast increase
-is easy to find. It consists chiefly of four great wars,
-namely, the Crimean war of 1854-56, the Franco-Sardinian
-war against Austria in 1859, the German-Italian
-war of 1866, and the Franco-Prussian war of 1870-72.
-These wars were waged to maintain what is termed the
-balance of power; they involved no principle affecting
-the rights of man. Whatever their issue, no gain could
-hence accrue to the people of Europe. And this is the
-nature of most of the wars in which the standing armies
-of Europe have been employed since their organization.
-But the European budget shows that they are the overshadowing<span class="pagenum" id="Page291">[291]</span>
-feature of the European governmental systems.</p>
-
-<p>The annual revenue of the States of Europe is about
-$1,725,000,000. Of this sum $700,000,000 is devoted to
-the support of the standing armies and navies, and as
-much more is required to meet the interest charge on
-the debts created in the prosecution of wars waged to
-maintain the balance of power! Thus, of the aggregate
-of European revenue, the sum of $1,400,000,000 is devoted
-to the purely supposititious theory that the subjects
-of the great powers are inflamed with an intense
-desire to cut one another’s throats, while the small sum
-of $325,000,000 is left for the support of the civil service,
-comprising all the strictly legitimate objects of government,
-and including education!</p>
-
-<p>The national debts of Europe represent a series of
-colossal crimes against the people. They were incurred
-in the prosecution of unnecessary wars, and for the support
-of unnecessary standing armies. With relation to
-these debts the people are divided into two classes&mdash;one
-class owns them and the other class pays interest on
-them. This relationship comprehends future generations
-in perpetuity. Every child born in Europe inherits
-either an estate in these debts or an obligation to contribute
-towards the payment of the interest upon them.
-Thus the fruits of a great crime have been transmuted
-into a vested right in one class of people, and into a
-vested wrong in another class.<a href="#Footnote85" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor85">[85]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote85"><a href="#FNanchor85"><span class="label">[85]</span></a>
-“For instance, I have seven thousand pounds in what we call
-the Funds or Founded things; but I am not comfortable about the
-founding of them. All that I can see of them is a square bit of
-paper, with some ugly printing on it, and all that I know of them is
-that this bit of paper gives me the right to tax you every year, and
-make you pay me two hundred pounds out of your wages; which is
-very pleasant for me; but how long will you be pleased to do so?
-Suppose it should occur to you, any summer’s day, that you had better
-not? Where would my seven thousand pounds be? In fact,
-where are they now? We call ourselves a rich people; but you see
-this seven thousand pounds of mine has no real existence&mdash;it only
-means that you, the workers, are poorer by two hundred pounds a
-year than you would be if I hadn’t got it. And this is surely a very
-odd kind of money for a country to boast of.”&mdash;“Fors Clavigera,”
-Part I., p. 67. By John Ruskin, LL.D. New York: John Wiley
-&amp; Sons, 1880.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page292">[292]</span></p>
-
-<p>If the European standing armies and navies had not
-been raised and kept up, and if the revenue devoted to
-their support had been expended for schools, there would
-not now be an uneducated person in Europe. If these
-standing armies and navies were now disbanded, and the
-revenue at present expended for their support diverted
-to the support of schools, and so applied continuously
-for half a century, there would not be, at the end of that
-period, an illiterate person in Europe.</p>
-
-<p>Under existing conditions the debts of the European
-nations cannot be paid. But vast as the sum of them is,
-their payment is not only possible, but practicable in a
-very short time. Disband the standing armies and navies,
-and continue the present rate of taxation, and there would
-be an annual surplus revenue of $700,000,000. Apply
-this sum, together with the surplus of the interest appropriation,
-accruing through the resulting yearly decrease
-of the interest charge, to the liquidation of these debts,
-and they would be extinguished in about twenty years.<a href="#Endnote26" class="fnanchor" id="EndAnchor26">[E26]</a>
-But if the period during which provision is made for
-the extinguishment of these debts be extended to fifty-four
-years, and, meantime, the present rate of taxation be
-maintained, there would be released and rendered available<span class="pagenum" id="Page293">[293]</span>
-for educational purposes, annually, the sum of
-$600,000,000.</p>
-
-<p>What is the purpose, it may be inquired, of these calculations?
-Their purpose is to show what the armies
-and navies of Europe cost, and what they stand in the
-way of. They cost so much that not a dollar of the
-national debts of Europe can be paid while they continue
-to exist. They cost so much that the people who
-are taxed to support them are fleeing from them as from
-a scourge. They cost so much that the decline of the
-nations which support them has already begun, and this
-decline can be arrested only by their disbandment.</p>
-
-<p>That the nations of Europe are declining is shown by
-the statistics of emigration. The foundation of national
-prosperity is manual labor. There must be a solid basis
-of industrial growth for the superstructure of elegance,
-refinement, luxury, and culture. Manual labor is as essential
-to triumphs in literature, music, and the fine arts
-as the foundations of the Brooklyn Bridge, buried in the
-earth, are to the beautiful arch which spans the great
-river. And in the strife for supremacy between the
-nations of the world the maintenance of these triumphs
-depends, also, upon manual labor.<a href="#Footnote86" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor86">[86]</a>
-The real flower of a<span class="pagenum" id="Page294">[294]</span>
-population is, therefore, its labor class. All other classes
-depend upon it, and all national triumphs spring from it.
-Hence a drain upon the labor class of a nation is a drain
-upon its most vital resource. The nation that suffers
-such a drain continuously is in its decadence. It loses
-some of its vigor, some of its productive power, and the
-loss is not supplied. True, the poor emigrant takes with
-him no part of the splendors of the country he leaves,
-but his brawny arm and skilled hand have contributed to
-the support of national pomp and social elegance, and as
-he steps aboard the steamer he withdraws that support
-forever.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote86"><a href="#FNanchor86"><span class="label">[86]</span></a>
-“Now, therefore, see briefly what it all comes to. First, you
-spend eighty millions of money in fireworks [war], doing no end of
-damage in letting them off.</p>
-
-<p>“Then you borrow money to pay the firework-maker’s bill, from
-any gain-loving persons who have got it.</p>
-
-<p>“And then, dressing your bailiff’s men in new red coats and cocked
-hats, you send them drumming and trumpeting into the fields, to
-take the peasants by the throat, and make them pay the interest on
-what you have borrowed, and the expense of the cocked hats besides.</p>
-
-<p>“That is ‘financiering,’ my friends, as the mob of the money-makers
-understand it. And they understand it well. For that is
-what it always comes to, finally&mdash;taking the peasant by the throat.
-He <i>must</i> pay&mdash;for he only <i>can</i>. Food can only be got out of the
-ground, and all these devices of soldiership, and law, and arithmetic,
-are but ways of getting at last down to him, the furrow-driver, and
-snatching the roots from him as he digs.”&mdash;“Fors Clavigera,” Part
-II., p. 27. By John Ruskin, LL.D. New York: John Wiley &amp;
-Sons, 1882.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Napoleon the Infamous plundered the conquered capitals
-of Europe to beautify and enrich the art treasuries
-of Paris. The art treasures of Europe are destined to
-cross the ocean, in the track of the column of emigration,
-if the flower of her labor class continues to flee from her
-standing armies and navies, as the statues of Rome
-followed the army of the modern Cæsar. For where
-the flower of the world’s labor class gathers, there
-wealth most abounds. Labor, not gold and silver, is
-the source of wealth, hence it is to the laborer that art
-triumphs are due, and this is the order of their development.
-The laborer provides for immediate, pressing
-wants; he is prudent, and accumulates a surplus; he
-hungers for education; he develops a love of the beautiful;<span class="pagenum" id="Page295">[295]</span>
-he seeks to dignify his life and adorn his home; he
-patronizes art; he draws to himself the art treasures of
-the world.</p>
-
-<p>The standing armies and navies of Europe have cost
-the European laborer the sacrifice of all these pleasing
-and noble aspirations.<a href="#Endnote27" class="fnanchor" id="EndAnchor27">[E27]</a> Beyond the point of providing
-for “immediate pressing wants” he has not been able
-to pass. His surplus goes to the tax-gatherer, to feed
-and clothe the army and the navy. His desire for education,
-his love of the beautiful, his hope of a dignified
-life, and of a home adorned by art&mdash;these all are
-dreams, illusions, which vanish into thin air in the presence
-of the substantial fact of the annual European budget&mdash;for
-the support of the standing armies and navies
-$700,000,000!</p>
-
-<p>In the way of the payment of the national debts of
-Europe her standing armies and navies rear themselves
-like an impassable wall. Against any general educational
-system they have hitherto constituted an insurmountable
-barrier; and in the future, as in the past, their maintenance
-dooms the masses to illiteracy. They stand in
-the way especially of the incorporation, in the curriculum
-of the public schools, of the manual element in education,
-because it is the most expensive, as it is the most
-important part of instruction.</p>
-
-<p>Germany affords an admirable example of the power
-of education, even though defective in character, and of
-the disgust with which standing armies inspire an intelligent
-people. The Germans are the best-educated people
-in Europe. The educational system of Germany was
-established by Prussia as a politico-economic measure
-after the humiliation of the German States by Bonaparte.
-Said Frederick William, “Though territory, power,<span class="pagenum" id="Page296">[296]</span>
-and prestige be lost, they can be regained by acquiring
-intellectual and moral power.” The outcome
-of the Franco-Prussian war of 1870 verified the truth
-of this prediction. Her freedom from debt enabled
-Prussia to inaugurate and carry forward a comprehensive
-educational system, which in turn enabled her not
-only to vanquish her ancient enemy, but to make France
-pay the cost of her own humiliation. Thus at a single
-stroke Prussia avenged the defeats suffered at the hands
-of the first Napoleon, and permanently weakened France
-by compelling her vastly to increase her national debt.</p>
-
-<p>The alacrity with which the French people subscribed
-for the new bonds was much remarked upon, at the time,
-as evincing both financial soundness and patriotism. But
-the really grave feature of the situation&mdash;the vast augmentation
-of the public burdens of France&mdash;was scarcely
-mentioned, and was, perhaps, philosophically considered
-only by that astute statesman, Prince Bismarck. The
-war with Germany cost France $2,000,000,000, and compelled
-an enormous increase of taxation. The debt statement
-for 1877 was $4,635,000,000&mdash;the expenditures
-$533,000,000; and of this latter sum $373,000,000 were
-absorbed by the army, the navy, and the national debt!</p>
-
-<p>The significant feature of the European situation is
-the freedom from debt of Germany. It is by virtue of
-this fact that she holds the first place in Europe. Her
-rate of taxation is as low as that of little Switzerland.
-All the other Great Powers are hampered by great debts.
-Spain is bankrupt; she does not pay the interest on her
-debt. Austria increases her debt every year; she is practically
-bankrupt. It is only a question of time, if standing
-armies and navies continue to be maintained and
-wars to occur, when all the debtor nations will be reduced<span class="pagenum" id="Page297">[297]</span>
-to bankruptcy.<a href="#Footnote87" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor87">[87]</a> The nation sinks as the column
-of debt rises. France cannot double her debt again and
-make her people pay interest on it. England draws
-from her citizens a larger <i>per capita</i> revenue than any
-other nation of Europe, except France, and she has
-nearly touched the limit of their capacity to pay taxes.
-A sudden and considerable increase of her debt would
-strain the Government, and might shatter it.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote87"><a href="#FNanchor87"><span class="label">[87]</span></a>
-“The progress of the enormous debts which at present oppress,
-and will in the long run probably ruin, all the great Nations of Europe,
-has been pretty uniform.”&mdash;“Wealth of Nations,” Vol. III., p.
-392. By Adam Smith, LL.D., F.R.S. Edinburgh, 1819.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Thus, the more searching the analysis of the European
-situation, the more clear does the exceptional
-strength of Germany appear. But out of her abundant
-strength a weakness has been evolved. The system of
-education that rendered the Germans so powerful against
-France as soldiers, has made them thoughtful citizens.
-It has revolutionized the public sentiment of Germany
-on the subject of government. In the place of passion
-it has substituted reason. The Prussian “subject” for
-whom the king thought, has become a German citizen
-who thinks for himself, and one of his earliest reflections
-is that, in modern civilization, a standing army is a
-solecism. The ignorant Prussian hated the French because
-hatred of them was enjoined upon him as the correlative
-of the duty of blind devotion to his king. But
-the educated German knows that the sole motive of the
-continuance of the standing army is the maintenance of
-the balance of power, which is merely a tacit agreement
-between the European rulers, by divine right, to
-perpetuate their own lease of power. Hence the “intellectual<span class="pagenum" id="Page298">[298]</span>
-and moral power” conferred upon the German
-people, by education, reacts upon Germany in the form
-of a drain of the flower of her population by emigration.</p>
-
-<p>The citizenship of Germany is more valuable, in an
-economic sense, than that of any other country of Europe&mdash;more
-valuable because Germany is the most powerful
-nation of the European family of States; more
-valuable because of them all she alone is free from debt;
-more valuable by reason of her more moderate scale of
-taxation. But she still furnishes the heaviest contingent
-to the column of emigration steadily moving towards
-the United States. In a word, the most valuable citizenship
-in Europe&mdash;that of Germany&mdash;is least regarded
-and most freely surrendered. Why? Because the Germans
-are the best-educated people in Europe. Poor as
-the German primary school system is, it is universal, and
-it has destroyed what it was founded chiefly to promote
-and perpetuate, namely, reverence for, and loyalty to,
-government by Divine right. German intelligence revolts
-from taxation for the support of a standing army.
-It revolts from the theory and policy of hate upon which
-standing armies are based. It comprehends perfectly
-that the standing army is a menace to the freedom
-of the citizen, at home, rather than a defence against
-pretended danger from abroad. It scorns, as absurd,
-the threadbare assumption that Englishmen, Frenchmen,
-Italians, Russians, and Germans desire to fly at one another’s
-throats, and that they can be restrained only by
-a cordon of bayonets.<a href="#Endnote28" class="fnanchor" id="EndAnchor28">[E28]</a> It realizes that the perpetuation
-of the era of hate, through the standing army, retards
-the mental and physical progress of the human race,
-which would be greatly promoted by the free intermingling<span class="pagenum" id="Page299">[299]</span>
-of the various nationalities of Europe.<a href="#Footnote88" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor88">[88]</a> That it is
-from the standing army that the emigrant flees is shown
-by the records of the military department of the German
-government.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote88"><a href="#FNanchor88"><span class="label">[88]</span></a>
-The multiplicity of languages is due to the policy of international
-hate, inaugurated by the nations of Europe to promote the
-selfish purposes of rulers. Barbarism is diversity; civilization is
-unity. The human race is one, provided it is civilized, and it should
-have but one language. Language is a tool, and time consumed in
-acquiring skill in the use of more than one tool designed for the
-same end, is wasted. The standing armies of Europe obstruct the
-way to unity of language. The time will come when all civilized
-peoples will speak one tongue, probably the English. Then language
-will cease to be a mere vain accomplishment, and become what it
-ought always to have been, the simple means of familiarizing the
-mind with things, and of the communication of knowledge.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>In the year 1883 twenty-nine thousand men were arrested
-for attempting to emigrate from Germany to avoid
-the required military service, and more than a hundred
-thousand others, from whom service was due, refused,
-both to report for duty, and to furnish the required excuses
-for the failure to enroll themselves.</p>
-
-<p>The law of Germany requires every male citizen, capable
-of bearing arms, to serve three years in the standing
-army&mdash;to devote three of the best years of his life to the
-preservation of the balance of power in Europe! In addition,
-he must serve four years in the reserve, and five
-years in the landwehr. And this service is regarded as
-a debt due the government. Every male child born in
-Germany contracts this debt, in contemplation of law, in
-the act of drawing his first breath, and nothing but death
-releases him from the obligation. Having been taught
-in the emperor’s schools to love the emperor, when he
-reaches the military age, a musket is placed in his hands,<span class="pagenum" id="Page300">[300]</span>
-and he is taught to shoot the emperor’s enemies. If he
-refuses to enter the army he is fined; if he refuses to
-pay the fine he is imprisoned.</p>
-
-<p>The German emperor attributes the decline in the
-military organization to the negligence of his military
-staff, but its true cause is the German educational system.
-The steady augmentation of the rolls of military
-delinquents is the measure of the growth of German intelligence.
-The ease with which Germany conquered
-France flattered the vanity of the educated German, but
-it did not prevent him from emigrating to America. To
-the cultured mind the army that wins the contest in
-which no principle is involved is as odious as the army
-that loses. To the cultured mind all standing armies are
-odious, because they are an embodied assumption of the
-barbarism of man, and a denial of the efficacy of reason.
-The great stream of German emigration attests the superiority
-of German culture. The educated German declines
-to learn the art of shooting the emperor’s enemies,
-but he knows that Germany is, in fact, governed by its
-standing army&mdash;by muskets&mdash;and he quits the country.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the chief power of Germany becomes her chief
-weakness. A system of education which has made her
-the first nation in Europe produces wide-spread discontent
-among her people, because she is governed by obsolete
-ideas. Nor can the loss in virile force suffered by
-Germany, through emigration, be made good by a counter
-movement of immigrants from the less favored countries
-of Europe. The economic condition of Germany&mdash;her
-freedom from debt and her comparatively low rate of
-taxation&mdash;invite such a movement. But the European
-policy of international hate, created and perpetuated by
-standing armies, forbids Germany to recoup her losses of<span class="pagenum" id="Page301">[301]</span>
-men to America, through corresponding gains of men
-from the overtaxed populations of neighboring countries.
-The grinning skeletons of a hundred battles in
-which the rival nationalities of Europe have been pitted
-against one another, rise to challenge the social intermingling
-of peoples separated for centuries by the arts
-of diplomacy, traditions of blood and flames, and the serried
-ranks of standing armies.</p>
-
-<p>The disposition of Germans to emigrate irritates the
-emperor and his prime-minister. The loss of numbers
-might be borne, for notwithstanding the steady outward
-flow of emigrants there is a slight increase of population
-in Germany. But it is the quality of the exodus
-that annoys the emperor and his chancellor. The German
-emigrants are strong men and women&mdash;strong mentally
-and physically. All the weaklings, all the paupers,
-all the imbeciles, the aged, and the infirm remain, only
-the young and vigorous go. Those who go have been
-taught at the expense of the State to love the emperor
-and hate his enemies, but they do neither. The German
-system of education, from the point of view of rulers by
-divine right, is, hence, a conspicuous failure. It makes
-better men but poorer subjects. The more thoroughly
-the man is educated the more valuable he is to himself
-and to the community, but the less valuable to his king.
-His growth in intelligence is the measure of his decline
-in reverence for rulers by divine right, and the standing
-armies by which they are alone supported. This is the
-cause of German emigration, and its effect is to weaken
-the German Empire. Germany is not so strong as she
-was when her armies swept over France; she declines in
-power each year, through the loss of men&mdash;the sole support
-of a State.<a href="#Endnote29" class="fnanchor" id="EndAnchor29">[E29]</a>
-They flee from her standing army to<span class="pagenum" id="Page302">[302]</span>
-the United States, a republic with only a handful of soldiers.</p>
-
-<p>The system of education established to increase the
-power of Prussia in Europe has accomplished its purpose.
-But it has done much more&mdash;something never
-thought of by its founders. It has produced a wide-spread
-feeling of intelligent discontent; and discontent
-is an inarticulate cry for reform. The cultured German
-scorns the standing army, refuses to serve in it, protests
-against its longer existence, and demands more and better
-education for his children. His protest is unheeded,
-and he quits the country. But the demand for higher
-education is not, cannot be, disregarded. Intelligence is
-contagious; it infects with a thirst for knowledge all
-with whom it comes in contact. Education is the arch-revolutionist
-whose onward march is irresistible. Soon
-a riper culture will make the German Protestants more
-courageous and more imperative in their demands, and
-they will remain in the country to enforce them. Education
-made Germany the first military power in Europe;
-but education could not have been put to a more ignoble
-service. The desire of intelligent Germans is that Germany
-shall become the first industrial power in Europe,
-and this desire can be realized by the disbandment of her
-standing army.</p>
-
-<p>This review of the situation in Europe shows that it is
-practicable for her to restore, at once, to productive employments
-three millions of men&mdash;the flower of her
-population&mdash;now not only idle, but a public charge. It
-shows, also, that it is practicable for Europe to place, at
-once, at the disposal of her educators $700,000,000 per
-annum instead of $70,000,000 per annum, as at present.
-The corollary of these two propositions is a third, namely,<span class="pagenum" id="Page303">[303]</span>
-that it is practicable for Europe to extinguish her
-national debts in fifty-four years. It follows that the
-regular armies of Europe alone stand in the way of
-universal education, and of universal industrial prosperity.</p>
-
-<p>Standing armies everywhere within the lines of advanced
-civilization must soon disappear before the march
-of education.<a href="#Footnote89" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor89">[89]</a> Social questions cannot much longer be
-settled by emigration. The world’s virgin soil is being
-rapidly appropriated. When the surface of the whole
-earth shall have become occupied, barbarisms of every
-nature will be intolerable. Man must then be highly
-civilized, and the only highly civilizing influence is education.
-The age of force is passing away; the age of
-science and art&mdash;the age of industrial development&mdash;has
-begun, and standing armies are as abnormal in Europe<span class="pagenum" id="Page304">[304]</span>
-now as slavery was in the United States twenty-five years
-ago.<a href="#Footnote90" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor90">[90]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote89"><a href="#FNanchor89"><span class="label">[89]</span></a>
-“This nation to-day is in profound peace with the world; but
-in my judgment it has before it a great duty, which will not only
-make that profound peace permanent, but shall set such an example
-as will absolutely abolish war on this continent, and by a great example
-and a lofty moral precedent shall ultimately abolish it in other
-continents. I am justified in saying that every one of the seventeen
-independent Powers of North and South America is not only willing
-but ready&mdash;is not only ready but eager&mdash;to enter into a solemn compact
-in a congress that may be called in the name of peace, to agree
-that if, unhappily, differences shall arise&mdash;as differences will arise
-between men and nations&mdash;they shall be settled upon the peaceful
-and Christian basis of arbitration.</p>
-
-<p>“And, as I have often said before, I am glad to repeat, in this great
-centre of civilization and power, that in my judgment no national
-spectacle, no international spectacle, no continental spectacle, could
-be more grand than that the republics of the Western world should
-meet together and solemnly agree that neither the soil of North nor
-that of South America shall be hereafter stained by brothers’ blood.”&mdash;Extract
-from the Speech of Hon. James G. Blaine at the Delmonico
-Dinner, October 29, 1884.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote90"><a href="#FNanchor90"><span class="label">[90]</span></a>
-“It is only slowly, and after having been long in contact with
-society, that man becomes more indulgent towards others and more
-severe towards himself.”&mdash;“Suicide: an Essay on Comparative Moral
-Statistics,” p. 226. By Henry Morselli, M.D. New York: D. Appleton
-&amp; Co., 1882.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Standing armies are the instruments of tyranny; they
-are the last analysis of selfishness, the incarnation of depravity;
-for they do not reason&mdash;they strike. It is
-worthy of note that the standing armies of Europe are
-coeval with the revival of learning, and the revival of
-learning was a revival of the Greco-Roman subjective
-educational methods. The logical effect of those methods
-was the promotion of selfishness, and the standing
-armies conserved the selfish designs of the rulers of the
-newly-formed States. It is hence not a mere coincidence
-that standing armies and the revival of learning through
-subjective processes of thought are of common origin.
-The Machiavellian philosophy of cruelty, duplicity, and
-contempt of man sprung logically from egoism, and as
-logically led to the formation of standing armies&mdash;bodies
-of armed men, trained, under compulsion, to kill, burn,
-and destroy.</p>
-
-<p>The synonyms of the standing army are selfishness
-and its vile issue, feudalism, serfdom, slavery, ignorance,
-and contempt of man. These conditions are passing
-away, and the standing army, the worst, as it is the most
-costly relic of savagery, must pass away with them. It
-cannot withstand the advance of the new education,
-whose mission is peace, whose quest is the truth, whose
-premise is a fact, whose conclusion is a thing of use and
-beauty, and whose goal is justice.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page305">[305]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="footnote" />
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Endnote25"><span class="label"><a href="#EndAnchor25">[E25]</a></span>
-War is not merely a relic of barbarism; it is barbarism triumphant.
-It is evidence of the presence, active and malignant, of all the
-bad passions of man. Nor are idle armies less infamous than armies
-in deadly conflict. Carlyle well says that the one monster in the
-world is the idle man; and the standing army is a vast horde of idle
-men quartered on the community. The standing armies of Europe,
-on parade, in barracks, and in forts, are as unmixed an evil as the
-legions of Rome were in Gaul, in Greece, or before Carthage. It is
-a shame to civilization that arbitration did not long ago take the
-place of the coarse brutality of war. The <i>duello</i> between Nations
-is not less absurd, and it is a thousand-fold more wicked, than the
-<i>duello</i> between individuals. It is savagery pure and simple, the
-child of selfishness, and not less inconsistent with a high state of civilization
-than slavery.</p>
-
-<p id="Endnote26"><span class="label"><a href="#EndAnchor26">[E26]</a></span>
-Of the British funding system when it was in its infancy, as early
-as 1748, Lord Bolingbroke said: “It is a method by which one part
-of the nation is pawned to the other, with hardly any hope left of
-ever being redeemed.”</p>
-
-<p>See, also, in the <i>North American Review</i> for September, 1886, an
-exhaustive article on the impolicy of national debt perpetuation, by
-N. P. Hill, in which it is alleged that “great interests are at work to
-prevent the payment of the national debt of the United States.”</p>
-
-<p id="Endnote27"><span class="label"><a href="#EndAnchor27">[E27]</a></span>
-In his recent great work&mdash;“The Wonderful Century”&mdash;Mr. Alfred
-Russel Wallace, on the authority of “The Statesman’s Year
-Book” for 1897, states that the standing armies and navies of Europe
-number three millions of men; cost 180,000,000 pounds sterling per
-annum, and withdraw from useful employments ten millions of men
-engaged in repairing the waste of war.&mdash;“The Wonderful Century,”
-pp. 335-336. New York: Dodd, Mead &amp; Co., 1898.</p>
-
-<p id="Endnote28"><span class="label"><a href="#EndAnchor28">[E28]</a></span>
-“I know now that my fellowship with others cannot be shut off by
-a frontier, or by a government decree which decides that I belong to
-some particular political organization. I know now that all men are
-everywhere brothers and equals. When I think now of all the evil I
-have done, that I have endured, and that I have seen about me, arising
-from national enmities, I see clearly that it is all due to that gross
-imposture called patriotism&mdash;love for one’s native land.” ...
-“I understand now that true welfare is possible for me only on condition
-that I recognize my fellowship with the whole world.”&mdash;“My
-Religion,” p. 256. By Count Leo Tolstoi. New York: Thomas Y.
-Crowell &amp; Co.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page306">[306]</span></p>
-
-<p id="Endnote29"><span class="label"><a href="#EndAnchor29">[E29]</a></span>
-There is another cause of the decline of Germany: War degrades;
-it is a reversion toward barbarism. Not only is the soldier brutalized
-by martial exercises and scenes of carnage, but the moral and mental
-fibre of the people of a nation which indulges in war is rendered
-coarser. The remark of M. Renan on the subject is profoundly
-philosophical:</p>
-
-<p>“The man who has passed years in the carriage of arms after the
-German fashion is dead to all delicate work whether of the hand or
-brain.”&mdash;“Recollections of my Youth,” p. 159. By Ernest Renan.
-New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1883.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page307">[307]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="chapno">CHAPTER XXV.</span><br />
-<span class="chapname">EDUCATION AND THE SOCIAL PROBLEM&mdash;HISTORIC.</span><br />
-<span class="chapsubname"><i>AMERICA.</i></span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="subjects">An Old Civilization in a New Country. &mdash; Old Methods in a New System
-of Schools. &mdash; Sordid Views of Education. &mdash; The highest Aim
-Money-getting. &mdash; Herbert Spencer on the English Schools. &mdash; Same
-Defects in the American Schools. &mdash; Maxims of Selfishness. &mdash; The
-Cultivation of Avarice. &mdash; Political Incongruities. &mdash; Negroes escaping
-from Slavery called Fugitives from Justice. &mdash; The Results of
-Subjective Educational Processes. &mdash; Climatic Influences alone saved
-America from becoming a Slave Empire. &mdash; Illiteracy. &mdash; Abnormal
-Growth of Cities. &mdash; Failure of Justice. &mdash; Defects of Education shown
-in Reckless and Corrupt Legislation. &mdash; Waste of an Empire of Public
-Land. &mdash; Henry D. Lloyd’s History of Congressional Land Grants. &mdash; The
-Growth and Power of Corporations. &mdash; The Origin of large
-Fortunes, Speculations. &mdash; Old Social Forces producing old Social
-Evils. &mdash; Still America is the Hope of the World. &mdash; The Right of
-Suffrage in the United States justifies the Sentiment of Patriotism. &mdash; Let
-Suffrage be made Intelligent and Virtuous, and all Social
-Evils will yield to it; and all the Wealth of the Country is subject
-to the Draft of the Ballot for Education. &mdash; The Hope of Social Reform
-depends upon a complete Educational Revolution.</p>
-
-<p>The discovery of America startled Europe. It was a
-great blow to prevailing dogmatisms. It upset many
-learned (?) theories. It swept away patristic geography.
-It completed the figure of the earth, rendering it susceptible
-of intelligent study. The advantages of such
-investigation accrued to man, to a degree, before the social
-and civil life of America began. In the century and
-a quarter which elapsed between the landing of Columbus
-and that of the Pilgrims, on these shores, considerable<span class="pagenum" id="Page308">[308]</span>
-social and political progress was made in Europe,
-and especially in England. From the turbulent scenes of
-the reigns of James I. and Charles I., which eventuated
-in the Cromwellian rebellion and victory of the Commons,
-the Pilgrims escaped. They not only bore with
-them, to the new continent, the impress of the long
-struggle for liberty waged by the English people, but
-they were, in a certain sense, the product of the progress
-of all the ages. But they constituted only a small part
-of the column of immigrants. Detachments of the Cavaliers
-came also, and Germans, Frenchmen, and Irishmen
-came with them.</p>
-
-<p>The discovery of America was a sort of new creation,<a href="#Footnote91" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor91">[91]</a>
-but its almost virgin soil was destined to become the
-home of an old civilization. From all the nationalities of
-the Old World the New World was to be peopled. The
-ambitious, the restless, the adventurous, the enterprising,
-and the hardy of every tongue, were gradually to assemble
-in the new field of action. The manner in which
-they treated the natives of the new country, both north
-and south, showed their origin and their training. Their
-determination to conquer and hold the new territory was
-but thinly disguised. Their descent upon the Atlantic
-coast was not the exact counterpart of that of Cæsar upon
-the coast of Britain, but it was the same in spirit; and
-the active trade in slaves which soon sprang up, and
-which was thereafter vigorously prosecuted for two hundred
-years, showed the taint of savagery&mdash;the impress of
-Roman cruelty, rapacity, and injustice.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote91"><a href="#FNanchor91"><span class="label">[91]</span></a>
-“The discovery of America is the greatest event which has ever
-taken place in this world of ours, one half of which had hitherto
-been unknown to the other. All that until now appeared extraordinary
-seems to disappear before this sort of new creation.”&mdash;Voltaire.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page309">[309]</span></p>
-
-<p>It is evident that in its most important feature&mdash;the
-formation of character&mdash;education had made little if any
-progress at the time of the organization of civil society
-in America. The democratic idea was not new. It found
-expression in every form during the struggles of Greece
-and Rome, and the revival of learning had led to the
-discussion of governmental questions in the light of history.
-Besides, the reformation of Luther had opened
-the way to the last analysis of dissent in the person of
-Roger Williams, who asserted the right of absolute freedom
-of thought and speech. Of the religious right of
-private judgment the political right of an equal voice in
-public affairs is the corollary. Hence, that the Puritans
-should establish the town organizations so justly lauded
-by M. Tocqueville was quite logical.<a href="#Footnote92" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor92">[92]</a> Nor was the
-public-school system less logical; all citizens being members
-of the government, all children must be prepared
-for the duties of citizenship. But unfortunately the old
-system of education was put into the new schools, as the
-old civilizations had been transferred to the new country.
-The system of education under which the kings and ruling
-classes of England and of the continent of Europe
-were trained to selfishness, cruelty, and injustice, was
-heedlessly adopted in the schools of New England, which
-became the models of schools throughout the country.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote92"><a href="#FNanchor92"><span class="label">[92]</span></a>
-“Town meetings are to liberty what primary schools are to
-science; they bring it within the people’s reach, they teach men how
-to use and how to enjoy it.... The township institutions of New
-England form a complete and regular whole; they are old; they have
-the support of the laws, and the still stronger support of the manners
-of the community, over which they exercise a prodigious influence.”&mdash;“Democracy
-in America,” Vol. I., p. 76. By Alexis De Tocqueville.
-Boston: John Allyn, 1876.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page310">[310]</span></p>
-
-<p>The popular idea in regard to the schools was (1) that
-they fitted their pupils for the duties of citizenship, or,
-more properly, for the art of governing, and (2) that
-they taught the art of getting on in the world; and getting
-on in the world was interpreted to mean getting and
-keeping money. That this sordid view of education was
-generally held in the rural districts of New England is
-shown by the fact that any culture beyond a limited and
-imperfect knowledge of reading, writing, and arithmetic
-was regarded as superfluous. Not even the rudiments of
-either the sciences or the arts were imparted, and yet it
-is only through a knowledge of the sciences and the arts
-that progress in civilization is made. The early settlers
-of New England devised a new system of schools, but
-they imported into them an old system of education, the
-Greco-Roman subjective system, introduced into England
-with the revival of learning. Of this system Mr.
-Herbert Spencer says, “Had there been no teaching but
-such as is given in our public schools, England would
-now be what it was in feudal times.” And he adds:</p>
-
-<p>“The vital knowledge, that by which we have grown
-as a nation to what we are, and which now underlies our
-whole existence, is a knowledge that has got itself taught in
-nooks and corners, while the ordained agencies for teaching
-have been mumbling little else but dead formulas.”<a href="#Footnote93" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor93">[93]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote93"><a href="#FNanchor93"><span class="label">[93]</span></a>
-“That which our school courses leave almost entirely out, we
-thus find to be that which most nearly concerns the business of life.
-All our industries would cease were it not for that information which
-men begin to acquire as they best may after their education is said
-to be finished.”&mdash;“Education,” p. 54. By Herbert Spencer. New
-York: D. Appleton &amp; Co., 1883.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>But these are merely negative effects of subjective
-methods of education. The positive evil effect of them<span class="pagenum" id="Page311">[311]</span>
-is selfishness, the sum of all villanies. Under the new
-system of schools&mdash;schools for all&mdash;the old philosophy of
-life flourished. Under the name of prudence, selfishness
-was deified. The maxim of Herbert&mdash;“Help thyself and
-God will help thee”&mdash;was reproduced by Franklin in a
-hundred forms. The child was taught, not that “The
-half is more than the whole,” but that “In the race of
-life the devil takes the hindmost.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus greed and avarice were cultivated to the sacrifice
-of honesty. Calling selfishness prudence led to confounding
-right and wrong&mdash;freedom and slavery. Hence
-we have the Declaration of Independence containing the
-lofty sentiment, “All men are created equal,” and the
-Constitution throwing the shield of its protection over
-human bondage. A false system of education led to
-political incongruities of the grossest character, as, in the
-preamble to the Constitution, the declaration of its high
-purpose&mdash;to establish justice and secure the blessings of
-liberty&mdash;and in the body of the instrument a guaranty
-of the slave-trade for twenty-five years, and a compact
-that it should be the duty of the national army to shoot
-rebellious slaves, and the duty of free citizens, of the free
-States, to hunt down escaping slaves and surrender them
-to their owners in the slave States.</p>
-
-<p>The failure of the prevailing system of education to
-promote rectitude and right thinking was so complete
-that negroes escaping from slavery were called “fugitives
-from justice!” Its failure was so complete that the very
-streets of Boston in which patriots had struggled to the
-death in the cause of liberty now echoed the groans of
-the slave, and resounded with the clank of his chains.
-Its failure was so complete that in Faneuil Hall, the
-cradle of liberty, slavery was justified. Its failure was<span class="pagenum" id="Page312">[312]</span>
-so complete that a senator, for daring to characterize
-slavery as barbaric, was stricken down and beaten with a
-club, until he lay helpless in a pool of blood on the floor
-of the legislative hall of the great, free republic.</p>
-
-<p>These are characteristics of the early civilizations, the
-civilizations of Greece and Rome. They are the product
-of selfishness, and they show that subjective educational
-processes&mdash;processes which proceed from the abstract to
-the concrete, thus violating the natural law of investigation&mdash;produce
-the same effects in the nineteenth century
-as they did in the first century.</p>
-
-<p>Ethically, slavery was tried only by the test of self-interest.
-In the North, as in Europe, it was not profitable,
-and it faded away; in the South, in the cotton and
-rice fields, it was thought to be profitable, and it spread
-and flourished. That the opposition to slavery, at the
-North, did not grow out of education in the schools, is
-evident, because the sons of the Southern ruling class
-were educated in the high schools and colleges of the
-North; but they became, notwithstanding such training,
-almost to a man, slavery propagandists. The heinousness
-of slavery was perceptible only to those who had no
-personal interest in its perpetuation. It is plain that the
-effect of the education of the schools upon the youth of
-the country was to make them callous to the common
-impressions of right and wrong; in a word, to render
-them thoroughly selfish.</p>
-
-<p>It is difficult to resist the conclusion that, if slavery had
-been as profitable at the North as it was at the South, it
-would have been perpetuated, and would have poisoned
-the infant civilization of America as that of Rome was
-vitiated and destroyed. Assuming the truth of this
-hypothesis, climate conditions, not education, saved this<span class="pagenum" id="Page313">[313]</span>
-continent from the scourge of slavery. To the fact that
-a large part of the territory of the United States is situated
-in the temperate zone we owe the elimination of
-slavery from the social problem.</p>
-
-<p>Existing social conditions in the United States do not
-differ materially from those of the chief countries of
-Europe. We have only a small standing army; but
-the sole great question which divided the people during
-the first hundred years of our political existence&mdash;slavery&mdash;had
-to be settled as such questions have been settled
-from the beginning of history, as savages settle all
-questions&mdash;by violence, by an appeal to the logic of
-brute force.</p>
-
-<p>Our government differs from the governments of Europe
-both in principle and form, but the governmental
-influence is only one of many influences which unite to
-mould social habits. The democratic principle, adopted
-as the foundation of our political institutions, has not
-served to counteract the tendency to the formation of
-social class distinctions. The people lack the wisdom, or
-the virtue, or both, to insist upon the first prerequisite to
-even an approximation to social equality, namely, universal
-education. Of our population of fifty millions, five
-millions of persons, ten years old and over, are unable to
-read, and six millions are unable to write. In the last
-census decade we made the paltry gain of three per cent,
-in intelligence, but in 1880 we had six hundred thousand
-more illiterates than in 1870. Nearly two millions of
-the legal voters in the United States are illiterates. Every
-sixth man who offers his ballot at the polls is unable
-to write his name. Under such circumstances class distinctions
-of the most pronounced type are inevitable.</p>
-
-<p>The tendency to the concentration of populations in<span class="pagenum" id="Page314">[314]</span>
-cities in the United States is not less decided than it is
-in the countries of Europe. In 1820 the population of
-our cities constituted less than one-twentieth of the
-whole population of the country, but in 1880 it constituted
-more than one-fifth of the whole.</p>
-
-<p>Cities have always been the chief source of societary
-disturbances. In the worst days of the Roman Empire
-tranquillity and prosperity reigned in many of the distant
-provinces. While at the city of Rome “every kind
-of vice paraded itself with revolting cynicism,” in the
-provinces “there was a middle class in which good-nature,
-conjugal fidelity, probity, and the domestic virtues
-were generally practised.”</p>
-
-<p>Of one of the youngest large cities in the United
-States the late superintendent of a Training School for
-Waifs says, “Never in the history of this city has infant
-wretchedness stalked forth in such multiplied and such
-humiliating forms. It is hard to suppress the conviction
-that even Pagan Rome, in the corrupt age of Augustus,
-did not witness a more rapid and frightful declension in
-morals than that which can to-day be found in the city
-of Chicago.”</p>
-
-<p>The most graphic description ever given of a waif came
-from the lips of John Morrissey.<a href="#Footnote94" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor94">[94]</a> He said of himself,</p>
-
-<p>“I was, at the age of seven years, thrown a waif upon
-the streets of Dublin. I slept in alleys and under sidewalks.
-I disputed with other waifs the possession of a
-crust. We fought like young savages for the garbage
-that fell from the basket of the scullion. The strongest<span class="pagenum" id="Page315">[315]</span>
-won and satisfied the cravings of hunger; the weakest
-starved. I had no idea that anything was to be gained
-by other means than brute force. Hence my code of
-moral and political ethics&mdash;the strongest man is the best
-man. I became a pugilist.”</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote94"><a href="#FNanchor94"><span class="label">[94]</span></a>
-A noted pugilist, proprietor of gambling-houses in New York
-City and at Saratoga Springs, and a politician who represented a
-New York City district in Congress.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The substantial citizen who passes the street waif with
-contempt should reflect that ten or a dozen years later
-he will meet him, a full-grown man, at the polls, still
-clothed in rags, perhaps, but his peer in all the rights of
-citizenship. It was the unfortunates of the dark alleys
-and noxious streets of New York&mdash;the waifs, the savages
-of the John Morrissey type&mdash;that made Tweedism<a href="#Footnote95" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor95">[95]</a> possible,
-that made robbery in the name of law possible, that
-made taxation the equivalent of confiscation in that city.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote95"><a href="#FNanchor95"><span class="label">[95]</span></a>
-For an account of the career of William Marcy Tweed, see “The
-American Cyclopædia,” Vol. XVI, p. 85. New York: D. Appleton
-&amp; Co., 1881.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Mr. Charles Dickens, in “Bleak House,” in the course
-of a pen-picture of a wretched quarter of London, under
-the name of “Tom-all-alones,” shows how ignorance,
-poverty, and vice react upon society. He says, “There
-is not an atom of Tom’s slime, not a cubic inch of any
-pestilential gas in which he lives, not one obscenity or
-degradation about him, not an ignorance, not a wickedness,
-not a brutality of his committing but shall work its
-retribution through every order of society, up to the
-proudest of the proud, and to the highest of the high.”</p>
-
-<p>The presence of the poison is already shown in the
-failure of justice. These waifs, grown to man’s estate,
-but destitute of education and moral principle, wielding
-the power of the ballot, desecrate the jury-room with
-their vile presence, and tug at the skirts of sheriffs,<span class="pagenum" id="Page316">[316]</span>
-prosecuting officers, and judges, and notorious criminals
-escape punishment! So grievous has the abuse become
-that Judge Lynch has opened his summary, awful court
-in almost every State of the Union.</p>
-
-<p>To say that this class menaces the government with
-destruction is to state it mildly. In every case of the
-failure of justice the government is in part subverted;
-for when crime goes unpunished, the law, violated in
-that particular instance, becomes a dead letter; and when
-lynching shall have become the rule, and the execution
-of the law the exception, government by law will have
-ceased to exist&mdash;it will have given way to government
-by force. Then the army will be invoked to shoot down
-the men for whose education the law failed to provide,
-in every city of the land, as it was invoked in Pittsburg
-in 1877.</p>
-
-<p>What are we doing to avert this danger which threatens
-our institutions? With the exception of here and
-there a weak effort on the part of a few humanitarians,
-as in the training school referred to, we are leaving hundreds
-of thousands of waifs to develop into savages, and,
-what is worse, savages with the power to tax civilized
-people! We have a system of public schools into which
-such children as choose may enter to a certain limit, remain
-as long as they please, and depart when they please.
-But there are thousands of children in every large city
-who could not enter if they would, and who are not compelled
-to receive the civilizing benefits of education, and
-who hence join the army of waifs and study the art of
-savagery; and, as has been remarked, they go to swell
-the ranks of a populace as depraved as that which in
-Rome cried for “bread and circuses!” and sacked the
-city while it was in flames.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page317">[317]</span></p>
-
-<p>The defective, not to say vicious character of our system
-of education, is shown by the reckless course of our
-legislators on the subject of the disposition of the public
-domain. William the Conqueror, conceiving that any
-social revolution is incomplete until it disturbs the proprietorship
-of land, confiscated the entire landed estates
-of England, and conferred what remained of the proprietary,
-after reservations in the Crown, upon his retainers,
-the Normans. Eight hundred years have elapsed since
-the issue of William’s land-tenure edict, but it still remains
-the controlling feature of the British Constitution.
-It has compelled the deportation of millions of Englishmen;
-it has reduced the masses of Scotland to a grinding
-poverty, and converted their country into hunting-grounds
-for the amusement of the landlord class; it has
-depopulated Ireland, and exasperated almost to madness
-the remnant of her people.</p>
-
-<p>But we have failed to profit by the example of England.
-Our legislators have been blind to the lessons of
-history, or they have been corrupt. They have been ignorant
-of political and social laws, or they have been
-wanting in rectitude. In the period of thirty years,
-ended in 1880, Congress gave to railway corporations
-over 240,000 square miles, or 154,067,553 acres, of the
-best public lands in the States and Territories of the
-Union&mdash;an area double that of the whole kingdom of
-Great Britain and Ireland, including the adjacent isles.</p>
-
-<p>On the 17th of March, 1883, the <i>Chicago Daily Tribune</i>
-published a history of these land grants, compiled
-by Mr. Henry D. Lloyd, under the following summary:</p>
-
-<p>“<i>The story of the dissipation of our great national
-inheritance&mdash;thrown away by Congress, wasted by the
-Land Office, stolen by thieves. A land monopoly worse<span class="pagenum" id="Page318">[318]</span>
-than that of England, begotten in America. English
-monopoly is in families; American monopoly is in
-corporations; and corporations are the only aristocrats
-that have no souls, and never die.</i>”</p>
-
-<p>The following passages from the opening paragraphs
-of Mr. Lloyd’s history are reproduced here by permission
-of the author:</p>
-
-<p>“The public are profoundly ignorant of the facts about
-the public land. They know, in a dim way, that it is
-passing out of their hands, and that huge monopolies are
-being created out of the lands which they meant should
-be the inheritance of the settler. The land set apart for
-homes for families has been made into empires for corporations.
-In the story recited below, every element of
-human fault and fraud will be seen to have been at work
-in the spoliation of the land of the people. Congress
-has been extravagant and has failed to act when part
-of the results of its extravagance might have been saved.
-The Land Office has been inadequately equipped by Congress,
-and has on its own account been careless, dishonest,
-and traitorous to the interests of the people. It has been
-wax in the hands of the great railroad corporations, but
-double-edged steel in the side of the poor settler. It has
-overruled decisions of the Supreme Court and nullified
-acts of Congress to betray its trust and enrich the railroads,
-but has refused even to exercise its discretion when
-the home of a settler, held by a righteous title, was to be
-confiscated at the demand of corporate greed. The niggardliness
-of Congress makes clerks, on salaries of twelve
-hundred to eighteen hundred dollars a year, untrained in
-the law, knowing nothing of the rules of evidence, judges
-of the law and facts in cases involving millions of dollars
-and thousands of homes. There is no worse chapter in<span class="pagenum" id="Page319">[319]</span>
-the history of government than the facts we have to give
-showing the deliberate and heartless evictions of the European
-immigrant and the American settler in order to
-give their farms to covetous corporations. The land-grant
-roads have had millions of acres granted them by
-the Land Office in excess of the grants by Congress.
-The whole story is summed up in the recent remark of
-one who had thoroughly investigated the subject&mdash;that
-the history of the management of the land-grant roads
-by the Land Office is a history of the management of the
-Land Office by the railroads.</p>
-
-<p>“No chapter in this story will be found of more sombre
-interest than the statements made as to the Supreme
-Court by the Senate Committee on Public Lands, in a report
-submitted by Senator Van Wyck recommending a
-bill to compel the railroads to pay taxes on their lands.
-Its decisions as to the titles of the railroads and the settlers
-to the lands, like those of a weathercock, have pointed
-the way the corporation blew its breath.”</p>
-
-<p>The summary of Mr. Lloyd’s paper by the editor of
-the <i>Tribune</i>, as a preface to its publication, and the foregoing
-characterization of the acts of Congress, of the
-Land Office, and of the Supreme Court, by Mr. Lloyd,
-are fully justified by the alleged facts marshalled in the
-body of the sketch; and these allegations, after a year
-and a half of public scrutiny, stand unchallenged.</p>
-
-<p>It would be difficult to conceive of a more reckless
-series of legislative acts than those through which the
-public domain in the United States has been squandered;
-and they are rendered either ignorant or vicious by the
-fact that in the vast empire surrendered almost totally
-without consideration, each legislator, in common with
-the people by and for whom he was deputed to act, had<span class="pagenum" id="Page320">[320]</span>
-a personal interest. Through this series of acts of Congress
-the public domain was rudely wrested from its
-rightful owners, the people; the abnormal growth of
-corporate power unduly promoted, and a tendency to
-the concentration, in a few hands, of the landed estates of
-the country fostered.</p>
-
-<p>The social and economic effects of this land legislation
-must be very great and far-reaching. Of the effects of
-the concentration of landed estates in a few hands we
-need not speak; they are sufficiently plain in England,
-Scotland, and Ireland.<a href="#Footnote96" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor96">[96]</a> But great corporations are a creation
-of yesterday; they are the product of steam. The
-railway, the factory, the mine of iron or coal, the furnace,
-the foundery, and the forge&mdash;these vast interests,
-chartered and endowed with certain muniments of sovereignty,
-are, as property, almost as indestructible as
-landed estates protected by the law of primogeniture.
