Evening Despatch: Tuesday 25th April 1911

Birmingham Education Committee Scheme: At the meeting of the Education Committee of the Birmingham City Council to be held on … next, the Attendance, Finance and … Subcommittees will present a report … discussion of after-care … committee includes … Mrs. Hume Pinsent …


Transcribed in whole or part from scanned originals: Presented with or without modified text and punctuation. For absolute accuracy refer to the original newspapers. Source: The British Newspaper Archive.


Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Torquay Times, and South Devon Advertiser: Friday 21st April 1911

Torquay Charity Organization Society: The Annual General Meeting will be held Today, Friday at 3 p.m. at the Museum Hall, Babbacombe Road. The mayor (Col. Spragge, C.B.) will preside: Mrs. Hume Pinsent (a member of the Royal Commission) will give an address on “The Care and Control of the Mentally Defective,”


Transcribed in whole or part from scanned originals: Presented with or without modified text and punctuation. For absolute accuracy refer to the original newspapers. Source: The British Newspaper Archive.


Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Sevenoaks Chronicle and Kentish Advertiser: Friday 7th April 1911

The Feeble-Minded: Lecture by Mrs. Pearce Clark: Under the auspices of the Christian Social Union, Mrs. Pearce Clark of Sevenoaks delivered an interesting lecture in the Christ Church Room, Tunbridge Wells, on March 27th. In the course of her remarks Mrs. Pearce Clark said: … … (continues) … … By the Act of 1899 special schools have been provided in a few centres for defective and epileptic children, and naturally of course mostly in the large areas. These children are given costly training up to about the usual school age, after that what happens. Perhaps I had better read what Mrs. Pinsent says. She is speaking of Birmingham, and was, as you know one of his Majesty’s Commissions, so that she is only too familiar with the subject: She writes: “A feeble-minded mother with little children is one of the most appalling sights of our modern civilization … (description of a visit) …


Transcribed in whole or part from scanned originals: Presented with or without modified text and punctuation. For absolute accuracy refer to the original newspapers. Source: The British Newspaper Archive.


Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Hastings and St. Leonard’s Observer: Saturday 11th March 1911

Aid for the Helpless: Care of the Feeble Urged at Hastings: Under the auspices of the Central Aid council, a meeting in reference to the care and control of the feeble minded was held in the Council Chamber of the Town Hall on Wednesday Evening. Commander J.  J. Oldfield, R.N., presided. Others present included: Mrs. Hume Pinsent (of Birmingham), Councillor W. C. T. Beasley … Mrs. Hume Pinsent, in an address, pointed out the inadequacy existing facilities for the care and control of the feeble-minded, four bodies dealt with that question independently of each other – the Board of Education, the Home Office (police), Boards of Guardians, and Lunacy Commissioners, the last being the most effective. There was a break between the control of Education Committees after a child was 16 years of age, and, generally speaking, a feeble-minded person eventually came into the hands of the police or the Guardians through the Workhouses. Mrs. Hume Pinsent gave instances in which two or more authorities had dealt quite ineffectually with the same case. Control should be under ONE CENTRAL AUTHORITY, working through local Committees, these to be Statutory Committees of the Town and County Councils. It would not mean the formation of new Committees. Most of the bodies already had Asylums Committees and it would merely mean a change of title and some extension of powers. At present many rises could not be certified, owing to the terms of the medical certificate not covering them; in the new scheme a new medical certificate would be necessary. From charts and family histories the lecturer showed how mental deficiency in one of the parents was reproduced to the third or fourth generation, generally in increasing proportion. The proposed new scheme might begin in special schools, where they could be assured the special treatment needed, and the feeble-minded could subsequently be transferred to industrial colonies and placed in suitable employment. If these recommendations were adopted the humiliation to parents of the artisan classes in having to apply under the Poor Law in cases where a feeble-minded child in a family could not be provided for would be obviated. The connection between mental defect and crime and inebriety was illustrated by startling statistics. Many people who could not at present be-certified as of unsound mind were not responsible for their actions, and were always in and out of prison, breaking windows and committing petty thefts. The present registration of inebriates was faulty, and in many cases habitual inebriaty was due to mental defect. Sixty seventy per cent of those admitted to Inebriates Homes were mentally defective and incurable. The speaker advocated continuous control in industrial colonies for these. The present circumstances led to enormous expenditure through the offspring of feeble-minded persons, who were very largely unemployed and unemployable: Only six or seven Boards of Guardians throughout the country made special provision for the feeble-minded. The proposed recommendations had the unqualified support of the Majority and Minority Reports of the Poor Law Commission. Councillor Hill moved: “That this meeting, firmly believing that the absence of control of the adult feeble-minded is a contributory factor of great importance in relation crime, immorality, and the problem of unemployment, and that this lack of control (having regard to the greater fecundity of the feeble-minded) seriously reduces the mean average of the health, intelligence, morality, and physique of the race, earnestly begs His Majesty’s Government to place in the hands of one authority, viz., an enlarged and strengthened Lunacy Commission, the continuous control and protection of these unfortunate people.” Captain Colvile seconded. The resolution was carried. Copies will be sent to the Lord Chancellor, the Home Secretary, the Presidents of the Local Government Board and the Board of Education, the Chairman of the Lunacy Commissioners, and the Members of Parliament for Hastings and the Rye or East Sussex Division.


