By Christopher Bischof
On the first of May each year from the
1880s onward the young women at Whitelands teacher training college in London
celebrated by throwing to the wind the timetable that normally dictated how
their every moment would be spent.
Instead, they adorned the college in flowers, donned in white dresses,
and spent the day dancing, singing, and reading poetry. The tradition of May Day helped to poke a
hole in the rather dour institutional regimen of Whitelands, which opened the
way for many smaller, everyday acts that gradually reworked the ethos of the
college.
The women of Whitelands on May Day, c. 1923. Whitelands Archive: Student Albums and Memorabilia, Box N-P. |
Whiteland sanctioned these May Day
activities at the suggestion of John Ruskin, the famous author and social
thinker, who was a patron of the college.
Ruskin sought to revive May Day as part of his campaign to overcome the
effects of industrialization on social relations and culture by returning to
the perceived organicism of medieval traditions.
In the afternoon, the young women elected a
May Queen, who handed out copies of Ruskin's books to her fellow students. Ruskin himself donated copies of all his
books that he had on hand – all except for Fors
Clavigera, his famous book of letters to working men encouraging them to
radically reimagine society, which he declared was "not meant for
girls." The women of Whitelands,
however, secretly acquired and distributed Fors
along with the rest of his works.[1]
This was part of a remarkably widespread and passionate culture of
intellectual curiosity at Victorian training colleges.[2]
What is even more remarkable is that the
young women of Whitelands not only acquired, read, and probably discussed Fors
Clavigera, they actually helped to make its index – unbeknownst to Ruskin
himself. Ruskin had asked John
Faunthorpe, the principal of Whitelands and one of his intellectual protégés,
for assistance compiling an index for
Fors, which was to be published separately.
Faunthorpe shouldered most of the work himself, but at several key
points he enlisted the help of his wife and the young women at Whitelands. At one point he had twenty-six Whitelands
women, one for every letter of the alphabet, assembled in a room scanning Fors.
"This took me about two years of leisure time," Faunthorpe
recorded later in his never-published autobiography, "and without my wife’s
and my college girls’ help it would have taken me much longer."
Though built on the backs of the young
women of Whittelands, the index of Fors
also cemented the budding friendship and intellectual relationship between
Ruskin and Faunthorpe. "I am really aghast to-day at learning the toil
that index has cost you," a grateful Ruskin wrote Faunthorpe in February
of 1886. Fors, Ruskin believed, "will be thrice the book" once it
had a "well done" index. In fact,
the index inspired him to a new project: "I think with the help of this
index of writing a systematic commentary on Fors
and you to be partner in profits.”
Faunthorpe counseled Ruskin against this project, arguing that the
nature of Fors did not lend itself to
a commentary. Ruskin heeded this
counsel, marking a shift in their relationship.
Before Ruskin had been mentor to Faunthorpe. Now Ruskin took advice as well as gave it. The work which it appeared Faunthorpe had
heroically and single-handedly put into indexing Fors – and the mastery of the text that work implied – helped to
bring about this shift.[3]
This is another chapter in the hidden
contribution of women to intellectual work, much like the contribution of women
to some of the nineteenth century's great works of history as revealed by
Bonnie Smith.[4] What makes this story
particularly interesting is that the contribution of women was hidden even from
Ruskin himself, who would have been aghast at this violation of the gendered
sensibilities which he held so dear.
It also reveals the challenges of doing
social history, especially in the context of the history of education. For historians of education working on the
nineteenth century or earlier, recovering the story of teachers, pupils, parents,
and other on-the-ground actors is a major struggle. We still know remarkably little about what
actually went on in the Victorian classroom, a lacunae that owes largely to the
lack of sources. To compensate for this
gap in our understanding, it is tempting to lean heavily on the histories of ideas
or people we do know well – and who are well known to contemporary
readers.
Figures like Ruskin can grab a reader who
might otherwise flounder on the unfamiliar terrain of a narrative dominated by unknown
teachers and pupils. They also shaped
teachers’ way of seeing the world and, as a narrative device for the historian,
they provide an organic link to the larger social, cultural, and political
context in which teachers and others operated.
Yet they threaten to steal the show from on-the-ground actors like the
teachers-in-training at Whitelands. Writing
a social history of education that connects up to big issues like gender,
intellectual work, and ideas about the nature of institutions requires walking
a fine line.
References
[1] Whitelands Archive (WA): The Whitelands Annual, 14 (1895), 31-38.
[2] Christopher Bischof, “‘A Home for
Poets’: The Liberal Curriculum in Victorian Britain’s Teachers’ Training
Colleges,” History of Education Quarterly
54, 1 (2014), 42–69.
[3] WA: James Faunthorpe, Ilicet. Being [My] Life and Work in Three
Training Colleges: Battersea, Chelsea, Whitelands, 1874-1907 (unpub.
manuscript, 1908), 57-64.
[4] Bonnie Smith, The Gender of History: Men, Women, and Historical Practice (Cambridge:
Harvard University Press, 1998).
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