-Men are trained from generation to generation to the
-care and conduct of them, and hence they are far less
-liable to waste and dispersion than private estates, which,<span class="pagenum" id="Page321">[321]</span>
-in transmission, may be subjected to disastrous changes
-of management. Being also enterprises of a semi-public
-character, the public is bound, as well as their owners, to
-see to their preservation.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote96"><a href="#FNanchor96"><span class="label">[96]</span></a>
-“The more essential and important consideration is this&mdash;that
-whenever the few rapidly accumulate excessive wealth, the many
-must, necessarily, become comparatively poorer.... In every case
-in which we have traced out the efficient causes of the present depression
-we have found it to originate in customs, laws, or modes of
-action which are ethically unsound, if not positively immoral. Wars
-and excessive war armaments, loans to despots or for war purposes,
-the accumulation of vast wealth by individuals, excessive speculation,
-adulteration of manufactured goods, and, lastly, <i>our bad land
-system</i>, with its insecurity of tenure, excessive rents, confiscation of
-tenants’ property, its common enclosures, evictions, and depopulation
-of the rural districts&mdash;all come under this category.”&mdash;“Bad Times,”
-pp. 65, 117. By Alfred Russel Wallace, LL.D. London: Macmillan
-&amp; Co., 1885.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>It is to a small number of the greatest of these great
-companies that Congress has given an empire of land
-in the West&mdash;an area double that owned by the lords
-of England, Scotland, and Ireland. In the railway proprietor
-of the United States the two great elements of
-power are united&mdash;steam and land. It needs no argument
-to show that only the nation can control the proprietor
-of both the land and the railway&mdash;the sole means
-of reaching a market for the products of the land. The
-appellative&mdash;kingship&mdash;to the railway proprietor is not a
-misnomer. He is a real potentate, both by virtue of the
-multitudes of men over whom he rules autocratically,
-and of the magnitude of the revenue he wields. Presidents
-come and go, but he remains. Legislators investigate
-him and report upon him, but they are met by a
-flat denial of the authority of either State or nation to interfere
-with his “vested rights.” He claims the right of
-himself and associates to control, absolutely, the internal
-commerce of the country; and this claim involves the
-pretence that they may confiscate merchandise seeking a
-market by charging, for carriage, the full value of the
-thing transported.</p>
-
-<p>The railway and the factory, the two great products of
-steam, are new factors in the social problem, and to properly
-control them will require new wisdom; and the new
-wisdom is not to be drawn from old educational fountains.</p>
-
-<p>State legislation has been as vicious as that of the nation.
-The people of nearly every State in the Union<span class="pagenum" id="Page322">[322]</span>
-have been made the victims of great frauds and gross ignorance
-at the hands of their representatives. In nearly
-every State syndicates have been formed with the design
-of securing valuable franchises without consideration;
-and to effectuate such designs bribery has been freely and
-successfully resorted to in a vast number of cases. But
-rarely has the guilty agent of the guilty syndicate, or
-the perjured, purchased legislator been brought to justice,
-notwithstanding the fact that exposure has often
-followed the iniquity.</p>
-
-<p>Evidence of the essentially European character of the
-American civilization is afforded by the prevalence of
-speculation.<a href="#Endnote30" class="fnanchor" id="EndAnchor30">[E30]</a> In Wall Street, New York, on the Board
-of Trade, Chicago, and on the exchanges of all large cities
-speculation rages. The real transactions of those business
-marts are very small, indeed, as compared with the
-transactions of a speculative character. On the New
-York Cotton Exchange the speculative trades in “futures”
-are thirty times more than the cotton sales. On
-the Chicago Board of Trade the speculative trades in
-“futures” are fifteen times more than the sales of grain
-and provisions, and so of the exchanges of all other large
-cities. To support these speculative operations fresh
-money is required to be constantly poured into the pool,
-and it is drawn from every class in the community.
-Very little of the “fresh money” is ever returned. Most
-of it remains in the hands of the pool managers, of those
-whose profession it is to manipulate the markets. Thus
-the fever of speculation extends from centre to circumference
-of the country, stimulating bad passions, creating
-distaste for labor, relieving the countryman of his surplus,
-and increasing the already overgrown fortune of the city
-operator. A writer on current topics, discussing this subject,<span class="pagenum" id="Page323">[323]</span>
-says, “Put your finger on one of our great fortunes,
-and nine times out of ten you will feel underneath it the
-cold heart of some one who has mined on the San Francisco
-Stock Exchange, or packed pork on the Chicago
-Board of Trade, or built railroads in Wall Street.”<a href="#Footnote97" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor97">[97]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote97"><a href="#FNanchor97"><span class="label">[97]</span></a>
-“America does not now suffer from this cause [standing armies],
-but nowhere in the world have colossal fortunes, rabid speculation,
-and great monopolies reached so portentous a magnitude, or exerted
-so pernicious an influence.”&mdash;“Bad Times,” p. 80. By Alfred Russel
-Wallace, LL.D. London: Macmillan &amp; Co,. 1885.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>A sufficient number of the salient features of American
-civilization have been brought under review to show
-that the new continent has not borne new social fruits.
-Under extremely favorable physical conditions&mdash;a country
-of vast resources, a wide range of climates, and a soil
-of great fertility&mdash;we planted old social forces, and old
-social evils are in process of rapid development. We are
-transplanted Europeans, controlled by European mental
-and moral habitudes. And the virile force, evoked by
-the splendid physical opportunities of a vast new country,
-so intensifies the struggle for wealth and power, that
-European social abuses are not only reproduced, but
-sometimes exaggerated in this land of boasted equal
-political rights.</p>
-
-<p>But notwithstanding the fact that social tendencies in
-America seem to be similar to those of Europe, it is upon
-America alone that the eyes of mankind rest with an expression
-of ardent hopefulness. Nor is this hope destitute
-of a basis of rationality. It is in the United States,
-for the first time in all the ages, that a good reason can
-be given for indulging the sentiment of patriotism. Love
-of country here is a due appreciation of the value of the
-right of suffrage. The private soldier who goes forth to<span class="pagenum" id="Page324">[324]</span>
-fight the battles of the United States is a man and citizen,
-and upon his return from the field he may, with the
-ballot, devote to the education of his children a share of
-the estate of the army contractor who amassed a fortune
-while he defended the country. All the property in the
-United States, whether honestly or dishonestly acquired,
-is subject to the order of the ballot of the citizen. It
-may be taken for war purposes, and it may be taken for
-educational purposes. In the universality of the right
-of suffrage lies the power of correcting all social evils.
-It is through the right of suffrage that the wrongs inflicted
-upon a too patient people by corrupt and ignorant
-legislation may be ultimately righted. By the suffrages
-of the people the tax bill is voted; and it is through the
-tax bill that the vast estates of corporations and individuals,
-whether obtained by dishonest practices or not, may
-be made to contribute to the thorough education of all
-the children of the country. And it is through the
-sentiment of patriotism thus inspired that the right of
-universal suffrage in the United States is destined to
-preservation forever.</p>
-
-<p>The late proposition to limit suffrage in the city of
-New York is explainable only on the theory put forth
-in this chapter, that our civilization is the product of
-European ideas&mdash;that we are Europeans in disguise. On
-any other hypothesis it would be amazing. It is even
-now sufficiently startling that the proposition to restrict
-suffrage should precede the proposition to make education
-universal by making it compulsory, and to purge
-it of its glaring defects. Every attempt to restrict the
-right of suffrage in the United States will, however, fail.
-The right of self-government can be taken from the
-American people only by force. The American citizen<span class="pagenum" id="Page325">[325]</span>
-will not vote away his right to vote, as the careless Greek
-sold his freedom, and as the Chinaman sells his life.</p>
-
-<p>That American social abuses do not spring from free
-suffrage is evident, because similar abuses exist in countries
-where the masses have little or no share in the
-government. Social evils are the product of defective
-education. So long as European educational methods
-prevail in this country, so long European social abuses
-will characterize our civilization. Our education is scant
-in quantity and poor in quality; hence the standard of
-the suffrage is lowered by the presence of ignorance and
-depravity. But when the suffrage shall be better informed,
-it will be more honest; and when it shall have
-become more honest and more intelligent, it will have
-gained the power to grapple with social abuses.</p>
-
-<p>Such examination of history as we have been able to
-make fails to disclose any radical change in educational
-methods for three thousand years. The charge of Mr.
-Herbert Spencer against the schools of England, to wit,
-“That which our school courses leave almost entirely out
-we thus find to be that which most nearly concerns the
-business of life”&mdash;this charge applies with almost as
-much force to the schools of the United States as to the
-Greek and Roman schools of rhetoric and logic. Bacon’s
-aphorism&mdash;“Education is the cultivation of a just
-and legitimate familiarity betwixt the mind and things”&mdash;is
-two hundred and fifty years old, but it has as yet
-exerted scarcely an appreciable influence upon the methods
-of our public schools. We still reverse the natural
-order of investigation proceeding from the abstract to the
-concrete, thus lumbering the mind of the student with
-trash which must be removed as a preliminary to the
-first step in the real work of education. We still impart<span class="pagenum" id="Page326">[326]</span>
-a knowledge of words instead of a knowledge of things;
-we still ignore art, notwithstanding the fact that it is
-through art alone that education touches human life.
-We still inculcate contempt of labor, and teach the student
-how to “make his way in the world” by his wits,
-rather than by giving an equivalent for what he shall
-receive; and, worst of all, we continue, through subjective
-processes of thought, to charge the mind with selfishness,
-the essence of depravity.</p>
-
-<p>Meantime, social problems press for a solution, a solution
-here and now. Our social problems cannot be settled
-as those of Europe have been, for two hundred
-years, by emigration. We have no Columbus, and if we
-had such an explorer, there is no new hemisphere for
-him to discover. The lesson of all history is, that selfish
-people cannot dwell together in unity. The struggle to
-secure more than a fair share of the products of the labor
-of all is sure to end in a quarrel; the quarrel ends in a
-revolution, and the revolution, under the glare of flames,
-drowns in blood the records of civilization. But in America
-the man must live with his fellows. As Mr. Henry
-D. Lloyd well says, in “Lords of Industry,” “Our young
-men can no longer go West; they must go up or down.
-Not new land, but new virtue must be the outlet for the
-future. Our halt at the shores of the Pacific is a much
-more serious affair than that which brought our ancestors
-to a pause before the barriers of the Atlantic, and compelled
-them to practise living together for a few hundred
-years. We cannot hereafter, as in the past, recover freedom
-by going to the prairies; we must find it in the
-society of the good.” <a href="#Footnote98" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor98">[98]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote98"><a href="#FNanchor98"><span class="label">[98]</span></a>
-<i>North American Review</i>, June, 1884, p. 552.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page327">[327]</span></p>
-
-<p>If we are to find freedom only in the society of the
-good, we must create such a society&mdash;a society free from
-selfishness; for to the stability of society public spirit is
-essential, and with a pure public spirit selfishness is at
-war. Hence, in a system of education like the prevailing
-one, which promotes selfishness, the germs of social
-disintegration are present, and, from the beginning, the
-end may with absolute certainty be predicted. It follows
-that any hope of social reform is wholly irrational
-that does not spring from the postulate of a complete
-educational revolution.</p>
-
-<hr class="footnote" />
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Endnote30"><span class="label"><a href="#EndAnchor30">[E30]</a></span>
-The speculative habit has so debauched public sentiment in England
-and America that distinguished authors hesitate not to give free
-expression to a feeling of contempt for the ancients because of their
-failure to engage in colossal swindling operations, as witness the
-following:</p>
-
-<p>“The charges of fraud [in the Attic courts], which are many, are
-of the vulgarest and simplest kind, depending upon violence, on false
-swearing, and upon evading judgment by legal devices. There is not
-a single case of any large or complicated swindling, such as is exhibited
-by the genius of modern English and American speculators.
-There is not even such ingenuity as was shown by Verres in his
-government of Sicily to be found among the clever Athenians.”&mdash;“Social
-Life in Greece,” p. 408. By the Rev. J. P. Mahaffy, F.T.C.D.
-London: Macmillan &amp; Co., 1883.</p>
-
-<p id="Endnote31"><span class="label">[E31]</span> “On all hands of us, there is the announcement, audible enough,
-that the Old Empire of Routine has ended; that to say a thing has
-long been, is no reason for its continuing to be. The things which
-have been are fallen into decay, are fallen into incompetence; large
-masses of mankind, in every society of our Europe, are no longer
-capable of living at all by the things which have been. When millions
-of men can no longer by their utmost exertion gain food for
-themselves, and ‘the third man for thirty-six weeks each year is short
-of third-rate potatoes,’ the things which have been must decidedly
-prepare to alter themselves!”&mdash;“Lectures on Heroes,” p. 157. By
-Thomas Carlyle. Chapman &amp; Hall’s People’s Edition.</p>
-
-<p>“Change the sources of a river, and you will change it throughout
-its whole course; change the education of a people, and you will
-alter their character and their manners:”&mdash;“Studies of Nature,” Vol.
-II., p. 575. By Bernardin St. Pierre. London: Henry G. Bohn, 1846.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page328">[328]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="chapno">CHAPTER XXVI.</span><br />
-<span class="chapname">THE MANUAL ELEMENT IN EDUCATION IN 1884.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="subjects">The Kindergarten and the Manual Training School one in Principle. &mdash; Russia
-solved the Problem of Tool Instruction by Laboratory
-Processes. &mdash; The Initiatory Step by M. Victor Della-Vos, Director
-of the Imperial Technical School of Moscow in 1868. &mdash; Statement
-of Director Della-Vos as to the Origin, Progress, and Results of the
-New System of Training. &mdash; Its Introduction into all the Technical
-Schools of Russia. &mdash; Dr. John D. Runkle, President of the Massachusetts
-Institute of Technology, recommends the Russian System
-in 1876, and it is adopted. &mdash; Statement of Dr. Runkle as to how
-he was led to the adoption of the Russian System. &mdash; Dr. Woodward,
-of Washington University, St. Louis, Mo., establishes the second
-School in this Country. &mdash; His Historical Note in the Prospectus of
-1882-83. &mdash; First Class graduated 1883. &mdash; Manual Training in the
-Agricultural Colleges &mdash; In Boston, in New Haven, in Baltimore, in
-San Francisco, and other places. &mdash; Manual Training at the Meeting
-of the National Educational Association, 1884. &mdash; Kindergarten and
-Manual Training Exhibits. &mdash; Prof. Felix Adler’s School in New
-York City &mdash; the most Comprehensive School in the World. &mdash; The
-Chicago Manual Training School the first Independent Institution
-of the Kind &mdash; its Inception; its Incorporation; its Opening. Its
-Director, Dr. Belfield. &mdash; His Inaugural Address. &mdash; Manual Training
-in the Public Schools of Philadelphia. &mdash; Manual Training in twenty-four
-States. &mdash; Revolutionizing a Texas College. &mdash; Local Option
-Law in Massachusetts. &mdash; Department of Domestic Economy in the
-Iowa Agricultural College. &mdash; Manual Training in Tennessee, in the
-University of Michigan, in the National Educational Association,
-in Ohio. &mdash; The Toledo School for both Sexes. &mdash; The Importance of
-the Education of Woman. &mdash; The Slöjd Schools of Europe.</p>
-
-<p>The principle of the manual training school exists in
-the kindergarten, and for that principle we are indebted
-directly to Froebel, and indirectly to Pestalozzi, Comenius,
-Rousseau, and Bacon. But it was reserved for
-Russia to solve the problem of tool instruction by the
-laboratory process, and make it the foundation of a great
-reform in education. The initiatory step was taken in
-1868 by M. Victor Della-Vos, Director of the Imperial
-Technical School of Moscow. The following statement
-is extracted from the account given by Director Della-Vos
-of the exhibit of the Moscow school at Philadelphia
-(Centennial of 1876), and at the Paris Exposition in 1878,
-as best showing the inception of the new education:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page329">[329]</span></p>
-
-<div class="container w30em">
-<img src="images/illo360.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">M. VICTOR DELLA-VOS, THE FOUNDER OF MANUAL TRAINING IN
-RUSSIA.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page330">[330-<br />331]
-<a id="Page331"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>“In 1868 the school council considered it indispensable,
-in order to secure the systematical teaching of elementary
-practical work, as well as for the more convenient
-supervision of the pupils while practically employed,
-to separate entirely the school workshops from the mechanical
-works in which the orders from private individuals
-are executed, admitting pupils to the latter only
-when they have perfectly acquired the principles of practical
-labor.</p>
-
-<p>“By the separation alone of the school workshops from
-the mechanical works, the principal aim was, however,
-far from being attained. It was found necessary to
-work out such a method of teaching the elementary
-principles of mechanical art as, firstly, should demand
-the least possible length of time for their acquirement;
-secondly, should increase the facility of the supervision
-of the graded employment of the pupils; thirdly,
-should impart to the study of practical work the character
-of a sound systematical acquirement of knowledge;
-and fourthly and lastly, should facilitate the demonstration
-of the progress of every pupil at every stated
-time. Everybody is well aware that the successful study
-of any art whatsoever, free-hand or linear drawing, music,<span class="pagenum" id="Page332">[332]</span>
-singing, painting, etc., is only attainable when the
-first attempts at any of them are strictly subject to the
-laws of gradation and successiveness, when every student
-adheres to a definite method or school, surmounting little
-by little, and by certain degrees, the difficulties encountered.</p>
-
-<p>“All those arts which we have just named possess a
-method of study which has been well worked out and
-defined, because, since they have long constituted a part
-of the education of the well-instructed classes of people,
-they could not but become subject to scientific analysis,
-could not but become the objects of investigation, with a
-view of defining those conditions which might render the
-study of them as easy and well regulated as possible.</p>
-
-<p>“If we except the attempts made in France in the year
-1867 by the celebrated and learned mechanical engineer,
-A. Cler, to form a collection of models for the practical
-study of the principal methods of forging and welding
-iron and steel, as well as the chief parts of joiners’ work,
-and this with a purely demonstrative aim, no one, as far
-as we are aware, has hitherto been actively engaged in
-the working out of this question in its application to the
-study of hand labor in workshops. To the Imperial
-Technical School belongs the initiative in the introduction
-of a systematical method of teaching the arts of
-turning, carpentering, fitting, and forging.</p>
-
-<p>“To the knowledge and experience in these specialties,
-of the gentlemen intrusted with the management of the
-school workshops, and to their warm sympathy in the
-matter of practical education, we are indebted for the
-drawing up of the programme of systematical instruction
-in the mechanical arts, its introduction in the year 1868
-into the workshops, and also for the preparation of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page333">[333]</span>
-necessary auxiliaries to study. In the year 1870, at the
-exhibition of manufactures at St. Petersburg, the school
-exhibited its methods of teaching mechanical arts, and
-from that time they have been common to all the technical
-schools of Russia.</p>
-
-<p>“And now (1878) we present our system of instruction,
-not as a project, but as an accomplished fact, confirmed
-by the long experience of ten years of success in
-its results.”</p>
-
-<p>For the introduction of the manual element in education
-to the United States we are indebted to the intellectual
-acumen of Dr. John D. Runkle, Ph.D., LL.D.,
-Walker Professor of Mathematics, Institute of Technology,
-Boston, Mass. In 1876 Doctor Runkle was President
-of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. In
-his official report for that year he gave an exhaustive exposition
-of the Russian system, in the course of which he
-said,</p>
-
-<p>“We went to Philadelphia, therefore, earnestly seeking
-for light in this as well as in all other directions, and this
-special report is now made to ask your attention to a fundamental,
-and, as I think, complete solution of this most
-important problem of practical mechanism for engineers.
-The question is simply this, Can a system of shop-work
-instruction be devised of sufficient range and quality
-which will not consume more time than ought to be
-spared from the indispensable studies?</p>
-
-<p>“This question has been answered triumphantly in the
-affirmative, and the answer comes from Russia. It gives
-me the greatest pleasure to call your attention to the exhibit
-made by the Imperial Technical Schools of St.
-Petersburg and Moscow, consisting entirely of collections
-of tools and samples of shop-work by students, illustrating<span class="pagenum" id="Page334">[334]</span>
-the system which has made these magnificent results
-possible.”</p>
-
-<p>In conclusion Doctor Runkle made the following earnest
-recommendation:</p>
-
-<p>“In the light of the experience which Russia brings us,
-not only in the form of a proposed system, but proved
-by several years of experience in more than a single
-school, it seems to me that the duty of the Institute is
-plain. We should, without delay, complete our course in
-Mechanical Engineering by adding a series of instruction
-shops, which I earnestly recommend.”</p>
-
-<p>In accordance with this recommendation the “new
-school of Mechanic Arts” was created, and made part of
-the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.</p>
-
-<p>In his report for 1877 Doctor Runkle said,</p>
-
-<p>“The plan announced in my last report, of building
-a series of shops [laboratories] in which to teach the
-students in the department of Mechanical Engineering
-and others the use of tools, and the fundamental steps in
-the art of construction, in accordance with the Russian
-system, as exhibited at Philadelphia in 1876, has been
-carried steadily forward, and I have now the pleasure of
-announcing its near completion.”</p>
-
-<p>Reference is also made in the same report to the action
-of the trustees of the Institute in acknowledging the reception
-of certain models illustrating the system of Mechanic
-Art education, presented by the government of
-Russia, as follows:</p>
-
-<p>“At a meeting of the Corporation of the Massachusetts
-Institute of Technology, held November 20, 1877,
-a communication from his Excellency, Hon. George H.
-Boker, American Minister at St. Petersburg, was read,
-announcing the gift to this Institute of eight cases of
-models, illustrating the system of Mechanic Art education,
-as devised and so successfully applied at the Imperial
-Technical School of Moscow. The undersigned have
-been charged with the agreeable duty of transmitting to
-his Imperial Highness the following resolutions:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page335">[335]</span></p>
-
-<div class="container w30em">
-<img src="images/illo366.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">DR. JOHN D. RUNKLE, THE FOUNDER OF MANUAL TRAINING IN THE
-UNITED STATES.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page336">[336-<br />337]
-<a id="Page337"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>“<i>Resolved</i>, That the Corporation of the Massachusetts
-Institute of Technology takes this opportunity to cordially
-congratulate his Imperial Highness, Prince Pierre
-d’Oldenbourg, that, at the Imperial Technical School of
-Moscow, education in the Mechanic Arts has been for
-the first time based upon philosophical and purely educational
-grounds, fully justifying for it the title of the
-‘Russian system.’</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Resolved</i>, That this Corporation hereby tenders its
-grateful thanks to his Imperial Highness for his most
-valuable gift, with the assurance that these models will
-be of the greatest aid in promoting Mechanic Art education
-not only in the School of this Institute, but in all
-similar schools throughout the United States.”</p>
-
-<p>Appreciating the value of the services rendered to the
-cause of the new education by Dr. Runkle, in introducing
-to the schools of the United States tool practice by
-laboratory methods, and desiring to inform the public of
-the course of thought which led to results so important,
-the author addressed him on the subject. His reply,
-under date of May 22, 1884, is in substance as follows:</p>
-
-<p>“From the first the course in Mechanical Engineering
-has been an important one in the Institute of Technology.
-A few students came with a knowledge of shop-work,
-and had a clear field open to them on graduation, but the
-larger number found it difficult to enter upon their professional
-work without first taking one or two years of
-apprenticeship. This always seemed to me a fault in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page338">[338]</span>
-education, and yet I did not see the way to remedy it
-without building up manufacturing works in connection
-with the school&mdash;a step which I knew to be an inversion
-of a true educational method.</p>
-
-<p>“At Philadelphia, in 1876, almost the first thing I saw
-was a small case containing three series of models&mdash;one
-of chipping and filing, one of forging, and one of machine-tool
-work. I saw at once that they were not parts
-of machines, but simply graded models for teaching the
-manipulations in those arts. In an instant the problem
-I had been seeking to solve was clear to my mind; a
-plain distinction between a Mechanic Art and its application
-in some special trade became apparent.</p>
-
-<p>“My first work was to build up at the Institute a series
-of Mechanic Art shops, or laboratories, to teach these
-arts, just as we teach chemistry and physics by the same
-means. At the same time I believed that this discipline
-could be made a part of general education, just as we
-make the sciences available for the same end through
-laboratory instruction.</p>
-
-<p>“All teaching has in an important sense a double purpose:
-first, the cultivation of the powers of the individual,
-and second, the pursuit of similar subjects, by substantially
-the same means, as a professional end. Now
-we use our shops [laboratories] both for educational and
-professional ends.... In brief, we teach the mechanic
-arts by laboratory methods, and the student applies the
-special skill and knowledge acquired, or not, as circumstances
-or his inclinations dictate.”</p>
-
-<p>The second manual training school in this country was
-founded as a department of Washington University, St.
-Louis, Mo., by Dr. C. M. Woodward. In a paper read
-before the St. Louis Social Science Association, May 16,<span class="pagenum" id="Page339">[339]</span>
-1878, Dr. Woodward discussed the subject of education
-both philosophically and practically. In the course of
-his address he gave a full account of the Russian system
-of manual training as expounded by Dr. Runkle, endorsed
-it, and recommended it to the people of St. Louis
-as the true method of education in the following pregnant
-sentence: “The manual education which begins in
-the kindergarten, before the children are able to read a
-word, should never cease.”<a href="#Footnote99" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor99">[99]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote99"><a href="#FNanchor99"><span class="label">[99]</span></a>
-The pressing problem of the time in methods of practical education
-is to devise suitable manual exercises for the school period embraced
-in the interim between the end of the kindergarten series of
-lessons and the beginning of the series of laboratory exercises described
-in this work&mdash;the grammar-school period&mdash;for children of
-both sexes from six to fourteen years of age.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>In the same paper Dr. Woodward thus modestly describes
-the beginning of the school which is now one of
-the most highly-esteemed educational institutions of St.
-Louis:</p>
-
-<p>“With the aid of our stanch friend, Mr. Gottlieb
-Conzelman, we fitted up during last summer a wood-working
-shop, with work-benches and vises for eighteen
-students; a second shop for vise-work upon metals and
-for machine-work; and a third with a single outfit of
-blacksmith’s tools. During the last few months systematic
-instruction has been given to different classes in all
-these shops. Special attention has been paid to the use
-of wood-working hand-tools, to wood-turning, and to
-filing.”</p>
-
-<p>These tentative steps promoted a healthy public sentiment,
-and attracted the attention of several wealthy men,
-who in 1879 contributed the funds for the permanent
-foundation of the school. The prospectus for the year<span class="pagenum" id="Page340">[340]</span>
-1882-83 contains the following “historical note,” which
-shows great progress:</p>
-
-<p>“The ordinance establishing the Manual Training
-School was adopted by the Board of Directors of the
-University, June 6, 1879.</p>
-
-<p>“The lot was purchased and the building begun in
-August of the same year. In the November following a
-prospectus of the school was published. In June, 1880,
-the building being partially equipped, was opened for
-public inspection, and a class of boys was examined for
-admission. On September 6, 1880, the school began
-with a single class of about fifty pupils. The whole
-number enrolled during the year was sixty-seven. A
-public exhibition of drawing and shop-work was given
-June 16, 1881.</p>
-
-<p>“The <i>second year</i> of the school opened September 12,
-1881, and closed June 14, 1882. There were two classes,
-sixty-one pupils belonging to the first year, and forty-six
-to the second year, making one hundred and seven in all.
-Of the second-year class, forty-two had attended the
-school the previous year.</p>
-
-<p>“The <i>third year</i> of the school will open on September
-11th, when three classes will be present.</p>
-
-<p>“The large addition now in progress (June, 1882) is to
-be completed and furnished by the day set for the examination
-of candidates for admission, September 8th. The
-number of pupils in the new first-year class is to be limited
-to one hundred. <i>Nearly one-half of that number
-have already been received.</i>”</p>
-
-<p>The capacity of the school since the completion of the
-“addition” alluded to in the “historical note” is two
-hundred and forty students. The first class was graduated
-in June, 1883; the second class in June, 1884. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page341">[341]</span>
-establishment of this excellent school is due first to the
-energy and educational foresight of Dr. Woodward, and
-second, to the munificent money donations of three citizens
-of St. Louis&mdash;Mr. Edwin Harrison, Mr. Samuel Cupples,
-and Mr. Gottlieb Conzelman. Other citizens emulated
-their noble example, and the result was a sufficient
-fund for the support of the school, whose purpose is to
-demonstrate the practicability of uniting manual and
-mental instruction in the public schools of St. Louis and
-of the country. With a single further quotation from
-the prospectus of the second great manual training
-school in the United States, on the subject of labor, we
-close this too brief notice:</p>
-
-<p>“One great object of the school is to foster a higher
-appreciation of the value and dignity of intelligent labor,
-and the worth and respectability of laboring men. A boy
-who sees nothing in manual labor but mere brute force
-despises both labor and the laborer. With the acquisition
-of skill in himself comes the ability and willingness
-to recognize skill in his fellows. When once he appreciates
-skill in handicraft, he regards the workman with
-sympathy and respect.”</p>
-
-<p>Considerable progress in manual training has been
-made in the State agricultural colleges of the country.
-In twelve of these colleges drawing and tool practice
-have been introduced. Generally the tool practice covers
-pattern-making, blacksmithing, moulding and founding,
-forging and bench-work, and machine-tool work in iron.
-The most pronounced success has been achieved at Purdue
-University, Lafayette, Ind., under the directorship
-of Prof. Wm. F. M. Goss, who graduated from the school
-of Mechanic Arts of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
-in 1879.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page342">[342]</span></p>
-
-<p>Manual training in connection with the public-school
-system of education has been inaugurated in Boston
-and Milford, Mass.; New Haven, and the State Normal
-School, New Britain, Conn.; Omaha, Neb.;<a href="#Footnote100" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor100">[100]</a> Eau Claire,
-Wis.;<a href="#Footnote101" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor101">[101]</a> Moline, Peru, and the Cook County Normal
-School, Normal Park, Ill.; Montclair, N. J.; Cleveland
-and Barnesville, Ohio; San Francisco, Cal.; and Baltimore,
-Md.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote100"><a href="#FNanchor100"><span class="label">[100]</span></a>
-In charge of Albert M. Bumann, B.S., graduate of the St. Louis
-Manual Training School, class of 1885.</p>
-
-<p id="Footnote101"><a href="#FNanchor101"><span class="label">[101]</span></a>
-In charge of William F. Barnes, B.S., graduate of the St. Louis
-Manual Training School, class of 1885.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>On the occasion of the annual meeting of 1884 of the
-National Educational Association of the United States,
-at Madison, Wis., manual training received a very large
-share of the attention of educators. Very creditable exhibits
-of various manipulations in wood, iron, and steel
-were made by the following institutions, namely, the
-Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Purdue University,
-the St. Louis Manual Training School, the Illinois
-Industrial University, the University of Wisconsin, and
-the Spring Garden Institute of Philadelphia. There
-were also about thirty kindergarten exhibits, and a large
-number of exhibits of specimens of drawing from public
-schools in various parts of the country.</p>
-
-<p>Prof. Felix Adler’s educational enterprise in the city
-of New York&mdash;The Workingman’s School and Free Kindergarten&mdash;is
-unique in this that, while it is entirely a
-work of charity, it is the most comprehensive educational
-institution in existence, as appears from the following
-description of its course of instruction:</p>
-
-<p>“The Workingman’s School and Free Kindergarten
-form one institution. The children are admitted at the<span class="pagenum" id="Page343">[343]</span>
-age of three to the kindergarten. They are graduated
-from it at six, and enter the workingman’s school. They
-remain in the school till they are thirteen or fourteen
-years of age. Thereafter those who show decided ability
-receive higher technical instruction. For the others who
-leave the school proper and are sent to work, a series of
-evening classes will be opened, in which their industrial
-and general education will be continued in various directions.
-This graduate course of the workingman’s school
-is intended to extend up to the eighteenth or twenty-first
-year.</p>
-
-<p>“From the third year up to manhood and womanhood&mdash;such,”
-says Prof. Adler, “is the scope embraced by the
-purposes of our institution!”</p>
-
-<p>The following extracts from a late report of the principal
-of the school, Mr. G. Bamberger, on its “purposes,”
-show that they are identical with those of the so-called
-manual training school, and also that its methods are similar:</p>
-
-<p>“We, therefore, have undertaken to institute a reform
-in education in the following two ways: We begin
-industrial instruction at the very earliest age possible.
-Already in our kindergarten we lay the foundation for
-the system of work instruction that is to follow. In the
-school proper, then, we seek to bridge over the interval
-lying between the preparatory kindergarten training and
-the specialized instruction of the technical school, utilizing
-the school age itself for the development of industrial
-ability. This, however, is only one characteristic
-feature of our institution. The other, and the capital
-one, is, that we seek to combine industrial instruction
-organically with the ordinary branches of instruction,
-thus using it not only for the material purpose of creating<span class="pagenum" id="Page344">[344]</span>
-skill, but also ideally as a factor of mind-education.
-To our knowledge, such an application of work instruction
-has nowhere as yet been attempted, either abroad or
-in this country....</p>
-
-<p>“In the teaching of history to these young children
-we hold it essential that the teacher should be entirely
-independent of any text-book, and able to freely handle
-the vast material at his disposal, and to draw from it, as
-from an endless storehouse, with fixed and definite purpose.
-We attach even greater importance to the moral
-than to the intellectual significance of history. The benefits
-which the understanding, the memory, and the imagination
-derive from the study of history are not small.
-But history, considered as a realm of actions, can be made
-especially fruitful of sound influence upon the active,
-moral side of human nature. The moral judgment is
-strengthened by a knowledge of the evolution of mankind
-in good and evil. The moral feelings are purified
-by abhorrence of the vices of the past, and by admiration
-of examples of greatness and virtue. Text-books
-are not to be discarded, but their choice is a matter
-of great difficulty. Thus, all books in which historical
-instruction is given in the shape of printed questions and
-answers are highly objectionable. They are convenient
-bridges which lead to nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>The following extract from a late report of Prof. Adler
-shows the purpose of the establishment of what he
-calls the “model school” to be identical with that of the
-projectors of the St. Louis and Chicago manual training
-schools, namely, the ultimate adoption by the public
-schools of the country of a far more rational system of
-instruction than that which at present prevails. He says,</p>
-
-<p>“It seemed to us, therefore, far more necessary, far<span class="pagenum" id="Page345">[345]</span>
-more calculated to really advance the public good, that
-one model school should be erected in which the entire
-system of rational and liberal education for the children
-of the poorer class might be exhibited from beginning to
-end. We ventured to hope that such an example, having
-once been set, would not be without effect upon the
-common-school system at large, and that the extension
-of our work would proceed by the natural course of the
-‘survival of what is fittest.’ It was decided, therefore,
-that the twenty-five graduates from the kindergarten
-should be invited to remain with us, that a complete
-school should be instituted, and that a teacher should be
-at once appointed to take in hand the instruction of the
-lowest class. The munificence of Mr. Joseph Seligman,
-to whose name we cannot refer without gratitude and respect,
-at this stage enabled us to go on with our undertaking,
-when the dearth of funds would otherwise have
-compelled us to wait, or perhaps desist altogether. His
-timely gift of ten thousand dollars was the means of
-starting the school, and on this as well as on other accounts
-his memory deserves to be cherished by those
-who cherish the educational interests of the people.”</p>
-
-<p>The Chicago Manual Training School is the only independent
-educational institution of the kind in the
-world. All the schools of this character to which reference
-has been made in this chapter are departments of
-colleges or institutes of technology. The Chicago school
-is unique in another respect: it owes its origin entirely
-to laymen. Professional educators labored long and earnestly
-to found the schools we have described, but the
-Chicago school was inspired by men unknown in the
-field of educational enterprise, advocated by a secular
-daily journal, and established by an association of merchants,<span class="pagenum" id="Page346">[346]</span>
-manufacturers, and bankers. For many years the
-<i>Chicago Tribune</i> had very freely and severely criticised
-the educational methods of the public schools. Early in
-the year 1881 its editorial columns were opened to the
-author of this work, who began and continued, therein,
-the advocacy of the establishment of a manual training
-school in Chicago, as a tentative step towards the incorporation
-in the curriculum of the public schools, of more
-practical methods of instruction.</p>
-
-<p>The editorial advocacy of the <i>Tribune</i> was continued
-for twelve months, articles appearing about once a week,
-without apparent effect beyond provoking a controversy
-with certain professional educators, who attacked the positions
-assumed by the <i>Tribune</i>. But a public sentiment
-had been created on the subject, and the Commercial
-Club was destined soon to embody that sentiment in action.
-At its regular monthly meeting, March 25, 1882,
-the subject of reform in methods of education was discussed
-by members of the club, and by men invited to
-be present for that purpose; the establishment of a school
-was resolved upon, and $100,000 pledged for its support.</p>
-
-<p>The Chicago Manual Training School Association was
-incorporated April 11, 1883; the corner-stone of its
-building was laid September 24, 1883; and the sessions
-of the school commenced on the 4th of February, 1884,
-with a class of seventy-two students, “selected by examination
-from one hundred and thirty applicants, under
-the directorship of Henry H. Belfield, A.M., Ph.D.”</p>
-
-<p>The Board of Trustees consists of E. W. Blatchford,
-president; R. T. Crane, vice-president; Marshall Field,
-treasurer; William A. Fuller, secretary; John Crerar,
-John W. Doane, N. K. Fairbank, Edson Keith, and George
-M. Pullman.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page347">[347]</span></p>
-
-<p>The object of the school is stated in the articles of
-incorporation as follows:</p>
-
-<p>“Instruction and practice in the use of tools, with such
-instruction as may be deemed necessary in mathematics,
-drawing, and the English branches of a high-school course.
-The tool instruction as at present contemplated shall include
-carpentry, wood-turning, pattern-making, iron chipping
-and filing, forge-work, brazing and soldering, the use
-of machine-shop tools, and such other instruction of a
-similar character as may be deemed advisable to add to
-the foregoing from time to time, it being the intention
-to divide the working hours of the students, as nearly
-as possible, equally between manual and mental exercises.”</p>
-
-<p>From the first annual catalogue, under the title “Building
-and Equipment,” we extract the following:</p>
-
-<p>“The school building is beautifully located on Michigan
-Avenue, and contains ample accommodations, in
-rooms for study and work, for several hundred pupils.</p>
-
-<p>“The equipment in the mechanical department consists
-mainly, at present, of twenty-four cabinet-makers’
-benches; bench and lathe tools of the best quality for
-seventy-two boys; twenty-four speed lathes, twelve-inch
-swing, thirty inches between centres; a fifty-two horse-power
-Corliss engine, twelve-inch cylinder, thirty-six
-inch stroke; two tubular boilers, forty inches in diameter,
-fourteen feet long. The Corliss engine, boilers, and
-lathes were made especially for the school.</p>
-
-<p>“A very valuable scientific library of nearly five hundred
-volumes, the property of the American Electrical
-Society, has been placed in the school. To this library,
-which is particularly rich in works pertaining to electricity
-and chemistry, but which contains also cyclopedias,<span class="pagenum" id="Page348">[348]</span>
-dictionaries, and other works of reference, the pupils
-have access.</p>
-
-<p>“The Blatchford Literary Society, an organization of
-pupils for improvement in composition, debate, etc., has
-lately had a handsome donation of money for the purchase
-of books to be placed in their alcove in the school
-library. Several periodicals are regularly placed on the
-library tables through the generosity of the publishers.</p>
-
-<p>“By the kindness of Dr. Wm. F. Poole, librarian, pupils
-are able to obtain books from the Chicago Public
-Library on unusually favorable conditions.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus the Chicago Manual Training School, a practical
-school, a school of instruction in things, a school after
-Bacon’s “own heart,” sprang from the brains of a number
-of plain, practical business men, full-armed, as
-Minerva from the brain of Jupiter.</p>
-
-<p>The Trustees were fortunate in securing Dr. Belfield
-for the directorship of the school. Before the introduction
-of the new education to this country, eleven years
-ago, while Russia was struggling with the problem of
-tool practice by the laboratory method, Dr. Belfield urged
-the need of manual training in the public schools of Chicago,
-in which he was a teacher. He was met with derision;
-but the president of the Board of Education of
-Chicago and the superintendent of schools are now advocates
-of the new system of training.</p>
-
-<p>In conclusion we present the following extracts from
-the inaugural address of Dr. Belfield, delivered before
-the Chicago Manual Training School Association, June
-19, 1884, as embodying the results of his experience
-and observation as to the value of the new system of
-training:</p>
-
-<p>“The distinctive feature of the manual training school<span class="pagenum" id="Page349">[349]</span>
-is the education of the mind, and of the hand as the agent
-of the mind. The time of the pupil in school is about
-equally divided between the study of books and the study
-of things; between the academic work on the one hand,
-and the drawing and shop-work on the other. Observe,
-I do not say between <i>school-work</i> and <i>shop-work</i>, for the
-shop is as much a school as is any other part of the establishment.
-Nor do I mean that the shop gives an education
-of the hand alone, and the class-room an education
-of the brain; but I mean that the shop educates <i>hand
-and brain</i>. That the <i>hand</i> is educated I need not stop
-to prove; but the shop educates the mind also.</p>
-
-<p>“Had you been in the wood-working room of this
-school a few hours ago, what would you have seen?
-Twenty-four boys at work at lathes driven by a powerful
-engine. Are any idle? No. Are any inattentive
-to their work? No; you notice the closest and most
-earnest attention, frequently approaching abstraction.
-Here, then, is the cultivation of a most important faculty
-of the mind, attention, the power of concentration;
-and it is worthy of remark that this attention is not an
-<i>enforced</i> attention, but is cheerful, voluntary, and unremitting.</p>
-
-<p>“The young workman is engaged on a problem in
-wood, just as, a few hours earlier, he was engaged on a
-problem in algebra. He has before him a drawing made
-to a scale. The problem is this: He must gain a clear
-conception of the object represented by the drawing; he
-must <i>imagine</i> it; he must select or cut a block of wood
-of the proper dimensions and of the right quality. It
-must not be too large, for he must guard against waste
-of material and waste of time. It must be large enough,
-for there must be no incompleteness about the finished<span class="pagenum" id="Page350">[350]</span>
-product of his labor. Observe him as the work grows
-under his hand; observe the selecting of the proper tools
-for the different parts of the process; observe the careful
-measuring, the watchful eye upon the position of the
-chisel, the speed of the lathe, the gradual approach of
-the once rectangular block to the model which exists in
-his brain&mdash;and you must admit that this work demands
-and develops, not manual dexterity alone, but attention,
-observation, imagination, judgment, reasoning....</p>
-
-<p>“My own opinion is that an hour in the shop of a
-well-conducted manual training school develops as much
-mental strength as an hour devoted to Virgil or Legendre....</p>
-
-<p>“But of this I am confident, that three years of a
-manual training school will give at least as much purely
-intellectual growth as three years of the ordinary high
-school, because, as has been said, every school hour, whether
-spent in the class-room, the drawing-room, or in the
-shop, is an hour devoted to intellectual training. And I
-am also convinced that the manual training school boy’s
-comprehension of some essential branches of knowledge
-will be as far superior to that of the other boy’s, as the
-realization of the grandeur and beauty of the Alps to the
-man who has seen their glories is superior to the conception
-of him who has merely read of them....</p>
-
-<p>“And here is the mistake of those who would degrade
-a manual training school into a manufacturing establishment.
-The fact should never be lost sight of for an
-instant that the product of the school should be, not the
-polished article of furniture, not the perfect piece of machinery,
-but the polished, perfect <i>boy</i>. The acquisition
-of industrial skill should be the means of promoting the
-general education of the pupil; the education of the hand<span class="pagenum" id="Page351">[351]</span>
-should be the means of more completely and more efficaciously
-educating the brain....</p>
-
-<p>“Take two boys, one with little or no education, the
-other a high-school graduate; let them enter the machine-shop
-of a large manufactory, beginning, as boys
-ignorant of the technique of the trade must begin, at the
-lowest round of the ladder. It cannot be doubted that
-in three or four years the high-school graduate, if he had
-been willing to do the drudgery incident to the place,
-would have reached a higher position than the other boy,
-and would be in a fair way to succeed to some responsible
-post in the establishment. But the graduate of the
-manual training school, by reason of his superior knowledge
-of machinery and materials, his skill in the use of
-tools, added to his general mental training, would begin
-at the point reached by the high-school boy after his
-years of apprenticeship. From the day of his entrance
-into the factory he would be conspicuous. While the
-other boys would stand in the presence of the huge Titan
-of the shop lost in the wonder of ignorance, the manual
-training boy would gaze with delight on the marvel of
-mechanism, wrapped in the admiration begotten of a
-thorough understanding of its construction, and strong
-in the consciousness of his mastery of it.”</p>
-
-<p>Manual training was introduced in the Pennsylvania
-State College, experimentally, about three years ago. In
-1883 the course was “greatly extended,” and in September,
-1884, it went into full operation. The course
-is substantially the same as that of the Chicago school;
-and that it was the outgrowth of the Russian system,
-and inspired by Dr. Runkle, is shown by the following
-extract from a circular lately issued by Prof. Louis E.
-Reber:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page352">[352]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Some may think that the variety of operations in the
-mechanic arts is so great as to make it impossible to give
-the student any real knowledge in the time at his disposal.
-It should be borne in mind, however, that this
-multiplicity of processes may be reduced to a small number
-of manual operations, and the numerous tools employed
-are only modifications of, or convenient substitutes
-for, a few tools which are in general use.”</p>
-
-<p>A course in tool practice by the laboratory method has
-been made part of the curriculum of the College of the
-City of New York.<a href="#Footnote102" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor102">[102]</a> I am permitted to make an extract
-from a letter written in August last by Alfred G. Compton,
-Professor of Applied Mathematics of the College of
-the City of New York, to Dr. Runkle. I print this extract
-to show the exacting nature of the demands made
-upon instructors by the new education. It is as follows:</p>
-
-<p>“We are anxious to find, by the opening of our term
-in September, a competent instructor in wood-working
-for our course in mechanic arts, now in its second year.
-He should be a good and ready draughtsman, skilful in
-perspective and projections, and ready in black-board
-sketching, besides being acquainted with the use of tools,
-and apt at class-teaching. He will have at first $1000 a
-year.”</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote102"><a href="#FNanchor102"><span class="label">[102]</span></a>
-“The first report of the Industrial Educational Association of
-New York gives a list of thirty-one schools in that city in which industrial
-education is furnished.”&mdash;Address of Prof. S. R. Thompson,
-Industrial Department of the National Educational Association, Saratoga
-Springs, N. Y., July, 1885.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The lack of competent instructors is the most serious
-difficulty which the new education is destined to encounter.
-The desire to adopt tool practice is so widespread
-among the people that educators, whether willing or otherwise,<span class="pagenum" id="Page353">[353]</span>
-are compelled to attempt to gratify the demand.
-At the same time the force of competent instructors is
-very small, and the danger is that the new system of education
-will be brought into disrepute through the failure
-of its proper administration.</p>
-
-<p>In 1882 Mr. Paul Tulane, of Princeton, N. J., made a
-large donation, consisting of his realty in the city of
-New Orleans, in aid of education in the State of Louisiana.
-In 1884 the University bearing its donor’s name&mdash;Tulane&mdash;came
-into existence. In the deed of donation
-Mr. Tulane declared that by the term education he
-meant to “foster such a course of intellectual development
-as shall be useful and of solid worth, and not be
-merely ornamental or superficial.” Hence manual training
-has been made a prominent feature of the institution.<a href="#Footnote103" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor103">[103]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote103"><a href="#FNanchor103"><span class="label">[103]</span></a>
-John M. Ordway, A.M., late Professor of Metallurgy and Industrial
-Chemistry of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, has been
-called to New Orleans to organize and direct the manual training
-department of the institution; and he is assisted by Charles A.
-Heath, B.S., and Everett E. Hapgood, graduates of the School of
-Mechanic Arts of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>There is in operation at Crozet, Va., a manual training
-school called, after its founder, Mr. Samuel Miller, “The
-Miller Manual Labor School;” but of the methods of
-training pursued at this school the author is not accurately
-informed.</p>
-
-<p>Girard College, dedicated nearly forty years ago, has
-adopted manual training. In response to a letter by the
-author, asking for information, Mr. W. Heyward Drayton,
-of Philadelphia, gives the following historical sketch
-of the introduction and progress of tool practice by the
-laboratory method in that noble institution:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page354">[354]</span></p>
-
-<p>“From time to time some of the directors recognized
-the importance of mechanical instruction, but after one
-or two attempts further efforts in this direction were
-abandoned, as those proved utter failures. It was not
-until Dr. Runkle, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
-at the instance of the late Mr. William Welsh,
-then president of the Board of Directors of City Trusts,
-delivered a short address on the subject in the lecture-room
-of the Franklin Institute in this city, that any practical
-mode of introducing this branch of study into the
-college was presented.</p>
-
-<p>“... Following as nearly as possible the scheme suggested
-by Dr. Runkle, and aided by many suggestions from
-him, in April, 1882, we began to instruct the larger boys
-to use tools in several kinds of metals. We were so fortunate
-as to secure the services of a very competent and
-enthusiastic instructor, who confined his instruction merely
-to teaching the use of tools, but without any pretence
-of teaching any trade. The result of two years’ experience
-has been so satisfactory that our boys leave the college
-to go to workshops, where they secure sufficient
-wages to support them at once; and they have, in many
-cases, been found so expert that in a few months their
-wages have been increased. We have been so encouraged
-by this as a substitute for apprenticing lads, which
-is fast becoming impossible, that we have just erected
-commodious workshops [laboratories], in which, on the
-same system, but to many more boys, we propose to teach
-the use of tools in wood-work also, as we have heretofore
-taught in metals. To this time we have been compelled,
-from want of facilities, to confine our instruction
-to about one hundred and seventy-five boys. We expect
-next month (October, 1884) to increase the number to<span class="pagenum" id="Page355">[355]</span>
-three hundred&mdash;only being limited by the youth of the
-pupils, many of whom are too young to permit of their
-handling tools.”</p>
-
-<p>Manual training has been made part of the curriculum
-of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Auburn,
-Ala., and the department is under the direction of a graduate
-of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.<a href="#Footnote104" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor104">[104]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote104"><a href="#FNanchor104"><span class="label">[104]</span></a>
-George H. Bryant, B.S., graduate of the Massachusetts Institute
-of Technology, class of 1883.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p class="blankbefore15">Manual training has been adopted as a branch of education
-in the Denver (Col.) University, and the director
-of the department is a graduate of the manual training
-department of the Washington University of St. Louis,
-Mo.<a href="#Footnote105" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor105">[105]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote105"><a href="#FNanchor105"><span class="label">[105]</span></a>
-C. H. Wright, B.S., graduate of the St. Louis Manual Training
-School, class of 1885.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The present year (1885) witnesses a very important
-addition to the list of manual training schools&mdash;that of
-Philadelphia.</p>
-
-<p>It is not too much to say that Mr. James MacAlister
-has revolutionized the public schools of Philadelphia in
-the short period of two years during which he has held
-the office of superintendent; and the last wave of the
-revolution reveals a fully-equipped manual training school
-as part of the public-school system of the conservative,
-grand old Quaker city. And this practical element in
-education is to be free to all public-school boys fourteen
-years of age, who can show themselves qualified to enter,
-as witness the following “rules” of the Philadelphia
-public schools:</p>
-
-<p>“Promotions to the Manual Training School shall be
-made at the close of the June term, from the Twelfth<span class="pagenum" id="Page356">[356]</span>
-Grade, or any higher grade, of the Boys’ Grammar, Consolidated
-and Combined Schools; but no boy shall be
-promoted who is under fourteen years of age.</p>
-
-<p>“It shall be the duty of the Principals of the several
-Boys’ Grammar, Consolidated and Combined Schools, to
-certify to the superintendent of schools the names of all
-boys of the proper age who have finished the course of
-study in the Twelfth Grade, or any higher grade, and are
-desirous of promotion to the Manual Training School.”</p>
-
-<p>In calling the attention of the public to the establishment
-of a manual training school as part of the educational
-system of Philadelphia, a committee of the City
-Board of Education say, under date of June 10, 1885,</p>
-
-<p>“The undersigned desire to call attention to the new
-manual training school to be opened in this city next
-September. It is intended for boys who have finished
-the Twelfth Grade, or any higher grade, of the Grammar-school
-course. The instruction will embrace a thorough
-course, so far as it goes, in English, mathematics,
-free-hand and mechanical drawing, and the fundamental
-sciences; but in addition to these branches a carefully
-graded course of manual training will form a leading
-feature of the school. This manual training is intended
-to give the boys such a knowledge of the tools and materials
-employed in the chief industrial pursuits of our
-time as shall place them in more direct and sympathetic
-relations with the great activities of the business world.
-The school will make our public education not only more
-complete and symmetrical in character than it has been
-heretofore, but it will be at the same time better adapted
-to enable the pupils to win their way in life. No matter
-what future a parent may have marked out for his boy&mdash;whether
-he be intended for an industrial, a mercantile, or<span class="pagenum" id="Page357">[357]</span>
-a professional occupation, it is believed that such an education
-will be of immense advantage to him. Upon the
-industries of the world, to a much larger extent than ever
-before in its history, depend the progress, the prosperity,
-the happiness of society. To prepare boys for this condition
-of things will be the aim of this school. The entire
-course of instruction and training will be <i>practical</i>
-in the largest and best sense of that term. The culture
-it gives will include the hand as well as the head, and
-its graduates will be trained to work as well as to think.
-The course will extend over a period of three years, but
-it is so arranged that boys whose intended pursuits in
-life will not warrant spending so much time may participate
-in its advantages for a shorter period before entering
-upon other studies or a permanent occupation.</p>
-
-<p>“The Manual Training School has been organized in
-response to a growing sentiment respecting the character
-of public education which has been strongly manifested
-in Philadelphia, and the Board of Public Education believe
-that the movement, when fully understood, will
-meet with the cordial approval of our people. Your
-careful consideration of the nature and objects which
-the school seeks to accomplish is respectfully solicited.”</p>
-
-<p>This act of the school authorities of the city of Philadelphia
-is the strongest popular endorsement the theory
-of manual training as an element of education has received.
-It commits a great city to a fair trial of the new
-education under the most favorable auspices&mdash;under the
-conduct of Mr. James MacAlister, one of the most accomplished,
-as well as most sternly practical educators
-in the United States.</p>
-
-<p>But this is only part of a general system of manual
-training introduced throughout the whole course of instruction<span class="pagenum" id="Page358">[358]</span>
-given in the public schools of Philadelphia.
-There are kindergartens (sub-primaries) for children
-from three to six years of age, and an industrial art
-department for all the students (of both sexes) of the
-grammar schools. In this latter department the course
-of training comprises “drawing and design,” “modelling,”
-“wood-carving,” “carpentry and joinery,” and
-“metal work.” These courses, including manual training
-proper, “at the top,” form a comprehensive system
-of head and hand training known as the new education.
-Mr. MacAlister says, “The conviction is gradually obtaining
-among the members of the Board of Education
-[of Philadelphia], and in the public mind, that every
-child should receive manual training; that a complete
-education implies the training of the hand in connection
-with the training of the mind; and that this feature
-must ultimately be incorporated into the public education.
-What is this but the realization of the principles
-which every great thinker and reformer in education
-has insisted upon, from Comenius, Locke, and Rousseau,
-to Pestalozzi, Froebel, and Spencer!”<a href="#Footnote106" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor106">[106]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote106"><a href="#FNanchor106"><span class="label">[106]</span></a>
-In a letter to the author, Mr. MacAlister re-enforces the observations
-quoted in the text. He says,</p>
-
-<p>“I wish you to understand that all my own convictions and action
-in connection with this movement are based upon what in my judgment
-should constitute an education fitted to prepare a human being
-for the social conditions of to-day, <i>and not merely upon the industrial
-demands of our time</i>.... I believe there is a great future for the
-manual training movement in Philadelphia. I feel encouraged to go
-forward with the work. The great principles which underlie the
-system are with me intense convictions; <i>they mean nothing less than
-a revolution in education</i>. The great ideas of the reformers of school
-training must be realized in the public schools, or they will fail in
-accomplishing the ends for which they were instituted and have been
-maintained.”</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page359">[359]</span></p>
-
-<p>The rapid progress of the revolution in education is
-shown by the fact that manual training in some form
-has been adopted in certain of the schools of at least
-twenty-four of the States of the American Union.</p>
-
-<p>In some of the higher educational institutions the new
-education is warmly welcomed, while in others public
-sentiment alone compels its adoption. The State Agricultural
-and Mechanical College of Texas has been revolutionized
-in this way. A member of the Faculty<a href="#Footnote107" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor107">[107]</a>
-writes as follows:</p>
-
-<p>“This institution was opened on the 4th of October,
-1876. In spite of its name, the conditions of its endowment,
-and its avowed object, it was founded on the plan
-of the old classical and mathematical college, and had
-no industrial features whatever till the beginning of the
-year 1880. At that time the public sentiment of the
-State had condemned so decidedly and repeatedly the
-misappropriation of the funds, and perversion of the energies
-of the college under its administration as a literary
-school, that the directors found it necessary to reorganize
-it by accepting the resignation of the members of
-the faculty without exception, and calling in a new corps
-of instructors. In 1880-81 a large dormitory building
-was converted into a shop [laboratory]. This was fitted
-with tools for elementary instruction in wood-working
-for the accommodation of about fifty students. A small
-metal-working plant was also erected, the whole being
-furnished with power from a twelve-horse-power engine.
-Since that time a brick shop [laboratory] has been provided
-for the accommodation of the metal-working machinery,
-which now includes the principal machines used<span class="pagenum" id="Page360">[360]</span>
-in ordinary iron-working, all driven by a twenty-horsepower
-engine.”</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote107"><a href="#FNanchor107"><span class="label">[107]</span></a>
-H. H. Dinwiddie, Professor of Chemistry, Chairman of the Faculty.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Massachusetts, the cradle of the American common-school
-system, is the first State to legalize by statute the
-new education, placing manual training on an equal footing
-with mental training, by the following act:</p>
-
-<p>“Section I. of Chapter XLIV. of the Public Statutes,
-relating to the branches of instruction to be taught in
-public schools, is amended by striking out in the eighth
-line the words ‘and hygiene,’ and inserting instead the
-words ‘hygiene and the elementary use of hand-tools;’
-and in any city or town where such tools shall be introduced
-they shall be purchased by the school committee
-at the expense of such city or town, and loaned to such
-pupils as may be allowed to use them free of charge,
-subject to such rules and regulations, as to care and custody,
-as the school committee may prescribe.”<a href="#Footnote108" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor108">[108]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote108"><a href="#FNanchor108"><span class="label">[108]</span></a>
-“School Laws of Massachusetts. Supplement to the Edition of
-1883, containing the Additional Legislation to the Close of the Legislative
-Session of 1885; issued by the State Board of Education.”</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The Legislature of Connecticut adopted a similar statute
-last year (1884).</p>
-
-<p>The Iowa Agricultural College is the first educational
-institution in the country to recognize the importance
-of instruction in the arts of home life. In this college
-domestic economy has been elevated to the dignity of a
-department called the “School of Domestic Economy,”
-with the following “special faculty:”</p>
-
-<table class="dontwrap fsize90" summary="Faculty">
-
-<tr>
-<td class="left padr4">The President, Mrs. Emma P. Ewing, Dean.</td>
-<td class="right"><i>Domestic Economy</i>.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="left padr4">J. L. Budd</td>
-<td class="right"><i>Horticulture and Gardening</i>.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="left padr4">A. A. Bennett</td>
-<td class="right"><i>Chemistry</i>.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="left padr4">B. D. Halsted</td>
-<td class="right"><i>Botany</i>.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="left padr4">D. S. Fairchild</td>
-<td class="right"><i>Hygiene and Physiology</i>.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="left padr4">Laura M. Saunderson</td>
-<td class="right"><i>Elocution</i>.</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page361">[361]</span></p>
-
-<p>The course of study is as follows:</p>
-
-<table class="course" summary="Course">
-
-<tr>
-<th colspan="2" class="highline3">FIRST YEAR.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<th class="highline2 br"><i>First Term.</i></th>
-<th class="highline2"><i>Second Term.</i></th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="br">Domestic Economy.</td>
-<td>Domestic Economy.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="br">Botany.</td>
-<td>Physiology and Hygiene.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="br">Physical Training.</td>
-<td>Dress-fitting and Millinery.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="br">Household Accounts.</td>
-<td>Essays.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<th colspan="2" class="highline3">SECOND YEAR.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<th class="highline2 br"><i>First Term.</i></th>
-<th class="highline2"><i>Second Term.</i></th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="br">Domestic Economy.</td>
-<td>Domestic Economy.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="br">Chemistry.</td>
-<td>Home Architecture.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="br">Duties of the Nurse.</td>
-<td>Home Sanitation.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="br">Designing and Free-hand Drawing.</td>
-<td>Home Æsthetics and Decorative Art.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="br">Landscape and Floral Gardening.</td>
-<td>Essays and Graduating Thesis.</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>Mrs. Ewing, dean of the school, thus states, clearly
-and powerfully, the reasons for its establishment and its
-purposes:</p>
-
-<p>“This school is based upon the assumption that no
-industry is more important to human happiness than that
-which makes the home; and that a pleasant home is an
-essential element of broad culture, and one of the surest
-safeguards of morality and virtue. It was organized to
-meet the wants of pupils who desire a knowledge of the
-principles that underlie domestic economy, and the course
-of study is especially arranged to furnish women instruction
-in applied house-keeping and the arts and sciences
-relating thereto&mdash;to incite them to a faithful performance
-of the every-day duties of life, and to inspire them with
-a belief in the nobleness and dignity of a true womanhood.</p>
-
-<p>“No calling requires for its perfect mastery a greater<span class="pagenum" id="Page362">[362]</span>
-amount of practice and theory combined than that of
-domestic economy, and students, in addition to recitations
-and lectures on the various topics of the course,
-receive practical training in all branches of house-work,
-in the purchase and care of family supplies, and in general
-household management. They are not, however,
-required to perform a greater amount of labor than is
-necessary for the desired instruction.</p>
-
-<p>“The course of study is for graduates of colleges and
-universities. It extends through two years, and leads to
-the degree of Master of Domestic Economy.”<a href="#Footnote109" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor109">[109]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote109"><a href="#FNanchor109"><span class="label">[109]</span></a>
-Annual Catalogue of the Iowa Agricultural College.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The Le Moyne Normal Institute of Memphis, Tenn.,
-is a private school, “sustained chiefly by benevolently
-disposed people at the North, for colored youth.” In a
-letter to the author the principal of this school thus describes
-the manual features of its curriculum:</p>
-
-<p>“Besides our Normal work proper, we give girls of
-the school two years’ training in needle-work of different
-kinds, one year’s instruction in choice and preparation of
-foods, with practice in an experimental kitchen, and six
-months’ training in nursing or care of the sick. One
-hour a day is given to each of the foregoing subjects for
-the time indicated.</p>
-
-<p>“I am about to erect workshops for training for our
-boys in the use of wood-working tools, and in iron-working
-and moulding&mdash;the course to comprise two years’
-time, two hours per day at the benches. We shall also
-have type-setting and printing as specialties for individual
-students. This work will be in operation in January,
-1886.”<a href="#Footnote110" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor110">[110]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote110"><a href="#FNanchor110"><span class="label">[110]</span></a> A. J. Steele.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page363">[363]</span></p>
-
-<p>The professor in charge of the Mechanical Engineering
-Department of the University of Michigan writes to
-the author as follows:</p>
-
-<p>“There can be no doubt in the mind of a sane man
-that this practical instruction [laboratory work] is exactly
-what is needed by our engineering students. We are
-assured of that fact by the expression of gratification on
-the part of our engineering <i>alumni</i> to find here the very
-instruction which they were obliged to spend two or
-three years to secure after graduating. We give our
-students work of an elementary character for a few
-weeks, or until they become accustomed to tools, when
-we put them to work on some part of a machine. If
-they spoil it, well and good&mdash;it goes into the scrap-heap;
-if they succeed, they have the pleasure of seeing a perfect
-machine grow up under their eyes and hand. Students
-having matured minds, as most of ours have, work
-better with a definite plan in view. We always require
-them to work from drawings. Our course in forging is
-very popular; and it is especially useful, as it gives our
-young men that knowledge of the different kinds of iron
-and steel which will be of the greatest benefit to them
-as engineers.”<a href="#Footnote111" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor111">[111]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote111"><a href="#FNanchor111"><span class="label">[111]</span></a>
-Mortimer E. Cooley, Assistant Engineer, U. S. Navy.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The National Educational Association of the United
-States, at its last meeting, at Saratoga Springs, N. Y.
-(1885), took a great step forward in the adoption of a
-resolution<a href="#Footnote112" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor112">[112]</a> endorsing the kindergarten. The association
-was, however, singularly illogical in its subsequent action,<span class="pagenum" id="Page364">[364]</span>
-in voting to lay upon the table a resolution<a href="#Footnote113" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor113">[113]</a> recommending
-the introduction of manual training to the public
-schools. The kindergarten and manual training are
-one in principle, and should be one in practice. All
-educators will soon see this, and the National Educational
-Association will no doubt soon place itself as heartily
-on record in support of manual training as it has already
-done in support of the kindergarten.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote112"><a href="#FNanchor112"><span class="label">[112]</span></a>
-“<i>Resolved</i>, that we trust the time is near at hand when the true
-principles of the kindergarten will guide all elementary training, and
-when public sentiment and legislative enactment will incorporate the
-kindergarten into our public-school system.”</p>
-
-<p id="Footnote113"><a href="#FNanchor113"><span class="label">[113]</span></a>
-“<i>Resolved</i>, That we recognize the educational value of training
-the hand to skill in the use of tools, and recommend that provision
-be made, as far as practicable, for such training in public schools.”</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Ohio ranks as the third State in the Union industrially,
-and she is making great strides in the direction of a more
-practical system of education. This is shown by the
-prominent place given to instruction in the mechanic
-arts in the State University at Columbus, by the prosperity
-of the Case School of Applied Science, and the introduction
-of manual training to the public-school system
-at Cleveland, and by the establishment of the Scott
-Manual Training School at Toledo. The city of Toledo
-owes the inception of the movement in support of the
-new education to the munificence of the late Jesup W.
-Scott, who during his life conveyed to trustees for purposes
-of industrial education, in connection with the
-public-school system, certain valuable real estate. After
-the death of Mr. Scott, his three sons,<a href="#Footnote114" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor114">[114]</a> still residents of
-Toledo, supplemented their father’s donation with a sufficient
-sum of money to secure the erection and complete
-equipment of a manual training school for three
-hundred and fifty pupils.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote114"><a href="#FNanchor114"><span class="label">[114]</span></a>
-William F., Frank J., and Maurice Scott.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The school is modelled after the schools of St. Louis
-and Chicago; but it gives only the manual side of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page365">[365]</span>
-curriculum, because it is conducted in connection with
-the public High School, receiving its pupils therefrom.
-It opened in the autumn of 1884 with sixty pupils, ten
-of whom were girls. Its register now numbers two hundred,
-fifty of whom are girls. Its course for boys is substantially
-the same as that of the Chicago school. The
-course for girls includes free-hand and mechanical drawing,
-designing, modelling, wood-carving, cutting, fitting,
-and making garments, and domestic science, including
-food preparation and household decoration. A distinguished
-lawyer and citizen of Toledo,<a href="#Footnote115" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor115">[115]</a> who has been
-prominent in the work of establishing the school, says,</p>
-
-<p>“The brightest and most faithful pupils of the High
-School have eagerly availed themselves of the opportunity
-for manual instruction, and the zeal with which this new
-work is pursued has added a new charm to school life.”</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote115"><a href="#FNanchor115"><span class="label">[115]</span></a> Hon. A. E. Macomber.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The school is in charge of Mr. Ralph Miller, B.S., who
-is assisted by Mr. Geo. S. Mills, B.S.<a href="#Footnote116" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor116">[116]</a> It is especially
-interesting, both as the newest educational enterprise and
-because it places the sexes on a footing of absolute equality.
-Reform in education must begin with woman, for
-it is from her that man inherits his notable traits, and
-from her that he receives the earliest and most enduring
-impressions. In the arms of the mother the infant mind
-rapidly unfolds. It is in the cradle, in the nursery, and
-at the fireside that the child becomes father of the man.
-The regeneration of the race through education must,
-then, begin with the child, and be directed by the mother;
-and this being the fact, the education of woman becomes
-far more imperative than that of man.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote116"><a href="#FNanchor116"><span class="label">[116]</span></a>
-Graduates of the St. Louis Manual Training School, class of 1884.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page366">[366]</span></p>
-
-<p>That the ancients made so little progress in morals is
-due to the fact of their neglect of the education of woman.
-Neither in Egypt nor Persia was provision made
-for her mental or moral training. There were schools
-for boys in Greece, but none for girls; and not till late
-in the Empire was there any special culture for girls in
-Rome.</p>
-
-<p>In the Middle Ages learning was confined to the religious
-orders. The narrow bounds of the convent contained
-all there was of science and art. In the castle
-and at the tournament woman ministered to man’s pride
-and vanity; and in the peasant’s hut, which was the
-abode equally of poverty and ignorance, she endured
-both mental and moral starvation. Sir Walter Raleigh,
-Lord Bacon, Swift, Addison, Lord Chesterfield, Dr. Johnson,
-and Southey treated woman with mingled contempt
-and pity, and yet they were familiar with the story of
-Lucretia, of Virginia, and of the Maid of Orleans! But
-Shakespeare, with a sublimer genius, portrayed a Cordelia,
-a Desdemona, an Imogen, and a Queen Catharine,
-and with rare prevision of a future better than the age
-he knew, wrote these glowing lines:</p>
-
-<div class="poetrycontainer">
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="verse indent10">“Falsehood and cowardice<br /></span>
-<span class="verse indent0">Are things that women highly hold in hate.”<br /></span>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p>This is the rational age, though not less truly chivalrous
-than that of Arthur and his knights; for, as Ruskin
-well says, “The buckling on of the knight’s armor by
-his lady’s hand is the type of an eternal truth&mdash;that the
-soul’s armor is never well set to the heart unless a woman’s
-hand has braced it.”<a href="#Footnote117" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor117">[117]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote117"><a href="#FNanchor117"><span class="label">[117]</span></a>
-“Sesame and Lilies,” p. 97. By John Ruskin, LL.D. New
-York: John Wiley &amp; Sons, 1884.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page367">[367]</span></p>
-
-<p>The distinguishing features of this time are its homes
-and its schools, and the purity of the one and the efficiency
-of the other depends upon woman. It was reserved
-for Froebel to rescue woman from the scorn of
-preceding ages by declaring her superior fitness for the
-office of teacher&mdash;the most exalted of civil functions.</p>
-
-<p>The growth of the kindergarten has not been commensurate
-with its importance. Indifference and prejudice
-have united to discourage progress. Ancient contempt
-of childhood&mdash;that contempt which in Persia
-excluded the boy from the presence of his father until
-the fifth year of his age<a href="#Footnote118" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor118">[118]</a>&mdash;projects its sombre shadow
-down the ages. But manual training, which is the kindergarten
-in another form, is leading captive the imagination
-of the American people, and where the imagination
-leads, woman is in the van. Woman is to man
-what the poet is to the scientist, what Shakespeare was
-to Newton, the celestial guide. She tempts to deeds of
-heroism and self-sacrifice. She is less selfish than man,
-because a more vivid imagination inspires her with a
-deeper feeling of compassion for the misfortunes and
-follies of the race. Her intuitions are truer than those
-of man, her ideals higher, her sense of justice finer, and
-of duty stronger; and she has a better appreciation of
-the moral value of industry, remembering the temptations
-of her sex to evil through habits of idleness, enforced
-by the decrees of custom. And she is our teacher,
-whether we will or no&mdash;our teacher from the cradle
-to the grave&mdash;and it is through her ministry that we are
-destined to realize our highest mental and moral ideals.<a href="#Endnote32" class="fnanchor" id="EndAnchor32">[E32]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote118"><a href="#FNanchor118"><span class="label">[118]</span></a> “Herodotus,” Clio I., p. 136.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>This sketch of the history of manual training in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page368">[368]</span>
-United States is doubtless incomplete. It is, however,
-sufficient to show that the subject is already one of
-absorbing interest in all parts of the country.</p>
-
-<p>Manual training in the public schools of Europe can
-scarcely be called educational, since the pupils usually
-make articles for household use. The purpose is purely
-industrial, and hence the mental culture received in the
-course of the manual exercise is the mere incident of a
-mechanical pursuit. But the making of things in the
-schools of Europe is gradually extending.</p>
-
-<p>In Denmark an annual appropriation ($2000) is made
-by the Legislature for the encouragement of <i>slöjd</i> (hand-cunning)
-in the schools. All pupils in Danish and Swedish
-schools make things.</p>
-
-<p>In Germany, Dr. Erasmus Schwab published in Vienna,
-in 1873, a book, “The Work School in the Common
-School.” Rittmeister Claussen Von Kaas, of Denmark,
-travelled through Germany and delivered lectures on
-manual training, and now there is a considerable agitation
-of the subject.</p>
-
-<p>In Finland all the country schools are <i>slöjd</i> schools.</p>
-
-<p>In 1881 the Legislature of Norway appropriated $1250
-for the support of <i>slöjd</i> in the schools.</p>
-
-<p>In France a law (1882) makes manual training obligatory,
-and a school for training teachers has been established&mdash;“L’école
-Normale Superieure de travail Manuel”&mdash;in
-which there are about fifty students. Prof. G. Solicis
-was the chief supporter of manual training in France.</p>
-
-<p>In Sweden, in 1876, there were eighty <i>slöjd</i> schools.
-In 1877 the number had increased to one hundred; in
-1878, to one hundred and thirty; in 1879, to two hundred;
-in 1880, to three hundred; in 1881, to four hundred;
-and in 1882, to five hundred.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page369">[369]</span></p>
-
-<p>In Nääs, in Sweden, there is a seminary for the training
-of <i>slöjd</i> teachers.<a href="#Footnote119" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor119">[119]</a> Of this seminary Otto Salomon is
-director. In the <i>slöjd</i> schools small articles are made for
-use in the house, kitchen, on the farm, etc. The course
-of instruction embraces one hundred models. The materials
-for the first series of twenty-five models cost about
-40 cents; for the second series of twenty-five the cost is
-75 cents; and for the third series of fifty the cost is $3.25.
-The annual expense of the manual training in a Swedish
-country school is about ten to eleven dollars.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote119"><a href="#FNanchor119"><span class="label">[119]</span></a>
-“Four young women have graduated from the Slöjd Teacher’s
-Seminary at Nääs, Sweden, and two of them are now engaged in
-teaching manual arts.”&mdash;Letter from John M. Ordway, A.M., Chair
-of Applied Chemistry and Biology, and Director of Manual Training,
-Tulane University of Louisiana.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The technical and mechanic art or trade schools of
-Europe, generally, whether public or private, do not
-come within the scope of this work, since their purpose
-is industrial, not educational.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Endnote32"><span class="label"><a href="#EndAnchor32">[E32]</a></span>
-“In fine, I have been beloved by the four women whose love was
-of the most comfort to me: My mother, my sister, my wife and my
-daughter. I have had the better part, and it will not be taken from
-me, for I often fancy that the judgments which will be passed upon
-us in the Valley of Jehoshaphat, will be neither more nor less than
-those of women, countersigned by the Almighty.”&mdash;“Recollections
-of My Youth,” p. 306. By Ernest Renan. New York: G. P. Putnam’s
-Sons, 1883.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page370">[370]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><span class="chapno">CHAPTER XXVII.</span><br />
-<span class="chapname">PROGRESS OF THE NEW EDUCATION&mdash;1883-1898.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="subjects">Educational Revolution in 1883-4. &mdash; Urgent Demand for Reform &mdash; Existing
-Schools Denounced as Superficial, their Methods as Automatic,
-their System as a Mixture of Cram and Smatter &mdash; The
-Controversy between the School-master of the Old Régime and
-the Reformer &mdash; The Leaders of the Movement, Col. Parker, Dr.
-MacAlister, and Others &mdash; Followers of Rousseau, Bacon, and
-Spencer &mdash; “The End of Man is an Action, not a Thought” &mdash; The
-Conservative Teachers Fall into Line &mdash; The New Education Becomes
-an Aggressive Force, Pushing on to Victory &mdash; The Physical
-Progress of Manual Training &mdash; Its Quality Not Equal to its Extent &mdash; The
-New System of Training Confided to Teachers of the
-Old Régime &mdash; Ideal Teachers Hard to Find &mdash; Teachers Willing to
-Learn Should Be Encouraged &mdash; The Effects of Manual Training
-Long Antedate its Introduction to the Schools &mdash; Bacon’s Definition
-of Education &mdash; Stephenson and the Value of Hand-work &mdash; Manual
-Training is the Union of Thought and Action &mdash; It is the Antithesis
-of the Greek Methods, which Exalted Abstractions and Debased
-Things &mdash; The Rule of Comenius and the Injunction of Rousseau &mdash; Few
-Teachers Comprehend Them &mdash; The Employment of the
-Hands in the Arts is More Highly Educative than the Acquisition
-of the Rules of Reading and Arithmetic &mdash; What the Locomotive
-has Accomplished for Man &mdash; Education Must be Equal, and
-Social and Political Equality will Follow &mdash; The Foundation of
-the New Education is the Baconian Philosophy as Stated by
-Macaulay &mdash; Use and Service are the Twin-ministers of Human
-Progress &mdash; Definitions of Genius &mdash; Attention &mdash; Sir Henry Maine &mdash; Manual
-Training Relates to all the Arts of Life &mdash; Mind and Hand &mdash; Newton
-and the Apple &mdash; The Sense of Touch Resides in the
-Hand &mdash; Robert Seidel on Familiarity with Objects &mdash; Material
-Progress the Basis of Spiritual Growth &mdash; Plato and the Divine
-Dialogues &mdash; Poverty, Society, and the Useful Arts &mdash; Selfishness<span class="pagenum" id="Page371">[371]</span>
-Must Give Way to Altruism &mdash; The Struggle of Life &mdash; The Progress
-of the Arts and the Final Regeneration of the Race &mdash; The Arts
-that Make Life Sweet and Beautiful &mdash; The Final Fundamental
-Educational Ideal is Universality &mdash; Comenius’s Definition of Schools &mdash; The
-Workshops of Humanity &mdash; That One Man Should Die Ignorant
-who had Capacity for Knowledge is a Tragedy &mdash; Mental and
-Manual Exercises to be Rendered Homogeneous in the School of
-the Future &mdash; The Hero of the Ideal School.</p>
-
-<p>Fifteen years ago a great wave of educational awakening
-swept over this country. It penetrated every
-nook and corner of the land, pervading both cities, large
-and small, and the rural districts. It took the shape of
-a demand, often almost inarticulate, for reform. The
-schools were denounced as superficial; their methods
-as automatic; their teachers as unintelligent and untrained,
-their system of instruction as a mixture of
-cram and smatter.</p>
-
-<p>The school-master is a conservative, and with his
-champions he came promptly to the defence of the old
-schools and their old methods. The controversy became
-heated, and soon the rival forces joined battle. Col.
-Francis W. Parker, of the Chicago Normal School, and
-Dr. James MacAlister, now President of the Drexel
-Institute of Philadelphia, and others were prominent
-leaders of the new reform movement, whose banner was
-“Manual Training,” or “The New Education.”</p>
-
-<p>Under this brilliant and enthusiastic leadership the
-movement became a crusade in the interest of the educational
-ideas of Montaigne, Rousseau, Bacon, Locke,
-Comenius, Pestalozzi, Froebel, Spencer, Mann, and their
-long array of sympathizers and supporters, who, with
-Bacon, declare that “the end of man is an action, not a
-thought.”</p>
-
-<p>But the work of the reformers was too serious to be<span class="pagenum" id="Page372">[372]</span>
-long controlled, either by emotion or passion. The more
-intelligent and better educated and trained teachers
-gradually came to the support of the new system and
-methods, and the mass of the teaching fraternity caught
-something of the enthusiasm by which the reformers
-were inspired to struggle for a great cause. Thereafter
-Manual Training became an aggressive force openly demanding
-recognition, and pushing for victory and ultimate
-control.</p>
-
-<p>In the <a href="#Page387">Appendix</a> hereto the physical progress of Manual
-Training is shown in tabulated form; and the extent
-of such progress is all, if not more, than its most ardent
-friends and advocates could rationally desire. But it is
-not to be doubted that the quality of the progress the
-new education has made in the period of fifteen years
-under consideration is far inferior to its extent. The
-statistics here presented relate mainly to the village,
-town, and city schools of this country, and especially to
-its public schools, with some general observations and
-facts in relation to the progress of the new education
-in England and the chief countries in Europe. In a few
-instances the tabulations include institutions designed
-for industrial rather than strictly educational purposes.
-But it is deemed wise to retain them, on the ground that
-whether so designed or not all industrial training is
-educative.</p>
-
-<p>It is worthy of intelligent inquiry whether as a matter
-of fact, not only in this country, but in all countries, the
-progress of Manual Training has not been very unsatisfactory
-in quality. In most cases the new education
-was necessarily confided to teachers of the old régime,
-who, as a preliminary, were compelled to unlearn what
-was false and erroneous in the old system, to overcome<span class="pagenum" id="Page373">[373]</span>
-the prejudices of years, sometimes of a lifetime, and to
-become faithful and laborious students of a new and
-scientific scheme of education. The main difficulty in
-matters educational has always been to secure ideal
-teachers. Education is the first of human considerations,
-and its professors should be the most learned of
-human beings. If the teachers who have been called to
-the Priesthood, of the New Education, have proved incompetent
-in many instances, instead of being hastily
-condemned they should be helped forward towards the
-goal of competency by all friends of that progress in
-education which is the sole hope of human perfection.</p>
-
-<p>The most striking effects of Manual Training long
-antedate its introduction to the schools. For thousands
-of years, in every shop where the humble mechanic
-wrought; at every fireside where the domestic arts obtained
-a foothold; in every field where a step forward
-was made through the invention of some less crude implement
-of husbandry than the one that preceded it, the
-mind and the hand expressed their joint struggle towards
-the achievement of that skill in useful things which
-constitutes the very kernel of civilization. Bacon’s definition
-of education&mdash;“the cultivation of a just and legitimate
-familiarity betwixt the mind and things”&mdash;is
-a recognition of the philosophic fact that the hand is
-the source of wisdom; and the life of George Stephenson,
-the inventor of the locomotive, affords a most impressive
-illustration of the educative value of hand-work.
-At the coal-pit’s mouth Stephenson, meantime
-learning his “A B C’s,” invented the “Rocket,” while
-the bookish engineers were declaring it to be a mechanical
-impossibility. Stephenson’s achievement was the
-realization in things of Bacon’s luminous precept&mdash;“The<span class="pagenum" id="Page374">[374]</span>
-end of man is an action, not a thought.”&mdash;This is the
-philosophy, the rationale, of Manual Training; it is the
-union of thought and action, and it therefore demands
-the elimination from educational methods of the abstract
-philosophy of the Greeks. In his declaration, “All the
-useful arts are degrading,” Plato defined the character
-of the revival of learning which was to occur hundreds
-of years afterwards; it was a revival of Greek methods,
-which exalted abstractions, and debased things. Mr.
-Herbert Spencer refers to its baleful effects upon the
-schools of England in the severest terms of condemnation.
-That Mr. Spencer’s arraignment of the schools is
-just, is shown by its antithesis expressed in the dictum
-of Dr. Dwight, of Yale College, who says: “Education
-is for the purpose of developing and cultivating the
-thinking power. It is to the end of making a knowing,
-thinking mind.”</p>
-
-<p>Bacon discovered, and did not hesitate to declare, that
-“the understanding is more prone to error than the
-senses”; and this fact constitutes the basis of his philosophy
-of “things,” which is another name for the law
-of induction. “For if we would look into and dissect
-the nature of this real world,” he says, “we must consult
-only things themselves.” If we would find the corner-stone
-of education, we must consult labor. Nothing
-great is accomplished without a due mingling of drudgery
-and humility; for of all the virtues humility is the
-most excellent. The Greeks failed to comprehend the
-true educational idea because of their pride. They associated
-use with slavery, because in Greece all labor
-was performed by slaves; and, scorning labor, they
-scorned use, and, by consequence, service, the greatest
-of the moralities.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page375">[375]</span></p>
-
-<p>Upon the foundation laid by Bacon, Rabelais, and
-Montaigne, Comenius, Rousseau, Pestalozzi, and Froebel
-raised a great superstructure of educational ideas.
-Words were subordinated, and things ennobled.</p>
-
-<p>Comenius’s rule, to “leave nothing until it has been
-impressed by means of the ear, the eye, the tongue, the
-hand,” and the injunction of Rousseau that “the student
-will learn more by one hour of manual labor than he
-will retain from a whole day’s verbal instructions; that
-the things themselves are the best explanations”&mdash;these
-are the maxims of the new education.</p>
-
-<p>But to what extent has the old school-master adopted
-the new education, to what extent occupied the old
-school-room with new ideas? How many school-masters
-of even the present <i>régime</i> comprehend with John Ruskin
-that “the youth who has once learned to take a
-straight shaving off a plank, or to draw a fine curve
-without faltering, or to lay a brick level in its mortar,
-has learned a multitude of other matters which no lips
-of man could ever teach him?” In other words, to what
-extent does the conviction pervade the ranks of the fraternity
-of teachers, whether of public-schools, private
-schools, colleges, or universities, that the employment of
-the hands in the useful arts is more highly educative
-than the acquisition of the rules of reading, writing, and
-arithmetic? Or, considering the subject of the history
-and career of George Stephenson, for instance, what, in
-the opinion of the modern school-master, contributed
-most to his development as a man and citizen of the
-world&mdash;the mental exercise of learning to read, write,
-and cipher, which task he accomplished while engaged
-in inventing the locomotive, or the combined mental
-and manual exercise of taking apart, repairing, and putting<span class="pagenum" id="Page376">[376]</span>
-together the stationary engine used at the colliery
-where he was employed? If, in the course of our investigation,
-it should be found that doing things as
-Stephenson did is more conducive to intellectual development
-than memorizing words and reciting poetry,
-as the Greeks did, some light may be thrown on the
-general subject of existing educational methods. Their
-chief defect is their lack of moral power. Morality
-does not reside in the letters of the alphabet, but there
-is in the locomotive, for example, a great moral principle&mdash;the
-principle of the brotherhood of man. For, in devising
-the locomotive, Stephenson made man’s neighborhood
-coterminous with earth’s utmost bounds; thus, in
-a single act, achieving his own apotheosis, and assuring,
-ultimately, the moral and intellectual kinship of the
-race. For the hand stands for use, for service, and for
-unyielding integrity; and it may be confidently asserted
-on the conviction of observation, experience, and a studious
-consideration of historic facts, that its drill and
-discipline as enforced in the world’s workshops, and in
-the best of existing Manual-training schools, results in a
-far greater degree of mind development than is produced
-by any exclusively academic course, and hence
-that Manual Training is the most important of all
-methods of education.</p>
-
-<p>The most sacred of human rights is the right of the
-poor child, born in a highly civilized, wealthy community,
-to the same kind and degree of education as that
-received by the child of the most opulent citizen.</p>
-
-<p>It was long ago remarked that “the inequalities of
-intellect, like the inequalities of the surface of our globe,
-bear so small a proportion to the mass that in calculating
-its great revolutions they may safely be neglected;<span class="pagenum" id="Page377">[377]</span>”
-and the late Henry George declared that the differences
-in men, intellectually, are no greater than their physical
-differences.</p>
-
-<p>The perpetuity of free institutions depends upon
-social not less than upon political equality. But social
-equality is impossible without educational equality: the
-very thought of intimate relations with the ignorant is
-repulsive to the learned. Education, impartial and
-universal, is, therefore, the sole guarantee of an ideal
-civilization, and so of an imperishable state.</p>
-
-<p>Old social evils constantly recur because the old crime
-of inequality in education is forever and ever repeated.
-It follows that we shall make all things equal through
-equal education. But what sort of education? We shall
-not train the child, as the ancients did, “to dispute in
-learned phrase as to whether we can be certain that we
-are certain of nothing!” Nor shall we stuff his memory
-with the grammar and rhetoric of an ancient tongue, in
-view of the profound observation of Dr. Draper, that a
-living thought can no more be embodied in a dead language
-than activity can be imparted to a corpse. But
-we shall rather instruct him in the principles of the
-Baconian philosophy, of which Macaulay so aptly says:
-“Its characteristic distinction, its essential spirit, is its
-majestic humility&mdash;the persuasion that nothing can be
-too insignificant for the attention of the wisest which
-is not too insignificant to give pleasure or pain to the
-meanest.”</p>
-
-<p>The end sought in education by the ancients was
-ornament, and its strict analogy is found in barbaric
-life. Spencer has pointed out that the savage smeared
-his body with yellow ochre before he covered it with
-clothes, and that he adorned his head with feathers before<span class="pagenum" id="Page378">[378]</span>
-he built a hut. So, under the laws of evolution,
-before a Bacon could arise, whole generations of philosophers
-were born, lived, speculated, and died, without
-leaving to mankind the smallest heritage of that common
-sense by which we nevertheless live.</p>
-
-<p>A philosophy which scorned the useful in all its
-aspects was essentially barbaric; for art differentiates
-civilized from savage life: its law was stagnation, as the
-law of scientific investigation is progress. Use is the
-greatest thing in the material world, as service is the
-greatest thing in the moral world; and they are united
-in the philosophy of Bacon, which, beginning in observation
-and ending in art, multiplies useful things that are
-beautiful, and beautiful things that are useful.</p>
-
-<p>The old education was an outgrowth of the old philosophy;
-the new education springs as logically from the
-new, or Baconian, philosophy. The old education was
-ornamental; the new is scientific, or useful. The old
-education was designed to make masters; the new is
-designed to make men.</p>
-
-<p>President Eliot, of Harvard University, admits that
-his method of education is to compel the student to
-work. On the other hand, the method of the new
-education is to attract him. Genius has many definitions,
-one of which is “a capacity for taking infinite
-pains.” But its humblest equivalent is “attention”;
-and we propose to secure the student’s attention through
-his hands: for the most significant fact in all the realm
-of certitude is the fact that man impresses himself upon
-nature through the hand alone!</p>
-
-<p>Let us then, in the new school, unite mind and hand
-in a crusade after the truths that are hidden in things.
-For Manual Training, educationally, is the blending of<span class="pagenum" id="Page379">[379]</span>
-thought and action. The thought that does not lead to
-an act is both mentally and materially barren. For as it
-confers no benefit upon the human race, neither does
-it profit the mind that conceives it. Nay, more. An
-unprolific thought exhausts the mind to no purpose, as
-an unfruitful tree cumbers the ground. It follows that
-the integrity of the mind can be maintained only by the
-submission of its immature judgments to the verification
-of things. Hence the correlation of thoughts and things
-is as necessary to mental and moral growth as the application
-of the principles of abstract mechanics to the arts
-of peace is essential to human progress.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Henry Maine supports this doctrine in a graphic
-paragraph: “Unchecked by external truth the mind of
-man has a fatal facility for ensnaring and entrapping
-and entangling itself. But happily, happily for the
-human race, some fragment of physical speculation has
-been built into every false system.”</p>
-
-<p>Things are the source of ideas. Action generates
-thought. He who has tools in his hand thinks best as
-well as acts best. The man whose finger is on Nature’s
-pulse feels her heart-throbs, and so discovers and utilizes
-her secrets. The men and women who do the world’s
-work are better educated than the schoolmen who vainly
-tell them how to do it; and they are better educated
-because they are in closer relationship with things,
-through the supreme sense of touch, which refines and
-spiritualizes the hand&mdash;that wonderful member which
-differentiates man from the other animals, and makes
-him their master.</p>
-
-<p>Manual Training educationally, then, relates to all the
-arts whose sum is the art of living. For whether it be
-the chair on which we sit; or the bed on which we lie;<span class="pagenum" id="Page380">[380]</span>
-or the garments we wear; or the house that shelters us;
-or the railway train on which we cross continents; or
-the ship that takes us over seas; or the unspeakable marvels
-of the world’s museums and galleries upon which
-we gaze with rapture; or the orchestra of an hundred
-instruments, whose music enchants us; or the treasures
-of dead cities&mdash;long buried&mdash;now unearthed; or the temples
-in which we worship; or the monuments which
-commemorate our heroes and martyrs; or the tombs in
-which we moulder away to dust&mdash;they are all the work
-of the hand!</p>
-
-<p>Manual Training is the acquisition by the hand of the
-arts through which man expresses himself in things.
-It is a series of educational generalizations in things.
-The purpose of it is to put the mind and hand <i>en rapport</i>
-with each other; to make the hand acquainted with the
-elementary manipulations of the typical arts, by actual
-exercises, as the mind is familiarized with the fundamental
-principles of the sciences by studying their laws.</p>
-
-<p>Superior observation is only another name for genius.
-To the dull eye the falling apple taught no lesson, but
-to Newton’s quick apprehension it revealed the law of
-gravitation!</p>
-
-<p>It is not alone, however, in the sense of sight that
-observation resides; nor is it keenest there. We have
-recently learned the value of object teaching; but we
-have yet to learn, popularly and practically, what has
-long been known to science&mdash;that the sense of touch is
-the master sense, whence all the other senses spring.
-It is because of this fact, and of the further fact that
-the sense of touch is most highly developed in the hand,
-that man is the wisest of animals.</p>
-
-<p>It follows that more than in the sense of seeing, hearing,<span class="pagenum" id="Page381">[381]</span>
-tasting, or smelling&mdash;nay, more than in all these
-senses combined&mdash;the faculty of observation resides in
-the hand.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Wilson declares that touch “reigns throughout
-the body, and is the token of life in every part”; and
-Dr. Maudsley says: “It is the fundamental sense, the
-mother-tongue of language.”</p>
-
-<p>How apt is this definition of the sense of touch&mdash;“the
-token of life in every part”&mdash;and how comprehensive
-this&mdash;“the mother-tongue of language!” And of this
-master sense the hand is the chief organ and minister.
-How versatile it is; what adaptability it possesses; what
-helpfulness! In the moment of danger how reassuring its
-supporting grasp; how consoling its gentle touch when
-grief overwhelms! In defeat how it trembles with
-emotion, and how tense with exaltation it becomes in
-the hour of victory! With what infinite loathing it
-shrinks from a hated contact, and with what sympathetic
-vibrations of ardor responds to the clinging pressure
-of love!</p>
-
-<p>If we would become familiar with objects we must
-subject them to the test of touch, we must handle them.
-As Robert Seidel, a great teacher, well says: “We must
-stretch them, beat them, cool them, expose them to the
-sun, the water, the air&mdash;we must work them.”</p>
-
-<p>It is through these processes of loving manipulation
-that the mechanic and the artisan transform things crude
-and ugly into forms of use and beauty. And it is in this
-way, and this way only, that man has trod the path of
-progress. It is a rugged road, whose steeps are to be
-climbed alone by those whose hearts are warm with holy
-zeal, whose souls are aglow with enthusiasm, and whose
-hands are endowed with the rich experiences of thoughtful<span class="pagenum" id="Page382">[382]</span>
-toil. And we shall fit all mankind for this noble
-task by training them to usefulness&mdash;that is, by teaching
-them, not merely how to think, but how to act, how to
-work.</p>
-
-<p>It is a broad and conclusive generalization of Herbert
-Spencer that since literature and the fine arts are made
-possible by the useful arts, manifestly that which is made
-possible must be postponed to that which makes it possible.
-Nor does this rational and sober view of art detract
-in the least from its dignity or sentiment. On the contrary,
-it provides a foundation for works of the imagination&mdash;a
-basis for that spirituality which is the fruit of the
-happy conjunction of a multitude of material conditions
-evolved from the humblest as well as the noblest of the
-useful arts&mdash;a basis without which the beautiful arts
-could never exist.</p>
-
-<p>It thus becomes plain that social and economic conditions
-are the product of education in things. Art education
-differentiates the civilized from the savage man.
-The pathway of progress which now blazes with the
-glory of electricity stretches back to the gloom of the
-caves where our early ancestors dwelt; and the steps of
-this advance consist of improvements in the useful and
-beautiful arts. From gesture to speech; from pictures
-to types; from the canoe to the steamship, and from the
-canal to the locomotive, the race has moved forward,
-always and only, through art triumphs.</p>
-
-<p>So all the generations of men have lived and toiled
-for us. We are the heirs of the hoarded learning, of the
-accumulated mental and moral fibre, and of the treasured
-arts of the ages. And we are hence the elders, as Bacon
-says, of the philosophers, the sages, and the inventors
-and discoverers of all time. Their achievements are<span class="pagenum" id="Page383">[383]</span>
-heights whence we may discern and occupy new and
-wider fields of human endeavor.</p>
-
-<p>The precise relation of the useful arts to social and
-economic conditions is, therefore, that of creator. As
-your art education is, so shall your society be. There
-are persons who unconsciously dissociate art and civilization&mdash;who
-think that things are not essential to spiritual
-development, who fail to realize the fact that the main
-reason of the barbaric character of the savage is the
-absence from his environment of the arts of peace and
-plenty. If, for example, Plato had not been provided
-with food and clothing and shelter, he would doubtless
-not have composed the divine dialogues; and if there
-had been neither mechanics, nor architects, nor sculptors
-to adorn with palaces and temples the Greek cities, his
-ideal republic would not have had a place in classic
-literature; and finally, if there had been no (slave) hand-workers
-in Greece (for art products are all, directly
-or indirectly, the work of the hand), instead of being
-the most venerated of philosophers, Plato might have
-been, perhaps, the most wretched of savages, prolonging
-a miserable existence by means the most inglorious.
-But so unconscious was he of the true relation of the
-useful arts to life that he denounced them all as “degrading”!</p>
-
-<p>Poverty is the chief scourge of society; and it is a
-familiar economic fact that where the useful arts are
-most flourishing poverty is least pressing, so that to
-abolish poverty it would seem to be only necessary to
-multiply and extend the arts. And if poverty is to be
-abolished; if there is ever to be an ideal civilization, the
-controlling motive of humanity must be changed from
-selfishness to altruism; and this change can come only<span class="pagenum" id="Page384">[384]</span>
-through love of work. So long as work shall be regarded
-as a “curse,” the paramount purpose of the individual
-will be to avoid it, and to compel others to submit to it.
-Hence the antagonisms that arise at every point of human
-contact. The sum of these antagonisms is what we call
-the struggle of life, which is merely the struggle of each
-to survive at the expense of his fellows, and is therefore
-barbaric.</p>
-
-<p>Now as we have seen that it is through the arts that
-man has been civilized&mdash;that, in a word, the arts differentiate
-the civilized from the savage man&mdash;it is evident that
-the further regeneration of the race is to be wrought by
-analogous means&mdash;that is to say, by a wider expansion of
-the arts of peace. And the way to achieve this result is
-to transform our schools, which were modelled after the
-classic methods of Greece and Rome, into laboratories
-for the development of useful men and women, through
-the mastery of the useful arts; the arts that make life
-sweet and beautiful; the arts that adorn our homes, that
-render the earth fertile and make it blossom as the rose;
-the arts that annihilate distance and so promote man’s
-brotherhood by enlarging his neighborhood&mdash;these are
-the arts that inspire us with just and generous impulses,
-the arts in which the noblest moral sentiments are made
-manifest in things.</p>
-
-<p>These, then, are the arts which ought to be made the
-subject of thorough and exhaustive education&mdash;the arts
-that led Comenius to define schools as the workshops of
-humanity. The final essential educational condition is
-universality; for it is obvious that inequality of educational
-opportunity is the grossest injustice of which organized
-society is capable. It is against this injustice that
-Carlyle exclaims: “That there should one man die<span class="pagenum" id="Page385">[385]</span>
-ignorant, who had capacity for knowledge, this I call a
-tragedy, were it to happen more than twenty times in
-the minute.”</p>
-
-<p>This is indeed the tragedy of tragedies&mdash;the tragedy
-on the heels of which slavery stalks; in whose train
-caste rides in scornful state; in whose hideous shadow
-war waits to shed blood and spread pestilence and famine.
-All these are the satellites of ignorance, and hardly less
-of partial education than of total unenlightenment; and
-hence the only hope that civilization shall finally triumph
-over barbarism rests in universal, impartial, and scientific
-education.</p>
-
-<p>The contrasts between the old and the new school
-methods pointed out in this chapter show along what
-lines educational progress is to be sought. The ideal
-school is to consist, not of one academic department,
-and a department of Manual Training, but of mental
-and manual exercises so related as to produce homogeneity.</p>
-
-<p>The tabulations of facts which will be found in the
-Appendix show that a vast number of schools have been
-dedicated to the new education. If they are to be developed
-into ideal schools thousands of ideal teachers must
-devote themselves to the arduous task. Each school
-transformed from the dull routine of mediocrity to the
-vigor and elasticity which wait on development will cost
-the life of a hero. The school that has no hero to struggle
-for its salvation will surely languish and die. Every
-great school of the future must therefore have its hero,
-for it is only the hero who toils without thought of reward.
-As Carlyle so well says: “The wages of every
-noble work do yet lie in heaven or else nowhere.” And
-he has left this message of advice and encouragement to<span class="pagenum" id="Page386">[386]</span>
-the hero of the school of the future which is to revolutionize
-the world: “Thou wilt never sell thy life in a
-satisfactory manner. Give it like a royal heart; let the
-price be nothing: thou hast then, in a certain sense, got
-all for it!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page387">[387]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">APPENDIX</h2>
-
-<h3>STATISTICS.&mdash;MANUAL TRAINING, 1883-1898, IN
-THE UNITED STATES</h3>
-
-</div><!--chpater-->
-
-<p class="tabhead">MANUAL TRAINING IN PUBLIC HIGH-SCHOOLS</p>
-
-<table class="appendix" summary="Statistics">
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<th class="br"><span class="smcap">Name<br />of<br />School</span></th>
-<th class="br"><span class="smcap">City<br />or<br />Town</span></th>
-<th class="br"><span class="smcap">State</span></th>
-<th class="br">Manual<br />Training<br />Estab-<br />lished</th>
-<th class="br">Teachers<br />of<br />Manual<br />Training</th>
-<th>Pupils<br />Taking<br />Manual<br />Training</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Peru</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ill.</td>
-<td class="year br">1883</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">41</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Polytechnic High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Baltimore</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Md.</td>
-<td class="year br">1883</td>
-<td class="numbers">16</td>
-<td class="pupils">674</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Eau Claire</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1884</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">50</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Central Manual-training School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Philadelphia</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Penn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1885</td>
-<td class="numbers">13</td>
-<td class="pupils">406</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Industrial Training High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Indianapolis</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ind.</td>
-<td class="year br">1885</td>
-<td class="numbers">10</td>
-<td class="pupils">676</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Rochester Free Academy</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Rochester</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1885</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">908</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Toledo</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ohio</td>
-<td class="year br">1885</td>
-<td class="numbers">11</td>
-<td class="pupils">394</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Central Manual-training School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Cleveland</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ohio</td>
-<td class="year br">1885</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">200</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Central High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Washington</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">D. C.</td>
-<td class="year br">1886</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">235</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Manual-training High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">New Haven</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Conn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1886</td>
-<td class="numbers">13</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Manual-training School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Springfield</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1886</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">34</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Minneapolis</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Minn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1886</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">375</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Newburg Free Academy</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Newburg</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1886</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">133</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Manual-training School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Galesburg</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ill.</td>
-<td class="year br">1887</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">74</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">St. Paul</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Minn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1887</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">350</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Manual-training High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Stillwater</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Minn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1887</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">12</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Jamestown</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1887</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">48</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Central High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Easton</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Del.</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Easton</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Md.</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Ridge Manual-training School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Cambridge</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers">9</td>
-<td class="pupils">178</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Concord</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. H.</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">52</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Orange High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Orange</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">180</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Albany</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">750</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Dist. 20 Central High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Pueblo</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Col.</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">160</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Manual-training High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Davenport</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Iowa</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">82</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">West Des Moines High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Des Moines</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Iowa</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">50</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Manual-training High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Fall River</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">62</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Duluth</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Minn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">80</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Omaha</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Neb.</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">100</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Union</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">200</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Westchester</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Penn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">240</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">English High and Manual-training School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Chicago</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ill.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">17</td>
-<td class="pupils">430</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Manual-training High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Louisville</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ky.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">13</td>
-<td class="pupils">212</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Approved High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Vineland</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">150</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Passaic</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">53</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">South Orange</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">150</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">West Manual-training School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Cleveland</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ohio</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">100</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">East and West High-schools<span class="pagenum" id="Page388">[388]</span></td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Milwaukee</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">144</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Norwich Free Academy</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Norwich</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Conn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">33</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Waterbury</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Conn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Springfield</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ill.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">20</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Moline High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Moline</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ill.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">47</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Manual training High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Waltham</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">18</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Bay City</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mich.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers"><a href="#Footnote120" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor120">[120]</a></td>
-<td class="pupils"><a href="#Footnote120" class="fnanchor">[120]</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Ridgewood High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ridgewood</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">35</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Manual training High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Camden</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">150</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Manual training High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Seattle</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wash.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">70</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Menominee</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">103</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Bristol</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Conn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">30</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Willard Hall High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wilmington</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Del.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">210</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Fremont Manual-training School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Fremont</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ohio</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">50</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">North East Manual-training School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Philadelphia</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Penn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">9</td>
-<td class="pupils">369</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Norristown</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Penn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">290</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Manual-training High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Providence</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">R. I.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">18</td>
-<td class="pupils">280</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Spokane</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wash.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">85</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Polytechnical High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">San Francisco</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Cal.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">250</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Manual-training High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mason City</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Iowa</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">125</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Manchester</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. H.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">12</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Atlantic City</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">235</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">East Orange High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">East Orange</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">125</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Manual-training High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Denver</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Col.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">400</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Frankfort</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ky.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">100</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Mechanics Arts High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Boston</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">11</td>
-<td class="pupils">324</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Manual-training High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Brooklyn</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">800</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Washington High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Washington</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Penn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">27</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Townsend Industrial School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Newport</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">R. I.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">26</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Ryan High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Appleton</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">26</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Manual-training School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Lowell</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">50</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">English High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Somerville</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">75</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">English and Classical High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Worcester</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">283</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Medford</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">20</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">English High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Lynn</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">72</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Lawrence</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">33</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Royen High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Youngstown</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ohio</td>
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">200</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Fitchburg</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Burlington</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Los Angeles</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Cal.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="pupils">315</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Rockford</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ill.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">27</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Florence</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">36</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Brookline High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Brookline</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">50</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Janesville</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Malden</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">60</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Hackley Manual-training School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Muskegon</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mich.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">350</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Ishpeming Manual-training School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ishpeming</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mich.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">75</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Menominee Manual-training School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Menominee</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mich.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">25</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Summit</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">40</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Barlow School of Industrial Art</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Binghamton</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">173</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Syracuse</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">50</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Akron</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ohio</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">180</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Cross Creek School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Washington</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Penn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">14</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Waupaca</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">16</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Winnetka</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ill.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">16</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school<span class="pagenum" id="Page389">[389]</span></td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Fond du Lac</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">50</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Manual-training High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Kansas City</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mo.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">27</td>
-<td class="pupils">800</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Oshkosh</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">250</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Central and Martin Park High-schools</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Buffalo</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">50</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mayville</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">30</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Red Bank</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">375</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Hartford</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Conn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1898</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">140</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Manual-training High school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Newark</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1898</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Howard School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wilmington</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Del.</td>
-<td class="year br"><a href="#Footnote121" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor121">[121]</a></td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">45</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Iowa City</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Iowa</td>
-<td class="year br"><a href="#Footnote121" class="fnanchor">[121]</a></td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Brockton</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br"><a href="#Footnote121" class="fnanchor">[121]</a></td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">South Omaha</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Neb.</td>
-<td class="year br"><a href="#Footnote121" class="fnanchor">[121]</a></td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">High-school</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Stamford</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Conn.</td>
-<td class="year br"><a href="#Footnote121" class="fnanchor">[121]</a></td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<td class="descr">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="center br">101 Cities</td>
-<td class="center br">23 States</td>
-<td class="br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="numbers">320</td>
-<td class="pupils">15,942</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote120"><a href="#FNanchor120"><span class="label">[120]</span></a> Abandoned temporarily for want of funds.</p>
-
-<p id="Footnote121"><a href="#FNanchor121"><span class="label">[121]</span></a> Date of establishment not reported.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p class="tabhead">MANUAL TRAINING IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS&mdash;GRAMMAR GRADES</p>
-
-<table class="appendix" summary="Statistics">
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<th class="br"><span class="smcap">City<br />or<br />Town</span></th>
-<th class="br"><span class="smcap">State</span></th>
-<th class="br">Manual<br />Training<br />Estab-<br />lished<br />in<br />Grammar<br />Grades</th>
-<th class="br">Separate<br />Manual-<br />training<br />Schools</th>
-<th class="br">Teachers<br />of<br />Manual<br />Training</th>
-<th>Pupils<br />Taking<br />Manual<br />Training</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Montclair</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1882</td>
-<td class="numbers">All</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">530</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Peru</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ill.</td>
-<td class="year br">1883</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">New Haven</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Conn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1884</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Jamestown</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1884</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">800</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Eau Claire</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1884</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">100</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Waltham</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1885</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">425</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Rochester</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1885</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">336</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Toledo</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ohio</td>
-<td class="year br">1885</td>
-<td class="numbers">11</td>
-<td class="numbers">11</td>
-<td class="pupils">2,257</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Washington</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">D. C.</td>
-<td class="year br">1886</td>
-<td class="numbers">40</td>
-<td class="numbers">43</td>
-<td class="pupils">9,452</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Springfield</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1886</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">267</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Boston</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1886</td>
-<td class="numbers">All</td>
-<td class="numbers">81</td>
-<td class="pupils">37,240</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Newburg</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1886</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">95</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Tidioute</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Penn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1886</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Beardstown</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ill.</td>
-<td class="year br">1887</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Easton</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Del.</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Brookline</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">525</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Winchester</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">408</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Concord</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. H.</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">402</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Hoboken</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="pupils">1,229</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Orange</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">842</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">New York</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers">37</td>
-<td class="numbers">32</td>
-<td class="pupils">10,187</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Meadville</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Penn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">263</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Wilmington</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Del.</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">45</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Davenport<span class="pagenum" id="Page390">[390]</span></td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Iowa</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">101</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Vineland</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers">All</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">500</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Union</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers">All</td>
-<td class="numbers">All</td>
-<td class="pupils">643</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">St. Louis</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mo.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">1<a href="#Footnote122" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor122">[122]</a></td>
-<td class="numbers">8<a href="#Footnote122" class="fnanchor">[122]</a></td>
-<td class="pupils">116<a href="#Footnote122" class="fnanchor">[122]</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Duluth</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Minn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">12</td>
-<td class="numbers">25</td>
-<td class="pupils">1,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Passaic</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">152</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Garfield</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">550</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Paterson</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">300</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Ridgewood</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">200</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Knoxville</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Tenn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">South Orange</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">300</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Waterbury</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Conn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Springfield</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ill.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">50</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Moline</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ill.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">279</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Salem</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">160</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Northampton</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">900</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Bay City</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mich.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers"><a href="#Footnote123" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor123">[123]</a></td>
-<td class="numbers"><a href="#Footnote123" class="fnanchor">[123]</a></td>
-<td class="pupils"><a href="#Footnote123" class="fnanchor">[123]</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">San Francisco</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Cal.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">560</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">St. Paul</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Minn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">2,366</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Camden</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">4,600</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Norristown</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Penn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">1,430</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Providence</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">R. I.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">13</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Menominee</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">200</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Bristol</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Conn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">276</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Haverhill</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">190</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Manistee</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mich.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Minneapolis</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Minn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">1,214</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">St. Cloud</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Minn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">150</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Manchester</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. H.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">All</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">196</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Bayonne</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">All</td>
-<td class="numbers">All</td>
-<td class="pupils">All</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">East Orange</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">All</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">755</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Cleveland</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ohio</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">3,500</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Newport</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">R. I.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">633</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Staunton</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Va.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">200</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Santa Barbara</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Cal.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">232</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">San Diego</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Cal.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">270</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Portland</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Maine</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">900</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Medford</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">400</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">New Bedford</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">400</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Ithaca</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">420</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Mason City</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Iowa</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">50</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Denver</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Colo.</td>
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="numbers">All</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">2,500</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Chicago</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ill.</td>
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="numbers">28</td>
-<td class="numbers">32</td>
-<td class="pupils">8,200</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Cape May</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="numbers">All</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">411</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Fitchburg</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Buffalo</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">200</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Pittsburg</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Penn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">400</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Barbadoes Township</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">713</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Woonsocket</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">R. I.</td>
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">150</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Oakland</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Cal.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">425</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Carlstadt</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">All</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">240</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Los Angeles</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Cal.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">7</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">2,080</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Summit</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">200</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Hartford</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Conn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">All</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">800</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Des Moines</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Iowa</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">80</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Florence<span class="pagenum" id="Page391">[391]</span></td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Menominee</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mich.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">80</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Brooklyn</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Glens Falls</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">60</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Utica</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">2,300</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Akron</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ohio</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">210</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Washington</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Penn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">112</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Pueblo Dist. No. 1</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Colo.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">180</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Winnetka</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ill.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">48</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Oshkosh</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">25</td>
-<td class="numbers">28</td>
-<td class="pupils">1,400</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Indianapolis</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ind.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">1,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">North Adams</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">247</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Lynn</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">351</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Newton</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">135</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Worcester</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">397</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Cambridge</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">136</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Muskegon</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mich.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">700</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Kansas City</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mo.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Newark</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">2,265</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Milwaukee</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">15</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Pueblo Dist. No. 20</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Colo.</td>
-<td class="year br">1898</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">300</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">New Britain</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Conn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1898</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">190</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Peabody</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1898</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Moberly</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mo.</td>
-<td class="year br">1898</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Stockton</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Cal.</td>
-<td class="year br"><a href="#Footnote124" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor124">[124]</a></td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Santa Cruz</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Cal.</td>
-<td class="year br"><a href="#Footnote124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a></td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Manchester</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Conn.</td>
-<td class="year br"><a href="#Footnote124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a></td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Stamford</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Conn.</td>
-<td class="year br"><a href="#Footnote124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a></td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Iowa City</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Iowa</td>
-<td class="year br"><a href="#Footnote124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a></td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Augusta</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Me.</td>
-<td class="year br"><a href="#Footnote124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a></td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Baltimore</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Md.</td>
-<td class="year br"><a href="#Footnote124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a></td>
-<td class="numbers">All</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">All</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Hyde Park</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br"><a href="#Footnote124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a></td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">204</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Holyoke</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br"><a href="#Footnote124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a></td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Easton</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br"><a href="#Footnote124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a></td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Fall River</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br"><a href="#Footnote124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a></td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Dedham</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br"><a href="#Footnote124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a></td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Malden</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br"><a href="#Footnote124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a></td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Milton</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br"><a href="#Footnote124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a></td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Waterbury</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br"><a href="#Footnote124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a></td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Wellesley</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br"><a href="#Footnote124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a></td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Canton</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br"><a href="#Footnote124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a></td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Richmond</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Va.</td>
-<td class="year br"><a href="#Footnote124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a></td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<td class="center br">119 Cities</td>
-<td class="center br">24 States</td>
-<td class="br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="numbers">287</td>
-<td class="numbers">444</td>
-<td class="pupils">118,835</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote122"><a href="#FNanchor122"><span class="label">[122]</span></a> Colored School.</p>
-
-<p id="Footnote123"><a href="#FNanchor123"><span class="label">[123]</span></a> Abandoned temporarily for want of funds.</p>
-
-<p id="Footnote124"><a href="#FNanchor124"><span class="label">[124]</span></a> Date of establishment not reported.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page392">[392]</span></p>
-
-<p class="tabhead">MANUAL TRAINING IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS&mdash;PRIMARY GRADES</p>
-
-<table class="appendix" summary="Statistics">
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<th class="br"><span class="smcap">City or<br />Town</span><a href="#Footnote125" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor125">[125]</a></th>
-<th class="br"><span class="smcap">State</span></th>
-<th class="br">Manual<br />Training<br />Estab-<br />lished<br />in<br />Primary<br />Grades</th>
-<th class="br">Separate<br />Manual<br />Training<br />Primary<br />Grades</th>
-<th class="br">Teachers<br />of<br />Manual<br />Training</th>
-<th>Pupils<br />Taking<br />Manual<br />Training</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Montclair</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1882</td>
-<td class="numbers">All</td>
-<td class="numbers">All</td>
-<td class="pupils">1,047</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Jamestown</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1882</td>
-<td class="numbers">All</td>
-<td class="numbers">All</td>
-<td class="pupils">2,400</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Baltimore</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Md.</td>
-<td class="year br">1884</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Washington</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">D. C.</td>
-<td class="year br">1886</td>
-<td class="numbers">55</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">12,900</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Newburg</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1886</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Tidioute</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Penn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1886</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Oakland</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Cal.</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">2,159</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Springfield</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers">All</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">29,256</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Concord</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. H.</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Orange</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">2,132</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">New York</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">12,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Union</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers">All</td>
-<td class="numbers">All</td>
-<td class="pupils">560</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Vineland</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers">All</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">700</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Westchester</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Penn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Garfield</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">200</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">South Orange</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">200</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Waterbury</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Conn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Moline</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ill.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Northampton</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">900</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Ridgewood</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">200</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">San Francisco</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Cal.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">176</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">St. Paul</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Minn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">40</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">4,500</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Camden</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">3,080</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Providence</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">R. I.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">50</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Bristol</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Conn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">144</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Minneapolis</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Minn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">44</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">4,446</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Stillwater</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Minn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Cleveland</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ohio</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">3,500</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Staunton</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Va.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">200</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Menominee</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">200</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">St. Cloud</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Minn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">488</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Philipsburg</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">All</td>
-<td class="numbers">All</td>
-<td class="pupils">700</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Elyria</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ohio</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">All</td>
-<td class="numbers">All</td>
-<td class="pupils">700</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Newport</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">R. I.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">101</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Denver</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Colo.</td>
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Oshkosh</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">20</td>
-<td class="numbers">25</td>
-<td class="pupils">800</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Waltham</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">100</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Carlstadt</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">All</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Utica</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Akron</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ohio</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">All</td>
-<td class="numbers">All</td>
-<td class="pupils">1,800</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">San Diego</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Cal.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">250</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Newark</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Indianapolis</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ind.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">500</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Moberly</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mo.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Passaic</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">375</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Pueblo Dist. No. 1</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Colo.</td>
-<td class="year br">1898</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">180</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Santa Cruz<span class="pagenum" id="Page393">[393]</span></td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Cal.</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Elgin</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ill.</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Augusta</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Me.</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Detroit</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mich.</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Toledo</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ohio</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Pittsburg</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Penn.</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Shenandoah</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Penn.</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">La Crosse</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<td class="center br">54 Cities</td>
-<td class="center br">20 States</td>
-<td class="br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="numbers">222</td>
-<td class="numbers">62</td>
-<td class="pupils">88,398</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote125"><a href="#FNanchor125"><span class="label">[125]</span></a>
-Of the 54 cities tabulated, only 9 report the number of separate primary schools in
-which Manual Training is taught. These 9 cities report 202 schools, or an average of
-22.4 schools per city. Nine cities report all. Thirty-four cities do not report. If the
-average obtained from the cities reporting can be applied to all, then 1120 primary
-schools have Manual Training. Thirty-one cities do not report the number of teachers.
-Twenty cities report 34. Applying the above method shows 85 teachers of Manual Training
-in primary schools. It must be remembered that there are special or supervising
-teachers; the regular teachers doing most of this work under supervision. Thirty-two
-cities report 87,598 pupils taking Primary Manual Training; or 2737 on the average to
-each city reporting. Applying this average to the 51 cities reporting, the total is 139,587.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p class="tabhead">KINDERGARTENS IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS</p>
-
-<table class="appendix" summary="Statistics">
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<th class="br"><span class="smcap">City<br />or<br />Town</span></th>
-<th class="br"><span class="smcap">State</span></th>
-<th class="br">Kinder-<br />garten<br />Estab-<br />lished</th>
-<th class="br">Separate<br />Kinder-<br />gartens</th>
-<th class="br">Kinder-<br />garten<br />Teachers</th>
-<th>Kinder-<br />garten<br />Pupils</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">St. Louis</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mo.</td>
-<td class="year br">1873</td>
-<td class="numbers">60</td>
-<td class="numbers">400</td>
-<td class="pupils">7,694</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Milwaukee</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1880</td>
-<td class="numbers">42</td>
-<td class="numbers">83</td>
-<td class="pupils">3,816</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Cedar Rapids</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Iowa</td>
-<td class="year br">1881</td>
-<td class="numbers">12</td>
-<td class="numbers">16</td>
-<td class="pupils">766</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Newport</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">R. I.</td>
-<td class="year br">1882</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="numbers">8</td>
-<td class="pupils">250</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Lowell</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1883</td>
-<td class="numbers">12</td>
-<td class="numbers">25</td>
-<td class="pupils">400</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Pawtucket</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">R. I.</td>
-<td class="year br">1883</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="numbers">9</td>
-<td class="pupils">295</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">La Porte</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ind.</td>
-<td class="year br">1884</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">163</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Muskegon</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mich.</td>
-<td class="year br">1884</td>
-<td class="numbers">8</td>
-<td class="numbers">10</td>
-<td class="pupils">581</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Philadelphia</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Penn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1884</td>
-<td class="numbers">135</td>
-<td class="numbers">180</td>
-<td class="pupils">6,500</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Traverse City</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mich.</td>
-<td class="year br">1885</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">180</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">San José</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Cal.</td>
-<td class="year br">1885</td>
-<td class="numbers">7</td>
-<td class="numbers">17</td>
-<td class="pupils">337</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Augusta</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ga.</td>
-<td class="year br">1887</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="numbers">8</td>
-<td class="pupils">183</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Des Moines</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Iowa</td>
-<td class="year br">1887</td>
-<td class="numbers">14</td>
-<td class="numbers">28</td>
-<td class="pupils">807</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Marshalltown</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Iowa</td>
-<td class="year br">1887</td>
-<td class="numbers">7</td>
-<td class="numbers">10</td>
-<td class="pupils">260</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Louisville</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ky.</td>
-<td class="year br">1887</td>
-<td class="numbers">10</td>
-<td class="numbers">59</td>
-<td class="pupils">750</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Albany</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1887</td>
-<td class="numbers">19</td>
-<td class="numbers">30</td>
-<td class="pupils">750</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Boston</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers">67</td>
-<td class="numbers">126</td>
-<td class="pupils">3,925</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Brookline</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers">11</td>
-<td class="numbers">18</td>
-<td class="pupils">373</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Rochester</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers">13</td>
-<td class="numbers">68</td>
-<td class="pupils">1,972</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Sheboygan</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers">9</td>
-<td class="numbers">27</td>
-<td class="pupils">980</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Bristol</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Conn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="numbers">7</td>
-<td class="pupils">253</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Richmond</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ind.</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">75</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Cambridge</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers">11</td>
-<td class="numbers">22</td>
-<td class="pupils">583</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Grand Rapids</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mich.</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers">8</td>
-<td class="numbers">7</td>
-<td class="pupils">352</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Montclair</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="numbers">12</td>
-<td class="pupils">273</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Louisburg</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="numbers">10</td>
-<td class="pupils">165</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">North Tonawanda</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">200</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Norwich</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Conn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="numbers">7</td>
-<td class="pupils">120</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Lexington</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ky.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="numbers">10</td>
-<td class="pupils">360</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Grand Haven</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mich.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">105</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Garfield</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">80</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">East Orange</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="pupils">180</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">South Orange</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">55</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Providence</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">R. I.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">15</td>
-<td class="numbers">31</td>
-<td class="pupils">700</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Los Angeles<span class="pagenum" id="Page394">[394]</span></td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Cal.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">29</td>
-<td class="numbers">78</td>
-<td class="pupils">1,800</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Covington</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ky.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="numbers">10</td>
-<td class="pupils">600</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Frankfort</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ky.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">50</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Somerville</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="numbers">11</td>
-<td class="pupils">200</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Iron Mountain</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mich.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">11</td>
-<td class="numbers">11</td>
-<td class="pupils">586</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Ironwood</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mich.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="numbers">9</td>
-<td class="pupils">290</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Negaunee</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mich.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">78</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Concord</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. H.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="numbers">7</td>
-<td class="pupils">288</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Passaic</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="numbers">8</td>
-<td class="pupils">284</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Greenwich</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Conn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">52</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Terre Haute</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ind.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">16</td>
-<td class="numbers">11</td>
-<td class="pupils">435</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Worcester</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">10</td>
-<td class="numbers">19</td>
-<td class="pupils">518</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Lowell</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">12</td>
-<td class="numbers">26</td>
-<td class="pupils">900</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Duluth</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Minn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">16</td>
-<td class="numbers">27</td>
-<td class="pupils">1,000</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Omaha</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Neb.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">26</td>
-<td class="numbers">40</td>
-<td class="pupils">1,600</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Plainfield</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">230</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Utica</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">11</td>
-<td class="numbers">26</td>
-<td class="pupils">750</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Cohoes</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">127</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Niagara Falls</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="pupils">156</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">San Diego</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Cal.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="pupils">250</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Denver</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Colo.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">25</td>
-<td class="numbers">50</td>
-<td class="pupils">2,534</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Chicago</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ill.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">51</td>
-<td class="numbers">121</td>
-<td class="pupils">2,500</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Newton</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">13</td>
-<td class="numbers">29</td>
-<td class="pupils">569</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Lincoln</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Neb.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">8</td>
-<td class="numbers">22</td>
-<td class="pupils">700</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Menominee</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mich.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">350</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Kansas City</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mo.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">200</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Ridgewood</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">75</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Union</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">120</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Saratoga Springs</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">9</td>
-<td class="numbers">24</td>
-<td class="pupils">500</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Flushing</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">60</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">New Rochelle</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="numbers">7</td>
-<td class="pupils">476</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">El Paso</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Tex.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">100</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Burlington</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Vt.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="numbers">8</td>
-<td class="pupils">137</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Racine</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="numbers">11</td>
-<td class="pupils">573</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Fond du Lac</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="numbers">11</td>
-<td class="pupils">250</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Hammond</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ind.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">80</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Oskaloosa</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Iowa</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">210</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Sioux City</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Iowa</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="pupils">125</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Springfield</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">8</td>
-<td class="numbers">17</td>
-<td class="pupils">346</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Peabody</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="pupils">126</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Medford</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="numbers">8</td>
-<td class="pupils">220</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Superior</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="numbers">11</td>
-<td class="pupils">225</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Lawrence</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">36</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Escanaba</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mich.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">225</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Winona</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Minn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">8</td>
-<td class="numbers">13</td>
-<td class="pupils">400</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Natchez</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Miss.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">50</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Portsmouth</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. H.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="pupils">180</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Binghamton</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">13</td>
-<td class="numbers">14</td>
-<td class="pupils">600</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Geneva</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">150</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Sing Sing</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">91</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Wilkesbarre</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Penn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">80</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Marinette</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">300</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">La Crosse</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">150</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Madison</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="pupils">134</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Oakland</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Cal.</td>
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">60</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Jeffersonville</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ind.</td>
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="numbers">7</td>
-<td class="numbers">7</td>
-<td class="pupils">200</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Burlington</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Iowa</td>
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="numbers">10</td>
-<td class="pupils">200</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">North Adams</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="pupils">120</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Vicksburg<span class="pagenum" id="Page395">[395]</span></td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Miss.</td>
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">180</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Fremont</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ohio</td>
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">160</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Oshkosh</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="numbers">9</td>
-<td class="numbers">25</td>
-<td class="pupils">800</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Winnetka</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ill.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">57</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Indianapolis</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ind.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">53</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Dubuque</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Iowa</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="numbers">8</td>
-<td class="pupils">232</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Malden</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">85</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Northampton</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">90</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Ishpeming</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mich.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="pupils">300</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Detroit</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mich.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="numbers">12</td>
-<td class="pupils">91</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Nashua</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. H.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">120</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Syracuse</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">97</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Mt. Vernon</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">30</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Cleveland</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ohio</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">12</td>
-<td class="numbers">24</td>
-<td class="pupils">500</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Stevens Point</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">180</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">New Bedford</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="pupils">140</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Walden</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">40</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Newark</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">26</td>
-<td class="numbers">50</td>
-<td class="pupils">2,100</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Hoboken</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">7</td>
-<td class="numbers">15</td>
-<td class="pupils">368</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Bayonne</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers"><a href="#Footnote126" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor126">[126]</a></td>
-<td class="numbers"><a href="#Footnote126" class="fnanchor">[126]</a></td>
-<td class="pupils"><a href="#Footnote126" class="fnanchor">[126]</a></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Brooklyn</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">14</td>
-<td class="numbers">28</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Woonsocket</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">R. I.</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">30</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Pueblo</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Colo.</td>
-<td class="year br">1898</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">65</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Akron</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ohio</td>
-<td class="year br">1898</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">30</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Seattle</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wash.</td>
-<td class="year br">1898</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">51</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Appleton</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1898</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="numbers">8</td>
-<td class="pupils">200</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Anniston</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ala.</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">122</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Hot Springs</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ark.</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">16</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Sacramento</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Cal.</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="numbers">8</td>
-<td class="pupils">172</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Santa Cruz</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Cal.</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">53</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Manchester</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Conn.</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">8</td>
-<td class="pupils">210</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">New Britain</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Conn.</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="numbers">13</td>
-<td class="pupils">410</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">New Haven</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Conn.</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">8</td>
-<td class="numbers">19</td>
-<td class="pupils">676</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Hartford</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Conn.</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">12</td>
-<td class="numbers">138</td>
-<td class="pupils">1,326</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Norwalk</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Conn.</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="pupils">95</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Rockville</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Conn.</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Willimantic</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Conn.</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="pupils">229</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Rome</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ga.</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">16</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Evanston</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ill.</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="pupils">100</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Augusta</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Me.</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Portland</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Me.</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="numbers">10</td>
-<td class="pupils">125</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Fall River</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mass.</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">202</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Sault Ste. Marie</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mich.</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">300</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">St. Paul</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Minn.</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">28</td>
-<td class="numbers">57</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Trenton</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">65</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Paterson</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. J.</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">15</td>
-<td class="numbers">17</td>
-<td class="pupils">500</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr"><a href="#Footnote127" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor127">[127]</a>Buffalo</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">10</td>
-<td class="numbers">15</td>
-<td class="pupils">925</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Gloversville</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">411</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">New York</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">15</td>
-<td class="numbers">16</td>
-<td class="pupils">571</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Schenectady</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">N. Y.</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">40</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Newark</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ohio</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">33</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Pittsburg</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Penn.</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">16</td>
-<td class="numbers">48</td>
-<td class="pupils">800</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Oil City</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Penn.</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">104</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Allegheny</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Penn.</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="numbers">12</td>
-<td class="pupils">120</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<td class="center br">146 Cities</td>
-<td class="center br">26 States</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">1,202</td>
-<td class="numbers">2,695</td>
-<td class="pupils">73,543</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote126"><a href="#FNanchor126"><span class="label">[126]</span></a>
-All first-grade schools have kindergartens.</p>
-
-<p id="Footnote127"><a href="#FNanchor127"><span class="label">[127]</span></a> Kindergartens are conducted by a
-private association financially assisted from public-school funds.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page396">[396]</span></p>
-
-<p class="tabhead">MANUAL TRAINING IN SCHOOLS FOR THE COLORED RACE</p>
-
-<table class="appendix" summary="Statistics">
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<th class="br"><span class="smcap">Name<br />of<br />Institution</span></th>
-<th class="br"><span class="smcap">Location</span></th>
-<th class="br">Grade<br />of<br />Academic<br />Work</th>
-<th class="br">Manual<br />Training<br />Estab-<br />lished</th>
-<th class="br">Teachers<br />of<br />Manual<br />Training</th>
-<th>Pupils<br />Taking<br />Manual<br />Training</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Storrs School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Atlanta, Ga.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Grammar</td>
-<td class="year br">1865</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">120</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Shaw University</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Raleigh, N. C.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Collegiate</td>
-<td class="year br">1865</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="pupils">216</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Storer College</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Harper’s Ferry, W. V.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">1867</td>
-<td class="numbers">9</td>
-<td class="pupils">121</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Hampton Normal Institute</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Hampton, Va.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. and High</td>
-<td class="year br">1868</td>
-<td class="numbers">48</td>
-<td class="pupils">658</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Mt. Hermon Female Seminary</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Clinton, Miss.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">1875</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">16</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Southland Col. and Normal Inst.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Southland, Ark.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Primary to Coll.</td>
-<td class="year br">1876</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">56</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Princess Anne Academy</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Princess Anne, Md.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">1878</td>
-<td class="numbers">7</td>
-<td class="pupils">101</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Colored Industrial School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Huntsville, Ala.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">1879</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">150</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Knoxville College</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Knoxville, Tenn.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. and High</td>
-<td class="year br">1879</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">125</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Penn Normal and Ind. School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Frogmore, S. C.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">1880</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">164</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">State Colored Normal School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Salisbury, N. C.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. and High</td>
-<td class="year br">1881</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">118</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Allen University</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Columbia, S. C.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Primary to Coll.</td>
-<td class="year br">1881</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">332</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Tuskegee Nor. and Ind. Institute</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Tuskegee, Ala.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. and High</td>
-<td class="year br">1882</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">661</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Tougaloo University</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Tougaloo, Miss.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Primary to Coll.</td>
-<td class="year br">1882</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">175</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Albion Academy</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Franklinton, N. C.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">1882</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">100</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Spelman Seminary</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Atlanta, Ga.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. and High</td>
-<td class="year br">1883</td>
-<td class="numbers">16</td>
-<td class="pupils">375</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Ballard Normal and Ind. School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Macon, Ga.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. and High</td>
-<td class="year br">1883</td>
-<td class="numbers">12</td>
-<td class="pupils">415</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Scotia Seminary</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Concord, N. C.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. and High</td>
-<td class="year br">1883</td>
-<td class="numbers">16</td>
-<td class="pupils">286</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Central Tennessee College</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Nashville, Tenn.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. to Coll.</td>
-<td class="year br">1884</td>
-<td class="numbers">7</td>
-<td class="pupils">103</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Hartshorn Memorial College</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Richmond, Va.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">1884</td>
-<td class="numbers">8</td>
-<td class="pupils">108</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Biddle University</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Charlotte, N. C.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. to Coll.</td>
-<td class="year br">1885</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="pupils">136</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Fisk University</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Nashville, Tenn.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. and High</td>
-<td class="year br">1885</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">275</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Roger Williams University</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Nashville, Tenn.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High and Coll.</td>
-<td class="year br">1885</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">68</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Paul Quinn College</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Waco, Tex.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">1885</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">31</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Norfolk Mission College</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Norfolk, Va.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">..</td>
-<td class="year br">1886</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">320</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Howard University</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Washington, D. C.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">..</td>
-<td class="year br">1887</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="pupils">169</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Colored Public Schools</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Jacksonville, Fla.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Prim. to Gram.</td>
-<td class="year br">1887</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Straight University</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">New Orleans, La.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">1887</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">50</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Wilberforce University</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Wilberforce, Ohio.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. and High</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers">7</td>
-<td class="pupils">133</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Mary Allen Seminary</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Crockett, Tex.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. and High</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">445</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Virginia Institute</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Petersburg, Va.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">389</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Scofield Industrial School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Aiken, S. C.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Grammar</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="pupils">155</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Institute for Colored Youth</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Philadelphia, Penn.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High and Norm.</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers">9</td>
-<td class="pupils">259</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Burrell Academy</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Selma, Ala.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Grammar</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">8</td>
-<td class="pupils">238</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Emerson Mem. Home School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ocala, Fla.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. and High</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">30</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">State Normal and Ind. College</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Tallahassee, Fla.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">27</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">State Nor. School for Col. Persons</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Frankfort, Ky.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">96</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Southern University</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">New Orleans, La.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. to Coll.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">107</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Alcon Agr. and Mech. College</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">West Side, Miss.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Collegiate</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">298</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">State Normal School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Goldsboro, N. C.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">163</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Lincoln Academy</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">King’s Mount’n, N. C.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. and High</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="pupils">186</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">St. Augustine School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Raleigh, N. C.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. to Coll.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">88</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Lincoln Academy</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Jefferson City, Mo.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">8</td>
-<td class="pupils">400</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Arkansas Industrial University</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Pine Bluff, Ark.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="pupils">62</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Berea College</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Berea, Ky.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High and Coll.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">56</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Colored Industrial School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Bordentown, N. J.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. and High</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="pupils">54</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Bishop College</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Marshall, Tex.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. and High</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">109</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Brewer Normal School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Greenwood, S. C.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. and High</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">120</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Hearne Academy</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Hearne, Tex.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">35</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Shorter University</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Arkadelphia, Ark.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. and High</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">20</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Knox Institute</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Athens, Ga.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. and High</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">87</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Walker Baptist Institute</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Augusta, Ga.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">67</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Chandler Normal School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Lexington, Ky.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. and High</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">150</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Washburn Seminary</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Beaufort, N. C.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. and High</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">77</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">State Col’d Nor. and Ind. School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Normal, Ala.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">10</td>
-<td class="pupils">248</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Cookman Institute</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Jacksonville, Fla.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Beach Institute<span class="pagenum" id="Page397">[397]</span></td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Savannah, Ga.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. and High</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">7</td>
-<td class="pupils">85</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Allen Industrial School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Thomasville, Ga.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">80</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Leland University</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">New Orleans, La.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High and Coll.</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">New Orleans University</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">New Orleans, La.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">..</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Mississippi State Normal School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Holly Springs, Miss.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">85</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">State Colored Normal School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Elizabeth City, N. C.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Plymouth State Normal School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Plymouth, N. C.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Rankin-Richards Institute</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Orangeburg, S. C.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. and High</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">20</td>
-<td class="pupils">454</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Slater Training School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Knoxville, Tenn.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. and High</td>
-<td class="year br"><a href="#Footnote128" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor128">[128]</a></td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">25</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Tillotson Institute</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Austin, Tex.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">..</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">55</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Emerson Institute</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Mobile, Ala.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. and High</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<td colspan="4" class="descr"><span class="padl2">67 Manual-training Schools</span></td>
-<td class="numbers">327</td>
-<td class="pupils">10,332</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote128"><a href="#FNanchor128"><span class="label">[128]</span></a>
-The date given is that of establishment of school. Date of establishment of Manual
-Training was not ascertained in these instances.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p class="tabhead">PRIVATE MANUAL-TRAINING SCHOOLS</p>
-
-<table class="appendix" summary="Statistics">
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<th class="br"><span class="smcap">Name<br />of<br />Institution</span></th>
-<th class="br"><span class="smcap">Location</span></th>
-<th class="br">Grade<br />of<br />Academic<br />Work</th>
-<th class="br">Date<br />of<br />Estab-<br />lishment</th>
-<th class="br">Teachers<br />of<br />Manual<br />Training</th>
-<th>Pupils</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Massachusetts Inst. of Technology<a href="#Footnote129" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor129">[129]</a></td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Boston, Mass.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">1876</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Penn. School of Industrial Arts</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Philadelphia, Penn.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">1876</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Working-men’s School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">New York, N. Y.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Grammar</td>
-<td class="year br">1878</td>
-<td class="numbers">19</td>
-<td class="pupils">353</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Miller Manual-labor School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Crozet, Va.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">1878</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">198</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Washington University M. T. School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">St. Louis, Mo.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">1879</td>
-<td class="numbers">14</td>
-<td class="pupils">300</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Girard College</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Philadelphia Penn.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. and High</td>
-<td class="year br">1882</td>
-<td class="numbers">11</td>
-<td class="pupils">650</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Chicago Manual-training School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Chicago, Ill.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">13</td>
-<td class="pupils">263</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Hebrew Technical Institute</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">New York, N. Y.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Grammar</td>
-<td class="year br">1883</td>
-<td class="numbers">11</td>
-<td class="pupils">254</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">M. T. School of Tulane University</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">New Orleans, La.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">1884</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="pupils">114</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">H. Mann School and Teachers’ Coll.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">New York, N. Y.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Primary to Coll.</td>
-<td class="year br">1884</td>
-<td class="numbers">12</td>
-<td class="pupils">257</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Haish Manual-training School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Denver, Col.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">..</td>
-<td class="year br">1886</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">11</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Pratt Institute</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Brooklyn, N. Y.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">1887</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">125</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">H. S. Newcom Memorial College</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">New Orleans, La.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High and Coll.</td>
-<td class="year br">1887</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Sloyd Manual-training School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Boston, Mass.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Normal</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">104</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Tyler School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Providence, R. I.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. and High</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="pupils">330</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Jewish Training School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Chicago, Ill.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Prim. and Gram.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">27</td>
-<td class="pupils">700</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">National University</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Chicago, Ill.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">..</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">500</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Miss Sayer’s School<span class="pagenum" id="Page398">[398]</span></td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Newport, R. I.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. and High</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">20</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Swedenborgian School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Waltham, Mass.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Grammar</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">60</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Thorp Polytechnic Institute</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Pasadena, Cal.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. to Coll.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">8</td>
-<td class="pupils">300</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Friends’ Select School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Philadelphia, Penn.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">123</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Providence Training School for Sloyd</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Providence, R. I.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Normal</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">49</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Plainfield Academy</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Plainfield, N. J.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Prim. to High</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">25</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">California School of Mechanical Arts</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">San Francisco, Cal.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="numbers">7</td>
-<td class="pupils">310</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">St. Andrew’s</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Rochester, N. Y.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High</td>
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">60</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Lewis Institute</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Chicago, Ill.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">High and Coll.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">10</td>
-<td class="pupils">200</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Free Industrial School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">San Diego, Cal.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. and High</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">80</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Commons Manual-training School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Chicago, Ill.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Grammar</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">40</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Hull House Manual-training School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Chicago, Ill.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Gram. and High</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">70</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Elmwood School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Buffalo, N. Y.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">..</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Franklin School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Buffalo, N. Y.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">..</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Lasell Seminary</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Auburndale, Mass.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">..</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Talladega College</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Talladega, Ala.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">..</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Kenilworth Academy</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Kenilworth, Ill.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">..</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Y. M. C. A. Manual-training Dep’t.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Hartford, Conn.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">..</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Clark University</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Atlanta, Ga.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">..</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<td class="descr">Private Manual-training Class</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Winnetka, Ill.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">..</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote129"><a href="#FNanchor129"><span class="label">[129]</span></a>
-The Massachusetts Institute of Technology was established in 1865; but in 1876 it
-adopted Manual Training as a system into all its grades, and thus became the first distinctive
-Manual-training School without prejudice to its high standing as an Institute
-of Technology.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p class="tabhead">MANUAL TRAINING IN PUBLIC NORMAL SCHOOLS</p>
-
-<table class="appendix" summary="Statistics">
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<th class="br"><span class="smcap">Name<br />of<br />School</span></th>
-<th class="br"><span class="smcap">Location</span></th>
-<th class="br">Manual<br />Training<br />Estab-<br />lished</th>
-<th class="br">Teachers<br />of<br />Manual<br />Training</th>
-<th>Pupils<br />Taking<br />Manual<br />Training</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Santee Normal Training School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Santee Agency, Neb.</td>
-<td class="year br">1870</td>
-<td class="numbers br">12</td>
-<td class="pupils">72</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Cook County Normal School<a href="#Footnote130" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor130">[130]</a></td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Chicago, Ill.</td>
-<td class="year br">1883</td>
-<td class="numbers br">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">450</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">State Normal School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Whitewater, Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1883</td>
-<td class="numbers br">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">100</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">State Normal Training School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">New Britain, Conn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1884</td>
-<td class="numbers br">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">253</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Industrial Institute and College</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Columbus, Miss.</td>
-<td class="year br">1885</td>
-<td class="numbers br">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">123</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">West Chester State Normal School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">West Chester, Penn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers br">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">220</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">State Normal School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">San José, Cal.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers br">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">700</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Georgia Normal and Industrial College</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Milledgeville, Ga.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers br">15</td>
-<td class="pupils">284</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">State Normal and Model School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Trenton, N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers br">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">225</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">State Female Normal School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Farmville, Va.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers br">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">75</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Normal College of New York</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">New York, N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers br">12</td>
-<td class="pupils">257</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Normal and Industrial School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Greensboro, N. C.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers br">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">300</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Keystone State Normal School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Kutztown, Penn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers br">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">106</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">State Normal School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Framingham, Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers br">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">25</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Westfield Normal School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Westfield, Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers br">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">70</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">State Normal School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Los Angeles, Cal.</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers br">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">475</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<td class="descr">Alabama Normal College for Girls</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Livingston, Ala.</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers br">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote130"><a href="#FNanchor130"><span class="label">[130]</span></a>
-The Cook County (Illinois) Normal School was originally established as a private
-school. It is now the public training school for teachers in the public schools.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page399">[399]</span></p>
-
-<p class="tabhead">PRIVATE TRADE SCHOOLS AND INSTITUTES OF TECHNOLOGY</p>
-
-<table class="appendix" summary="Statistics">
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<th class="br"><span class="smcap">Name<br />of<br />Institution</span></th>
-<th class="br"><span class="smcap">Location</span></th>
-<th class="br">Date<br />of<br />Estab-<br />lishment</th>
-<th class="br">Teachers</th>
-<th>Pupils</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Troy, N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1824</td>
-<td class="numbers br">18</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Ohio Mechanics’ Institute</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Cincinnati, Ohio.</td>
-<td class="year br">1828</td>
-<td class="numbers br">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">720</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Massachusetts Institute of Technology</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Boston, Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1865</td>
-<td class="numbers br">6</td>
-<td class="pupils">222</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Cornell University</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ithaca, N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1865</td>
-<td class="numbers br">36</td>
-<td class="pupils">599</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Worcester Polytechnic Institute</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Worcester, Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1868</td>
-<td class="numbers br">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Stevens Institute of Technology</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Hoboken, N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1871</td>
-<td class="numbers br">22</td>
-<td class="pupils">256</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Lowell School of Practical Designing</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Boston, Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1872</td>
-<td class="numbers br">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">65</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Rhode Island School of Design</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Providence, R. I.</td>
-<td class="year br">1878</td>
-<td class="numbers br">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">341</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Chicago College of Horology</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Chicago, Ill.</td>
-<td class="year br">1880</td>
-<td class="numbers br">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Case School of Applied Sciences</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Cleveland, Ohio.</td>
-<td class="year br">1881</td>
-<td class="numbers br">11</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">School of Ind. Art and Tech. Design for Women</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">New York, N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1881</td>
-<td class="numbers br">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">New York Trade School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">New York, N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1881</td>
-<td class="numbers br">26</td>
-<td class="pupils">556</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Rose Polytechnic Institute</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Terre Haute, Ind.</td>
-<td class="year br">1883</td>
-<td class="numbers br">6</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr"><a href="#Footnote131" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor131">[131]</a>Textile Schools</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Philadelphia, Penn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1883</td>
-<td class="numbers br">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">65</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Milwaukee Cooking School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Milwaukee, Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1884</td>
-<td class="numbers br">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Newark Technical School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Newark, N. J.</td>
-<td class="year br">1885</td>
-<td class="numbers br">6</td>
-<td class="pupils">250</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Technical School of Cincinnati</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Cincinnati, Ohio.</td>
-<td class="year br">1886</td>
-<td class="numbers br">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Technical Drawing School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Providence, R. I.</td>
-<td class="year br">1887</td>
-<td class="numbers br">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Cogswell Polytechnic School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">San Francisco, Cal.</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers br">7</td>
-<td class="pupils">150</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Institute for Artisans</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">New York, N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers br">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Watchmakers’ Trade School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">La Porte, Ind.</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers br">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Institute for Colored Youth</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Philadelphia, Penn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers br">9</td>
-<td class="pupils">259</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Master-Builders’ Mechanical School of Phil’a.</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Philadelphia, Penn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers br">6</td>
-<td class="pupils">67</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Lawrence Scientific School of Harvard Univ’ty</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Cambridge, Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers br">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">64</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Baron de Hirsch Trade School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">New York, N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers br">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr"><a href="#Footnote132" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor132">[132]</a>University of Cincinnati</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Cincinnati, Ohio.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers br">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Leland Stanford University</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Palo Alto, Cal.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers br">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Williamson Free School of Mechanical Trades</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Williamson Schools, Pa.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers br">10</td>
-<td class="pupils">160</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Springfield Industrial Institute</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Springfield, Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers br">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">105</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Drexel Institute</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Philadelphia, Penn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers br">38</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Armour Institute</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Chicago, Ill.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers br">15</td>
-<td class="pupils">300</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Mechanics’ Institute</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Rochester, N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers br">15</td>
-<td class="pupils">972</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Private School of Carpentry</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Racine, Wis.</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers br">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">30</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Lafayette College</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Easton, Penn.</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers br">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Vanderbilt University</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Nashville, Tenn.</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers br">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<td class="descr">Boston Normal School of Cookery</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Boston, Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers br">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Note.</span>&mdash;Private trade schools for teaching watch-making, some fifteen in number, are
-united, because no data was secured. Private cooking schools, dress-making schools,
-barber schools, etc., have within the last five years sprung up in various parts of the
-country. Some of these are of considerable importance, but most are small, and no effort
-has been made to secure reports from them.</p>
-
-<p id="Footnote131"><a href="#FNanchor131"><span class="label">[131]</span></a>
-These schools are supported by both legislative appropriations and private endowments.
-They are not public schools in the usual sense of the term.</p>
-
-<p id="Footnote132"><a href="#FNanchor132"><span class="label">[132]</span></a>
-The University of Cincinnati is supported by both public funds and private endowments.
-It is unique in this, that, although a university in its grade of work, it is
-essentially a part of the public-school system. The city collects a one-tenth mill tax
-annually for its benefit; and the university, including its technical and Manual-training
-course, is free to residents of the city. The necessary expenses, such as
-laboratory fees, are kept to the lowest possible limit; and every family in the municipality
-is entitled to educate its children in this thoroughly equipped university, practically
-without cost.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page400">[400]</span></p>
-
-<p class="tabhead">TECHNOLOGY IN PUBLIC EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS OF COLLEGIATE
-GRADE&mdash;EXCLUSIVE OF PURELY AGRICULTURAL
-COLLEGES</p>
-
-<table class="appendix" summary="Statistics">
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<th class="br"><span class="smcap">Institution</span></th>
-<th class="br"><span class="smcap">Location</span></th>
-<th class="br">Technical<br />Training<br />Estab-<br />lished</th>
-<th class="br">Teachers</th>
-<th>Pupils</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">United States Naval Academy</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Annapolis, Md.</td>
-<td class="year br">1845</td>
-<td class="numbers br">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">State Agricultural College</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Agricultural College, Mich.</td>
-<td class="year br">1857</td>
-<td class="numbers br">14</td>
-<td class="pupils">332</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Maine State College</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Orono, Me.</td>
-<td class="year br">1864</td>
-<td class="numbers br">13</td>
-<td class="pupils">191</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">University of Vermont</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Burlington, Vt.</td>
-<td class="year br">1865</td>
-<td class="numbers br">11</td>
-<td class="pupils">119</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Illinois University</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Urbana, Ill.</td>
-<td class="year br">1868</td>
-<td class="numbers br">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">University of Minnesota</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Minnesota, Minn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1869</td>
-<td class="numbers br">9</td>
-<td class="pupils">159</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">University of Tennessee</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Knoxville, Tenn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1869</td>
-<td class="numbers br">6</td>
-<td class="pupils">150</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">University of Iowa</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ames, Iowa.</td>
-<td class="year br">1869</td>
-<td class="numbers br">9</td>
-<td class="pupils">284</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Kansas State Agricultural College</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Manhattan, Kan.</td>
-<td class="year br">1873</td>
-<td class="numbers br">20</td>
-<td class="pupils">530</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Ohio State University</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Columbus, Ohio.</td>
-<td class="year br">1873</td>
-<td class="numbers br">9</td>
-<td class="pupils">373</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">University of California</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Berkeley, Cal.</td>
-<td class="year br">1874</td>
-<td class="numbers br">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">84</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr"><a href="#Footnote133" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor133">[133]</a>Purdue University</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Lafayette, Ind.</td>
-<td class="year br">1874</td>
-<td class="numbers br">10</td>
-<td class="pupils">280</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Agricultural and Mechanical College</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">College Station, Tex.</td>
-<td class="year br">1876</td>
-<td class="numbers br">16</td>
-<td class="pupils">313</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">State Agricultural College</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Fort Collins, Col.</td>
-<td class="year br">1879</td>
-<td class="numbers br">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">137</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Agricultural and Mechanical College</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Agricultural College, Miss.</td>
-<td class="year br">1880</td>
-<td class="numbers br">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Agricultural and Mechanical College</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Blacksburg, Va.</td>
-<td class="year br">1880</td>
-<td class="numbers br">18</td>
-<td class="pupils">190</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Mechanical College of State University</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Baton Rouge, La.</td>
-<td class="year br">1880</td>
-<td class="numbers br">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">56</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Storrs Agricultural College</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Storrs, Conn.</td>
-<td class="year br">1881</td>
-<td class="numbers br">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">145</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Agricultural and Mechanical College</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Auburn, Ala.</td>
-<td class="year br">1885</td>
-<td class="numbers br">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">200</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Arkansas Industrial University</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Fayetteville, Ark.</td>
-<td class="year br">1885</td>
-<td class="numbers br">7</td>
-<td class="pupils">150</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Michigan Mining School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Houghton, Mich.</td>
-<td class="year br">1886</td>
-<td class="numbers br">11</td>
-<td class="pupils">82</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Agricultural College of South Dakota</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Brookings, S. D.</td>
-<td class="year br">1887</td>
-<td class="numbers br">11</td>
-<td class="pupils">160</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Florida Agricultural College</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Lake City, Fla.</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers br">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">62</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Oregon State Agricultural College</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Corvallis, Ore.</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers br">9</td>
-<td class="pupils">237</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Agricultural College of Utah</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Logan, Utah.</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers br">7</td>
-<td class="pupils">119</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">New Mexico College of Mechanical Arts</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Messilla Park, N. M.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers br">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">University of Michigan</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Ann Arbor, Mich.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers br">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Delaware College</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Newark, Del.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers br">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">23</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Agricultural and Mechanical Coll. of Kentucky</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Lexington, Ky.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers br">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">31</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">State University</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Columbia, Mo.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers br">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">145</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">College of Mining</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Rolla, Mo.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers br">7</td>
-<td class="pupils">225</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">University of Nebraska</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Lincoln, Neb.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers br">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">210</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Nevada State University</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Reno, Nev.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers br">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">106</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">University of Wyoming</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Laramie, Wy.</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers br">4</td>
-<td class="pupils">60</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">North Dakota Agricultural College</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Fargo, N. D.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers br">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">24</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">West Virginia University</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Morgantown, W. Va.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers br">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">79</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<td class="descr">Clemson Agricultural College</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Clemson College, S. C.</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers br">9</td>
-<td class="pupils">635</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote133"><a href="#FNanchor133"><span class="label">[133]</span></a>
-Purdue University is partially supported by endowment, but as it secures regular
-appropriations, it is here classified as a State University.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page401">[401]</span></p>
-
-<p class="tabhead">INDUSTRIAL TRAINING IN CHARITY SCHOOLS<a href="#Footnote134" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor134">[134]</a></p>
-
-<table class="appendix" summary="Statistics">
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<th class="br"><span class="smcap">Name<br />of<br />School</span></th>
-<th class="br"><span class="smcap">Location</span></th>
-<th class="br">Industrial<br />Training<br />Estab-<br />lished</th>
-<th class="br">Teachers<br />of<br />Industrial<br />Training</th>
-<th>Pupils<br />Taking<br />Industrial<br />Training</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Baltimore Manual-labor School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Arbutus, Md.</td>
-<td class="year br">1841</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="pupils">60</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Wilson Industrial School for Girls</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">New York, N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1853</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">100</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Industrial Home School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Washington, D. C.</td>
-<td class="year br">1867</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="pupils">60</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">McDonough School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">McDonough, Md.</td>
-<td class="year br">1873</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">140</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">South End Industrial School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Roxbury, Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1884</td>
-<td class="numbers">21</td>
-<td class="pupils">313</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Five Points House of Industry</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">New York, N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1885</td>
-<td class="numbers">9</td>
-<td class="pupils">331</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Indiana Soldiers’ Orphans’ Home</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Kingstown, Ind.</td>
-<td class="year br">1885</td>
-<td class="numbers">7</td>
-<td class="pupils">80</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Skyland Institute</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Blowing Rock, N. C.</td>
-<td class="year br">1886</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Samuel Ready School for Female Orphans</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Baltimore, Md.</td>
-<td class="year br">1887</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">60</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Chicago Waifs’ Mission and Training School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Chicago, Ill.</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="pupils">30</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Industrial School Association</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Brooklyn, N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers">8</td>
-<td class="pupils">80</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Kalamazoo Industrial School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Kalamazoo, Mich.</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers">18</td>
-<td class="pupils">224</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Industrial School of Rochester</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Rochester, N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="pupils">120</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Industrial School for Boys</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Glenwood, Ill.</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">400</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Jewish Orphan Asylum</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Cleveland, Ohio</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">8</td>
-<td class="pupils">157</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">St. George’s Boys’ Industrial Trade School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">New York, N. Y.</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="pupils">259</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Boys’ Club in Carpentry</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Lynn, Mass.</td>
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="pupils">25</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Polish Orphans’ Home</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Chicago, Ill.</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Unity Church Manual-training School</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Chicago, Ill.</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<td class="descr">Iowa Orphans’ Home</td>
-<td class="shorttext br">Davenport, Iowa.</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote134"><a href="#FNanchor134"><span class="label">[134]</span></a> Industrial Training, rather than Manual Training, characterizes the Charity Schools,
-the central idea being to prepare the child for some occupation by which it can become
-self-supporting. As will be seen by the table, this idea found very early expression in
-the Manual-labor School at Arbutus, Maryland. The co-education of mind and hand,
-because of its equal, or greater, educational value, was not thought of in these charity
-institutions until recently, and cannot be said to obtain in any of them even now.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page402">[402]</span></p>
-
-<p class="tabhead">PROGRESS OF MANUAL TRAINING BY YEARS, IN CITIES</p>
-
-<p>The following table shows growth by years, as represented by
-cities establishing Manual Training or Kindergartens in Public
-Schools. The number refers to cities adopting this feature of education
-in the years named.</p>
-
-<table class="appendix" summary="Statistics">
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<th colspan="2" class="br"><span class="smcap">High<br />Schools</span></th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br"><span class="smcap">Grammar<br />Grades</span></th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br"><span class="smcap">Primary<br />Grades</span></th>
-<th colspan="2"><span class="smcap">Kinder-<br />gartens</span></th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<th class="br">Year</th>
-<th class="br">Number<br />of<br />Cities</th>
-<th class="br">Year</th>
-<th class="br">Number<br />of<br />Cities</th>
-<th class="br">Year</th>
-<th class="br">Number<br />of<br />Cities</th>
-<th class="br">Year</th>
-<th>Number<br />of<br />Cities</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="year br">1873</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="year br">1880</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="year br">1881</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="year br">1882</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="year br">1882</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="year br">1882</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1883</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="year br">1883</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="year br">1883</td>
-<td class="numbers">0</td>
-<td class="year br">1883</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1884</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="year br">1884</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="year br">1884</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="year br">1884</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1885</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="year br">1885</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="year br">1885</td>
-<td class="numbers">0</td>
-<td class="year br">1885</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1886</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="year br">1886</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="year br">1886</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="year br">1886</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">0</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1887</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="year br">1887</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="year br">1887</td>
-<td class="numbers">0</td>
-<td class="year br">1887</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">5</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers">8</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers">8</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers">3</td>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">7</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">8</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">10</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">7</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">10</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">11</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">15</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">7</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">7</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">20</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="numbers">8</td>
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="numbers">8</td>
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">15</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">13</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="year br">1896</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">12</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">8</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">13</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="year br">1897</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1898</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="year br">1898</td>
-<td class="numbers">4</td>
-<td class="year br">1898</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="year br">1898</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<td class="year br"><a href="#Footnote135" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor135">[135]</a></td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="year br"><a href="#Footnote135" class="fnanchor">[135]</a></td>
-<td class="numbers">18</td>
-<td class="year br"><a href="#Footnote135" class="fnanchor">[135]</a></td>
-<td class="numbers">8</td>
-<td class="year br"><a href="#Footnote135" class="fnanchor">[135]</a></td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">28</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote135"><a href="#FNanchor135"><span class="label">[135]</span></a> Not reported.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page403">[403]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">NOTE ON STATE LAWS IN RELATION TO
-MANUAL TRAINING.</h3>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p>Connecticut, in 1888, authorized and empowered school
-boards to introduce Manual Training in public schools.</p>
-
-<p>Congress appropriated $8000 to Manual Training equipment
-in the District of Columbia in 1896.</p>
-
-<p>In 1885 the State of Georgia passed a law authorizing
-and recommending school boards to introduce Manual Training
-in the public schools of the state. The law was simply
-a moral indorsement, and had little practical effect.</p>
-
-<p>Indiana has a law authorizing the introduction of Manual
-Training into the public schools of all cities of 100,000 inhabitants
-or over.</p>
-
-<p>Massachusetts passed an authorizing act in 1884, and on
-April 14, 1894, a law was adopted, section one of which is
-as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="quote">
-
-<p>“After the first day of September in the year eighteen hundred
-and ninety five, every city of twenty thousand or more inhabitants
-shall maintain as part of its high-school system the teaching of Manual
-Training. The course to be pursued in said instruction shall be subject
-to the approval of the state board of education.”</p>
-
-</div><!--quote-->
-
-<p>In 1887 New Jersey passed a law to encourage the introduction
-of Manual Training in public schools. The chief
-provision of the act was, that whenever any school district
-should raise by taxation, subscription, or both, a sum of
-money not less than $1000, for the establishment of Manual
-Training in such school district, the state should appropriate
-a sum equal to that raised by the district, to aid in the
-establishment of such school; provided that no one district
-should receive over $5000 in any one year from state
-funds. In 1888 this law was amended so as to include
-districts that should raise not to exceed $500, the state agreeing
-to duplicate the sum raised. The effect of this law was
-very marked in 1890, resulting in the establishment of a
-large number of schools.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page404">[404]</span></p>
-
-<p>In 1888 New York passed a law authorizing local school
-boards to establish Manual Training within their respective
-jurisdictions. The same law makes the teaching of Manual
-Training compulsory in normal schools, subject, however, to
-recommendations of the state superintendent of public instruction,
-which provision has practically nullified it.</p>
-
-<p>Ohio has a law authorizing a tax levy of <sup>5</sup>&#8260;<sub>10</sub> of a mill for
-cities of a certain size, and <sup>1</sup>&#8260;<sub>5</sub> of a mill for certain other
-cities, in excess of other taxes; the sums so raised to be
-used for the purpose of introducing Manual Training into
-the public schools.</p>
-
-<p>In 1895 Wyoming authorized school boards to establish
-Manual Training in the public schools.</p>
-
-<p>In 1895 Wisconsin authorized the establishment of Manual
-Training in its public schools providing state aid for the
-same, but limiting the number to receive state aid to ten
-high-schools to be selected by the state superintendent of
-schools.</p>
-
-<p>The best of existing state-aid laws is that of Maryland,
-enacted April 7, 1898. It is very liberal and will doubtless
-greatly stimulate the progress of the new education in that
-state. The Wisconsin law gives $250 to each of its schools
-per year, and the New Jersey law duplicates whatever the
-school board raises for that purpose. But the Maryland
-law gives $1500 to each school the first year, and $50 per
-pupil per year thereafter, up to the limit of $1500 per school
-per year&mdash;enough, probably, to pay the entire expense of
-the system. Following is the text of the statute:</p>
-
-<div class="quote">
-
-<p>“<i>Whereas</i>, The establishment of well-conducted and liberally
-supported schools, or departments, in one of the large graded schools
-or high-schools in each county of the state, for the development and
-training of the manual ability of pupils, must tend to supply a growing
-want in each county of the state; and</p>
-
-<p><i>Whereas</i>, It is especially the duty of the state to afford the best
-educational facilities to its youth in those technical studies which are
-directly associated with the material prosperity of its people; and</p>
-
-<p><i>Whereas</i>, It is for the best interests of this state that the colored
-population of each county shall have an opportunity for the establishment
-of separate industrial schools; therefore,</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Sec.</span> 1. <i>Be it enacted by the General Assembly of
-Maryland</i>, That<span class="pagenum" id="Page405">[405]</span>
-it shall be the duty of the board of county school commissioners, when
-a suitable building, or room or rooms connected with one of the large
-graded schools or high-schools shall be provided by the county, or
-money sufficient for the erection of such building, or room or rooms,
-to accept the same (if, in the judgment of the board, there is any
-necessity therefor), and thereafter to provide for the maintenance of
-a Manual Training school, or Manual Training department, for said
-county, and the salaries of teachers and Manual Training instructors,
-out of the general school fund and the state aid hereinafter provided.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Sec.</span> 2. <i>And be it enacted</i>, That whenever a Manual Training school,
-or Manual Training department, is opened in any county, the president
-and secretary of the board of county school commissioners of
-said county shall report to the secretary of the state board of education,
-and the state board of education shall, without delay, proceed
-to appoint the principal of the state normal school, or one of the
-teachers in said school, well qualified for such service, to visit the
-school and give a certificate of approval of its condition and the plan
-upon which it is conducted; and thereafter the president and secretary
-of the board of county school commissioners shall report to the comptroller
-the condition of the school, the number of instructors, and the
-number of pupils enrolled, on or before the twentieth day of January
-in each year.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Sec.</span> 3. <i>And be it enacted</i>, That the comptroller of the treasury,
-after receiving the certificate of approval concerning the county
-Manual Training school, or Manual Training department, according to
-the provisions of the second section of this act, is hereby authorized
-and directed to issue his warrant upon the treasurer of the state for
-the sum of fifteen hundred dollars, payable to the order of the treasurer
-of the board of county school commissioners of the county filing
-the certificate of approval aforesaid, out of any moneys in the state
-treasury not otherwise appropriated, on the first day of October in
-each year, for the support of said Manual Training school, or Manual
-Training department.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Sec.</span> 4. <i>And be it enacted</i>, That the county Manual Training school,
-or the Manual Training department and the school to which it is
-attached, shall be under the management and control of the board of
-county school commissioners.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Sec.</span> 5. <i>And be it enacted</i>, That it shall be the duty of the board of
-county school commissioners of each county in this state, whenever
-a suitable building, or room or rooms connected with one of the colored
-schools of said county, shall be provided by the county to accept the
-same, if in the judgment of the said board there is any necessity therefor,
-and thereafter to provide for the maintenance of such member
-[number] of separate colored industrial schools as in their judgment
-may be needed, and the salaries of such teachers as may be required<span class="pagenum" id="Page406">[406]</span>
-for that purpose shall be paid out of the general fund and the state
-aid hereinafter provided.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Sec.</span> 6. <i>And be it enacted</i>, That whenever any such separate colored
-industrial school or schools are opened in any county, the president and
-secretary of the board of county school commissioners of said county
-shall report the fact to the secretary of the state board of education,
-and the state board of education shall without delay proceed to appoint
-a proper person well qualified for such service, to visit the said school
-or schools and give a certificate of approval of its condition and the
-plan upon which it is conducted, and thereafter the president and
-secretary of the said board shall report to the comptroller of this state
-the condition of said school or schools, the number of instructors and
-the number of pupils enrolled during the school year last ended, on
-or before the 20th day of August in each year.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Sec.</span> 7. <i>And be it enacted</i>, That the comptroller of the treasury upon
-receiving the certificate of approval concerning the county colored industrial
-school or schools, as aforesaid, according to the provisions of
-the sixth section of this act, is hereby authorized and directed to issue
-his warrant upon the treasurer of the state for the sum of fifteen
-hundred dollars, payable to the order [of the] treasurer of the board
-of county school commissioners of the county, upon the filing of the
-certificates of approval aforesaid, out of any moneys in the state
-treasury not otherwise appropriated, on the first day of October in each
-year, for the support of said colored industrial school or schools, and
-thereafter the said industrial school or schools shall be under the management
-and control of the said board of county school commissioners.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Sec.</span> 8. <i>And be it enacted</i>, That no entire appropriation for the
-benefit of any Manual Training school, provided for under this act,
-shall be paid as authorized, after the first annual appropriation, unless
-said school have had an average daily attendance of thirty scholars
-for the preceding year; and in case said attendance shall fall short of
-said number, then there shall only be paid towards the maintenance
-of said school at the rate of fifty ($50.00) dollars for each scholar of
-its daily average annual attendance, to be determined by the report
-hereinbefore required to be made to the comptroller.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Sec.</span> 9. <i>And be it enacted</i>, That no appropriation for the benefit
-of the colored industrial schools of any county, provided for under
-this act, shall be paid after the first annual appropriation, unless the
-average daily attendance at such school or schools shall have been,
-for the preceding year, at least thirty scholars; and in case said
-attendance shall fall short of said number, then there shall be paid
-to the treasurer of the county school commissioners maintaining said
-school or schools, only at the rate of fifty ($50.00) dollars a scholar,
-for the daily average annual attendance at the same, to be determined
-by the report hereinbefore required to be made to the comptroller.</p>
-
-<p>Approved April 7, 1898.”</p>
-
-</div><!--quote-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page407">[407]</span></p>
-
-<p>The report of the state superintendent of public instruction
-for Michigan, for the year 1897, shows that Kindergartens
-exist in the public schools of the following cities
-and towns: Cities of over 4000 population as shown by
-state census of 1894&mdash;Albion, Big Rapids, Cadillac, Calumet,
-Detroit, Escanaba, Grand Haven, Grand Rapids, Holland,
-Ionia, Ironwood, Ishpeming, Jackson, Menonimee,
-Mt. Clemens, Muskegon, Negamee, Niles, St. Joseph, Traverse
-City, West Bay City, Wyandotte&mdash;twenty-two cities
-of over 4000 population. The twenty-four cities and
-towns with less than 4000 population as shown by state
-census of 1894, and having Kindergartens in their public
-schools, are: Algonac, Alma, Au Sable, Caro, Crystal
-Falls, Dowagiac, Fremont, Greenville, Hartford, Houghton,
-Ithaca, Lake Linden, Lake View, Mancelona, Manistique,
-Montague, Morenci, Nashville, Pentwater, Reed
-City, Sand Beach, Stanton, Union City, Vassar. Such of
-these cities and towns as furnished reports will be found
-in the accompanying tables; from the others no data was
-received.</p>
-
-<p>Two thoroughly equipped Manual Training schools are
-projected: one, to be in Pullman, Illinois, is to result from a
-bequest in the will of the late Mr. George M. Pullman, who
-left a large sum for its construction, and an annuity of
-$25,000 for its maintenance; the other school is to be built
-by the Calumet and Hecla Mining Company, at Calumet,
-Michigan. Both these schools will be free, and will probably
-become a part of the public-school system of their
-respective towns.</p>
-
-<p>The legislature of Massachusetts in 1898 passed an act
-establishing a trade-school for weavers, to be located at
-Lowell, Massachusetts, provided the city would raise half
-the money necessary for its construction, the state to pay
-the other half. This is the first well-defined movement in
-this country to establish public trade-schools to teach the
-trades prevailing in the locality of the school. Europe has
-many such schools.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page408">[408]</span></p>
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">Manual Training in Russia.</span></h4>
-
-<p>There is, as yet, no established national school system
-in Russia. The school systems of Finland and other Russian
-dependencies are provincial and local. An imperial
-decree of March 7, 1888, however, contained an elaborate
-plan for elementary national education, in which Manual
-Training, Technical, and Trade education were given not
-only prominence but precedence. The doctrine of state
-aid to educational institutions is, however, fully and liberally
-recognized. Manual Training was founded in Russia
-in 1868, as mentioned in the first edition of this work, by
-M. Victor Della Vos, and revived and extended in 1884 by
-the then Minister of Finance, who sent two teachers to
-Naäs, Sweden, to take a six weeks’ course of instruction,
-and a workshop for boys’ hand labor was the same year
-established in connection with the Teachers’ Institute in
-St. Petersburg. In 1885 this was made a permanent feature
-of Teachers’ Institute work, and an annual grant of 3000
-rubles ($1659) was voted; and in 1887 a course in metal
-work was added to this school. In 1888 three normal
-courses for instructing teachers in Manual Training were
-instituted and subsidized by the imperial government.
-One of these at Novaia Ladoga trains both city and country
-school-teachers; at Riga, city teachers only, while at Kiev
-only country teachers are trained. The instruction of
-teachers in Manual Training was also made part of the
-teachers’ institutes at Glookhov, Vilna, and Orenboorg in
-1889. Besides these there were in 1890 eleven vacation
-institutes, training two hundred and fifty teachers for the
-work of imparting manual instruction. These teachers’
-institutes, vacation and permanent (or normal schools),
-have increased rapidly and received rich subsidies from the
-imperial treasury. In 1891 the Russian Minister of War
-introduced Manual Training into all the cadet schools.
-The most recent available data indicate the introduction
-of Manual Training into one hundred and sixteen establishments,
-as follows: four teachers’ institutes, fourteen teachers<span class="pagenum" id="Page409">[409]</span>’
-seminaries, four intermediate schools, forty-four higher
-public schools, and thirty-four elementary common schools.
-A more recent report&mdash;which, however, is not at hand&mdash;is
-said to show remarkable developments in Manual Training
-in common and rural schools. A brief survey of technical
-and trade schools in Russia follows.</p>
-
-<p>The technical schools at Moscow and St. Petersburg are
-imperial schools of university grade, richly endowed, and
-reputed to be the best equipped schools in Europe. The
-oldest and best technical school in Moscow below university
-rank, and making no attempt to teach trades, is the Komisarof
-Technical School, founded in 1865 by two railroad
-contractors. It now receives government aid, and has about
-four hundred pupils. The Society for the Promotion of
-Technical Education in 1873 founded a school called the
-“Mechanical Handicraft School of Moscow.” The government
-contributes $1000 per year to this school. There are
-five technical schools having a grade of academic work
-comparable with our high schools&mdash;the Komisarof Technical
-School of Moscow, mentioned above, founded in 1865;
-the Lodz, in 1869; Irkootsk, 1873; Kungursk, 1877; and the
-Omsk, in 1882. The five schools had 1052 students at date
-of latest available report. Trade-schools of grammar grade,
-twenty-three in number, had 2474 pupils. Of these schools
-three were established in 1868; one in 1871; two in 1872; one
-in 1873; one in 1874; one in 1875; two in 1877; one in 1878;
-two in 1879; one in 1880; two in 1883; two in 1885; three
-in 1886; one in 1887. Trade-schools of primary grade, sixty-three
-in number, with 2562 pupils. One was established
-in 1865; one in 1866; two in 1867; one in 1870; one in 1871;
-three in 1872; two in 1873; five in 1874; six in 1875; one in
-1876; six in 1877; four in 1878; three in 1879; two in 1880;
-two in 1881; four in 1882; five in 1883; five in 1884; one in
-1885; one in 1886; four in 1887; two in 1888; one in 1889.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">Manual Training in Finland.</span></h4>
-
-<p>Finland was the birthplace of the man who first devised
-and practised that method of education known as Sloyd&mdash;a
-form of Manual Training.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page410">[410]</span></p>
-
-<p>Otto Cygneans, of Helsingfors Teachers’ Seminary, after
-a thorough study of Froebel and Pestalozzi (to whom he
-gives ample credit), originated in 1858 a system for carrying
-the education of the hand beyond the kindergarten into all
-grades of schools. To Finland also belongs the credit of
-being the first country to officially recognize the value of
-such education. Since 1866 (sometimes stated 1868) Manual
-Training (Sloyd) has been compulsory in all the elemental
-and normal schools of Finland. In 1896 there were four
-normal schools with 569 students, and 75,712 pupils taking
-Manual Training in the elementary schools of the cities.
-Statistics of rural schools are not obtainable. In addition
-to these, there were in 1896 forty-two separate and distinctively
-Manual-training high-schools, with 1030 pupils,
-besides eight industrial schools, with 56 teachers and 380
-pupils. All are public schools. There are technical and
-trade schools of all grades, from the Polytechnic School at
-Helsingfors to the elementary trade and weaving schools.
-There are seven schools where navigation is taught, twelve
-weaving, dyeing, and sewing schools, supported wholly or
-in part by the government, fourteen elementary technical
-schools, five high-grade technical schools, and ten trade-schools
-other than weaving and navigation. Government
-aid is granted to all of these schools.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">Manual Training in England.</span></h4>
-
-<p>The activity of Germany along the line of trade and
-technical schools, immediately following the Centennial
-Exposition at Philadelphia, alarmed the people of England,
-producing in 1882 what has been termed a “Technical
-education scare.” The friends of Manual Training, acting
-upon this popular and commercial anxiety, secured the
-passage of the “Technical Instruction Act of 1889.” By
-the terms of this act the schools organized under it were
-not to be trade-schools; and the construction put upon the
-expression “Manual Instruction” makes the term practically
-synonymous with our term Manual Training. The
-following table shows the growth of these schools. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page411">[411]</span>
-growth of cooking schools is also statistically represented
-in the table.</p>
-
-<table class="appendix" summary="Statistics">
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<th class="br"><span class="smcap">Date</span></th>
-<th colspan="3" class="brd"><span class="smcap">Manual<br />Instruction<br />Number of<br />Schools</span></th>
-<th colspan="3"><span class="smcap">Schools of<br />Cookery<br />and Domestic<br />Science</span></th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<th class="br"><span class="smcap">Year</span></th>
-<th colspan="2" class="br">Number<br />of<br />Schools<br />Existing<br />in Year<br />Named</th>
-<th class="brd">Number<br />of<br />Schools<br />Estab-<br />lished<br />During<br />Year<br />Named</th>
-<th class="br">Number<br />of<br />Schools<br />Existing<br />in<br />Year<br />Named</th>
-<th class="br">Number<br />of<br />Schools<br />Estab-<br />lished<br />During<br />Year<br />Named</th>
-<th>Number<br />of<br />Pupils</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1876</td>
-<td class="schools right">..</td>
-<td rowspan="19" class="br">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="schools brd">..</td>
-<td class="schools br">29</td>
-<td class="schools br">29</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1877</td>
-<td class="schools right">..</td>
-<td class="schools brd">..</td>
-<td class="schools br">125</td>
-<td class="schools br">96</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1878</td>
-<td class="schools right">..</td>
-<td class="schools brd">..</td>
-<td class="schools br">178</td>
-<td class="schools br">53</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1879</td>
-<td class="schools right">..</td>
-<td class="schools brd">..</td>
-<td class="schools br">223</td>
-<td class="schools br">45</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1880</td>
-<td class="schools right">..</td>
-<td class="schools brd">..</td>
-<td class="schools br">276</td>
-<td class="schools br">53</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1881</td>
-<td class="schools right">..</td>
-<td class="schools brd">..</td>
-<td class="schools br">299</td>
-<td class="schools br">23</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1882</td>
-<td class="schools right">..</td>
-<td class="schools brd">..</td>
-<td class="schools br">347</td>
-<td class="schools br">48</td>
-<td class="pupils">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1883</td>
-<td class="schools right">..</td>
-<td class="schools brd">..</td>
-<td class="schools br">420</td>
-<td class="schools br">73</td>
-<td class="pupils">1,251</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1884</td>
-<td class="schools right">..</td>
-<td class="schools brd">..</td>
-<td class="schools br">541</td>
-<td class="schools br">121</td>
-<td class="pupils">7,597</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1885</td>
-<td class="schools right">..</td>
-<td class="schools brd">..</td>
-<td class="schools br">715</td>
-<td class="schools br">174</td>
-<td class="pupils">17,754</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1886</td>
-<td class="schools right">..</td>
-<td class="schools brd">..</td>
-<td class="schools br">812</td>
-<td class="schools br">97</td>
-<td class="pupils">24,526</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1887</td>
-<td class="schools right">..</td>
-<td class="schools brd">..</td>
-<td class="schools br">921</td>
-<td class="schools br">109</td>
-<td class="pupils">30,431</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1888</td>
-<td class="schools right">..</td>
-<td class="schools brd">..</td>
-<td class="schools br">1,086</td>
-<td class="schools br">165</td>
-<td class="pupils">42,159</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1889</td>
-<td class="schools right">..</td>
-<td class="schools brd">..</td>
-<td class="schools br">1,355</td>
-<td class="schools br">269</td>
-<td class="pupils">57,539</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1890</td>
-<td class="schools right">30</td>
-<td class="schools brd">30</td>
-<td class="schools br">1,554</td>
-<td class="schools br">199</td>
-<td class="pupils">66,820</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1891</td>
-<td class="schools right">145</td>
-<td class="schools brd">115</td>
-<td class="schools br">1,796</td>
-<td class="schools br">242</td>
-<td class="pupils">68,291</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1892</td>
-<td class="schools right">285</td>
-<td class="schools brd">140</td>
-<td class="schools br">2,113</td>
-<td class="schools br">317</td>
-<td class="pupils">90,794</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1893</td>
-<td class="schools right">430</td>
-<td class="schools brd">145</td>
-<td class="schools br">2,419</td>
-<td class="schools br">306</td>
-<td class="pupils">108,192</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="year br">1894</td>
-<td class="schools right">677</td>
-<td class="schools brd">247</td>
-<td class="schools br">2,634</td>
-<td class="schools br">215</td>
-<td class="pupils">122,325</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<td class="year br">1895</td>
-<td class="schools right">949</td>
-<td class="schools left br"><a href="#Footnote136" class="fnanchor" id="FNanchor136">[136]</a></td>
-<td class="schools brd">272</td>
-<td class="schools br">2,775</td>
-<td class="schools br">141</td>
-<td class="pupils">134,930</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote136"><a href="#FNanchor136"><span class="label">[136]</span></a>
-The number of pupils taking Manual Training cannot be given; as an indication,
-however, it may be said that the London School Board reports that in 1895, 30,508 boys
-were instructed in wood work in London schools alone.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Governmental aid to drawing and Manual Training, when
-incorporated in the curriculum of day grammar-grade
-schools, evening “continuation schools,” and teachers’ training
-colleges, is bestowed through the executive department,
-styled “The Science and Art Department.” Special attention
-is paid to training teachers in the teachers’ colleges, so
-that they will be able to give instruction in Manual Training.
-This is specially true to grammar-grade teachers. In 1894
-56 teachers’ colleges were giving Manual Training to 4,434
-teacher-pupils, the government granting $13,290 in aid of
-such training. In 1895, the science and art department,
-upon examinations aided 910 elementary Manual-training
-schools, giving instruction to 67,470 pupils; the amount of
-aid granted was $81,537.</p>
-
-<p>In 1890 a law was passed empowering county councils to
-use the surplus from duties on liquor to aid Manual-training<span class="pagenum" id="Page412">[412]</span>
-and technical schools. Many districts use the “liquor
-money” to establish purely Manual-training schools, attaching
-them to municipal technical schools. Generally, however,
-the “liquor money” goes to technical and art schools.
-The report for 1895 shows $5,699,046 applied by local authorities
-to technical instruction under the “liquor money” law.
-Scotland secured in 1887 a law empowering local authorities
-to levy a tax of a penny in the pound for the support of
-technical schools. In 1889 a similar law was passed for
-England. The Welsh law of 1889 organizing intermediate
-schools, recognizes and defines Manual Training. These acts
-led up to the “liquor money” law referred to.</p>
-
-<p>The City and Guilds of London Institute, organized in
-1876, is the principal private promoter of technical education
-in England. This organization has founded three schools
-of its own, besides aiding liberally similar schools in all
-parts of the kingdom. With the exception of the well-known
-South-Kensington school, the Manchester school, and
-the Birmingham schools, the technical schools of England,
-as well as its Manual-training schools and kindergartens, are
-of recent origin. Huddersfield Technical School, founded
-as a mechanics’ institute in 1841, is another exceptionally
-old and especially good school of its class.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">Manual Training in Switzerland.</span></h4>
-
-<p>As each canton regulates its own school system, the
-federal constitution requiring only that education must be
-obligatory and free, the same diversity of conditions exists
-in the cantons of Switzerland that is found in the states of
-our own Union:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Thus in the canton of Geneva, kindergartens and Manual-training
-schools are a part of the public-school system,
-entirely supported by public funds, and Manual Training is
-compulsory for all male pupils, in all grades of the public
-schools. The gradual advance from kindergarten work to
-primary, grammar, and high-school, makes a complete course
-in Manual Training in the schools of Geneva&mdash;perhaps the
-most complete to be found in any single public-school system.
-In other cantons, however, kindergartens exist generally as<span class="pagenum" id="Page413">[413]</span>
-private institutions, aided by public funds and contributions
-from societies and individuals. The growth of kindergartens
-in Switzerland by years cannot be shown from any
-data at hand; the following table, however, shows the status
-at the date of most recent available data:</p>
-
-<p class="tabhead">PUPILS AND TEACHERS IN KINDERGARTENS OF SWITZERLAND</p>
-
-<table class="appendix" summary="Statistics">
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<th class="br"><span class="smcap">Canton</span></th>
-<th class="br">Number<br />of<br />Separate<br />Kinder-<br />gartens</th>
-<th class="br">Number<br />of<br />Pupils</th>
-<th>Number<br />of<br />Teachers</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Zurich</td>
-<td class="schools br">61</td>
-<td class="pupils br">3,532</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">79</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Berne</td>
-<td class="schools br">62</td>
-<td class="pupils br">2,550</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">63</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Lucerne</td>
-<td class="schools br">3</td>
-<td class="pupils br">260</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Uri</td>
-<td class="schools br">1</td>
-<td class="pupils br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Schwytz</td>
-<td class="schools br">4</td>
-<td class="pupils br">91</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Unterwalden</td>
-<td class="schools br">2</td>
-<td class="pupils br">85</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Zug</td>
-<td class="schools br">5</td>
-<td class="pupils br">188</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Freyburg</td>
-<td class="schools br">10</td>
-<td class="pupils br">912</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">10</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Soleure</td>
-<td class="schools br">8</td>
-<td class="pupils br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Basel Town</td>
-<td class="schools br">32</td>
-<td class="pupils br">2,117</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">46</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Basel Land</td>
-<td class="schools br">8</td>
-<td class="pupils br">452</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Appenzell Outer Rhodes</td>
-<td class="schools br">16</td>
-<td class="pupils br">843</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">19</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Appenzell Inner Rhodes</td>
-<td class="schools br">1</td>
-<td class="pupils br">60</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Grisons</td>
-<td class="schools br">2</td>
-<td class="pupils br">80</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Aargau</td>
-<td class="schools br">13</td>
-<td class="pupils br">..</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">13</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Ticino</td>
-<td class="schools br">23</td>
-<td class="pupils br">1,351</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">43</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Vaud</td>
-<td class="schools br">160</td>
-<td class="pupils br">4,000</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">160</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Valais</td>
-<td class="schools br">3</td>
-<td class="pupils br">249</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Neuchâtel</td>
-<td class="schools br">36</td>
-<td class="pupils br">997</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">36</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Geneva</td>
-<td class="schools br">65</td>
-<td class="pupils br">3,872</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">85</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<td class="descr"><span class="padl4">Total</span></td>
-<td class="schools br">515</td>
-<td class="pupils br">21,639</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">589</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>Manual Training for boys was introduced into the
-Switzerland schools in 1884 by M. Rudin, who in that
-year instructed a class of forty teachers; in 1891 over one
-hundred teachers were taking a Manual-training course under
-his instruction. The following table shows the growth
-of Manual Training to 1889, or five years after its introduction.
-More recent data are unfortunately not available.</p>
-
-<p class="tabhead">MANUAL-TRAINING CLASSES IN SWITZERLAND</p>
-
-<table class="appendix" summary="Statistics">
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<th class="br"><span class="smcap">Canton</span></th>
-<th class="br">Number<br />of<br />Classes</th>
-<th class="br">Number<br />of<br />Pupils</th>
-<th>Number<br />of<br />Teachers</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Zurich</td>
-<td class="numbers">19</td>
-<td class="numbers">305</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">13</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Basel</td>
-<td class="numbers">32</td>
-<td class="numbers">558</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">19</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Saint Gall</td>
-<td class="numbers">6</td>
-<td class="numbers">122</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">8</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Schaffhausen</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">120</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Grisons</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">48</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">2</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Thurgau</td>
-<td class="numbers">2</td>
-<td class="numbers">46</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Soleure</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers">40</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Aargau</td>
-<td class="numbers">1</td>
-<td class="numbers">..</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bb">
-<td class="descr">Berne</td>
-<td class="numbers">5</td>
-<td class="numbers">175</td>
-<td class="numbers noborder">5</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page414">[414]</span></p>
-
-<p>Classes in Manual Training are reported from the cantons
-of Vaud, Neuchâtel, Appenzell, Freyburg, and Glarus;
-but statistics are not given. Manual Training for girls has
-been an integral part of the public schools of Switzerland
-for many years, and in practically all of the cantons this
-instruction is obligatory. The instruction consists in knitting,
-sewing, mending, cutting, and fitting, with lectures on
-house-keeping, and was introduced into the schools rather
-for its industrial use than in recognition of its educational
-value. Switzerland early recognized the importance of
-technical instruction and the development of artisan skill.
-The Municipal School of Art at Geneva was founded in
-1751, and is intended as a school for working-men. It is
-the oldest in Switzerland. The working-man’s school at
-Berne was founded in 1829, and, though a private institution,
-it is subsidized by the federal government. The
-Polytechnic School at Zurich was founded by the federal
-government in 1854. The Industrial School in that city,
-founded in 1873 by a society, is subsidized by the city,
-canton, and federal government. “The Tecknikum” of
-Winterthur, probably the most complete of its class of
-schools, was founded as a cantonal institution in 1873.
-The most extensive are the technical institutions for the
-education of working-men. The government began the
-establishment of these at the beginning of this century.
-By 1865, ninety-one had been established; in 1889, eleven
-hundred and eighty-four of these schools, having 26,716
-pupils, were reported. Trade-schools have sprung up
-everywhere, adapting themselves to local industries and
-common needs. The School of Watchmaking, at Fleurier,
-was founded as a private institution in 1850, but has been
-municipal property since 1875. Municipal Schools of
-Watchmaking exist at Chaux-de-Fonds, 1865; St. Imier,
-1866; Locle, 1868; Neuchâtel, 1871; Bienne, 1872; Porentruy,
-1883, is a municipal and state school, as is also that
-at Soleure, 1884. The Trade School for Women is a private
-institution of Basel, founded in 1879; that of Berne, in 1888.
-These schools are founded by Societies for the Advancement<span class="pagenum" id="Page415">[415]</span>
-of Public Utility, and teach women the millinery and dress-making
-trades, and give instruction in household work, and
-all the means by which women can become self-supporting.
-The societies have also founded numerous House-keeping
-Schools, and Schools for Domestic Servants.</p>
-
-<p>No attempt is here made to give a complete list of
-Switzerland’s trade-schools, or the efforts being made to
-advance the skill of her artisans. It is but proper, however,
-to mention the latest efforts to overcome the difficulties
-growing out of the decline in apprenticeship. In 1884 the
-Mannheim Trade Unions asked for a committee of investigation
-into the condition of the small trades. The committee
-reported, recommending the adoption of a suggestion
-received from the Karlsruhe Trades Union. It was in effect,
-that master-workmen who are willing to train apprentices
-systematically, according to regulations prescribed by
-school authorities, shall be aided by the state treasury.
-In 1888 Baden appropriated 5000 marks per annum for
-this purpose, and in 1892 twenty-two trades, or one hundred
-and twenty-two workshops, having one hundred and eighty
-apprentices, were subsidized. In 1895 the appropriation
-was increased. In 1898 the federal government of Switzerland
-adopted the plan and purposes to greatly extend it.
-The result of this is, practically, that every skilled master-workman
-who desires may become to a certain extent a
-public-school teacher, and every factory or workshop is, or
-may become, a school-house.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">Manual Training in Germany.</span></h4>
-
-<p>The officials of the regular school systems of Germany,
-while for some years past active in advancing trade-schools,
-have never recognized Manual Training as worthy a place
-in the public schools, except as regards female handiwork,
-which is everywhere a part of the course in grammar and
-high schools for girls. Individuals, and “societies for the
-promotion of practical education,” must therefore take the
-initiative in Manual Training, and this results either in
-private schools, or in persuading municipal or state authorities<span class="pagenum" id="Page416">[416]</span>
-to annex a Manual-training department to some public
-school.</p>
-
-<p>Of the 328 Manual-training schools for boys existing in
-1892, 126 were independent schools, and 202 were annexes
-attached to other educational institutions of various kinds.
-Special societies maintain 50 schools and 72 annexes, of the
-above total, while municipal authorities maintain 70 schools
-and state authorities 66 annexes. The growth by years
-since 1878 is shown in the following table:</p>
-
-<table class="appendix" summary="Statistics">
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<th class="br"><span class="smcap">Established</span></th>
-<th class="br">Inde-<br />pendent<br />Schools</th>
-<th>Annexes<br />to<br />Other<br />Schools</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">Prior to 1878</td>
-<td class="schools br">..</td>
-<td class="schools">26</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">1878</td>
-<td class="schools br">1</td>
-<td class="schools">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">1879</td>
-<td class="schools br">3</td>
-<td class="schools">..</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">1880</td>
-<td class="schools br">4</td>
-<td class="schools">4</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">1881</td>
-<td class="schools br">9</td>
-<td class="schools">6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">1882</td>
-<td class="schools br">4</td>
-<td class="schools">3</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">1883</td>
-<td class="schools br">2</td>
-<td class="schools">6</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">1884</td>
-<td class="schools br">3</td>
-<td class="schools">10</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">1885</td>
-<td class="schools br">2</td>
-<td class="schools">11</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">1886</td>
-<td class="schools br">1</td>
-<td class="schools">9</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">1887</td>
-<td class="schools br">8</td>
-<td class="schools">11</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">1888</td>
-<td class="schools br">13</td>
-<td class="schools">11</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">1889</td>
-<td class="schools br">19</td>
-<td class="schools">23</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">1890</td>
-<td class="schools br">21</td>
-<td class="schools">30</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">1891</td>
-<td class="schools br">27</td>
-<td class="schools">36</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="descr">1892</td>
-<td class="schools br">9</td>
-<td class="schools">16</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr class="bt bb">
-<td class="descr"><span class="padl2">Total</span></td>
-<td class="schools br">126</td>
-<td class="schools">202</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>In 1892 there were 285 teachers and 7374 pupils in the
-independent schools; 363 teachers and 6841 pupils in the
-annexes, or 648 teachers and 14,235 pupils in both. While
-something had been done in Germany in the way of trade-schools
-prior to that date, the general interest and official
-zeal was created by the Centennial Exhibition at Philadelphia
-in 1876, when Professor Reuleaux cabled to Bismarck,
-“Our goods are cheap but wretched.” The various states
-began to inaugurate the educational system that had made
-the manufactures of France so superior to those of her competitor,
-and from 1879 to 1890 over 50 trade-schools were
-established in Prussia.</p>
-
-<p>Some of the German states, notably Saxony and Würtemberg,
-had early established trade-schools. In 1837 three royal
-labor-schools were established by the state of Saxony; one
-in 1838, and two in 1840. Special schools for instruction
-in weaving, embroidery, and lace-making were established;
-one in 1835, one in 1857, one in 1861, one in 1866, and one
-in 1881. Of the 32 trade-schools in Saxony seven have been<span class="pagenum" id="Page417">[417]</span>
-established since 1886. In the 20 “<i>Kleinstaaten</i>” or so-called
-small states of Germany there were, in 1895, 218
-trade-schools having 2047 pupils. Practically all of these
-have been established since 1879. The city of Berlin in
-1895 reported 21 trade-schools with 8992 pupils, 332 teachers,
-and expenditures (exclusive of state aid) for these schools
-of $129,102; besides $80,339 spent for trade education in
-so-called “continuation” schools. In February, 1897, the
-number of students attending these schools in Berlin was
-14,750, or 1 per cent. of the population.</p>
-
-<p>It will be interesting, in view of the antagonistic attitude
-of the school authorities to the introduction of Manual-training
-methods in public schools from kindergartens up,
-to note how long Germany will follow the trade-school experiment
-of France, without learning, as did France, to fit
-her boys for the trade-schools by putting their little hands
-to school in the kindergarten, the primary school, and so
-on through grammar and high school; so that by the time
-the trade-school comes in to differentiate and accentuate
-special skill, the boy will have learned equally the use and
-control of muscle and of mind.</p>
-
-<p>The highest results of trade-schools upon a nation’s manufactures,
-and therefore upon its exports and its wealth, cannot
-be realized until the Manual-training school has furnished
-the educated hand as raw material for the trade-school to
-work upon. The nation that begins with the trade-school
-first will have a long and expensive lesson to learn. France
-learned it. Will Germany require as long and expensive a
-tuition? Germany has, however, the advantage, in that many
-of her private citizens, and “societies for practical education,”
-are, as usual, far more intelligent than her school
-authorities.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">Manual Training in France.</span></h4>
-
-<p>The thorough reorganization of the public schools of
-France by the law of June 16, 1881, renders any reference
-to the prior system unnecessary here.</p>
-
-<p>By this law primary education was rendered absolutely<span class="pagenum" id="Page418">[418]</span>
-free; and by the law of March 28, 1882, compulsory education
-for all children between the ages of 6 and 13 years
-was established. The law of October 30, 1886, systematized
-the public schools, classifying and grading them, and fixing
-a curriculum. Kindergartens admitting pupils from the
-ages of 2 to 6 years were made general by this law, and in
-1886-87 there were 3597 kindergartens with 543,839 pupils.
-In 1895 this number had grown to 4734 kindergartens,
-714,734 pupils, and 9199 teachers, all women.</p>
-
-<p>The government programme contemplates that Manual
-Training proper shall begin where its elements in the kindergarten
-leave off, and be continued throughout the four
-grades of primary instruction. But the full purpose of the
-law seems slow of realization, for in 1890, four years after
-the passage of the law, only 400 shop-schools of primary
-grade had been established, 101 of these in Paris. Manual
-Training has been compulsory in all public high-schools of
-France since 1886. These may be either independent schools
-or classes annexed to an elementary school. In the latter
-case they are called <i>cours complémentaires</i>. In 1886 there
-were 16,217 boys and 5150 girls in public high-schools; in
-1895 there were 21,996 boys and 8660 girls, a rise of 35 per
-cent. for boys and of 68 per cent. for girls in the ten years.</p>
-
-<p>In the <i>cours complémentaires</i> there were 11,518 boys and
-5223 girls in 1895, an increase of 37 per cent. for boys
-and 26 per cent. for girls over the figures for 1886. This
-result was not, however, accomplished at once. There had
-been the usual struggle for Manual-training schools before
-the law of 1886 made them universal and compulsory.
-The school authorities of Paris introduced sewing into the
-public schools in 1867, and in 1873 M. Salicis began the
-introduction of Manual Training into what we would term
-grammar-schools. Shops were annexed to the boys’ school
-in the Rue Tournefort in 1873. From that time until the
-general law of 1886 the growth was gradual. There are in
-France a large number of Manual Apprenticeship schools.
-They are a kind of primary trade-school. Prior to 1880
-various cities, as Paris, Havre, Rheims, etc., had founded<span class="pagenum" id="Page419">[419]</span>
-apprenticeship schools. Private schools of the same character
-had been established by individuals and industrial
-associations. The law of 1880 organized these efforts, assimilated
-all these institutions, and brought them under
-the control of the public. The tendency to bring all industrial
-institutions, whether classical, manual, trade, or technical,
-under control of the state has been very marked since
-1880 in France, and still more so since the law of 1886.
-Of the six industrial and house-keeping schools for girls in
-Paris four were founded by the city; the others were private
-institutions absorbed by the city&mdash;one in 1884, the other in
-1886. They are of high-school grade, and, in addition to
-general domestic economy, teach special trades to women,
-such as millinery and artificial flower work. The nation
-maintains high-class trade and technical schools in all
-industries important to her commerce. And there can be
-no doubt that the excellence of her manufactures has its
-origin in the large number, variety, and excellence of her
-free schools. The National School of Watch-makers was
-founded in 1848 by the government of Savoy, and reorganized
-by the French government in 1890. The National
-Schools of Arts and Trades, four in number, are the oldest
-and most important of the public institutes of technology
-and trades. The first of these was founded as a private
-institution in 1780, and became national property during
-the First Republic. The second of these schools was established
-in 1804, the third in 1843, and the fourth completed
-in 1892. These schools instruct fully in the mechanical
-arts, the purpose being to educate at public expense thoroughly
-equipped superintendents and masters of workshops
-for industrial establishments. Such, too, is the purpose
-of the Central School of Arts and Manufactures at Paris,
-which, founded as a private institution in 1829, became the
-property of the state in 1857.</p>
-
-<p>Schools of Mining, such as the one at Houghton, Michigan,
-are located, one at Paris (National High-school of Mines);
-one at St. Étienne (School of Mines); and schools for master
-miners at Alais and at Douai. The National Conservatory<span class="pagenum" id="Page420">[420]</span>
-of Arts and Trades, founded by the National Convention
-in 1794, began in 1819, under special ordinance of the government,
-gratuitous courses of instruction upon the application
-of the sciences and industrial arts. It is to industrial
-education what the College of France is to classicism and
-“pure science”&mdash;whatever that may mean. No attempt is
-here made to give a complete list of the trade and technical
-schools of France, whether public or private. They are
-exceedingly numerous, and cover every phase of industry.
-The purpose here, however, is to call attention to the fact
-that France began with trade-schools, and, after a hundred
-years of experimenting with trade and technical institutions,
-she reached the wisdom embodied in the laws of 1886 and
-1890, which provide for the training of the hand of the
-child in the kindergarten and continuously throughput
-the school age, thus furnishing aptest possible pupils for
-her higher trade and technical institutes, and the greatest
-possible development of skill for her industries. The
-character of her manufactures shows the importance of the
-scholar in industry.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">Manual Training in Italy.</span></h4>
-
-<p>Discussions in 1882 and 1885 led to an official adoption
-of Manual Training in normal schools in 1892, when twenty
-selected teachers were given one month’s gratuitous training.
-In 1893 Sloyd was made obligatory in the practice department
-of all normal schools. In 1893, 34 men and 34 women
-teachers were taking the Manual-training course at Repatrausone.
-The school authorities in Italy acting upon the
-English idea of teaching Manual Training to the teachers
-first, and so interest them that they will introduce Sloyd
-into the elementary schools of their districts.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond the statement that Manual Training was experimentally
-taught to 400 pupils in Genoa in 1892, no data is at
-present obtainable as to the success of this plan. There are
-194 industrial schools, seeking to teach special industries.
-In 1887 there were 419 technical schools, of more or less
-importance, and 74 institutes of secondary technology.<span class="pagenum" id="Page421">[421]</span>
-With the exception of the Aldini-Valeriani institute in Bologna,
-founded in 1834, and the <i>Scuola Professionale</i> at
-Foggia, established by the state in 1872, the trade and
-technical schools of Italy seem to be of recent origin.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">Manual Training in Belgium.</span></h4>
-
-<p>The law of July 1, 1879, reorganizing the public-school
-system of Belgium, made kindergartens a universal and
-integral part of the public schools. Children are admitted at
-3 years of age, remaining till seven. “At Brussels, Liege,
-and Verviers, experimental transition classes exist, which
-prolong kindergarten methods in the primary grades, the
-Manual-training exercises of Froebel reappearing in the
-primary schools, and there developing into some simple form
-of actual hand labor, with paper, pasteboard, or clay. The
-results have been very satisfactory.” In 1891 the city of
-Liege reported 4717 children attending public kindergartens.
-A normal school for training kindergarten teachers
-is maintained at Liege. In 1890 Belgium maintained 1042
-kindergartens having 104,760 pupils. The movement to
-generalize Manual Training in the public schools began in
-1882, took definite shape three years later, and by 1887 the
-state made Manual Training obligatory in all state normal
-schools, sixteen in number. Fifty cities also reported Manual
-Training established in their public schools in 1888. The
-more recent reports, while not given much to statistics,
-show satisfactory growth in the system. Schools of apprenticeship
-and of trade have received more encouragement
-in Belgium than Manual Training has in the schools
-of grammar and high-school grades.</p>
-
-<p>Apprenticeship schools to teach lace-making to the indigent
-peasantry were established by the state as early as
-1776. With the introduction of machinery, and the expansion
-of industries, the character of these schools was
-changed. Abuses grew up. Academic tuition was abandoned
-for work, and the schools practically turned over to
-financial interests of the exploiters of the labor of children.
-A reorganization occurred in 1890 when the state subsidized<span class="pagenum" id="Page422">[422]</span>
-some forty of these apprenticeship schools, and abolished
-many others.</p>
-
-<p>Trade-schools of every variety, from the schools for fishermen
-at Ostend and Blankenberg to the famous trade-schools
-of Brussels, abound in Belgium. While these
-schools are for the most part private schools, they are usually
-subsidized by the city or local government. The industrial
-school at Ghent is a technical school of importance founded
-in 1828. That at Tournay was opened in 1841. These are
-the oldest schools of their type in Belgium. A new impetus
-was given to these schools in 1885, and from that date many
-have sprung up in all parts of the country, the local industries
-determining the character of the trade-schools. The
-trade-school at Ghent, established in 1890, is the best expression
-of modern methods, as distinguished from the early
-ideas represented by Tournay. This school was overcrowded
-with pupils in 1892. The state grants a subsidy of 6000
-francs ($1158), and the province also aids the school. In
-1889, 54 industrial schools were reported in Belgium. In
-1872 a house-keeping school for girls was established by
-M. Smits, of Couillet, the first of its kind in Belgium. In
-1890 there were 160, and in 1892, 250 such schools, and
-classes in house-keeping attached to other schools. Practically
-all of these were either public schools or free classes
-in private institutions.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">Manual Training in Austria.</span></h4>
-
-<p>In Austria no attempt is made to combine in the same
-institutions the discipline of shop-work and the academics
-of the public schools. The first shop-school was established in
-Vienna by a private association, August 10, 1883. The second
-followed, February 16, 1887. In 1884 a normal school for
-the training of Manual-training teachers was established.
-At Budapest a Manual-training school was organized by
-private initiative in 1886.</p>
-
-<p>The municipal statutes almost immediately required one
-such school to be maintained by each school district, and in
-1889 there were in the twelve districts sixteen such schools.<span class="pagenum" id="Page423">[423]</span>
-One unimportant trade-school dates back to 1871; but with
-the exception of the work done in Vienna and Budapest, and
-a few so-called “continuation schools” and trade-schools,
-nothing of importance was done by Austria until 1896. The
-activity of the empire since the latter date has been directed
-towards the establishment of apprenticeship schools.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">Manual Training in Sweden, Norway, and Denmark.</span></h4>
-
-<p>From Finland the new educational ideals developed by
-Otto Cygnaeus spread to Sweden, and thence to the world
-at large. Dr. Salomon of Naäs introduced Manual Training
-(Sloyd) into his school in 1872, and in 1878 there were 103
-Sloyd schools in Sweden. In 1879 there were 163; in 1880,
-234; in 1881, 300; in 1882, 377; in 1883, 463; in 1884, 584;
-in 1885, 727; in 1886, 872; in 1887, 991; in 1888, 1167; in
-1890, 1278; in 1891, 1492; in 1892, 1624; in 1893, 1787; in
-1894, 1887; in 1895, 2483; or an increase of 2380 in 17
-years. In 1877 parliament voted $4000 per annum to
-advance Sloyd instruction; in 1891 this was increased to
-$30,000 per annum, in addition to amounts given by provincial
-authorities, agricultural and private societies, and
-parish authorities. The Naäs seminary for the instruction
-of teachers of Sloyd (Dr. Salomon’s school) reports that
-2627 teachers of Sloyd had been taught between 1875 and
-1896. In the Sloyd teachers training-school at Stockholm
-573 women instructors were taught in the years from 1885
-to 1897, inclusive. There are 32 evening and holiday schools,
-which in 1895 received a subsidy of $12,060.</p>
-
-<p>There is no definite data on Manual Training in Norway
-earlier than 1889, though Sloyd had doubtless been introduced
-from adjacent countries prior to that time. By law,
-however, Sloyd was made compulsory in all city elementary
-and intermediate grade schools in 1892, and optional in
-village schools. In 1891, $5060 was given as a subsidy for
-teaching Sloyd in 178 schools. The number of students in
-rural elementary schools in which Sloyd is optional is given
-at 236,161; number of students in city schools where Sloyd
-is compulsory, 58,871.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page424">[424]</span></p>
-
-<p>In 1883 the first Danish Sloyd school was established.
-The Copenhagen Seminary for instructing teachers of Sloyd
-was established in 1885. In 1888, 46 schools reported Sloyd
-courses with 2000 pupils under instruction; this number in
-1889 had grown to 59, and in 1896 to 114. Of this latter
-number 30 are regular Sloyd schools; the others educational
-institutions having Sloyd as a part of the course. In 1890,
-$4368 was appropriated to further the introduction of Sloyd
-into the schools of Denmark. In this connection must be
-mentioned the “Home Industry” schools of Denmark. Not
-less than 500 of these schools exist, generally attached to
-other schools, and supported by 400 societies for promotion
-of home industries and by state aid. It was the powerful
-advocacy of these schools by their champion, Clauson-Kaas,
-that delayed the introduction of Sloyd into Danish schools
-until 1883, when the influence of Professor Mikkelsen began
-to gain the ascendency. Not only was Clauson-Kaas a
-powerful man in his advocacy of these home industry schools,
-but equally vociferous and partisan in his opposition to
-Manual Training or Sloyd as a means of education and
-intellectual development. In the terrific strife of partisan
-school-teachers as to what constituted education, the schools
-of Denmark not only deteriorated but were wellnigh closed.
-That the home industry schools had their use is witnessed
-by the fact that practically every Danish housewife is not
-only an expert needlewoman and house-keeper, but expert
-in all those arts that go by the name of female handicraft.
-Grade schools and technical education have not developed
-greatly in Scandinavian countries. Sweden has two important
-schools for weaving, the Eskilstuna school for metal-workers,
-and four technical schools. Norway has two schools
-for teaching the wood-carver’s trade, two of carpentry, a
-school for mechanics, three technical schools, and four industrial
-schools for women. Apart from the numerous
-schools of home industries, difficult if not impossible to
-classify, Denmark has a trade-school for shoemakers, and
-one of considerable importance for watch-makers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page425">[425]</span></p>
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">Manual Training in the Netherlands.</span></h4>
-
-<p>The normal course in the Netherlands includes Manual
-Training for boys, it being the intention to teach teachers
-first, and to establish Manual Training in the schools later.
-There are a large number of trade and apprenticeship schools,
-the government taking far more interest in these than in
-Manual Training. In 1895 there were twenty “<i>Ambachtscholen</i>”
-(for training tinners, carpenters, and dyers), with
-2295 students. There are forty-eight industrial schools.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smcap">Manual Training in Argentine Republic.</span></h4>
-
-<p>January 13, 1896, a commission was appointed to report
-a plan for the introduction of kindergartens and Manual
-Training into the public-school system. In 1897 the report
-was made, and its recommendations were enacted into a
-law going into effect January 1, 1898. The introduction
-of Manual Training is to begin with the national colleges,
-sixteen in number, with 2629 pupils; the normal schools,
-thirty-five in number, with 1770 pupils. Ultimately under
-the law Manual Training will be adopted in the 3749 elementary
-schools, having 264,294 pupils, though no statistics
-are at hand showing to what extent this has been already
-accomplished. The papers presented before the commission
-which sat through February, 1896, were upon the importance
-of kindergartens as a basis for Manual Training;
-Manual Training as a means of education; Manual Training
-from the hygienic standpoint, etc. Some speakers favored
-industrial rather than Manual-training schools, but the
-commission reported that the system of Sloyd used at
-Naäs, Sweden, with certain modifications to suit local conditions,
-was the proper one to adopt. The kindergarten
-system recommended is purely Froebelian. From one of
-the papers read before the commission it is learned that
-Manual Training is a recognized part of the course of instruction
-in the national colleges of Uruguay, and to some extent
-in its elementary schools. Definite data for Uruguay schools
-are not, however, at hand.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page426">[426-<br />427]
-<a id="Page427"></a></span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak fsize150 gesp2">INDEX.</h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<ul class="index">
-
-<li class="newletter">A.</li>
-
-<li>Abstract ideas regarded as of more vital importance than things, <a href="#Page185">185</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Adam, legend of, and the stick, <a href="#Page157">157</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Adams, Charles Francis, Jr., arraigns the schools of Massachusetts for automatism, <a href="#Page201">201</a>;
-declares that, in the public schools, children are regarded as automatons, etc., <a href="#Page205">205</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Adler, Prof. Felix, declaration of [in note], that manual training promotes rectitude, <a href="#Page142">142</a>;
-unique educational enterprise of, in New York City, <a href="#Page342">342</a>;
-extracts from report of, as to purposes of the “model school,”, <a href="#Page344">344</a>, <a href="#Page345">345</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Age of force, the, is passing away, <a href="#Page303">303</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Age of science and art, the, has begun, <a href="#Page303">303</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Agricola, noted for the practice of the most austere virtue, <a href="#Page274">274</a>;
-after great services, was retired, <a href="#Page274">274</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Agricultural colleges, manual training in twelve, of the State, <a href="#Page341">341</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Agriculture nearly perishes in the Middle Ages&mdash;prevalence of famines, <a href="#Page281">281</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Alabama, Agricultural and Mechanical College of, adopts manual training, <a href="#Page355">355</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Alcibiades kept not his patriotism when he was being wronged, <a href="#Page255">255</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Alison, his theory of the cause of the decline of Rome, <a href="#Page63">63</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Altruism, stability of government depends upon, <a href="#Page135">135</a>.</li>
-
-<li>America, discovery of, the crowning act of man’s emancipation from the gloom of the Dark Ages, <a href="#Page286">286</a>;
-gives wings to hope, <a href="#Page287">287</a>;
-startles the people of Europe from the deep sleep of a thousand years, <a href="#Page287">287</a>;
-a great blow to prevailing dogmatisms, <a href="#Page307">307</a>;
-completes the figure of the earth, rendering it susceptible of intelligent study, <a href="#Page307">307</a>.</li>
-
-<li>America, early immigration to, consisted of Puritans and Cavaliers, Germans, Frenchmen, and Irishmen,
-<a href="#Page306">306</a>;
-destined to become the home of an old civilization, <a href="#Page306">306</a>;
-the manner in which the colonists of, treated the natives showed the Roman taint of savagery, <a href="#Page306">306</a>;
-European social abuses exaggerated in, <a href="#Page323">323</a>;
-the eyes of mankind rest upon, alone with hope, <a href="#Page323">323</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Americans, are transplanted Europeans controlled by European mental and moral habitudes, <a href="#Page323">323</a>;
-will not vote away their right to vote, <a href="#Page324">324</a>, <a href="#Page325">325</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Anaxagoras, his characterization of man as the wisest of animals because he has
-hands<span class="pagenum" id="Page428">[428]</span>, <a href="#Page152">152</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Ancients, reverence due them for their art triumphs, <a href="#Page73">73</a>;
-temples of, remained long as instructors of succeeding generations, <a href="#Page73">73</a>;
-educational theory of, contrasted with that of moderns, <a href="#Page123">123</a>;
-ignorance of, on the subject of physiology, <a href="#Page153">153</a>;
-speculative philosophy the only resource of, <a href="#Page153">153</a>;
-slow growth of, in morals due to the fact of their neglect of the education of woman, <a href="#Page366">366</a>;
-contempt of, for children, <a href="#Page367">367</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Anossoff, a Russian general, experiments of, in the effort to produce Damascus steel, <a href="#Page72">72</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Antwerp, Flemish silk-weavers of, flee to England upon the sacking of, <a href="#Page34">34</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Apollo, bronze statue of, at Rhodes, <a href="#Page47">47</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Apprentice system, the, gives skilled mechanics to England, <a href="#Page181">181</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Apprentices better educated than school and college graduates, <a href="#Page239">239</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Architecture, limit of, attained in Greece and Rome, <a href="#Page73">73</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Aristocracy, alliance of, with the kings, <a href="#Page290">290</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Arithmetic, automatism in teaching it in the schools of the United States, as shown by the Walton report,
-<a href="#Page197">197</a>;
-Colonel Parker’s declaration in regard to the defective methods of instruction in, <a href="#Page206">206</a>,
-<a href="#Page207">207</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Arnold, John, inventor of the chronometer, <a href="#Page86">86</a>;
-his ingenious watch, of the size of twopence and weight of sixpence, <a href="#Page86">86</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Art, its cosmopolitan character, <a href="#Page12">12</a>;
-the product of a sequential series of steps, <a href="#Page73">73</a>;
-the preservation of a record of each step essential to progress, <a href="#Page73">73</a>;
-printing makes every invention in, the heritage of all the ages, <a href="#Page286">286</a>;
-triumphs due to the laborer, <a href="#Page294">294</a>;
-ignored in educational systems, <a href="#Page326">326</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Artisan, the, embodies the discoveries of science in things, <a href="#Page13">13</a>;
-more deserving of veneration than the artist, <a href="#Page74">74</a>;
-regarded with disdain by statesmen, lawyers, <i>littérateurs</i>, poets, and artists, <a href="#Page185">185</a>;
-education of, more scientific than that of merchants, lawyers, judges, etc., <a href="#Page227">227</a>;
-training of, is objective, <a href="#Page231">231</a>;
-intuitively shrinks from the false, and struggles to find the truth, <a href="#Page231">231</a>;
-always in the advance, <a href="#Page242">242</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Artists more highly esteemed than engineers, machinists, and artisans, <a href="#Page185">185</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Arts, the fine, not so fine as the useful, <a href="#Page74">74</a>;
-can exist legitimately only as the natural outgrowth of the useful arts, <a href="#Page279">279</a>;
-the so-called fine arts must wait for the expansion and perfection of the useful arts, <a href="#Page383">383</a>;
-civilization and the, are one, <a href="#Page384">384</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Arts, the useful, finer than the so-called fine arts&mdash;their processes more intricate, <a href="#Page74">74</a>;
-no limit to their development except the exhaustion of the forces of nature, <a href="#Page74">74</a>;
-neglect of, by all the governments of the world is amazing, <a href="#Page176">176</a>;
-Plato’s contempt of, <a href="#Page176">176</a>;
-no instruction is given in the public schools, <a href="#Page181">181</a>;
-slavery’s brand of shame still upon, <a href="#Page190">190</a>;
-no such failure of the, as there is of justice, <a href="#Page227">227</a>;
-the true measure of civilization, <a href="#Page247">247</a>;
-depend upon labor, <a href="#Page278">278</a>;
-precede the fine arts, <a href="#Page279">279</a>;
-unknown in the Middle Ages, <a href="#Page281">281</a>;
-stagnation in, is the death of civilization, <a href="#Page283">283</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Athenians and Spartans as thieves<span class="pagenum" id="Page429">[429]</span>, <a href="#Page255">255</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Atkinson, Edward, declares that the perfection of our almost automatic mechanism is achieved at the
-cost not only of the manual but of the mental development of our men, <a href="#Page201">201</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Attention&mdash;the equivalent of genius, <a href="#Page380">380</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Aurelius, Marcus, sublime moral teachings of, <a href="#Page138">138</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Austria, Emperor of, has a suit of clothes made from the fleece in eleven hours, <a href="#Page87">87</a>;
-increases her debt each year, <a href="#Page296">296</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Authority, in the Middle Ages, chilled courage, <a href="#Page284">284</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Automata, of the ancients&mdash;hint of modern automatic tools in, <a href="#Page8">8</a>;
-of the moderns, triumphs of mechanical genius, <a href="#Page86">86</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Automatism, of mind and body, <a href="#Page191">191</a>;
-of mind promoted by the environment of modern life, <a href="#Page192">192</a>;
-promotion of, by the schools, <a href="#Page193">193</a>;
-in the schools of Norfolk County, Mass., as shown by the Walton report, <a href="#Page196">196</a>;
-as shown in the Walton report in grammar, in arithmetic, in reading, in penmanship, in spelling, and in composition,
-<a href="#Page197">197</a>, <a href="#Page198">198</a>, <a href="#Page199">199</a>;
-a final and conclusive test of the prevalence of, in the schools, <a href="#Page204">204</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="newletter">B.</li>
-
-<li>Babylon, the hundred brazen gates of, <a href="#Page55">55</a>;
-influence of ideas of, in full force in the United States down to the time of the emancipation proclamation of President
-Lincoln, <a href="#Page190">190</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Bacon, Lord, the school he wished for, <a href="#Page2">2</a>;
-his aphorism, <a href="#Page4">4</a>;
-his apothegm on the sciences, <a href="#Page13">13</a>;
-condemns the old system of education, <a href="#Page126">126</a>;
-his opinion of the universities, <a href="#Page127">127</a>;
-his proposal that a college be established for the discovery of new truth, <a href="#Page185">185</a>;
-his proposal to bring the mind into accord with things, <a href="#Page245">245</a>;
-foresees the kindergarten and the manual training school, <a href="#Page245">245</a>;
-celebrated aphorism of, has had but little influence upon the methods of our public schools, <a href="#Page325">325</a>;
-the basis of his philosophy of things, <a href="#Page374">374</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Bacon, Roger, his daring prediction of mechanical wonders, <a href="#Page98">98</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Ballot, power of, in the United States, <a href="#Page324">324</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Baltimore, Md., manual training in, <a href="#Page342">342</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Bamberger, Mr. G., Principal of the Workingman’s School, New York City&mdash;extracts from report of, on
-purposes of the school, <a href="#Page343">343</a>, <a href="#Page344">344</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Barnesville, O., manual training in, <a href="#Page342">342</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Belfield, Dr. Henry H., Director of the Chicago Manual Training School, <a href="#Page346">346</a>;
-his early appreciation of the mental value of manual training, <a href="#Page348">348</a>;
-extracts from the inaugural address of, <a href="#Page348">348-351</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Bell, Sir Charles, his great discovery of the muscular sense, <a href="#Page146">146</a>;
-his definition of the office of the sixth sense, <a href="#Page146">146</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Bells, that of Pekin, China, <a href="#Page47">47</a>;
-that of Moscow, <a href="#Page47">47</a>;
-they show an intimate knowledge of the founder’s art, <a href="#Page48">48</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Bernot, M., inventor of file-cutting machine, <a href="#Page91">91</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Bessemer<span class="pagenum" id="Page430">[430]</span>, Sir Henry, his birth and early training, <a href="#Page162">162</a>;
-his appearance in London, a poor young man&mdash;his first invention, <a href="#Page162">162</a>;
-as young Gladstone enters the Treasury, he retires an unsuccessful suitor for the just reward of genius and toil,
-<a href="#Page163">163</a>;
-his burning sense of outrage, <a href="#Page163">163</a>;
-announcement of his discovery of a new process in steel-making, <a href="#Page164">164</a>;
-his declaration that he could make steel at the cost of iron received with incredulity, <a href="#Page165">165</a>;
-his process of steel-making a complete success in 1860, <a href="#Page165">165</a>;
-compared with Mr. Gladstone, <a href="#Page165">165</a>, <a href="#Page166">166</a>;
-description of the process that revolutionized the steel manufacture, <a href="#Page166">166</a>,
-<a href="#Page167">167</a>;
-value of process of, <a href="#Page167">167</a>;
-the government of England slow in honoring, <a href="#Page168">168</a>;
-comparison between the life and services of, to man and those of Mr. Gladstone and Mr. Disraeli, <a href="#Page168">168</a>,
-<a href="#Page169">169</a>;
-stands for the new education, <a href="#Page169">169</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Black-walnut, its natural history studied in the wood-turning laboratory, <a href="#Page36">36</a>;
-its structure, growth, and uses, <a href="#Page37">37</a>;
-the poet Bryant’s great tree, <a href="#Page37">37</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Blatchford, E. W., President of the Chicago Manual Training School Association, <a href="#Page346">346</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Blatchford Literary Society, an organization of students of the Chicago Manual Training School, <a href="#Page348">348</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Blow, Miss S. E., in formulating the theory of the kindergarten, describes the method equally of the savage and the
-manual training school, <a href="#Page218">218</a>, <a href="#Page219">219</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Board of Trade of Chicago, the speculative trades in futures on, are fifteen times more than the sales of grain and
-provisions, <a href="#Page322">322</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Body, contempt of the, by the ancients, led to contempt of manual labor, <a href="#Page155">155</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Book-makers, the, writing the lives of the old inventors in the temple of fame, <a href="#Page171">171</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Books, the sure promise of universal culture, <a href="#Page287">287</a>;
-the precursor of the common school, <a href="#Page287">287</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Boston, the streets of, in which patriots had struggled for liberty, now echoed the groans of the slave,
-<a href="#Page311">311</a>;
-manual training in, <a href="#Page341">341</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Boy, the civilized, is not trained in school for the actual duties of life, <a href="#Page181">181</a>;
-is taught many theories, but not required to put any of them in practice, <a href="#Page181">181</a>;
-is in danger of the penitentiary until he learns a trade or profession, <a href="#Page181">181</a>,
-<a href="#Page182">182</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Boys, ninety-seven in a hundred, who graduate from the public schools and embark in mercantile pursuits, fail,
-<a href="#Page227">227</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Brain, the, its absorbing and expressing powers&mdash;diagram illustrating, <a href="#Page193">193</a>;
-the healthy education of, consists in giving to the expressing side power equal to that of the absorbing side,
-<a href="#Page193">193</a>, <a href="#Page194">194</a>;
-the functions of the absorbing side extended, while those of the expressing side are restricted&mdash;diagram illustrating,
-<a href="#Page194">194</a>;
-functions of the expressing side of, increased by adding drawing and the manual arts, <a href="#Page195">195</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Bramah, Joseph, inventor of automatic tools, <a href="#Page84">84</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Breighton helps to solve the steam-power problem, <a href="#Page15">15</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Bridge<span class="pagenum" id="Page431">[431]</span>, the first iron, across the Severn, one hundred years old, but
-likely to last for centuries, <a href="#Page241">241</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Bridgman, Laura, used the finger alphabet in her dreams, <a href="#Page150">150</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Brindley, James, sketch of the life of, <a href="#Page172">172</a>;
-a common laborer&mdash;a millwright’s apprentice&mdash;a man of honor&mdash;an illiterate, but a genius and an originator of
-great canal enterprises, <a href="#Page172">172-175</a>;
-the engineer of the Duke of Bridgewater, <a href="#Page173">173</a>;
-his “castle in the air” and “river hung in the air,” <a href="#Page173">173</a>;
-his obstinacy, poverty, and poor pay for splendid services of which he was robbed by the duke, <a href="#Page174">174</a>;
-his life and career typical of a score of biographies presented in Mr. Smiles’s “Lives of the Engineers,”
-<a href="#Page175">175</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Bronze, castings of, in the ruins of Egypt and Greece, <a href="#Page46">46</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Brooklyn Bridge illustrates the necessity of practical training for the civil engineer, <a href="#Page97">97</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Brown, John, Captain, in the presence of his exultant but half-terrified captors, <a href="#Page235">235</a>;
-defying the constitution, the laws, and public sentiment in the interest of the cause of justice,
-<a href="#Page236">236</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Bruno, his fate, condemned by the Inquisition and burned as a heretic, <a href="#Page178">178</a>;
-persecution of, a link in the chain of progress, <a href="#Page287">287</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Buckle, Henry Thomas, his testimony to the practical uses of imagination, <a href="#Page38">38</a>;
-his scathing arraignment of English statesmen and legislators, <a href="#Page160">160</a>;
-his declaration that the best English laws are those by which former laws are repealed, <a href="#Page187">187</a>;
-his declaration in regard to the obstinacy and stupidity of English legislators, <a href="#Page242">242</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Budget, the European, shows that the standing armies are the overshadowing feature of the situation,
-<a href="#Page290">290</a>;
-the portion of, that goes to the maintenance of the standing armies, <a href="#Page291">291</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Burgos, manufactures of, destroyed by the expulsion of the Moors from Spain, <a href="#Page283">283</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="newletter">C.</li>
-
-<li>Cæsar preferred to Cato, whose patriotism was above question, <a href="#Page274">274</a>;
-commentaries of, in all the world’s universities, <a href="#Page275">275</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Caligula, his pleasure in witnessing the countenances of dying gladiators, <a href="#Page138">138</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Camillus honored in the early days of Rome, <a href="#Page274">274</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Carlyle, his apostrophe to tools, <a href="#Page7">7</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Carpenter’s laboratory, class of students at the black-board in, discussing the history and nature of certain woods,
-<a href="#Page21">21</a>;
-working drawings of the lesson put on the black-board by the instructor in, <a href="#Page25">25</a>;
-parts of the lesson executed by the instructor in, <a href="#Page25">25</a>;
-new tools introduced, and their care and use explained, <a href="#Page25">25</a>;
-the students at their benches in, making things, as busy as bees, <a href="#Page26">26</a>;
-a call to order and a solution of the main problem of the day’s lesson, <a href="#Page26">26</a>;
-a tenon too large for its mortise, <a href="#Page29">29</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Caste, a tendency to, disclosed in all history, <a href="#Page248">248</a>;
-illustration of, the earliest&mdash;the
-chief of the brawny arm<span class="pagenum" id="Page432">[432]</span>, <a href="#Page248">248</a>;
-illustrations of, in savage and half-civilized communities, <a href="#Page248">248</a>, <a href="#Page249">249</a>;
-in Egypt&mdash;in India, <a href="#Page249">249</a>;
-in the United States, <a href="#Page313">313</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Castile, manufactures of, destroyed by the expulsion of the Moors from Spain, <a href="#Page283">283</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Castle of the Middle Ages, the home of music and chivalry, <a href="#Page280">280</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Cato a type of Roman persistence in the path of conquest, <a href="#Page264">264</a>;
-patriotism and virtue of, <a href="#Page274">274</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Centennial Exposition, exhibit of models of tool-practice in the Imperial Technical School, Moscow, Russia, at the,
-<a href="#Page331">331</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Charcoal, the forests of England swept away to provide it for the smith’s and smelter’s fires, in the early time,
-<a href="#Page63">63</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Charlemagne, attempt of, to reconstruct a worn-out civilization, <a href="#Page280">280</a>;
-neglect of the education of the people the cause of the failure of, <a href="#Page280">280</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Chatham, Lord, declaration of, that the American colonies had no right to make a nail or a horseshoe,
-<a href="#Page203">203</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Chicago, comparison of, with ancient Rome, <a href="#Page138">138</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Chicago Manual Training School, description of building, <a href="#Page1">1</a>;
-its main purpose intellectual development, <a href="#Page3">3</a>;
-theory of, <a href="#Page4">4</a>;
-engine-room of, <a href="#Page14">14</a>;
-engine of, doing duty as a school-master, <a href="#Page14">14</a>;
-an epitome of, in the engine-room, <a href="#Page15">15</a>;
-its purpose not to make mechanics, but men, <a href="#Page38">38</a>;
-conditions of admission to, <a href="#Page106">106</a>;
-detail of questions used in examination of candidates for the first class in, <a href="#Page106">106-110</a>;
-curriculum of, <a href="#Page110">110</a>, <a href="#Page111">111</a>;
-optional studies of, <a href="#Page111">111</a>;
-blending of manual and mental instruction in, <a href="#Page111">111</a>;
-missionary character of, <a href="#Page111">111</a>;
-the only independent educational institution of the kind in the world, <a href="#Page345">345</a>;
-owes its origin entirely to laymen, <a href="#Page345">345</a>;
-established by an association of merchants, manufacturers, and bankers, <a href="#Page345">345</a>, <a href="#Page346">346</a>;
-incorporated April 11, 1883, <a href="#Page346">346</a>;
-corner-stone of, laid September 24, 1883, <a href="#Page346">346</a>;
-opened February 4, 1884, <a href="#Page340">340</a>;
-officers and trustees of association of, <a href="#Page346">346</a>;
-object of, mental and manual culture, <a href="#Page347">347</a>;
-equipment of, <a href="#Page347">347</a>;
-library of, <a href="#Page347">347</a>;
-Dr. Henry H. Belfield director of, <a href="#Page348">348</a>.</li>
-
-<li><i>Chicago Tribune</i>, criticism of the methods of the public schools by the, <a href="#Page346">346</a>;
-columns of, opened to the author, <a href="#Page346">346</a>;
-effect of advocacy of manual training by the, <a href="#Page346">346</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Child, the, becomes father of the man, in the cradle, the nursery, and at the fireside, <a href="#Page365">365</a>;
-contempt of, by the ancients, <a href="#Page367">367</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Chipping, filing, and fitting laboratory, <a href="#Page88">88</a>;
-course in the, <a href="#Page88">88</a>;
-the ante-room to the machine-tool laboratory, <a href="#Page88">88</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Christian religion, the, its failure to save Rome, <a href="#Page140">140</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Cicero, his doctrine of the universal brotherhood of man, <a href="#Page139">139</a>;
-forecasts the doom of the Roman Republic, but has no remedy for the public ills to propose, <a href="#Page272">272</a>;
-without moral courage, <a href="#Page273">273</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Cincinnatus found at the plough, <a href="#Page268">268</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Cities, rapid concentration of population in, <a href="#Page137">137</a>;
-plague-spots on the body
-politic<span class="pagenum" id="Page433">[433]</span>, <a href="#Page137">137</a>;
-dominated by selfishness, <a href="#Page137">137</a>;
-statistics of increase of population in, <a href="#Page313">313</a>, <a href="#Page314">314</a>;
-the chief sources of society disturbances, <a href="#Page314">314</a>.</li>
-
-<li>City, the modern, the despair of the political economist, <a href="#Page137">137</a>;
-the centre of vice, <a href="#Page137">137</a>;
-pen-picture of its vices and crimes, <a href="#Page140">140</a>;
-picture of vice in, <a href="#Page314">314</a>.</li>
-
-<li>City of New York, College of, manual training in, <a href="#Page352">352</a>;
-first report of the industrial educational association of, gives a list of thirty-one schools in, where industrial education
-is furnished (<a href="#Footnote102"><i>note</i></a>), <a href="#Page352">352</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Civil engineer, the modern, must be familiar with all the processes of the machine-tool shop, <a href="#Page97">97</a>;
-his works may be amended, but never repealed, <a href="#Page187">187</a>;
-more competent than the railway president, the lawyer, the judge, or the legislator, <a href="#Page225">225</a>;
-trained in things, <a href="#Page225">225</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Civilization, progress of, depends upon progress in invention and discovery, <a href="#Page65">65</a>;
-a growth from the state of savagery, <a href="#Page131">131</a>;
-evils of, flow from mental development wanting the element of rectitude, <a href="#Page132">132</a>;
-contrast presented by that of Italy in the fifteenth century, and that of America in the nineteenth,
-<a href="#Page234">234</a>;
-difference between, and barbarism, <a href="#Page244">244</a>;
-the useful arts the true measure of, <a href="#Page247">247</a>;
-the product of education, <a href="#Page248">248</a>;
-of Greece sprang from mythology and ended in anarchy, <a href="#Page254">254</a>;
-languishes in an atmosphere of injustice, <a href="#Page278">278</a>;
-the trinity upon which it rests is justice, the useful arts, and labor, <a href="#Page278">278</a>;
-American, has not borne new social fruits, <a href="#Page323">323</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Clark, John S., his elaborate exposition of the defects of existing educational methods, <a href="#Page193">193</a>,
-<a href="#Page194">194</a>, <a href="#Page195">195</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Claudius, under the favor of, Seneca amassed a vast fortune, <a href="#Page273">273</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Clement, Joseph, great English inventor of the eighteenth century, <a href="#Page84">84</a>;
-his two improvements in the slide-rest, and the medals he received for them, <a href="#Page92">92</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Cleveland, O., manual training in, <a href="#Page342">342</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Coal, subject of production, cost, demand, and supply discussed in forging laboratory, <a href="#Page62">62</a>;
-history of application of, to useful arts, <a href="#Page63">63</a>;
-prejudice against use of mineral, in the beginning of the seventeenth century, <a href="#Page64">64</a>;
-smelting with mineral, successfully introduced in England in 1766, <a href="#Page66">66</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Coalbrookdale Iron-works, mineral coal first used at, for smelting purposes, <a href="#Page65">65</a>,
-<a href="#Page66">66</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Columbus, in proving that the world is round, frees mankind, <a href="#Page286">286</a>;
-sounds the death-knell of intellectual slavery, <a href="#Page286">286</a>, <a href="#Page287">287</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Comenius, the school he struggled in vain to establish, <a href="#Page2">2</a>;
-his theory of learning by doing, <a href="#Page13">13</a>;
-condemns the old system of education, <a href="#Page126">126</a>;
-his definition of education, <a href="#Page127">127</a>;
-foresees the kindergarten and the manual training school, <a href="#Page245">245</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Commerce, early, of America, so insignificant that in 1784 eight bales of cotton shipped from South Carolina were
-seized by the custom authorities of England on the ground that so large a quantity could not have been produced in the
-United States, <a href="#Page203">203</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Commercial Club<span class="pagenum" id="Page434">[434]</span>, the, founds the Chicago Manual Training School,
-<a href="#Page2">2</a>;
-guarantees $100,000 for its support, <a href="#Page3">3</a>;
-meeting of, March 25, 1882, <a href="#Page346">346</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Common-school system of the United States, glaring defects of, shown by the Walton report, <a href="#Page197">197</a>,
-<a href="#Page198">198</a>, <a href="#Page199">199</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Composition, automatism in teaching, in the schools of the United States, as shown by the Walton report,
-<a href="#Page199">199</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Compton, Prof. Alfred G., on the exacting nature of the demands made upon instructors by the new education,
-<a href="#Page352">352</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Concrete, progress can find expression only in the, <a href="#Page151">151</a>, <a href="#Page152">152</a>;
-a lie always hideous in the, <a href="#Page224">224</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Connecticut, manual training in State Normal School, <a href="#Page342">342</a>;
-legislature of, adopts manual training as part of the course of public instruction, <a href="#Page360">360</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Contempt, in the Middle Ages, withered hope, <a href="#Page284">284</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Convent, of the Middle Ages, the home of religion and of art, <a href="#Page280">280</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Cook County Normal School, Ill., manual training in, <a href="#Page342">342</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Cooley, Lieut. Mortimer E., letter of, to the author on effects of manual training in the University of Michigan,
-<a href="#Page363">363</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Cordova the abode of wealth, learning, refinement, and the arts, <a href="#Page282">282</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Corporate power unduly promoted by reckless legislation on the subject of land in the United States,
-<a href="#Page320">320</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Corporations, a creation of yesterday, the product of steam, <a href="#Page320">320</a>;
-almost as indestructible as landed estates, <a href="#Page320">320</a>;
-men trained from generation to generation to the care of, <a href="#Page320">320</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Cort, Henry, an English inventor of the eighteenth century, <a href="#Page84">84</a>;
-experiments of, with a view to the improvement of English iron, <a href="#Page115">115</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Cotton-gin, the, trebled the value of the cotton-fields of the South, <a href="#Page160">160</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Cotton Exchange of New York, speculative trades in futures on, thirty times more than the actual cotton sales,
-<a href="#Page322">322</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Crane, R. T., Vice-President of the Chicago Manual Training School Association, <a href="#Page346">346</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Cranege, the Brothers, inventors of the reverberatory furnace, <a href="#Page66">66</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Crerar, John, Trustee of the Chicago Manual Training School Association, <a href="#Page346">346</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Crusaders, their astonishment at the splendors of Constantinople, <a href="#Page285">285</a>;
-they expected to meet with treachery and cruelty&mdash;they found chivalry and high culture, <a href="#Page285">285</a>;
-they returned to Europe relieved of many illusions, <a href="#Page285">285</a>, <a href="#Page286">286</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Crusades, the, pitiful and prolific of horrors as they were, shed a great light upon Europe, <a href="#Page285">285</a>;
-brought the men of the West face to face with a progressive civilization, <a href="#Page285">285</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="newletter">D.</li>
-
-<li>Dædalus, invention of turning ascribed to, by the Greeks, <a href="#Page33">33</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Damascus blades, the most signal triumph of the art of the smelter and the
-smith<span class="pagenum" id="Page435">[435]</span>, <a href="#Page72">72</a>;
-the material of which they were made, and their temper, <a href="#Page72">72</a>;
-first encountered by Europeans during the Crusades, <a href="#Page72">72</a>;
-triumphs of genius not less pronounced than the Athena of Phidias, <a href="#Page74">74</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Dark Ages, the shame of, caused by the neglect of the useful arts, <a href="#Page64">64</a>;
-maxims of Machiavelli explain the fact of the existence of, <a href="#Page284">284</a>;
-gloom of, dispelled by the discovery of America, <a href="#Page286">286</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Darwin, Charles, declares that a complex train of thought cannot be carried on without the aid of words,
-<a href="#Page149">149</a>;
-law of reversion of, in operation during the decay of the Roman civilization, <a href="#Page275">275</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Da Vinci, Leonardo, took up the work of Archimedes, and the science of mechanics made progress, <a href="#Page287">287</a>.</li>
-
-<li>De Caus helps to solve the steam-power problem, <a href="#Page15">15</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Della Vos, M. Victor, Director of the Imperial Technical School, Moscow, <a href="#Page121">121</a>;
-testimony of, as to value of manual training, <a href="#Page121">121</a>;
-author of the laboratory process of tool instruction, <a href="#Page331">331</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Democratic idea, the, not new when adopted in America, <a href="#Page309">309</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Democratic principle in the United States Government does not prevent class distinctions, <a href="#Page313">313</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Denmark appropriates money for teaching hand-cunning in the schools, <a href="#Page368">368</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Denver (Col.) University, manual training in, <a href="#Page355">355</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Dickens, Charles, his pen-picture of “Tom All-alone’s”&mdash;philosophy of, <a href="#Page315">315</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Dinwiddie, Prof. H. H., his account of the manner in which the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas was
-revolutionized in the interest of manual training, <a href="#Page359">359</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Disasters, mercantile and other, show that business is done by the “rule of thumb,” <a href="#Page214">214</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Disraeli (Lord Beaconsfield), his tribute to the value of the imagination as a useful quality, <a href="#Page38">38</a>;
-his alternations of political power with Mr. Gladstone&mdash;from Liberalism to Toryism an easy transition,
-<a href="#Page164">164</a>;
-England heaps honors upon him while it neglects Mr. Bessemer, <a href="#Page168">168</a>;
-comparison between the life services of, to man and those of Sir Henry Bessemer, <a href="#Page169">169</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Doane, John W., Trustee of the Chicago Manual Training School Association, <a href="#Page346">346</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Dogmatist, the, no place for, in the modern order of things, <a href="#Page124">124</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Domestic economy made a department of the Iowa Agricultural College, <a href="#Page360">360</a>;
-part of the curriculum of the Le Moyne Normal Institute, <a href="#Page362">362</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Draper, Dr. John W., profound observation by, <a href="#Page377">377</a>;
-drudgery and humility, the value of, <a href="#Page374">374</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Drawing, thoroughness of training in, <a href="#Page16">16</a>;
-definition of, <a href="#Page16">16</a>;
-sketches of certain geometric forms, <a href="#Page17">17</a>;
-working drawings, pictorial drawings, and designs applied to industrial art, <a href="#Page18">18</a>;
-its æsthetic element, <a href="#Page18">18</a>;
-geometry its basis, examples of, <a href="#Page18">18</a>;
-from objects in the school laboratories, <a href="#Page19">19</a>;
-value of, as an educational agency, <a href="#Page19">19</a>;
-language of, common to all draughtsmen&mdash;pen-picture of class in, <a href="#Page20">20</a>;
-first step of expression, <a href="#Page208">208</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Drayton<span class="pagenum" id="Page436">[436]</span>, W. Heyward, historical sketch of origin of manual training in
-Girard College by, <a href="#Page353">353-355</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Dudley, Dud, inventor of machinery for the application of mineral coal to smelting purposes, <a href="#Page64">64</a>;
-sketch of career of, <a href="#Page64">64</a>, <a href="#Page65">65</a>;
-combinations against, by the charcoal iron-masters, <a href="#Page64">64</a>, <a href="#Page65">65</a>;
-furnaces of, destroyed by mobs, and their owner reduced to beggary and driven to prison, <a href="#Page64">64</a>,
-<a href="#Page65">65</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Dun, R. G., &amp; Co., statistics of, in relation to commercial failures, <a href="#Page211">211</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="newletter">E.</li>
-
-<li>Ear not a more important organ than the hand because situated nearer the brain, <a href="#Page154">154</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Eau Claire, Wis., manual training in, <a href="#Page342">342</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Edict of Nantes, revocation of, drove artisans to England, <a href="#Page34">34</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Education, the philosopher’s stone in, <a href="#Page2">2</a>;
-laying the foundation of, in labor, <a href="#Page3">3</a>;
-the power to do some useful thing the last analysis of, <a href="#Page12">12</a>;
-definition of, <a href="#Page12">12</a>;
-confined to abstractions in the past, <a href="#Page13">13</a>;
-the new&mdash;claims made in its behalf, <a href="#Page105">105</a>;
-universal, a modern idea, <a href="#Page123">123</a>;
-difference in systems of, constitutes difference between ancient and modern civilizations, <a href="#Page123">123</a>,
-<a href="#Page124">124</a>;
-every child entitled to receive, <a href="#Page124">124</a>;
-certain fundamentals of, upon which all are agreed, <a href="#Page125">125</a>;
-Rousseau’s definition of, <a href="#Page125">125</a>;
-begins at birth and continues to the end of life, <a href="#Page126">126</a>;
-Froebel’s definition of, <a href="#Page126">126</a>;
-old system of, condemned by Bacon, Comenius, Rousseau, Pestalozzi, and Froebel, <a href="#Page126">126</a>;
-of woman more important than that of man, <a href="#Page128">128</a>;
-develops innate mental qualities and forms character, <a href="#Page130">130</a>;
-all, is both mental and moral, <a href="#Page133">133</a>;
-any system of, that does not produce altruism is vicious, <a href="#Page136">136</a>;
-first step in, to eliminate selfishness and put rectitude in its place, <a href="#Page136">136</a>;
-a system of, consisting exclusively of mental exercises, promotes selfishness, <a href="#Page141">141</a>;
-methods of, controlled by the Classicism of the Renaissance, <a href="#Page154">154</a>;
-of the hands as well as the brain necessary, <a href="#Page172">172</a>;
-the old, designed to make lawyers, doctors, priests, statesmen, <i>littérateurs</i>, and poets, <a href="#Page179">179</a>;
-that is not practical, in the Age of Steel, is nothing, <a href="#Page179">179</a>;
-not broad enough on the expressing side of the brain, <a href="#Page194">194</a>;
-illustrations of defects of, shown by the Walton report, <a href="#Page196">196</a>, <a href="#Page197">197</a>,
-<a href="#Page198">198</a>, <a href="#Page199">199</a>;
-in existing systems of, the memory is cultivated while the reason is allowed to slumber, <a href="#Page200">200</a>;
-defective methods of, result in vast mercantile and railway disasters, <a href="#Page215">215</a>;
-defective morally, since the truth is to be found only in things, <a href="#Page224">224</a>;
-the New England system of, very defective, but to it the country owes the quality of its civilization,
-<a href="#Page235">235</a>;
-in South Carolina the monopoly of a class, <a href="#Page235">235</a>;
-a scientific system of, would have averted the War of Rebellion in the United States, and kept down the debt of England,
-<a href="#Page237">237</a>;
-why popular, is provided for by the State, <a href="#Page237">237</a>;
-the sole bulwark of the State, <a href="#Page238">238</a>;
-the best is the cheapest, <a href="#Page239">239</a>;
-of New England does not produce great lawyers, great judges, or great legislators, <a href="#Page239">239</a>;
-exclusively mental, stops far short of the objective
-point of true<span class="pagenum" id="Page437">[437]</span>, <a href="#Page243">243</a>;
-the last analysis of, is art, <a href="#Page243">243</a>;
-any system of, which separates ideas and things, is radically defective, <a href="#Page244">244</a>;
-the object of, is the generation of power, <a href="#Page244">244</a>;
-the system of, which does not teach the application of facts to things, is unscientific, <a href="#Page245">245</a>;
-among the ancients, was confined to a small class, and consisted of selfish maxims for the government of the many,
-<a href="#Page253">253</a>;
-of the Greeks responsible for the destruction of Greek civilization, <a href="#Page256">256</a>;
-defects of the Roman, <a href="#Page265">265</a>;
-Roman, deified selfishness and so realized its last analysis&mdash;total depravity, <a href="#Page267">267</a>;
-a false system of, wrecks the Roman civilization, <a href="#Page277">277</a>;
-scientific, essential to the salvation of the trinity upon which civilization rests, <a href="#Page278">278</a>;
-how to make it universal in Europe, <a href="#Page292">292</a>, <a href="#Page293">293</a>;
-possible only in Europe through the disbandment of the standing armies, <a href="#Page295">295</a>;
-in Germany, has taught the people to hate standing armies, <a href="#Page298">298</a>, <a href="#Page299">299</a>;
-is causing the emigration of Germany’s best citizens, <a href="#Page302">302</a>;
-is the arch-revolutionist whose march is irresistible, <a href="#Page302">302</a>;
-the new, will come in as the standing armies go out, <a href="#Page304">304</a>;
-had made little progress at the time of the organization of civil society in America, <a href="#Page309">309</a>;
-the system of, under which the kings and ruling classes of Europe had been trained to selfishness, cruelty, and injustice,
-put into the New England common schools, <a href="#Page309">309</a>;
-sordid view of, generally held in the rural districts of New England, <a href="#Page310">310</a>;
-Herbert Spencer’s view of the prevailing methods of, <a href="#Page310">310</a>;
-positive ill effects of the prevailing methods of, <a href="#Page310">310</a>, <a href="#Page311">311</a>;
-a false system of, in the United States, led to political incongruities of the grossest character, <a href="#Page311">311</a>;
-complete failure of, to promote rectitude, <a href="#Page311">311</a>;
-defects of system of, in the United States, shown by the ignorance and crimes of legislators, <a href="#Page317">317</a>;
-may be made universal through the ballot, <a href="#Page324">324</a>;
-all property may be taken for, by the ballot, <a href="#Page324">324</a>;
-American, is scant in quantity and poor in quality, <a href="#Page325">325</a>;
-no radical change in methods of, for 3000 years, <a href="#Page325">325</a>;
-a complete revolution in, essential to social reform, <a href="#Page327">327</a>;
-must begin with the child and be directed by the mother, <a href="#Page366">366</a>;
-the new, becomes one aggressive force, <a href="#Page372">372</a>;
-the new, confided to the teachers of the old régime, <a href="#Page372">372</a>;
-the first of human considerations, <a href="#Page373">373</a>;
-its professors should be the most learned of human beings, <a href="#Page373">373</a>;
-the new, maxims of, <a href="#Page375">375</a>;
-what form and character shall our education take?, <a href="#Page377">377</a>;
-the old, was designed to make masters, the new to make men, <a href="#Page378">378</a>;
-universality and equality of, the first and last essential, <a href="#Page384">384</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Edward III. of England uses the smiths at the siege of Berwick, <a href="#Page72">72</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Egypt, how the castes of, arose, <a href="#Page249">249</a>;
-progress of the civilization of, <a href="#Page249">249</a>;
-civilization of, the product of education, <a href="#Page250">250</a>;
-selfishness the basis of the system of education of, <a href="#Page250">250</a>;
-wealth, commerce, and military and naval power of, <a href="#Page250">250</a>;
-learning of, <a href="#Page251">251</a>;
-luxury of, <a href="#Page251">251</a>;
-conquered by Persia, <a href="#Page251">251</a>, <a href="#Page252">252</a>;
-no provision in, for the training of woman, <a href="#Page366">366</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Electricity must be “harnessed” at the forge and in the shop to enable it to do its work, <a href="#Page170">170</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Elizabeth<span class="pagenum" id="Page438">[438]</span>, Queen, use of iron by, to defeat the Spanish Armada,
-<a href="#Page61">61</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Emerson, his declaration that Napoleon was typical of the modern man, <a href="#Page134">134</a>;
-his observation that during the Crusades “the banker with his seven per cent. drove the earl out of his castle,”
-<a href="#Page286">286</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Emigrant, the, withdraws his support from the fatherland, <a href="#Page290">290</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Emigration, social questions cannot much longer be settled by, <a href="#Page299">299</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Empire, art of mechanism greatest of modern times, <a href="#Page61">61</a>.</li>
-
-<li>England, history of the early iron manufacture of, <a href="#Page63">63</a>;
-decline of the iron industry of, during the seventeenth century, <a href="#Page65">65</a>;
-the people of, import their pots and kettles, <a href="#Page65">65</a>;
-workshops of, originate great inventions during the period 1740-1840, <a href="#Page115">115</a>;
-apprentices of, become learned men, <a href="#Page115">115</a>;
-material condition of, <a href="#Page250">250</a> years ago, <a href="#Page158">158</a>, <a href="#Page159">159</a>;
-civilization and transformation of&mdash;how accomplished, <a href="#Page159">159</a>;
-studded with workshops, filled with automatic machines through the apprentice system, <a href="#Page181">181</a>;
-debt of, to the French and Flemish immigrants, <a href="#Page185">185</a>;
-constitution of, grew out of the feudal system, <a href="#Page190">190</a>;
-safer to shoot a man than a hare in, <a href="#Page190">190</a>;
-school system of, indescribably poor, <a href="#Page224">224</a>;
-a scientific system of education in, would have averted wars and kept down the national debt of, <a href="#Page237">237</a>;
-criminal laws of, <a href="#Page241">241</a>;
-draws from her people a larger <i>per capita</i> revenue than any nation of Europe, <a href="#Page297">297</a>;
-has nearly reached the limit of the power of her people to pay taxes, <a href="#Page297">297</a>;
-land system of&mdash;its terrible effect upon the English, Scotch, and Irish, <a href="#Page317">317</a>.</li>
-
-<li>English history, the great names in&mdash;the names without which there would have been no English history,
-<a href="#Page175">175</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Enterprise, in the Middle Ages, the slave of superstition and ignorance, <a href="#Page277">277</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Epictetus, lofty patriotism of, <a href="#Page139">139</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Equality, social and educational, essential to an ideal civilization, <a href="#Page375">375</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Europe, face of, and civilization of, changed during the Crusades, <a href="#Page286">286</a>;
-growth of the middle class of, <a href="#Page286">286</a>;
-the artisan became a factor in the social problem of, <a href="#Page286">286</a>;
-art treasures of, destined to follow in the track of her fleeing population, <a href="#Page294">294</a>;
-may restore to productive employments three millions of men, <a href="#Page302">302</a>;
-may place at the disposal of her educators seven hundred million dollars per annum, instead of seventy million dollars, as
-at present, <a href="#Page302">302</a>;
-may extinguish her national debts in fifty-four years, <a href="#Page303">303</a>;
-progress in, previous to the discovery of America, <a href="#Page307">307</a>, <a href="#Page308">308</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Ewing, Mrs. Emma P., Dean of the Domestic Economy Department of the Iowa Agricultural College, <a href="#Page361">361</a>;
-on the importance of the study of domestic economy, <a href="#Page361">361</a>, <a href="#Page362">362</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Expression, power of, quite as important as that of absorption, <a href="#Page208">208</a>;
-susceptible of being made clear only in things, <a href="#Page208">208</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Eye, not a more important organ than the hand, because it is situated nearer the brain, <a href="#Page154">154</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="newletter">F.<span class="pagenum" id="Page439">[439]</span></li>
-
-<li>Fairbank, N. K., Trustee of the Chicago Manual Training School Association, <a href="#Page346">346</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Faneuil Hall, slavery justified in, <a href="#Page311">311</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Feudalism emasculated human energy, <a href="#Page281">281</a>;
-the ruin of, set thousands of serfs free, <a href="#Page290">290</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Field, Marshall, Treasurer of the Chicago Manual Training School Association, <a href="#Page346">346</a>.</li>
-
-<li>File, the, older than history, dating back to the Greek mythological period, <a href="#Page91">91</a>;
-of the Swiss watch-makers, <a href="#Page91">91</a>;
-dexterity of the hand-working cutter of, <a href="#Page91">91</a>;
-invention of file-cutting machine in 1859, <a href="#Page91">91</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Finland, all the schools of, give instruction in hand-cunning, <a href="#Page368">368</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Fire, legend in regard to its discovery, <a href="#Page62">62</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Foley, Thomas, on the excellence of the laboratory methods of instruction, <a href="#Page217">217</a>,
-<a href="#Page218">218</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Force, new elements of, to be discovered and applied to the needs of man, <a href="#Page180">180</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Forging, laboratory of, <a href="#Page58">58</a>;
-pen-picture of a class of students in, <a href="#Page61">61</a>;
-story of the origin of the Turkish Empire related by the instructor in, <a href="#Page61">61</a>;
-the management of the forge fires in, <a href="#Page62">62</a>;
-lessons in, on the black-board and at the forges, in detail, <a href="#Page66">66</a>;
-the instructor in, at the forge, <a href="#Page69">69</a>;
-questions by the students in, <a href="#Page69">69</a>;
-the school-room converted into a smithy which resounds with the clang of sledges, <a href="#Page69">69</a>,
-<a href="#Page70">70</a>;
-healthful effects of the exercise&mdash;the anvil chorus, <a href="#Page70">70</a>;
-the tests of merit in, applied, <a href="#Page75">75</a>;
-the instructor in, gives a lecture on the steam-hammer, <a href="#Page75">75</a>;
-extent of the course in, <a href="#Page77">77</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Founding, laboratory of, <a href="#Page45">45</a>;
-history of the art of, <a href="#Page46">46</a>;
-first applied to bronze, <a href="#Page46">46</a>;
-lesson of the day, casting a pulley, <a href="#Page48">48</a>;
-the process in detail, <a href="#Page51">51</a>;
-pen-picture of the students pouring the steaming metal into moulds, <a href="#Page52">52</a>.</li>
-
-<li>France, permanently weakened by the increase of her national debt, <a href="#Page296">296</a>;
-debt, statement of&mdash;what the war with Germany cost her, <a href="#Page296">296</a>;
-cannot double her debt again and make her people pay interest on it, <a href="#Page297">297</a>;
-a law of, makes manual training obligatory, <a href="#Page368">368</a>;
-supports a school for training teachers of manual training, <a href="#Page368">368</a>;
-Prof. G. Solicis the chief supporter of manual training in, <a href="#Page368">368</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Franklin, the famous selfish maxims of, <a href="#Page311">311</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Froebel, the school be struggled in vain to establish, <a href="#Page2">2</a>;
-first applies Rousseau’s ideas to school life, <a href="#Page126">126</a>;
-his definition of education, <a href="#Page126">126</a>;
-condemns the old system of education, <a href="#Page126">126</a>;
-a character of, <a href="#Page127">127</a>;
-his discovery of the superior fitness of woman for the office of teacher, <a href="#Page127">127</a>,
-<a href="#Page128">128</a>;
-foresees the manual training school, <a href="#Page245">245</a>;
-it was reserved for him to rescue woman from the scorn of the ages, <a href="#Page367">367</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Fuller<span class="pagenum" id="Page440">[440]</span>, William A., Secretary of the Chicago Manual Training School
-Association, <a href="#Page346">346</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Fulton, Robert, an American inventor, <a href="#Page84">84</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="newletter">G.</li>
-
-<li>Galileo, persecution of, for his great discovery, <a href="#Page177">177</a>, <a href="#Page178">178</a>;
-persecutors of, believed and trembled, <a href="#Page287">287</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Galton, Francis, declaration of, that brain without heart is insufficient to achieve eminence,
-<a href="#Page134">134</a>;
-his testimony to the great value of artisan immigration, and the worthless character of political refugees,
-<a href="#Page186">186</a>;
-his neglect of the artisan class in his speculations on the subject of the science of life, <a href="#Page186">186</a>,
-<a href="#Page187">187</a>;
-reason of his neglect of the artisan class stated by Horace Mann&mdash;the influence of slavery, <a href="#Page188">188</a>.</li>
-
-<li>George III. an expert wood-turner, <a href="#Page34">34</a>;
-gives John Arnold five hundred guineas for a miniature watch, <a href="#Page86">86</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Germanicus noted for the highest public virtue, <a href="#Page274">274</a>;
-after great services, is exiled and poisoned, <a href="#Page274">274</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Germany, Emperor of, experience of, in a needle factory, illustrative of the delicacy of mechanical operations,
-<a href="#Page240">240</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Germany, foundation of her educational system, <a href="#Page295">295</a>, <a href="#Page296">296</a>;
-superior training of her people enabled her to humiliate France, <a href="#Page296">296</a>;
-freedom from debt of, the significant feature of the European situation, <a href="#Page296">296</a>;
-low rate of taxation in, <a href="#Page296">296</a>;
-weakness of, through emigration, <a href="#Page297">297</a>;
-the educated subject of, has become a thoughtful citizen, who rebels against the standing army, and flees from it,
-<a href="#Page297">297</a>, <a href="#Page298">298</a>;
-high value of citizenship of, <a href="#Page298">298</a>;
-citizenship freely abandoned, because the educated German revolts at the standing army, <a href="#Page298">298</a>;
-the military records of, show the cause of German emigration to be disgust of the policy of international hate,
-<a href="#Page299">299</a>;
-increase in the number of military delinquents in, is the measure of the growth of German intelligence,
-<a href="#Page300">300</a>;
-the chief power of, becomes her chief weakness, <a href="#Page300">300</a>;
-cannot recoup her losses to America through gains from neighboring countries, on account of the policy of international
-hate, <a href="#Page300">300</a>, <a href="#Page301">301</a>;
-losing the flower of her population&mdash;the strong&mdash;the weaklings, the paupers, the aged, and the infirm remain,
-<a href="#Page301">301</a>;
-is growing weaker each year, <a href="#Page301">301</a>;
-agitation on the subject of manual training in, <a href="#Page368">368</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Gibbon on the wealth of the Saracens in Spain, <a href="#Page283">283</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Girard College, manual training in, <a href="#Page353">353</a>;
-Dr. Runkle’s influence in promoting the adoption of manual training in, <a href="#Page354">354</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Gladiatorial games, atrocities of, in Rome, contrasted with the sublime precepts of Seneca, Plutarch, and Marcus
-Aurelius, <a href="#Page138">138</a>;
-extent of slaughter of animals at their celebration, <a href="#Page138">138</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Gladstone, William Ewart, political power and popularity of, <a href="#Page161">161</a>;
-enters upon his long official career as young Henry Bessemer retires from the Stamp-office without his just reward,
-<a href="#Page163">163</a>;
-a great orator, and a great
-financier<span class="pagenum" id="Page441">[441]</span>, a talker, a maker of laws and treaties, constantly in the public
-eye, <a href="#Page163">163</a>;
-in office and out of office, <a href="#Page163">163</a>, <a href="#Page164">164</a>;
-from Toryism to Liberalism&mdash;an easy transition, <a href="#Page164">164</a>;
-compared with Sir Henry Bessemer, <a href="#Page165">165</a>, <a href="#Page166">166</a>;
-England heaps honors upon him while she neglects Mr. Bessemer, <a href="#Page168">168</a>;
-comparison of the life and services of, to man, with those of Mr. Bessemer, <a href="#Page169">169</a>;
-stands for the old system of education, <a href="#Page169">169</a>;
-admission of, that the great mechanics of England had no aid from the government, <a href="#Page175">175</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Gold, once the king of metals, surrenders its sceptre to iron, <a href="#Page124">124</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Goss, William F. M., his exposition of the methods of the manual training school in detail, <a href="#Page219">219</a>,
-<a href="#Page220">220</a>, <a href="#Page221">221</a>, <a href="#Page222">222</a>;
-pronounced success of the Manual Training Department of Purdue University, under directorship of, <a href="#Page341">341</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Grammar, automatism in teaching, in the common schools of the United States, as shown in the Walton report,
-<a href="#Page197">197</a>;
-criticism of Colonel Parker on methods of instruction in, <a href="#Page206">206</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Great Powers of Europe all hampered by great debts, <a href="#Page296">296</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Greece, Egypt the University of, <a href="#Page251">251</a>;
-every intellectual Greek made a voyage to Egypt, <a href="#Page251">251</a>;
-the destiny of, was controlled by renegades&mdash;there was disloyalty in every camp, a traitor in every army, and a band of
-traitors in every besieged city, <a href="#Page254">254</a>;
-the orators of, never refused bribes, and oratory ruled in, <a href="#Page255">255</a>;
-philosophy and education of, responsible for decay of the civilization of, <a href="#Page256">256</a>;
-ruined by metaphysics and rhetoric, <a href="#Page256">256</a>;
-no schools in, for girls, <a href="#Page366">366</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Greeks, the people of youth, <a href="#Page254">254</a>;
-religion and patriotism of, <a href="#Page254">254</a>;
-were treacherous, cruel, and their sense of honor dull, <a href="#Page254">254</a>;
-they enslaved women and robbed the bodies of the slain on the battle-field, <a href="#Page254">254</a>;
-declaration of Thucydides that there was neither promise that could be depended upon, nor oath that struck them with fear,
-<a href="#Page255">255</a>;
-in the Pantheon the highest niche was reserved for the God of Gain, <a href="#Page255">255</a>;
-the early, were pirates, and some sold themselves into slavery, so great was their lust of gold, <a href="#Page255">255</a>;
-armies of the, bribed by Persia, <a href="#Page255">255</a>;
-young, taught the arts of sophistry in the schools of rhetoric, <a href="#Page256">256</a>;
-never emerged from the savage state, <a href="#Page256">256</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Guttenberg and the printing-press, <a href="#Page152">152</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="newletter">H.</li>
-
-<li>Habit, all reforms must encounter the stolid resistance of, <a href="#Page191">191</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Hand, it is through the, alone, that the mind impresses itself upon matter, <a href="#Page141">141</a>;
-the skilled, confers benefits upon man, <a href="#Page141">141</a>;
-and the mind are natural allies, <a href="#Page144">144</a>;
-tests the speculations of the mind by the law of practical application, <a href="#Page144">144</a>;
-explodes the errors of the mind, <a href="#Page144">144</a>;
-finds the truth, <a href="#Page145">145</a>;
-if it works falsely, publishes its own guilt in the false thing it makes, <a href="#Page145">145</a>;
-Dr. Wilson’s graphic picture of the versatility of the, <a href="#Page145">145</a>;
-not less the guide than the agent of the mind, <a href="#Page145">145</a>;
-influences the mind through the muscular sense, <a href="#Page148">148</a>;
-how its habit of labor leads
-to<span class="pagenum" id="Page442">[442]</span> the discovery of the truth and the exposure of the false,
-<a href="#Page149">149</a>;
-the preserver of the power of speech through the endless succession of objects it presents to the mind,
-<a href="#Page151">151</a>;
-the, ceasing to labor in the arts, to plant and to gather, speech would degenerate into a mere iteration of the wants of
-savages subsisting on fruits, <a href="#Page151">151</a>;
-the most potent agency in the work of civilization, <a href="#Page152">152</a>;
-mobility of, multiplies its powers in a geometrical ratio, <a href="#Page154">154</a>;
-contempt of, an inheritance from the speculative philosophy of the Middle Ages, <a href="#Page155">155</a>;
-the works of, comprise all the visible results of civilization, <a href="#Page155">155</a>;
-marvels wrought by the, <a href="#Page155">155</a>, <a href="#Page156">156</a>;
-James MacAlister on the power and versatility of the [<a href="#Footnote24"><i>note</i></a>], <a href="#Page156">156</a>;
-wields the mechanical powers&mdash;its works, <a href="#Page158">158</a>;
-the wise counsel of the practical, steadies the mind, <a href="#Page225">225</a>;
-not a nicer instrument than the mind, <a href="#Page240">240</a>;
-the, stands for use, for service, and for integrity, <a href="#Page376">376</a>;
-its drill and discipline more highly educative than any exclusively academic course, <a href="#Page376">376</a>;
-through it alone man impresses himself upon Nature, <a href="#Page378">378</a>;
-is refined and spiritualized by the sense of touch, <a href="#Page379">379</a>;
-the multitudinous works of the, <a href="#Page379">379</a>, <a href="#Page380">380</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Hand-work, difficulties of, illustrated, <a href="#Page86">86</a>;
-educative value of, <a href="#Page375">375</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Hargreaves, James, inventor of the “spinning-jenny,” <a href="#Page84">84</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Herbert, the famous selfish maxim of, <a href="#Page311">311</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Hero, of Alexandria, the inventor of the steam-engine, <a href="#Page14">14</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Hero, the, is an honest man, <a href="#Page233">233</a>;
-the, in education, <a href="#Page385">385</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Herodotus, his description of the hundred brazen gates of Babylon, <a href="#Page55">55</a>;
-his contempt for the artisan, <a href="#Page56">56</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Heroes, the thin ranks of, constitute the measure of the poverty of the systems of education that have prevailed
-among mankind, <a href="#Page234">234</a>;
-are normally developed men who honor the truth everywhere, <a href="#Page234">234</a>;
-the fact that they are honored after death evidence of progress, <a href="#Page234">234</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Heroism rendered grand by contrast with the debased standards of public judgment, <a href="#Page233">233</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Herophilus opens the way to an intelligent study of the mind, <a href="#Page153">153</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Hippocrates opens the way to an intelligent study of the mind, <a href="#Page153">153</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Holtzapffels, speculation of, as to the origin of the invention of the lathe, <a href="#Page33">33</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Honesty, only another name for heroism, <a href="#Page233">233</a>;
-scientific education will make it universal, <a href="#Page233">233</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Hood, Tom, his song of the shirt, <a href="#Page87">87</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Huntsman, Benjamin, an English inventor of the eighteenth century, <a href="#Page84">84</a>;
-sketch of the career of, <a href="#Page116">116</a>;
-his invention of cast-steel, and its effect upon the Sheffield cutlery market, <a href="#Page116">116</a>;
-how his secret was stolen, <a href="#Page117">117</a>;
-declines a membership of the Royal Society, <a href="#Page117">117</a>;
-how resplendent his name is now, <a href="#Page171">171</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="newletter">I.</li>
-
-<li>Ideas are mere vain speculations till embodied in things, <a href="#Page243">243</a>;
-and things are indissolubly connected, <a href="#Page244">244</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Ignorance<span class="pagenum" id="Page443">[443]</span>, illustration of, in the opposition of a Roman Emperor to
-the use of improved machinery, <a href="#Page178">178</a>;
-reverences the past, never doubts, is suspicious, an enemy of all progress, <a href="#Page179">179</a>;
-in the schools of Norfolk County, Mass., <a href="#Page197">197</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Illinois Penitentiary, statistics of show that four out of five of the inmates of have no handicraft,
-<a href="#Page182">182</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Imagination, Buckle’s tribute to the, <a href="#Page38">38</a>;
-Disraeli on Sir Robert Peel’s want of, <a href="#Page38">38</a>;
-Disraeli’s career an illustration of the value of, <a href="#Page39">39</a>;
-the discovery of America appealed powerfully to the, <a href="#Page287">287</a>;
-blazes the path to glorious achievements, <a href="#Page287">287</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Imperial Technical School, Moscow, manual training adopted as part of curriculum of the, in 1868,
-<a href="#Page331">331</a>;
-sketch of the history of manual training in, by Director Della Vos, <a href="#Page331">331-333</a>.</li>
-
-<li>India, how the castes of, arose, <a href="#Page249">249</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Injustice, civilization languishes in an atmosphere of, <a href="#Page278">278</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Inquisition, the, its persecution of Galileo, <a href="#Page177">177</a>, <a href="#Page178">178</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Instructors, lack of competent, in the new education, <a href="#Page352">352</a>, <a href="#Page353">353</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Intelligence, the basis of morality, <a href="#Page113">113</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Inventions, a growth, <a href="#Page14">14</a>;
-each step of constitutes a link in the chain of progress, <a href="#Page187">187</a>;
-contain the germs of imperishable truth, <a href="#Page243">243</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Inventive genius, to the, mankind owes more than to the philosophers, <i>littérateurs</i>, professors, and statesmen
-of all time, <a href="#Page84">84</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Inventor, the, produces a machine that will make a thousand things in the time required by the hand-worker to make one,
-<a href="#Page86">86</a>;
-helps on the cause of progress, <a href="#Page160">160</a>;
-rules the world, <a href="#Page161">161</a>;
-his works are never repealed, <a href="#Page187">187</a>;
-is always in the advance, <a href="#Page242">242</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Iowa, Agricultural College of, makes domestic economy a part of its curriculum, <a href="#Page360">360</a>;
-faculty and course of study in the department of domestic economy of, <a href="#Page360">360</a>, <a href="#Page361">361</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Iron, Locke’s famous apothegm on the value of, <a href="#Page45">45</a>;
-the most potent instrument of power, <a href="#Page61">61</a>;
-use of by Queen Elizabeth to defeat the Spanish Armada, <a href="#Page61">61</a>;
-the equivalent of civilization, <a href="#Page62">62</a>;
-is king, and the smelter and smith are his chief ministers, <a href="#Page62">62</a>;
-to make a ton of, required hundreds of cords of wood before the introduction of “pit” coal for smelting purposes,
-<a href="#Page63">63</a>;
-the foundation of every useful art, <a href="#Page81">81</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Italy, government of, during the Middle Ages, consisted of a menace and a sneer, <a href="#Page284">284</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="newletter">J.</li>
-
-<li>Jacobson, Col. Augustus, on the demand for a more comprehensive system of education, <a href="#Page180">180</a>;
-on the proper equipment of the boy upon leaving school, <a href="#Page209">209</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Jerusalem, when conquered, its smiths and other craftsmen were carried away as captives by the Babylonians,
-<a href="#Page70">70</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Jews<span class="pagenum" id="Page444">[444]</span>, learning of, exerted an ameliorating influence upon the darkness
-of the Middle Ages, <a href="#Page285">285</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Judges, training of, is exclusively subjective, <a href="#Page230">230</a>;
-rendered selfish by subjective processes of thought, <a href="#Page231">231</a>;
-venerate the past, <a href="#Page242">242</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Justice assumes the place of selfishness in the mind of the hero, <a href="#Page233">233</a>;
-cause of the failure of, <a href="#Page242">242</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="newletter">K.</li>
-
-<li>Keith, Edson, Trustee of Chicago Manual Training School Association, <a href="#Page340">340</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Kindergarten, the, father of the manual training school, <a href="#Page5">5</a>;
-fills a place unoccupied until the time of Froebel, <a href="#Page126">126</a>;
-educational principles of, susceptible of universal application, <a href="#Page126">126</a>;
-analysis of, <a href="#Page128">128</a>;
-leads logically to the manual training school, <a href="#Page129">129</a>;
-method of, is scientific, <a href="#Page207">207</a>;
-method of, is the expression of ideas in things, <a href="#Page245">245</a>;
-realizes the dream of Bacon, Comenius, and Pestalozzi, <a href="#Page245">245</a>;
-exhibits of work of, at the meeting of the National Educational Association in 1884, <a href="#Page342">342</a>;
-endorsed by the National Educational Association, <a href="#Page363">363</a>;
-the growth of, prevented by prejudice and indifference, <a href="#Page367">367</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Kings, alliance of, with the aristocracy, <a href="#Page286">286</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="newletter">L.</li>
-
-<li>Labor class, the real flower of a population, <a href="#Page293">293</a>;
-all other classes depend upon the, <a href="#Page294">294</a>;
-a drain upon the, is a drain upon the most vital resource of the State, <a href="#Page294">294</a>;
-where the flower of gathers, wealth most abounds, <a href="#Page294">294</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Labor, manual, scorn of, among the ancients, <a href="#Page56">56</a>;
-its slow recovery of independence, its destined dignity through scientific and art culture, <a href="#Page57">57</a>;
-repugnance to, has multiplied dishonest practices, <a href="#Page155">155</a>;
-respect for, would be increased by the adoption in the public schools of a comprehensive system of mechanical training,
-<a href="#Page182">182</a>;
-cause of the scorn of&mdash;the slavery of the laborer, <a href="#Page188">188</a>;
-of to-day alone maintains the value of property, <a href="#Page252">252</a>;
-of men cheaper than that of cattle, in Rome, <a href="#Page266">266</a>;
-the useful arts depend upon, <a href="#Page278">278</a>;
-the foundation of national prosperity, <a href="#Page293">293</a>;
-essential to triumphs in literature, music, and the fine arts, <a href="#Page293">293</a>;
-not gold and silver, is the source of wealth, <a href="#Page294">294</a>;
-draws to itself the art treasures of the world, <a href="#Page294">294</a>, <a href="#Page295">295</a>;
-contempt of, inculcated by educational systems, <a href="#Page326">326</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Laborer, the, degraded through slavery, <a href="#Page10">10</a>;
-contempt of, ingrained in the public mind, <a href="#Page177">177</a>;
-contempt of, leads inevitably to social disintegration, <a href="#Page247">247</a>;
-the battles of antiquity were contests for the possession of, <a href="#Page253">253</a>;
-reduced to slavery in Rome, <a href="#Page265">265</a>;
-spurned in Rome, <a href="#Page266">266</a>;
-the useful arts decline if he is degraded, <a href="#Page278">278</a>,
-and advance if he is honored, <a href="#Page278">278</a>;
-the standing armies of Europe have cost him all his noble ambitions, <a href="#Page295">295</a>;
-surplus of, goes to the tax-gatherer, <a href="#Page295">295</a>;
-forced to sacrifice his desire for education, his love of the beautiful, of dignity, and of a home adorned by art,
-<a href="#Page295">295</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Laborers<span class="pagenum" id="Page445">[445]</span> thrown into the arena in Rome to be scrambled for,
-<a href="#Page269">269</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Landed estates, effect of concentration of, in a few hands, <a href="#Page320">320</a>;
-vast, conferred upon a few corporations in the United States&mdash;double the area of that owned by the lords of England,
-Scotland, and Ireland, <a href="#Page321">321</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Language, thought impossible without, <a href="#Page150">150</a>;
-changes in, arise out of new discoveries in science and new inventions in art, <a href="#Page151">151</a>;
-stagnates when the State ceases to advance, <a href="#Page151">151</a>;
-invention of, <a href="#Page248">248</a>;
-when nations shall dwell together in unity there will be but one, <a href="#Page299">299</a>
-[<a href="#Footnote88"><i>note</i></a>].</li>
-
-<li>Lawyers more highly esteemed than civil engineers, machinists, and artisans, <a href="#Page185">185</a>;
-training of, is exclusively subjective, <a href="#Page230">230</a>;
-rendered selfish by subjective processes of thought, <a href="#Page231">231</a>;
-look for precedents in an age whose civilization perished with its language, <a href="#Page242">242</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Layard, discoveries of, in the ruins of Nineveh, <a href="#Page46">46</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Learning, the revival of exalted abstractions and debased things, <a href="#Page374">374</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Legislation, restrictive, in England, to prevent the conversion of timber into charcoal for smelting purposes,
-<a href="#Page63">63</a>;
-the best, in England, is that by which former statutes were repealed, <a href="#Page226">226</a>;
-of the United States no better than that of England, <a href="#Page226">226</a>;
-cause of failure of, <a href="#Page242">242</a>;
-reckless, in the United States, on the subject of the public domain, <a href="#Page319">319</a>;
-of the States of the Union vicious and corrupt, <a href="#Page322">322</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Legislators, not the authors of English progress, <a href="#Page159">159</a>;
-Buckle’s scathing arraignment of, <a href="#Page160">160</a>;
-wiser in the statutes they repeal than in those they enact, <a href="#Page226">226</a>, <a href="#Page227">227</a>;
-training of, is exclusively subjective, <a href="#Page230">230</a>;
-rendered selfish by subjective processes of thought, <a href="#Page231">231</a>;
-become selfish, and venerate the past, <a href="#Page242">242</a>;
-refuse to grant reforms until awed into submission, <a href="#Page242">242</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Le Moyne Normal Institute, manual training and domestic economy in, <a href="#Page356">356</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Life Insurance, ethical aspect of, <a href="#Page214">214</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Literature, full of maxims in honor of selfishness, <a href="#Page134">134</a>;
-polite, must rest upon a basis of general culture, or it is valueless, <a href="#Page279">279</a>.</li>
-
-<li><i>Littérateurs</i> more highly esteemed than civil engineers, machinists, and artisans, <a href="#Page185">185</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Livy characterizes Valerius as the first man of his time, <a href="#Page264">264</a>;
-deplores the decay of virtue, <a href="#Page272">272</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Lloyd, Henry D., his history of the land system of the United States&mdash;syllabus of, <a href="#Page317">317</a>;
-opening paragraphs of the history of the United States by, <a href="#Page318">318</a>, <a href="#Page319">319</a>;
-declaration of, that we must hereafter find freedom in the society of the good, <a href="#Page326">326</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Locke, the school he dreamed of, <a href="#Page2">2</a>;
-famous apothegm of, on iron, <a href="#Page45">45</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Locomotive, the&mdash;stands for the brotherhood of man, <a href="#Page376">376</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Locomotives, no such failure of, as there is of legislation, <a href="#Page227">227</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Lombardy, five famines in, <a href="#Page281">281</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Louis XVI. an expert locksmith, <a href="#Page34">34</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Lubbock, Sir John, on the skill of the savage, <a href="#Page216">216</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Lucan, his gospel of universal love, <a href="#Page139">139</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Lucretia<span class="pagenum" id="Page446">[446]</span>, political effects of the tragic fate of,
-<a href="#Page264">264</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Luther, the reformation of, opened the way to the last analysis of dissent in America, <a href="#Page309">309</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="newletter">M.</li>
-
-<li>MacAlister, James, declaration of, that there has been but little change in the ideas that have controlled our methods
-of education in four hundred years, <a href="#Page154">154</a>;
-his graphic description of the power and versatility of the hand [<a href="#Footnote24"><i>note</i></a>],
-<a href="#Page156">156</a>;
-observation of, that a skilled hand, to the majority of men, is quite as important as a well-filled head,
-<a href="#Page208">208</a>;
-has revolutionized the public schools of Philadelphia in two years, <a href="#Page355">355</a>;
-one of the most accomplished as well as sternly practical educators in the United States, <a href="#Page357">357</a>;
-opinion of, that every child should receive manual training, <a href="#Page358">358</a>;
-opinion of, that the great principles which underlie the system mean nothing less than a revolution in education
-[<a href="#Footnote106"><i>note</i></a>], <a href="#Page358">358</a>, <a href="#Page364">364</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Macaulay’s, Lord, analysis of the Baconian philosophy, <a href="#Page377">377</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Machiavelli, philosophy formulated by, <a href="#Page284">284</a>;
-political maxims of, not invented by him, <a href="#Page284">284</a>;
-maxims of, atrocious character of, <a href="#Page284">284</a>, <a href="#Page285">285</a>;
-maxims of, promote barbarism, <a href="#Page285">285</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Machines, automatic, nails, screws, pins, and needles flying from the fingers of, by the thousand million,
-<a href="#Page82">82</a>;
-more powerful to be constructed in the future, <a href="#Page180">180</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Machine-tool laboratory, the students of, enter upon a most important inquiry, <a href="#Page82">82</a>;
-the study of minute and ponderous tools in, <a href="#Page83">83</a>;
-delicacy of the processes of, <a href="#Page91">91</a>;
-the poverty of words as compared with things asserted in, <a href="#Page91">91</a>;
-silence of, how eloquent, <a href="#Page91">91</a>, <a href="#Page92">92</a>;
-a screw-engine lathe taken to pieces in, <a href="#Page92">92</a>;
-improvements in the lathe explained in, <a href="#Page92">92</a>;
-fundamental and auxiliary tools of, explained, <a href="#Page93">93</a>;
-course of training in, orderly, <a href="#Page93">93</a>;
-students work from their own drawings in, <a href="#Page94">94</a>;
-why skill is required to handle steam-driven tools of the, <a href="#Page94">94</a>;
-aspect of the, when in repose, <a href="#Page97">97</a>;
-aspect of the, when steam is on, <a href="#Page98">98</a>;
-pen-picture of students of, <a href="#Page99">99</a>;
-students of, at work on graduating projects in, <a href="#Page100">100</a>;
-dream of instructor in, <a href="#Page100">100-103</a>;
-completing graduating projects in, <a href="#Page103">103</a>, <a href="#Page104">104</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Machine-tool shop, the modern, an aggregation of hand-tools made automatic, and driven by steam, <a href="#Page8">8</a>;
-revolution in the useful arts caused by the, <a href="#Page78">78</a>;
-what this creation of modern times, a huge automaton with steam coursing through its veins, does,
-<a href="#Page78">78-81</a>;
-its arms, its hands, its brain, its food, and its products, <a href="#Page81">81</a>;
-lines of modern development converge in the, <a href="#Page81">81</a>;
-human pursuits widely diversified by, <a href="#Page82">82</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Macomber, A. E., on the Toledo Manual Training School, <a href="#Page365">365</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Madrid, people of, threatened with starvation, <a href="#Page283">283</a>;
-lost half its population in the seventeenth century, <a href="#Page283">283</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Maine, Sir Henry&mdash;his tribute to things, <a href="#Page379">379</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Man<span class="pagenum" id="Page447">[447]</span>, the two states of&mdash;with and without tools&mdash;contrasted,
-<a href="#Page7">7</a>;
-the gulf between the civilized and savage, spanned by the seven-hand-tools, <a href="#Page8">8</a>;
-the wisest of animals because he has hands, <a href="#Page152">152</a>;
-the most powerful of animals because he has hands, <a href="#Page157">157</a>;
-powers of, increased by steam, <a href="#Page161">161</a>;
-the most highly civilized, familiar with all the arts, <a href="#Page278">278</a>;
-in the Middle Ages, shrunk into a state of moral cowardice and intellectual lethargy, <a href="#Page284">284</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Mann, Horace, cause of the degradation of labor stated by, <a href="#Page5">5</a>;
-reason for the scorn of labor given by, <i>in extenso</i>, <a href="#Page188">188</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Manual training, promotes rectitude, <a href="#Page132">132</a>;
-promotes altruism because it is objective, <a href="#Page141">141</a>;
-its effects relate to the human race, <a href="#Page141">141</a>;
-Prof. Felix Adler in support of its tendency to promote rectitude, <a href="#Page142">142</a>;
-idea of, grasped by the Ionic philosopher, <a href="#Page153">153</a>;
-exactly what it is, <a href="#Page200">200</a>;
-is natural and hence efficient, <a href="#Page218">218</a>;
-required to render mental operations more true, <a href="#Page225">225</a>;
-possible in Europe only through the disbandment of the standing armies, <a href="#Page295">295</a>;
-in all the technical schools of Russia, <a href="#Page333">333</a>;
-theory of, by Dr. John D. Runkle, <a href="#Page338">338</a>;
-in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, <a href="#Page333">333</a>, <a href="#Page334">334</a>;
-in the St. Louis school, <a href="#Page338">338</a>, <a href="#Page339">339</a>;
-in twelve of the State agricultural colleges, <a href="#Page341">341</a>;
-in Purdue University, <a href="#Page341">341</a>;
-in Boston and Milford, Mass., New Haven, and the State Normal School, Conn., Omaha, Neb., Eau Claire, Wis., Moline, Peru,
-and the Cook County Normal School, Normal Park, Ill., Montclair, N. J., Cleveland and Barnesville, O., San Francisco, Cal.,
-and Baltimore, Md., <a href="#Page342">342</a>;
-exhibits of work of, at the meeting of the National Educational Association in 1884, <a href="#Page342">342</a>;
-in Prof. Felix Adler’s Workingman’s School, <a href="#Page342">342</a>;
-in Chicago, <a href="#Page345">345</a>;
-Dr. Belfield on the mental effect of, <a href="#Page350">350</a>;
-in the Pennsylvania State College, <a href="#Page351">351</a>;
-Prof. Louis E. Reber in support of, <a href="#Page351">351</a>, <a href="#Page352">352</a>;
-in the College of the City of New York, <a href="#Page352">352</a>;
-in thirty-one schools in the city of New York [<a href="#Footnote102"><i>note</i></a>], <a href="#Page352">352</a>;
-in the Tulane University, <a href="#Page353">353</a>;
-in the Miller School at Crozet, Va., <a href="#Page353">353</a>;
-in Girard College, <a href="#Page353">353</a>;
-in the Alabama Agricultural and Mechanical College, <a href="#Page355">355</a>;
-in the Denver (Col.) University, <a href="#Page355">355</a>;
-in the public schools of Philadelphia, <a href="#Page356">356</a>;
-in twenty-four of the States of the Union, <a href="#Page359">359</a>;
-in the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas, <a href="#Page359">359</a>;
-part of the course of public instruction by Massachusetts and Connecticut, <a href="#Page360">360</a>;
-in the Le Moyne Normal Institute, <a href="#Page362">362</a>;
-in the University of Michigan, <a href="#Page363">363</a>;
-laid on the table by the National Educational Association, <a href="#Page363">363</a>, <a href="#Page364">364</a>;
-in the State University, Cleveland, and Toledo, O., <a href="#Page364">364</a>;
-is leading captive the imagination of the American people, <a href="#Page367">367</a>;
-the purpose of, in the schools of Europe, <a href="#Page368">368</a>;
-progress of&mdash;its extent greater than its quality, <a href="#Page372">372</a>;
-acquisition by the hand of the arts through which man expresses himself in things, <a href="#Page380">380</a>;
-a series of educational generalizations in things, <a href="#Page380">380</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Manual training school the child of the kindergarten, <a href="#Page5">5</a>;
-destined to unite science and art, <a href="#Page5">5</a>;
-its highest text-books tools, <a href="#Page7">7</a>;
-must be made part of the public system of education, <a href="#Page112">112</a>;
-gain of the pupil of, <a href="#Page122">122</a>;
-pupil
-of<span class="pagenum" id="Page448">[448]</span>, constructs a machine, breathes into it the breath of life, and with it
-moves mountains, <a href="#Page201">201</a>;
-methods of, twenty times more valuable than the unscientific methods of the trade-shop, <a href="#Page219">219</a>;
-pupil of, is an investigator, his reasoning opens new fields of thought with every stroke of the chisel,
-<a href="#Page220">220</a>;
-pupil of, gets as much again intellectual benefit from the laboratory as he would if the laboratory equivalent in time
-were given to book study, <a href="#Page221">221</a>;
-laboratory exercises of, a great strain upon the mental constitution, and hence highly educational,
-<a href="#Page222">222</a>;
-pupils of, love it&mdash;an incident, <a href="#Page223">223</a>;
-method of the, is the expression of ideas in things, <a href="#Page245">245</a>;
-realizes the idea of Bacon, Comenius, Pestalozzi, and Froebel, <a href="#Page245">245</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Massachusetts Institute of Technology, its models of mechanical manipulation presented by the Emperor of Russia,
-<a href="#Page66">66</a>;
-first institution of learning in the United States to adopt manual training, <a href="#Page333">333</a>;
-manual training adopted by, in 1876, <a href="#Page334">334</a>;
-resolution of thanks for a series of models, presented by the Emperor of Russia, adopted by, <a href="#Page334">334</a>,
-<a href="#Page335">335</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Massachusetts, legislature of, adopts manual training as part of the public school course of, <a href="#Page360">360</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Maudslay, Henry, his improvement of the lathe made it the king of the machine-tool shop, <a href="#Page33">33</a>;
-without his slide-rest Watt’s engine could not have been made, <a href="#Page35">35</a>;
-through his slide-rest alone the mechanic is able to make two things exactly alike, <a href="#Page92">92</a>;
-slide-rest of, an automaton truer than the human eye, more cunning than the human hand, <a href="#Page200">200</a>,
-<a href="#Page201">201</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Maudsley, Dr. Henry, on the contribution of the muscular sense to mental operations, <a href="#Page147">147</a>;
-on the impossibility of thinking without physical expression, <a href="#Page149">149</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Mechanic, the, who makes a machine that multiplies products is in the front rank of the civilizers of the race,
-<a href="#Page160">160</a>;
-prospects of the skilled, in life, <a href="#Page170">170</a>;
-did more to hasten the world’s progress from 1740 to 1840 than all the statesmen of previous ages,
-<a href="#Page171">171</a>;
-splendid career which this age opens to the educated, <a href="#Page182">182</a>;
-tremendous power wielded by, <a href="#Page183">183</a>;
-has wrought an industrial revolution, <a href="#Page185">185</a>;
-works of, reflect honor upon, <a href="#Page187">187</a>;
-stands the test of scrutiny better than the merchant, <a href="#Page225">225</a>;
-trained in things, <a href="#Page225">225</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Mechanics, skilled, the use of automatic tools increases rather than diminishes the demand for, <a href="#Page94">94</a>;
-of the early time had none of the advantages of the manual training school, <a href="#Page172">172</a>;
-their sufferings and misfortunes, <a href="#Page172">172</a>;
-no such failure of, as there is of merchants, <a href="#Page227">227</a>;
-thoroughness of training of, <a href="#Page239">239</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Mediæval period, the speculative philosophy of, still projects its baleful influence over our institutions of
-learning, <a href="#Page185">185</a>;
-graphic picture of society in, by Winwood Reade, <a href="#Page280">280</a>, <a href="#Page281">281</a>;
-the art of war only flourished in, <a href="#Page281">281</a>;
-precarious condition of the serfs in&mdash;fate of&mdash;to be killed in battle or die of starvation,
-<a href="#Page281">281</a>;
-causes of the moral and intellectual darkness of the, <a href="#Page281">281</a>, <a href="#Page282">282</a>;
-causes of the moral and intellectual torpor of the people
-of<span class="pagenum" id="Page449">[449]</span>, <a href="#Page284">284</a>;
-conferred upon man two great blessings, and left a legacy of evil, <a href="#Page289">289</a>;
-degradation of woman in the, <a href="#Page366">366</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Memory cultivated at the expense of the reason, <a href="#Page200">200</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Men sold for sixpence apiece in Asia, <a href="#Page269">269</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Menander, lofty moral precepts of, <a href="#Page139">139</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Mental acquirement, a, is a theorem&mdash;something to be proved, <a href="#Page144">144</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Mental development, law of, <a href="#Page131">131</a>;
-which is most conducive to, doing things, or memorizing words, <a href="#Page376">376</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Mental training, exclusively, does not produce a symmetrical character, <a href="#Page244">244</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Merchants, percentage of failure of, in Chicago from 1870 to 1881, <a href="#Page211">211</a>;
-three per cent. of, only, succeed, <a href="#Page211">211</a>;
-ninety-seven per cent. of, go to the wall, <a href="#Page212">212</a>;
-cost of failures of, borne by the public, <a href="#Page212">212</a>;
-ninety-seven per cent. of, mistake their avocation, <a href="#Page212">212</a>;
-failure of, made too easy, <a href="#Page213">213</a>;
-honor of, in France [<a href="#Footnote52"><i>note</i></a>], <a href="#Page213">213</a>;
-ninety-seven in one hundred fail, <a href="#Page225">225</a>;
-cause of failures of, <a href="#Page229">229</a>;
-selfishness of&mdash;do not seek for justice, or to find truth, <a href="#Page230">230</a>;
-who compromise with their creditors, and subsequently accumulate fortunes, rarely repay the forgiven debt,
-<a href="#Page230">230</a>;
-cause of failure of, <a href="#Page242">242</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Mercury, bronze statue of, at the Museum of Naples, <a href="#Page47">47</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Michigan, University of, manual training in, as described by Instructor Lieut. M. E. Cooley, <a href="#Page363">363</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Microscope, the work of the hand, <a href="#Page156">156</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Milford, Mass., manual training in, <a href="#Page342">342</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Miller Manual Training School, the, of Crozet, Va., <a href="#Page353">353</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Mind, the, mental laws of, <a href="#Page132">132</a>, <a href="#Page133">133</a>;
-moral laws of, <a href="#Page133">133</a>;
-and the hand are natural allies, <a href="#Page144">144</a>;
-indulges in false logic without instant detection, <a href="#Page145">145</a>;
-the hand its moral rudder, its balance-wheel, <a href="#Page145">145</a>;
-influenced by the hand through the muscular sense, <a href="#Page148">148</a>;
-steadied by the wise counsel of the practical hand, <a href="#Page225">225</a>;
-steadied and balanced by the study of things, <a href="#Page225">225</a>;
-devises a watch, and the hand makes it, <a href="#Page240">240</a>;
-fails when it attempts to execute its devices, <a href="#Page240">240</a>;
-succeeds when the hand executes its plans, but fails in merchandizing, law, and justice, <a href="#Page240">240</a>;
-should not be stored with facts unless they are to be applied to things, <a href="#Page245">245</a>;
-how it began to assert its empire over matter, <a href="#Page249">249</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Moline, Ill., manual training in, <a href="#Page342">342</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Montclair, N. J., manual training in, <a href="#Page342">342</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Moors, the, in Spain in the Middle Ages constituted a glowing exception to the general prevalence of superstition
-and ignorance, <a href="#Page282">282</a>;
-skilled in all the arts, <a href="#Page282">282</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Morality, springs from intelligence, <a href="#Page113">113</a>;
-is not a mere sentiment, a barren ideality, <a href="#Page142">142</a>;
-of Christ and Paul, <a href="#Page142">142</a>;
-is a vital principle whose exemplification consists in doing justice, <a href="#Page142">142</a>;
-cannot be acquired by memorizing a series of maxims, <a href="#Page143">143</a>;
-of a community is in the ratio of its intelligence, <a href="#Page238">238</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Morrissey, John, his brief autobiography, <a href="#Page314">314</a>, <a href="#Page315">315</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Mother<span class="pagenum" id="Page450">[450]</span>, the, in the arms of, the infant mind rapidly unfolds,
-<a href="#Page365">365</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Moulding, the oldest of human discoveries, <a href="#Page46">46</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Murray, Matt, inventor of flax machinery, <a href="#Page84">84</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Muscular sense, the, its discovery by Sir Charles Bell, <a href="#Page146">146</a>;
-its power over the movements of the frame&mdash;walking, etc., <a href="#Page146">146</a>;
-Dr. Henry Maudsley on the, <a href="#Page147">147</a>;
-actions of essential elements in mental operations, <a href="#Page147">147</a>;
-sharpened to marvellous fineness by constant use, <a href="#Page148">148</a>;
-if trained in the direction of truth, it will react in the direction of rectitude, on the mind, <a href="#Page148">148</a>,
-<a href="#Page149">149</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Mushet, David, an English inventor and author, <a href="#Page84">84</a>;
-his discovery of the value of black band iron-stone, <a href="#Page117">117</a>;
-his papers on iron and steel, <a href="#Page117">117</a>;
-sprung from the labor class, <a href="#Page117">117</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Mythology, the highest place in its Pantheon given to Vulcan, the God of Fire, <a href="#Page70">70</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="newletter">N.</li>
-
-<li>Napoleon, the incarnation of selfishness, <a href="#Page134">134</a>, <a href="#Page135">135</a>;
-the infamous, plundered the conquered capitals of Europe, <a href="#Page294">294</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Nasmyth, James, invented the steam-hammer in 1837, and applied the principle of it to the pile-driver in 1845,
-<a href="#Page76">76</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Nation, the, that degrades labor is ripe for destruction, <a href="#Page253">253</a>;
-that loses its population by emigration is in its decadence, <a href="#Page294">294</a>.</li>
-
-<li>National debts of Europe, amount of, thirty years ago, <a href="#Page286">286</a>;
-doubled since 1850, <a href="#Page290">290</a>;
-cause of the rapid increase of, <a href="#Page290">290</a>;
-represent a series of colossal crimes against the people, <a href="#Page291">291</a>;
-with relation to them, the people are divided into two classes&mdash;one class owns them, the other class pays interest on
-them, <a href="#Page291">291</a>;
-in one class they are a vested right, in the other a vested wrong, <a href="#Page291">291</a>;
-how they can be paid, and education promoted at the same time, <a href="#Page292">292</a>;
-can be paid only by disbanding the standing armies, <a href="#Page295">295</a>;
-will reduce their governments to bankruptcy unless standing armies are disbanded, <a href="#Page296">296</a>.</li>
-
-<li>National Educational Association, manual training exhibits at, 1884, meeting of, <a href="#Page342">342</a>;
-meeting of 1885 adopts a resolution endorsing the kindergarten, <a href="#Page363">363</a>;
-illogical action of, in laying upon the table a resolution endorsing manual training, <a href="#Page363">363</a>,
-<a href="#Page364">364</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Nations, the rise, progress, and decay of, <a href="#Page252">252</a>, <a href="#Page253">253</a>;
-sink as the column of debt rises, <a href="#Page297">297</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Neilson, James B., inventor of the hot-blast, <a href="#Page84">84</a>;
-revolutionizes the processes of iron manufacture, <a href="#Page117">117</a>;
-sprang from the labor class, and is made a member of the Royal Society, <a href="#Page117">117</a>.</li>
-
-<li>New England, system of education of, moulded the character of the civilization of the United States,
-<a href="#Page235">235</a>;
-difference between the civilization of, and that of South Carolina, measured by the difference in their respective
-educational systems, <a href="#Page235">235</a>;
-educational system of, is unscientific, <a href="#Page239">239</a>.</li>
-
-<li>New Haven<span class="pagenum" id="Page451">[451]</span>, Conn., manual training in, <a href="#Page342">342</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Newcomen helps to solve the steam-power problem, <a href="#Page15">15</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Nineveh, bronze castings recovered from the ruins of, <a href="#Page46">46</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Nobility above price in the eleventh century, for sale in the thirteenth, and soon afterwards offered as a gift,
-<a href="#Page286">286</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Norway appropriates money for teaching hand-cunning in the schools, <a href="#Page368">368</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="newletter">O.</li>
-
-<li>Object teaching, example of, <a href="#Page4">4</a>;
-the corner-stone of the kindergarten and the manual training school, <a href="#Page129">129</a>;
-an analysis of, with examples, <a href="#Page200">200</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Observation, the power of, resides chiefly in the hand, <a href="#Page380">380</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Ohio, high rank of, industrially, <a href="#Page364">364</a>;
-making great strides towards a more practical system of education, <a href="#Page364">364</a>;
-State University of, manual training in, <a href="#Page364">364</a>;
-prosperity of the Case School of Applied Science in, <a href="#Page364">364</a>;
-manual training schools of Cleveland and Toledo, in, <a href="#Page364">364</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Omaha, Neb., manual training in, <a href="#Page342">342</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="newletter">P.</li>
-
-<li>Palissy, Bernard, sketch of his career, <a href="#Page231">231</a>, <a href="#Page232">232</a>,
-<a href="#Page233">233</a>;
-burns the furniture of his house in the cause of art, <a href="#Page232">232</a>;
-is cast into prison for heresy&mdash;his defiance of King Henry III., <a href="#Page232">232</a>;
-dies in the Bastile, <a href="#Page233">233</a>;
-was right, and his devotion to art rendered him immortal, <a href="#Page233">233</a>, <a href="#Page234">234</a>;
-struggle of, over the furnace in the cause of art, was mentally and morally normal, while the opposition he encountered
-was abnormal, <a href="#Page234">234</a>;
-mind of, was developed normally, while the minds of the millions of men who permitted him to die unfriended were developed
-abnormally, <a href="#Page234">234</a>;
-willing to starve for his art, and ready to die for his faith, <a href="#Page234">234</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Papin helps to solve the steam-power problem, <a href="#Page15">15</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Paris Exposition, exhibit of models of tool practice in the Imperial Technical School, Moscow, Russia, at the,
-<a href="#Page331">331</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Parker, Col. Francis W., declares that the application of science to methods of instruction would produce a radical
-change in all school work, <a href="#Page205">205</a>;
-his forcible exposition of the defects of prevailing methods of instruction, <a href="#Page205">205</a>,
-<a href="#Page206">206</a>, <a href="#Page207">207</a>;
-asserts that teachers are faithful, honest, and earnest, but ignorant of the history and science of education,
-<a href="#Page207">207</a>, <a href="#Page364">364</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Patriotism can be indulged with good reason only in the United States, <a href="#Page323">323</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Penmanship, automatism in teaching, in the schools of the United States, as shown by the Walton report,
-<a href="#Page198">198</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Pennsylvania State College, manual training in the, <a href="#Page351">351</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Pennsylvania State Prison, statistics&mdash;five-sixths of the inmates of, had attended public schools, and the same
-number were without trades, <a href="#Page182">182</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Pericles boasted that he could not be bribed, but robbed all Greece to embellish Athens, and was convicted of
-peculation and fined, <a href="#Page255">255</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Persia<span class="pagenum" id="Page452">[452]</span>, no provision in, for either the mental or moral training of
-woman, <a href="#Page366">366</a>;
-the boy in, excluded from the presence of his father till the fifth year, <a href="#Page367">367</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Peru, Ill., manual training in, <a href="#Page342">342</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Pestalozzi, the school he struggled in vain to establish, <a href="#Page2">2</a>;
-his definition of education, <a href="#Page12">12</a>;
-his condemnation of the old system of education, <a href="#Page126">126</a>;
-foresaw the kindergarten and the manual training school, <a href="#Page245">245</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Phidias familiar with the turning lathe, <a href="#Page33">33</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Philadelphia, manual training made part of the public school system of, <a href="#Page353">353</a>;
-rules of the public schools of, <a href="#Page355">355</a>, <a href="#Page356">356</a>;
-report of a committee of the Board of Education of, in regard to manual training, <a href="#Page356">356</a>,
-<a href="#Page357">357</a>;
-hand-training introduced into the public schools of, <a href="#Page358">358</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Philosophers, the, little time to speculate with, <a href="#Page180">180</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Philosophy established on a scientific basis&mdash;the study of natural phenomena, <a href="#Page153">153</a>;
-of the Greeks scorned both science and art, <a href="#Page257">257</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Physical development, law of, <a href="#Page131">131</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Pile-driver, the steam-hammer principle applied to the, <a href="#Page76">76</a>;
-power of the, <a href="#Page76">76</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Pilgrims, the product of the progress of all the ages, <a href="#Page308">308</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Pine, in the forest and in lumber, <a href="#Page21">21</a>;
-description of the tree by the son of a lumberman, <a href="#Page21">21</a>;
-uses of, commerce in, supply of, <a href="#Page22">22</a>;
-sources of information of students in regard to&mdash;newspapers and encyclopedias, <a href="#Page25">25</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Plato, his theory of the divine origin of caste, <a href="#Page123">123</a>;
-blinded by half-truths, <a href="#Page124">124</a>;
-how he was controlled by his environment, <a href="#Page124">124</a>;
-his theory of the importance of early training, <a href="#Page125">125</a>;
-his contempt for the useful arts, <a href="#Page176">176</a>, <a href="#Page177">177</a>, <a href="#Page369">369</a>;
-regarded the soul’s residence in the body as an evil, <a href="#Page256">256</a>;
-opinion of, that the majority is always dull and always wrong, <a href="#Page280">280</a>;
-the creation of his Divine Dialogues depended upon the useful arts, <a href="#Page383">383</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Pliny, affection of, for his slaves, <a href="#Page139">139</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Plutarch, sublime moral teachings of, <a href="#Page138">138</a>;
-on the death of his daughter, <a href="#Page139">139</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Poets, the, little time to sentimentalize with, <a href="#Page180">180</a>;
-more highly esteemed than civil engineers, machinists, and artisans, <a href="#Page185">185</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Poole, Dr. William F., courtesy of, to the students of the Chicago Manual Training School, <a href="#Page348">348</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Poverty, its final abolition depends upon the multiplication of the useful arts, <a href="#Page383">383</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Power, generation of, the object of education, <a href="#Page244">244</a>;
-to generate and store up either mental or physical, not to be exerted, is a waste of energy, <a href="#Page245">245</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Printing, the art of, essential to progress in the useful arts, <a href="#Page73">73</a>;
-not so necessary to progress in the so-called fine arts, <a href="#Page73">73</a>;
-removes the seal from the lips of learning, <a href="#Page286">286</a>;
-makes every discovery in science and every invention in art the heritage of all the ages, <a href="#Page286">286</a>;
-the invention of, paralyzed authority, <a href="#Page287">287</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Progress<span class="pagenum" id="Page453">[453]</span>, if Guttenberg had rested content with an idea, there would
-have been no printing-press, <a href="#Page152">152</a>;
-if Watt, Stephenson, and Fulton had stopped at words, there would have been neither railways nor steamships,
-<a href="#Page152">152</a>;
-dates from the beginning of the seventeenth century, <a href="#Page153">153</a>;
-slow until within one hundred years, <a href="#Page153">153</a>;
-due not to the men who make laws, but to the men who make things, <a href="#Page160">160</a>;
-of the world towards a higher appreciation of the value of the useful arts, <a href="#Page172">172</a>;
-of moral ideas shown by the honors lavished upon the memory of heroes, <a href="#Page234">234</a>;
-can find expression only in things, <a href="#Page243">243</a>;
-the path of, a rugged road, <a href="#Page381">381</a>;
-its steps consist of improvements in the useful and beautiful arts, <a href="#Page382">382</a>;
-the lines on which educational, is to be sought, <a href="#Page385">385</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Property, no security for, in a community devoid of education, <a href="#Page237">237</a>;
-intelligence alone confers a sacred character upon, <a href="#Page237">237</a>;
-may be protected by a hired soldiery, or by public sentiment enlightened by education, <a href="#Page238">238</a>;
-the main purpose of governments is to protect, but nearly all the governments of history have been destroyed in the effort
-to fulfil this function of their existence, <a href="#Page238">238</a>;
-in slaves, failure of the United States to protect, <a href="#Page238">238</a>;
-rights of, in English land, about to be disturbed, <a href="#Page238">238</a>;
-not sacred unless honestly acquired and honestly held, <a href="#Page238">238</a>;
-all in the United States may be devoted to education by the ballot, <a href="#Page324">324</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Prudence, extreme, consistent with rectitude, <a href="#Page136">136</a>;
-selfishness deified under the name of, <a href="#Page311">311</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Public lands of the United States squandered by Congress, <a href="#Page317">317</a>;
-history of waste of, by Henry D. Lloyd, in the <i>Chicago Tribune</i>, <a href="#Page317">317</a>,
-<a href="#Page318">318</a>, <a href="#Page319">319</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Public schools of New England, <a href="#Page309">309</a>;
-the old system of education put into the, <a href="#Page303">303</a>;
-popular idea of the, <a href="#Page310">310</a>;
-neither science nor art taught in the, <a href="#Page310">310</a>;
-revived the Greco-Roman subjective system, <a href="#Page310">310</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Public schools of the United States, attendance in, not compulsory&mdash;some children enter them, and some do not,
-<a href="#Page316">316</a>;
-leave out that which most nearly concerns the business of life, <a href="#Page325">325</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Pugilist, how John Morrissey became a, <a href="#Page314">314</a>, <a href="#Page315">315</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Pullman, George M., Trustee of the Chicago Manual Training School Association, <a href="#Page346">346</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Purdue University, pronounced success achieved in manual training in, under the directorship of Professor Goss,
-<a href="#Page341">341</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="newletter">R.</li>
-
-<li>Railroad, the, influence of, upon the destinies of mankind, <a href="#Page170">170</a>;
-taxes to the utmost nearly every department of the useful arts, <a href="#Page171">171</a>;
-incompetency of management of, as shown by shrinkage in values of stocks of, <a href="#Page210">210</a>;
-in the proprietor of, the two great elements of modern power, land and steam, are united, <a href="#Page321">321</a>;
-proprietor of the, is a king, <a href="#Page321">321</a>;
-monstrous claims of the proprietor of, <a href="#Page315">315</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Reading, automatism of teaching, in the schools of the United States, as shown by the Walton report,
-<a href="#Page197">197</a>;
-Colonel Parker declares that prevailing<span class="pagenum" id="Page454">[454]</span>
-methods of instruction in, are “utterly opposed to a mental law about which there can be no dispute,”
-<a href="#Page206">206</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Reason, in existing systems of education, allowed to slumber, <a href="#Page200">200</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Reber, Prof. Louis E., in support of manual training, <a href="#Page352">352</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Reform&mdash;demand for, <a href="#Page371">371</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Revolution&mdash;educational, 1883-4, <a href="#Page371">371</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Richard I. presents King Arthur’s sword Excalibar to Tancred, <a href="#Page71">71</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Right, of the poor child to equal education sacred, <a href="#Page376">376</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Roberts, Richard, a great English inventor of the eighteenth century, <a href="#Page84">84</a>.</li>
-
-<li>“Rocket,” the, George Stephenson’s first locomotive, <a href="#Page118">118</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Roebuck, Dr. John, a patron of Watt, <a href="#Page84">84</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Roman aristocrats, were refined and accomplished, <a href="#Page276">276</a>, <a href="#Page277">277</a>;
-savage contest for supremacy among the, <a href="#Page277">277</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Roman civilization the product of all that had gone before, <a href="#Page260">260</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Roman literature, possessed no saving quality, <a href="#Page275">275</a>;
-did not represent the Roman people, <a href="#Page275">275</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Roman State, the, slavery the corner-stone of, <a href="#Page265">265</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Romans, the, had no peer either in courage or fortitude, <a href="#Page264">264</a>;
-vices of, shown in the character of Appius, the Decemvir, <a href="#Page264">264</a>;
-virtues of, shown in the character of Virginius, <a href="#Page265">265</a>;
-sense of justice of, swallowed up in lust of power, <a href="#Page266">266</a>;
-early triumphs of industrial, <a href="#Page268">268</a>;
-indebted to slaves for all the arts, <a href="#Page269">269</a>;
-philosophy of, so shallow as to render them callous to the great crimes upon which the State rested,
-<a href="#Page272">272</a>;
-debasing influence of the Greek philosophy upon, <a href="#Page274">274</a>;
-under the Empire rewarded vice and punished virtue, <a href="#Page274">274</a>;
-preferred Cæsar, Caligula, and Nero to Cato, Germanicus, and Agricola, <a href="#Page274">274</a>;
-retrograded towards a state of savagery under the Empire, <a href="#Page275">275</a>;
-became absolutely selfish, and hence totally depraved, <a href="#Page276">276</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Rome, the decline of, caused by the failure of the fuel supply, and by her neglect of the useful arts,
-<a href="#Page63">63</a>, <a href="#Page64">64</a>;
-had she possessed great mechanics her fall might have been averted, <a href="#Page64">64</a>;
-her civilization culminated at the limit of the application of iron to the useful arts, <a href="#Page83">83</a>;
-a pen-picture of the decline of, <a href="#Page83">83</a>;
-her splendors and her degradation, <a href="#Page138">138</a>;
-fall of, stopped the study of physiology, <a href="#Page153">153</a>;
-the dominion of, logical&mdash;vigorous but pitiless, <a href="#Page263">263</a>;
-all the great races mingled in, <a href="#Page264">264</a>;
-laws of, show the stamina of her people, <a href="#Page265">265</a>;
-supply of laborers for, maintained by depopulating conquered countries, <a href="#Page265">265</a>;
-in the train of the legions returning to, were men, women, and children destined to slavery, <a href="#Page265">265</a>;
-laws of, in regard to slaves, terrible, <a href="#Page265">265</a>;
-for the free citizen of, to labor with his hands was more disgraceful than to die of starvation,
-<a href="#Page266">266</a>;
-free citizen paupers of, crying “bread and circuses,” <a href="#Page266">266</a>;
-education in, confined to politics and war, <a href="#Page266">266</a>;
-became the great robber nation of the world, <a href="#Page266">266</a>;
-was on the land what Greece had been on the sea&mdash;a pirate, <a href="#Page266">266</a>;
-the spoil of conquered countries used to bribe courts, senators, and the populace, <a href="#Page267">267</a>;
-nothing safe in, from the hand of rapacity, <a href="#Page267">267</a>;
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page455">[455]</span>grew
-rich through plunder, and poor in public and private virtue, <a href="#Page267">267</a>;
-bribery in, <a href="#Page268">268</a>;
-great social change in, after the fall of Greece and Carthage and the reduction of Asia, <a href="#Page268">268</a>;
-summary of the causes of the fall of, <a href="#Page268">268</a>;
-scenes immediately preceding the fall of, <a href="#Page269">269</a>, <a href="#Page270">270</a>;
-the seat of all the world’s learning, <a href="#Page270">270</a>;
-the wise men of, powerless to help their fellow-men, because their philosophy was false, <a href="#Page270">270</a>;
-metaphysical philosophy of, <a href="#Page270">270</a>, <a href="#Page271">271</a>;
-the philosophy of, furnished an excuse for slavery, <a href="#Page271">271</a>;
-suffrage in, the subject of open traffic, <a href="#Page271">271</a>, <a href="#Page272">272</a>;
-noted men of, ignorant of the cause of the disorders which afflicted the body politic, <a href="#Page272">272</a>;
-in the city of, vice reigned supreme, while in the provinces there was a middle class by whom all the domestic virtues
-were practised, <a href="#Page314">314</a>;
-no culture in, for girls till late in the Empire, <a href="#Page366">366</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Romulus and Remus, legend of, <a href="#Page259">259</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Rousseau, the school he described, <a href="#Page2">2</a>;
-his opinion that the poor need no education, <a href="#Page124">124</a>;
-his theory of the vital importance of early training, <a href="#Page125">125</a>;
-his definition of education, <a href="#Page125">125</a>;
-his appreciation of the importance of the education of woman, <a href="#Page125">125</a>, <a href="#Page126">126</a>;
-his condemnation of the old system of education, <a href="#Page126">126</a>;
-declaration of, that education is nothing but habit, <a href="#Page245">245</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Runkle, Dr. John D., his declaration that public education should touch practical life in a larger number of points,
-<a href="#Page202">202</a>;
-the founder of manual training in the United States, <a href="#Page333">333</a>;
-excerpts from the report of, in 1876, recommending the adoption of manual training by the Massachusetts Institute of
-Technology, <a href="#Page333">333</a>, <a href="#Page334">334</a>;
-letter of, to the author, containing an exposition of the theory of manual training, with an account of its origin in
-the mind of, <a href="#Page337">337</a>, <a href="#Page338">338</a>;
-assists in introducing manual training into Girard College, <a href="#Page354">354</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Ruskin, on finding the truth in things [<a href="#Footnote13"><i>note</i></a>], <a href="#Page145">145</a>;
-on disciplining the fingers in the laboratory of the goldsmiths [<a href="#Footnote17"><i>note</i></a>],
-<a href="#Page148">148</a>;
-on learning by labor what the lips of man could never teach [<a href="#Footnote22"><i>note</i></a>],
-<a href="#Page152">152</a>;
-tribute of, to labor [<a href="#Footnote27"><i>note</i></a>], <a href="#Page161">161</a>;
-on rogues, a manufactured article [<a href="#Footnote66"><i>note</i></a>], <a href="#Page237">237</a>;
-on how national debts bear upon labor [<a href="#Footnote85"><i>note</i></a>], <a href="#Page291">291</a>;
-on how standing armies are supported [<a href="#Footnote86"><i>note</i></a>], <a href="#Page293">293</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Russia, arbitrary act of, in 1770, in relation to the export of iron, <a href="#Page115">115</a>;
-solves the problem of tool instruction by the laboratory process, <a href="#Page331">331</a>;
-manual training introduced into all the technical schools of, <a href="#Page333">333</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Russia, Emperor of, presents one hundred models of mechanical manipulations to the Massachusetts Institute of
-Technology, <a href="#Page69">69</a>;
-offers John Arnold five thousand dollars for a duplicate of his George III. watch, <a href="#Page86">86</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="newletter">S.</li>
-
-<li>San Francisco, Cal., manual training in, <a href="#Page342">342</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Sankey Canal, the, authorized upon condition that boats plying upon it should be drawn by men only,
-<a href="#Page179">179</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Saracens<span class="pagenum" id="Page456">[456]</span>, the friends of education, of science, and art,
-<a href="#Page282">282</a>;
-inventors of cotton-paper, promoters of all the industries, including agriculture, <a href="#Page282">282</a>,
-<a href="#Page283">283</a>;
-driven from the soil they had made to blossom like the rose, <a href="#Page283">283</a>;
-ameliorating influence of, upon the ignorance and superstition of the Middle Ages, <a href="#Page285">285</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Savage, the, how he is trained, <a href="#Page9">9</a>;
-helplessness of, <a href="#Page11">11</a>;
-how he is taught to hunt and fish, <a href="#Page176">176</a>;
-is taught what he needs to know in his condition, and nothing else, <a href="#Page181">181</a>;
-if his education were as unscientific as that of the civilized boy, the race would perish, <a href="#Page215">215</a>;
-ninety-nine times in a hundred he traces the footsteps of his enemy in the forest, <a href="#Page215">215</a>,
-<a href="#Page216">216</a>;
-education of, is scientific, <a href="#Page216">216</a>;
-in the practical character of the training of, consists its excellence, <a href="#Page217">217</a>;
-mystery which envelops skill of, solved, <a href="#Page219">219</a>;
-ignorant, in his primitive state, of all the arts, <a href="#Page278">278</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Savonarola, the hater of abuses in the Roman Catholic Church, <a href="#Page234">234</a>;
-at the death-bed of Lorenzo de Medici, <a href="#Page235">235</a>;
-shaking thrones and making proud prelates tremble, <a href="#Page235">235</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Savory helps to solve the steam-power problem, <a href="#Page15">15</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Saw-mills, opposition to their introduction in England, <a href="#Page178">178</a>.</li>
-
-<li>School, of the future, <a href="#Page2">2</a>;
-proposed by Ruskin [<a href="#Footnote36"><i>note</i></a>], <a href="#Page180">180</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Schools, the, have not moved forward with events, <a href="#Page154">154</a>;
-are still dominated by mediæval ideas of speculative philosophy, <a href="#Page154">154</a>;
-as an industrial agency are a failure, <a href="#Page202">202</a>;
-were established as a bulwark of liberty, <a href="#Page202">202</a>;
-denounced, <a href="#Page371">371</a>;
-must be transformed from the ornamental type of Greece into laboratories for the development of useful men and
-women, <a href="#Page384">384</a>;
-a vast number of, have been dedicated to the new education&mdash;are they to be developed into ideal schools?,
-<a href="#Page385">385</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Schoolmaster, the, and the Reformer, <a href="#Page371">371</a>;
-the old, and the new education, <a href="#Page375">375</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Schools of England, arraignment of, by Herbert Spencer, <a href="#Page325">325</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Schwab, Dr. Erasmus, and “The Work School in the Common School,” <a href="#Page368">368</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Science, effect of divorce of, from art, <a href="#Page11">11</a>;
-through printing every discovery in, becomes the heritage of future ages, <a href="#Page286">286</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Scientific education, simplicity of, <a href="#Page207">207</a>, <a href="#Page208">208</a>;
-difference between, and unscientific, <a href="#Page217">217</a>;
-description of, by Miss S. E. Blow, <a href="#Page218">218</a>, <a href="#Page219">219</a>;
-is natural education, <a href="#Page223">223</a>;
-brightens, stimulates, and develops, while automatic stupefies, <a href="#Page223">223</a>, <a href="#Page224">224</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Scientist, the, a public benefactor, <a href="#Page160">160</a>;
-studies the stars, the earth, and the air in the light of the flames of persecution, <a href="#Page287">287</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Scott, Frank J., contributor to the fund for the founding of the Toledo, Ohio, Manual Training School,
-<a href="#Page364">364</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Scott, Jesup W., the founder of the Toledo Manual Training School, <a href="#Page358">358</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Scott, Maurice, contributor to the fund for the founding of the Toledo Manual Training School, <a href="#Page364">364</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Scott, William F., contributor to the fund for the founding of the Toledo Manual Training School, <a href="#Page364">364</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Sculpture<span class="pagenum" id="Page457">[457]</span>, limit of, reached in Greece, <a href="#Page73">73</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Scythians, among the, the iron sword was a god, <a href="#Page70">70</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Segovia, manufactures of, destroyed by the expulsion of the Moors from Spain, <a href="#Page283">283</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Seligman, Mr. Joseph, munificence of, established Professor Adler’s Workingman’s School in New York City on a
-firm basis, <a href="#Page345">345</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Selfishness, the arch-enemy of virtue, <a href="#Page134">134</a>;
-maxims in honor of, <a href="#Page134">134</a>;
-Napoleon a colossal example of the folly of, <a href="#Page135">135</a>;
-in conflict with the true spirit of civilization, <a href="#Page135">135</a>;
-causes revolutions and destroys governments, <a href="#Page135">135</a>;
-is blind of one eye&mdash;sees only one side of a cause, <a href="#Page136">136</a>;
-let not prudence be confounded with, <a href="#Page136">136</a>;
-extreme, the synonym of depravity, <a href="#Page136">136</a>;
-promoted by prevailing systems of education, <a href="#Page136">136</a>;
-promoted by a mercantile career, <a href="#Page230">230</a>;
-of the lawyer, the judge, and the legislator, <a href="#Page230">230</a>, <a href="#Page231">231</a>;
-as it recedes from the mind, justice assumes its appropriate place as the controlling element in human conduct,
-<a href="#Page233">233</a>;
-the source of all social evil, <a href="#Page247">247</a>;
-transformed Roman courage into cruelty, and Roman fortitude into brutal stoicism, <a href="#Page266">266</a>;
-transformed the government of Rome from a pure democracy into an oligarchy of wealth, <a href="#Page276">276</a>;
-vanquishes itself in Rome, <a href="#Page277">277</a>;
-the equivalent of savagery, <a href="#Page277">277</a>;
-deified under the name of prudence, <a href="#Page311">311</a>;
-calling it prudence led to confounding right and wrong, <a href="#Page311">311</a>;
-effects of, in the nineteenth century the same as in the first, <a href="#Page312">312</a>;
-the mind charged with, through subjective educational processes, <a href="#Page326">326</a>;
-ends in a struggle which ends in a revolution, <a href="#Page326">326</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Seneca, sublime moral precepts of, contrasted with the horrors of the gladiatorial games, <a href="#Page138">138</a>;
-his doctrine of humanity, <a href="#Page139">139</a>;
-ignores slavery, the slave, the laborer, and the useful arts, <a href="#Page268">268</a>;
-morals of, glittering generalities, politics of, practical, <a href="#Page269">269</a>;
-put money in his purse, <a href="#Page269">269</a>;
-charged with complicity in the Piso conspiracy, and banished for the crime of adultery, <a href="#Page269">269</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Serfs of the Middle Ages the mercenary troops of the modern State, <a href="#Page290">290</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Service&mdash;the greatest thing in the moral world, <a href="#Page378">378</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Seville, silk industry of, <a href="#Page292">292</a>;
-looms of, silenced in the seventeenth century, <a href="#Page283">283</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Sewing-machine, the, its accuracy, <a href="#Page87">87</a>;
-it illustrates the interdependence of the practical arts, <a href="#Page87">87</a>;
-it multiplies garments beyond the power of figures to express, <a href="#Page87">87</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Sheffield, Lord, his estimate of the value of Henry Cort’s improvements in iron and the steam-engine of Watt,
-<a href="#Page115">115</a>;
-his declaration of the purpose of the establishment of the American colonies, <a href="#Page202">202</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Sheffield, town of, its insignificance in 1715, <a href="#Page116">116</a>;
-its manufacturing importance now, <a href="#Page116">116</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Skill being prolific of good should be brought to bear upon educational systems, <a href="#Page132">132</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Slavery existed in the United States when Horace Mann declared it to be the cause of the degradation of labor and
-the laborer, <a href="#Page189">189</a>;
-aided by<span class="pagenum" id="Page458">[458]</span>
-England in its struggle for survival, <a href="#Page189">189</a>;
-influence of, not yet extinct, <a href="#Page189">189</a>;
-has kept its brand of shame upon the useful arts for thousands of years, <a href="#Page190">190</a>;
-how the Egyptian was reduced to, <a href="#Page250">250</a>;
-and labor were synonymous terms in Rome, <a href="#Page265">265</a>;
-a state of, is a state of war, <a href="#Page265">265</a>;
-confounded with freedom in the United States, <a href="#Page311">311</a>;
-negroes escaping from, called fugitives from justice, <a href="#Page311">311</a>;
-justified in Faneuil Hall, the cradle of liberty, <a href="#Page311">311</a>;
-tried only by the test of self-interest, <a href="#Page312">312</a>;
-in the North it faded away, in the South it flourished, <a href="#Page312">312</a>;
-climate conditions, not education, saved this continent from the scourge of, <a href="#Page312">312</a>,
-<a href="#Page313">313</a>;
-question of continuance of, in the United States, settled by violence, as savages settle controversies,
-<a href="#Page313">313</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Slaves, in Rome, laws in relation to, <a href="#Page265">265</a>;
-a million killed in the course of the servile rebellion in Sicily, <a href="#Page265">265</a>;
-exposed to wild beasts in the arena for the popular amusement, <a href="#Page265">265</a>;
-all industrial pursuits in Rome carried on by, <a href="#Page266">266</a>;
-labor of, in Rome, cheaper than that of cattle, <a href="#Page266">266</a>;
-construct all the great public works in Rome, <a href="#Page269">269</a>;
-strike for liberty in Rome, and are slaughtered, <a href="#Page271">271</a>;
-clank of the chains of, in the streets of Boston, <a href="#Page311">311</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Smeaton helps to solve the steam-power problem, <a href="#Page15">15</a>;
-the best workman of his time, <a href="#Page85">85</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Smiles, Samuel, declares that the automata of the Middle Ages led to the useful automatic tools of the eighteenth
-century, <a href="#Page35">35</a>;
-his peculiar views about Maudslay’s great invention, <a href="#Page36">36</a>;
-his history of the Dutch and German mechanics who contributed to the solution of the problem of the application of mineral
-coal to smelting purposes, <a href="#Page64">64</a>;
-his graphic picture of the versatility of the smith, <a href="#Page71">71</a>;
-his pen-picture of the steamship <i>Warrior</i> “breasting the billows of the North Sea,” <a href="#Page85">85</a>;
-shows the true springs of English greatness in his “Lives of the Engineers,” <a href="#Page172">172</a>;
-shows the origin of useful arts in England in his great work on the Huguenots, <a href="#Page185">185</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Smith, the, gives direction to the course of Empire, <a href="#Page62">62</a>;
-a man of great consequence in England in the early time, <a href="#Page71">71</a>;
-name of, descends to more families than that of any other profession, <a href="#Page71">71</a>;
-versatility of, <a href="#Page71">71</a>, <a href="#Page72">72</a>;
-conducts the engineering at the siege of Berwick, <a href="#Page72">72</a>;
-ancient, kin to all the ages through his works, <a href="#Page74">74</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Social evils, are the product of defective education, <a href="#Page325">325</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Social problems, solution of, to be sought through a radical change in educational methods, <a href="#Page248">248</a>;
-the railway and factory are new factors in, <a href="#Page321">321</a>;
-of America cannot be settled as those of Europe are, by emigration, <a href="#Page326">326</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Solicis, Prof. G., the chief supporter of manual training in France, <a href="#Page368">368</a>.</li>
-
-<li>South Carolina, educational system of, confined to a class, as opposed to universal education in New England,
-<a href="#Page235">235</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Spain, ruined by the expulsion of the Moors, <a href="#Page283">283</a>;
-destitution in the chief cities of, <a href="#Page283">283</a>;
-danger that the royal family of, would go hungry to bed, <a href="#Page283">283</a>;
-is bankrupt, <a href="#Page296">296</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Speculation<span class="pagenum" id="Page459">[459]</span>, rages on the exchanges of all large American cities,
-<a href="#Page322">322</a>;
-affects every class in the community, <a href="#Page322">322</a>;
-stimulates bad passions, and creates a distaste for labor, <a href="#Page322">322</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Speculative philosophy, only resource of the ancients, <a href="#Page153">153</a>;
-dominated the world from the fall of Rome to the time of Bacon, <a href="#Page153">153</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Speech, must be incarnate in things or it is dead, <a href="#Page141">141</a>;
-man would lose the power of, if his words should cease to be realized in things, <a href="#Page149">149</a>;
-dependent upon objects for its existence, <a href="#Page150">150</a>;
-has its origin not less in external objects than in the mind, <a href="#Page150">150</a>;
-would be lost if the senses should cease to be impressed by things, <a href="#Page150">150</a>;
-freedom of, and of thought, catch-penny phrases, <a href="#Page192">192</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Spelling, automatism in teaching, in the schools of the United States, as shown by the Walton report,
-<a href="#Page198">198</a>, <a href="#Page199">199</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Spencer, Herbert, on the defects of the schools of England, <a href="#Page325">325</a>;
-the contrast between his views and the dictum of Dr. Dwight of Yale University, <a href="#Page374">374</a>;
-pointed out, the analogy between early methods of education and barbarism, <a href="#Page377">377</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Standing armies, a legacy of evil from the Middle Ages, <a href="#Page289">289</a>;
-recruited from the ranks of the serfs, <a href="#Page290">290</a>;
-the dominant feature of European public economy, <a href="#Page290">290</a>;
-number of, <a href="#Page290">290</a>;
-collateral evils of, <a href="#Page290">290</a>;
-responsible for illiteracy and pauperism, <a href="#Page292">292</a>;
-what they cost and what they stand in the way of, <a href="#Page293">293</a>;
-how they are supported [<a href="#Footnote86"><i>note</i></a>], <a href="#Page293">293</a>;
-an assumption of the barbarism of man, <a href="#Page300">300</a>;
-stand in the way of education and prosperity, <a href="#Page303">303</a>;
-must everywhere soon disappear before the march of education, <a href="#Page303">303</a>;
-are as abnormal in Europe as slavery was in the United States, <a href="#Page303">303</a>, <a href="#Page304">304</a>;
-are the instruments of tyranny, the last analysis of selfishness, <a href="#Page304">304</a>;
-the result of the Greco-Roman methods of education, <a href="#Page304">304</a>.</li>
-
-<li>State, a, growth of, depends upon progress in the practical arts, <a href="#Page151">151</a>;
-ceasing to advance, its language ceases to grow, becomes stationary, stagnates, <a href="#Page151">151</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Statesmen, not the authors of English progress, <a href="#Page159">159</a>;
-Buckle’s scathing arraignment of, <a href="#Page160">160</a>;
-more highly esteemed than civil engineers, machinists, and artisans, <a href="#Page185">185</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Statutes, that wear out in a year, <a href="#Page241">241</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Steam, power of, known to the ancients, <a href="#Page14">14</a>;
-makes all civilized countries prosperous and great, <a href="#Page161">161</a>;
-must be harnessed at the forge and in the shop to enable it to do its work, <a href="#Page170">170</a>;
-power exerted by, in the manufactories of Great Britain equal to the manual labor of four hundred millions of men,
-<a href="#Page184">184</a>;
-may be likened to an idea which finds expression through the engine&mdash;a thing, <a href="#Page245">245</a>;
-the railway and the factory two great products of, <a href="#Page321">321</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Steam-hammer, the, in works of Mr. Crane, Chicago, <a href="#Page75">75</a>;
-in Pittsburg, Pa., and at Krupp’s cast-steel works, Essen, Germany, <a href="#Page75">75</a>;
-invention of, in 1837, its accuracy, power, and delicacy, <a href="#Page76">76</a>;
-application of the principle of, to the pile-driver in 1845, <a href="#Page76">76</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Steamship<span class="pagenum" id="Page460">[460]</span>, the, influence of, upon the destinies of mankind,
-<a href="#Page170">170</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Steel, Age of, great enterprises of the, dwarf the merely ornamental branches of learning, <a href="#Page179">179</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Steele, Prof. A. J., Principal of the Le Moyne Normal Institute&mdash;letter of, to the Author,
-<a href="#Page362">362</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Stephenson, George, inventor of the locomotive, <a href="#Page84">84</a>;
-sketch of his remarkable career, <a href="#Page118">118</a>, <a href="#Page119">119</a>;
-declines knighthood and a membership in the Royal Society, <a href="#Page119">119</a>;
-the founder of the railway system of the world, <a href="#Page119">119</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Stephenson, Robert, an English railway engineer, <a href="#Page84">84</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Stick, Adam and the, <a href="#Page157">157</a>;
-the symbol and instrument of power, <a href="#Page158">158</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Stoics and philosophers of Rome, lofty moral sentiments of, in contrast with the Roman vices,
-<a href="#Page139">139</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Suetonius, portrays the cruelties of the Cæsars, but hints at no cause therefor inherent in the social system,
-<a href="#Page272">272</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Suffrage, love of country in the United States is a due appreciation of the right of, <a href="#Page323">323</a>;
-in the universality of the right of, lies the power of correcting all social evils, <a href="#Page324">324</a>;
-destined to preservation forever in the United States, <a href="#Page324">324</a>;
-attempt to limit, in New York accounted for by the prevalence of European ideas, <a href="#Page324">324</a>;
-the right of, can be taken from the American people only by force, <a href="#Page324">324</a>;
-standard of, lowered by ignorance and depravity, <a href="#Page325">325</a>;
-when better informed it will be more honest, <a href="#Page325">325</a>;
-with increased intelligence it will gain the power to grapple with social abuses, <a href="#Page325">325</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Superstition, how it arose through ignorance and selfishness, <a href="#Page249">249</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Sweden, five hundred <i>slöjd</i> schools in, in 1882, <a href="#Page368">368</a>;
-supports a school for the training of teachers of <i>slöjd</i> schools at Nääs, <a href="#Page369">369</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Syria, the founders, smiths, and all the artisans of, were slaves, <a href="#Page56">56</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="newletter">T.</li>
-
-<li>Tacitus, his account of the execution of four hundred slaves for the murder of one man, <a href="#Page265">265</a>;
-his lament at the decline of public virtue, <a href="#Page267">267</a>;
-is silent on the subject of the infamy of slavery, and on the shame of degrading labor, <a href="#Page272">272</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Tancred the Crusader pays for King Arthur’s sword Excalibar “four great ships and fifteen galleys,” <a href="#Page71">71</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Tarquins, the banishment of the, <a href="#Page264">264</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Telegraph, the, influence of, upon the destinies of mankind, <a href="#Page170">170</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Telephone, the work of the hand, <a href="#Page156">156</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Telescope, the work of the hand, <a href="#Page155">155</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Texas, Agricultural and Mechanical College of, <a href="#Page359">359</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Theodoric, attempt of, to reconstruct the Roman civilization, <a href="#Page279">279</a>;
-the order evoked from chaos by, to chaos soon returned, <a href="#Page280">280</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Theorem, a, always a question solved, <a href="#Page144">144</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Things both the subject and occasion of speech, <a href="#Page151">151</a>;
-regarded as of less
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page461">[461]</span>vital importance than abstract ideas, <a href="#Page185">185</a>;
-the false, easily detected in&mdash;examples, <a href="#Page224">224</a>;
-the study of, steadies and balances the mind, <a href="#Page225">225</a>;
-the truth revealed only in, <a href="#Page243">243</a>;
-ideas are mere vain speculations till embodied in, <a href="#Page243">243</a>;
-the habit of expressing ideas in, should be formed in the schools, <a href="#Page245">245</a>;
-the truths that are hidden in, <a href="#Page378">378</a>;
-the integrity of the mind can be maintained only by the submission of its immature judgments to the verification of,
-<a href="#Page379">379</a>;
-the source of ideas, <a href="#Page379">379</a>;
-essential to spiritual development, <a href="#Page384">384</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Thinking, acting is the complement of, <a href="#Page244">244</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Thought, must be incarnate in things, or it is dead, <a href="#Page141">141</a>;
-is not even present to the thinker until he has set it forth, out of himself, <a href="#Page150">150</a>;
-independent, of all mental processes the most difficult&mdash;habit, tradition, and reverence for antiquity unite to
-forbid it, <a href="#Page192">192</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Thoughts must be expressed to have influence, <a href="#Page244">244</a>;
-may be expressed most forcibly in things, <a href="#Page244">244</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Thucydides arraigns the Greeks as falsifiers and perjurers, <a href="#Page255">255</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Thurston, Robert H., on the tremendous power wielded by the mechanic, <a href="#Page183">183</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Toledo, O., Manual Training School, inception of, due to the generosity of the late Jesup W. Scott and his three sons,
-<a href="#Page364">364</a>;
-connected with the public high-school, <a href="#Page364">364</a>, <a href="#Page365">365</a>;
-students of, consist of both sexes, <a href="#Page365">365</a>;
-the course for girls in, <a href="#Page365">365</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Toledo, Spain, woollen manufactures of, transferred by the exiled Moors to Tunis, <a href="#Page283">283</a>.</li>
-
-<li>“Tom All-alone’s” in “Bleak House”&mdash;social philosophy of, <a href="#Page315">315</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Tool practice, quickens the intellect, <a href="#Page114">114</a>;
-engenders a thirst for wisdom, <a href="#Page114">114</a>;
-history of, in England confirms this view, <a href="#Page114">114</a>;
-the foundation of James Watt’s culture, <a href="#Page119">119</a>;
-George Stephenson’s career an illustration of the intellectual effect of, <a href="#Page119">119</a>;
-testimony of the Director of the Artisans’ School at Rotterdam, Holland, as to intellectual effect of,
-<a href="#Page121">121</a>;
-testimony of Dr. Woodward, Director of the St. Louis Manual Training School, as to intellectual effect of,
-<a href="#Page121">121</a>;
-testimony of M. Victor Della Vos, Director of the Imperial Technical School of Moscow, as to intellectual effect of,
-<a href="#Page121">121</a>;
-effect of, as shown by the experience of the Mechanic Art School at Komotan, Bohemia, <a href="#Page122">122</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Tools, influence of, upon modern civilization, <a href="#Page9">9</a>;
-represent the steps of human progress, <a href="#Page10">10</a>;
-the great civilizing agency of the world, <a href="#Page11">11</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Touch, the master sense, whence all the other senses spring, <a href="#Page380">380</a>;
-reigns throughout the body, and is the token of life in every part, <a href="#Page381">381</a>;
-is the fundamental sense, the mother-tongue of, language, <a href="#Page381">381</a>;
-its versatility, <a href="#Page381">381</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Townships of New England, their establishment logical, <a href="#Page309">309</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Tradition, tyranny of, <a href="#Page124">124</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Truth, the struggle after, <a href="#Page233">233</a>;
-the love of, natural, <a href="#Page233">233</a>;
-heroes honor it, <a href="#Page234">234</a>;
-conspicuous through efforts to suppress it, <a href="#Page287">287</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Tulane<span class="pagenum" id="Page462">[462]</span>, Paul, founder of the Tulane University of New Orleans, La.,
-<a href="#Page353">353</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Tulane University, manual training a prominent feature in the, <a href="#Page353">353</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Turkish Empire, story of its origin through the art of forging, <a href="#Page61">61</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Tweedism, what made it possible in the city of New York, <a href="#Page315">315</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Types, through the medium of, the voice of genius is destined to reach to the ends of the earth,
-<a href="#Page286">286</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="newletter">U.</li>
-
-<li>United States, the, not at the front in the race of nations for industrial supremacy, <a href="#Page203">203</a>;
-comparison of imports and exports of, with those of England, <a href="#Page203">203</a>;
-industrially ill-balanced, <a href="#Page204">204</a>;
-suffering from a paucity of skilled labor, <a href="#Page204">204</a>;
-educational system of, very poor, as shown by the statistics of railway and commercial disasters, <a href="#Page224">224</a>;
-educational system of, as poor morally as mentally, <a href="#Page224">224</a>;
-neglect of education by, the most astonishing fact in the history of, <a href="#Page235">235</a>;
-a scientific educational system forced upon the South by, would have averted the war of rebellion, <a href="#Page237">237</a>;
-could not protect property in slaves, <a href="#Page238">238</a>;
-social conditions in, similar to those prevailing in Europe, <a href="#Page313">313</a>;
-illiteracy in, <a href="#Page313">313</a>;
-increase of illiteracy in, <a href="#Page313">313</a>;
-every sixth man who votes in, is unable to write his name, <a href="#Page313">313</a>;
-land system of, rivals that of England in injustice, <a href="#Page317">317</a>;
-history of the land system of, by Henry D. Lloyd, in the <i>Chicago Tribune</i>, <a href="#Page317">317-319</a>;
-the sentiment of patriotism justifiable only in, <a href="#Page323">323</a>;
-the soldier of, is a citizen of, <a href="#Page323">323</a>, <a href="#Page324">324</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Universities, the men who have transformed the face of the earth came not from the, <a href="#Page185">185</a>;
-Bacon’s caustic remark in relation to the, <a href="#Page185">185</a>;
-on Bacon’s plan would have united science and art, <a href="#Page185">185</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Use&mdash;the greatest thing in the material world, <a href="#Page378">378</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="newletter">V.</li>
-
-<li>Valerius, died so poor that he was buried at the public charge, <a href="#Page268">268</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Venus, made the wife of Vulcan, the God of Fire, <a href="#Page70">70</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Von Kaas, Rittmeister Claussen, lectures on the subject of manual training in Germany, <a href="#Page368">368</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Vulcan, the God of Fire, given Venus to wife, the father of Cupid, <a href="#Page70">70</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="newletter">W.</li>
-
-<li>Waif, the, description of, by John Morrissey, <a href="#Page314">314</a>;
-destined to become an equal citizen, <a href="#Page315">315</a>;
-made Tweedism in New York City possible, <a href="#Page315">315</a>;
-pollutes the fountains of justice, <a href="#Page315">315</a>, <a href="#Page316">316</a>;
-menaces the government with destruction, <a href="#Page316">316</a>;
-permitted by the hundred thousand to develop into a savage, <a href="#Page316">316</a>;
-power of, to tax civilized people, <a href="#Page316">316</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Walton, George A., report of, in regard to investigation of the schools of Norfolk County, Mass.,
-<a href="#Page196">196-199</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Wars<span class="pagenum" id="Page463">[463]</span>, modern, of European nations involve no principle,
-<a href="#Page290">290</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Washington University, manual training department of, established in 1878, <a href="#Page338">338</a>,
-<a href="#Page339">339</a>;
-excerpts from the prospectus of, 1882-83, showing the progress of manual training, <a href="#Page339">339</a>,
-<a href="#Page340">340</a>;
-founding of manual training department of, due to the energy and foresight of Dr. Woodward first, and second, to the
-donations of private citizens, <a href="#Page340">340</a>, <a href="#Page341">341</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Watch Company, Elgin National, makes a thousand watches a day&mdash;all perfect, <a href="#Page87">87</a>;
-makes two hundred thousand watch-screws in a few minutes, <a href="#Page87">87</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Watt, James, the last link in the chain of steam-engine inventors, <a href="#Page15">15</a>;
-Dr. Draper’s eulogy of, <a href="#Page15">15</a>;
-chief difficulty of, in perfecting the steam-engine, <a href="#Page84">84</a>, <a href="#Page85">85</a>;
-Smeaton’s opinion that the engine of, could not be made to work with hand-made tools, <a href="#Page85">85</a>;
-sketch of the life and career of, <a href="#Page119">119</a>, <a href="#Page120">120</a>;
-a dull boy in school, <a href="#Page120">120</a>;
-tribute of Sir Walter Scott to the greatness of, <a href="#Page120">120</a>;
-every incident in the life of, now eagerly sought for, <a href="#Page171">171</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Weaving Machinery, improved, opposition to introduction of, in England, <a href="#Page178">178</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Whitney, Eli B., inventor of the cotton-gin, <a href="#Page84">84</a>.</li>
-
-<li>William the Conqueror, his appreciation of the importance of land proprietorship, <a href="#Page317">317</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Williams, Roger, the champion of absolute freedom of thought and speech, <a href="#Page309">309</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Wilson, Dr. George, his panegyric on the hand, <a href="#Page145">145</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Wisdom, the power of discriminating between what is true and what is false, <a href="#Page152">152</a>;
-the hand used as the synonym of, because it is only in the concrete that the false is sure of detection, <a href="#Page152">152</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Woman, tremendous influence of, upon the destinies of the human race, <a href="#Page125">125</a>;
-neglect of past ages to educate, a crime, <a href="#Page125">125</a>;
-education of, more important than that of man, <a href="#Page128">128</a>;
-condition of, in a state of savagery, <a href="#Page249">249</a>;
-reform in education must begin with, <a href="#Page365">365</a>;
-the education of, more imperative than that of man, <a href="#Page365">365</a>;
-neglect of the education of, among the ancients, <a href="#Page366">366</a>;
-degradation of, in the Middle Ages, <a href="#Page366">366</a>;
-contempt of, by Bacon, Swift, Addison, and Johnson, <a href="#Page366">366</a>;
-Shakespeare’s tribute to, <a href="#Page366">366</a>;
-Ruskin’s worship of, <a href="#Page366">366</a>;
-the purity of the home and the efficiency of the school depends upon, <a href="#Page367">367</a>;
-in the van where the imagination leads, <a href="#Page367">367</a>;
-less selfish than man, <a href="#Page367">367</a>;
-intuitions of, truer, ideals higher, sense of justice finer, and of duty stronger than those of man,
-<a href="#Page367">367</a>;
-the teacher of man from the cradle to the grave, <a href="#Page367">367</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Woodward, Dr. C. M., Director of the St. Louis Manual Training School, <a href="#Page121">121</a>;
-statement of, as to intellectual effect of manual training, <a href="#Page121">121</a>;
-his account of the origin of the St. Louis school, <a href="#Page339">339</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Wood-turning laboratory, radical change of, from carpentry&mdash;from angles to spherical, cylindrical, and eccentric
-forms, <a href="#Page30">30</a>;
-the value in the arts of the lathe, <a href="#Page30">30</a>;
-its mythical origin, <a href="#Page33">33</a>;
-its application and uses among the ancients, <a href="#Page34">34</a>;
-fashionable in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
-in<span class="pagenum" id="Page464">[464]</span> England and France, <a href="#Page34">34</a>;
-purpose of, is not to make turners, but to educate boys, <a href="#Page39">39</a>;
-the machinery of, in motion, <a href="#Page39">39</a>;
-pen-picture of the students in, <a href="#Page39">39</a>;
-the lesson in detail in, <a href="#Page40">40</a>;
-the students at their lathes in, <a href="#Page43">43</a>;
-the instructor passes upon the work of the class in, <a href="#Page44">44</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Wootz, or Indian steel, produced near Golconda, and used in the fabrication of Damascus blades, <a href="#Page72">72</a>;
-millions of dollars expended in efforts to produce the equal of, <a href="#Page72">72</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Words, weakness of, <a href="#Page141">141</a>;
-cannot attain to definiteness save as living outgrowths of realities, <a href="#Page150">150</a>;
-easy to juggle with, and make the worse appear the better reason, <a href="#Page224">224</a>;
-educational systems still train in, rather than in things, <a href="#Page325">325</a>, <a href="#Page326">326</a>.</li>
-
-<li>Workingman’s School and Free Kindergarten of New York City, the most comprehensive educational institution in the world,
-<a href="#Page342">342</a>;
-scope of, <a href="#Page343">343</a>;
-purpose of, identical with that of the manual training school, <a href="#Page343">343</a>;
-methods of instruction in the, <a href="#Page343">343</a>, <a href="#Page344">344</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="newletter">Y.</li>
-
-<li>Yarranton, Andrew, according to Patrick Edward Dove, was the founder of English political economy,
-<a href="#Page175">175</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="newletter">Z.</li>
-
-<li>Zenophon, after conducting the retreat of the Ten Thousand, led a detachment of Greeks on a pillaging expedition,
-<a href="#Page255">255</a>.</li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<p class="center highline6">THE END</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<div class="tnbot" id="TN">
-
-<h2>Transcriber&#8217;s Notes</h2>
-
-<p>Inconsistencies in spelling, hyphenation, etc. (including in proper names) have been retained, except as mentioned below.</p>
-
-<p>Depending on the hard- and software and their settings used to read this text, not all elements may display as intended.</p>
-
-<p>As explained in the <a href="#Pageiii">Preface</a>, the book contains both endnotes per chapter and footnotes. This
-distinction has been kept in this text, with the endnotes being numbered E1, E2, E3, ... and the footnotes having numbers 1, 2, 3, ....</p>
-
-<p>Text in a <span class="illotext">dotted box</span> has been transcribed from the illustration for the sake of legibility
-and completeness.</p>
-
-<p>Page 85, “Machine-made tools were unknown ...: either the closing quote mark is missing, or the opening quote mark was
-included erroneously.</p>
-
-<p>Page 169: there is a footnote marker * on this page, but no footnote.</p>
-
-<p>Page 179, paragraph starting When labor was only another name ... and
-related foot- and endotes: several quote marks appear to be lacking.</p>
-
-<p>Page 180, Footnote 36: there probably should have been a closing quote mark after ... exercises of humanity.</p>
-
-<p>Page 327, Endnote [E31]: there is no marker in the text for this note.</p>
-
-<p>Page 400, Minnesota, Minn.: as printed in the source document; probably an error for Minneapolis, Minn.</p>
-
-<p>Page 464, Zenophon: the text consistently uses Xenophon.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore75">Changes:</p>
-
-<p>Illustrations and footnotes have been moved out of text paragraphs.</p>
-
-<p>Some obvious minor typographical and punctuation errors have been corrected silently.</p>
-
-<p>Table of Contents: Several page numbers have been corrected to the book’s actual page numbers.</p>
-
-<p>Page 6, Endnote 1: closing quote mark inserted after ... principles of scientific education.</p>
-
-<p>Page 13: closing quote mark inserted after ... be learned by doing them.</p>
-
-<p>Page 58: ... accessaries, as anvils, ... changed to ... accessories, as anvils, ....</p>
-
-<p>Page 77, Endnote 2: opening quote mark inserted before The inquiry of truth ....</p>
-
-<p>Page 171: Maudslay, Clement Murray, Nasmyth changed to Maudslay, Clement, Murray, Nasmyth.</p>
-
-<p>Page 194: Opening quote mark inserted before Applying our popular schemes ....</p>
-
-<p>Page 257: Endnote marker numbering [E1] corrected to [E11] to conform to endnotes for this chapter.</p>
-
-<p>Page 392, footnote [125]: Of the 51 cities tabulated ... changed to Of the 54 cities tabulated ....</p>
-
-<p>Page 432: Chicago Manual Training School, equipment of: 341 changed to 347.</p>
-
-</div><!--TNbot-->
-
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