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Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Cheltenham Examiner: Thursday 9th March 1911

Mrs. Hume Pinsent delivered an address to the Charity Organization, on Friday on “The Care of the Feeble Minded” (Page 7).


Transcribed in whole or part from scanned originals: Presented with or without modified text and punctuation. For absolute accuracy refer to the original newspapers. Source: The British Newspaper Archive.


Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Cheltenham Examiner: Thursday 9th March 1911

C.O.S.: Care of the Mentally Defective: Address by Mrs. Hume-Pinsent: The annual meeting of the Cheltenham Organisation Society was held in the reception room of the Town Hall on Friday afternoon. Mr. W. F. Hicks Beach, J.P. presided and was supported by Capt. Willoughby Berthon (chairman of the committee) Mr. W. R. Carles, C.M.G. (treasurer), Col. Aylmer, Mr. E. Bourne, J.P., Mr. A. Bourne, and Mrs. Hume Pinsent (Birmingham) a member of the Royal Commission, who attended to give an address on “The Care of the Feeble-Minded.” … (description of event) … Mrs. Hume Pinsent, then delivered a striking address on the mentally defective. She first commented upon the existing laws for the treatment of such persons and showed how far they dealt with the problem. There were the Lunacy Laws dealing with acquired insanity known as “dementia”, the Idiot Act, which dealt with low grade cases of “amentia,” in which class are idiots and imbeciles; and the Elementary Education (Defective and Epileptic Children) Act which dealt with mild cases of amentia. There were in England 131,000 certified insane persons and 149,000 uncertified feeble-minded. … (continues) … She commended the proposal of the Royal Commission that there should be a central authority called “The Board of Control.” … [Good Review of Her Position – continues in detail] … Mr. A. Bourne proposed a vote of thanks to Mrs. Pinsent and the chairman, which was seconded by Lieut. Gen. Willoughby, the Chairman responding both for Mrs. Pinsent and himself. This brought the meeting to a close.


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Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Northampton Mercury: Friday 24th February 1911

The Case of the Feeble Minded: Idiocy and Crime: The question of the care and control of the feeble minded was discussed in an able speech by Mrs. Pinsent at the meeting held under the auspices of the Northampton Charity Organization Society, on Thursday afternoon in the Free Library. Mrs. Pinsent is the chairman of the Special Schools Committee of the Birmingham Education Committee and was a member of the Royal Commission which sat upon this subject. At the outset, she pointed out the difference which the law made in the treatment of acquired insanity or dementia and the feeble-minded or amentia. The Lunacy Commission had absolute power over the demented, but the treatment of the feeble-minded was not efficient either from an economic or human point of view. Mrs. Pinsent briefly reviewed the present law and pointed out how it failed. Under existing circumstances, it was impossible to exercise control over the feeble-minded after they had reached the age 16. Up to that time the Elementary (Defective and Epileptic Children) Act gave Education Authorities the power to establish special schools; but they were able in these schools only to keep the children until they were sixteen. Further, this Act is permissive, and owing to its cost, many authorities have not established these schools. The curriculum was often not suited to a large number of the children, for only half are able to learn enough the three R’s to be of the slightest use. The speaker paid tribute to the work of the school in Northampton. “I was struck,” she said, “with the good work which is being carried on here.” WHAT IS TO BE DONE? After her criticism of the existing law, Mrs. Pinsent explained the recommendations of the Commission. The central authority was to be the present Lunacy Commission, enlarged and re-named the Board of Control. Its name would be altered to get away from the term which to so many people would be painful. The Asylums Committee appointed by the County Council would be the local authority, also with a changed name. To this committee, would fall the control of the feeble-minded in the county. What methods were they to use? If a child could suitably be cared for in its own home, it remains there. If there was a little doubt about the suitability of the home, a visitor would be appointed, who would keep an eye on them and give advice as to the proper manner of treatment. Thirdly, such children might be sent to school, or if the home and school were not suitable, to a residential institution. Adult persons not receiving adequate care might be sent to suitable colonies, or places in a specially adapted poor law institution under the inspection of the central authority. Lastly, under special regulations, some might be found homes in the villages as had been done in Scotland with such tremendous success. MENTAL DEFECT AND CRIME. The next part of Mrs. Pinsent’s address was an examination of the relation of mental defect to crime, to inebriety, and to pauperism, and she pointed out how, owing to the want of legislation, the feeble-minded joined one or other of those three classes of people who are such a drag on the rates. The point which Mrs. Pinsent emphasized was the powerlessness of the State to touch feebleminded people after they reached the age of 16. The result was they not only became criminals and drunkards, but also reproduced their kind. She showed the history of several families where a feeble-minded parent or parents had children who were themselves feeble-minded and potential or real members of the criminal or drunken classes. A feeble-minded young criminal is always likely to commit more serious crimes as he got older. Punishment by imprisonment for short or long terms is of no use whatsoever. But could these people be permanently detained when young, they would not be anything like the burden on the State they are under present conditions. Of 2,000 persons in our smaller prisons, for the lesser crimes, who were examined, ten per cent, were feeble-minded. These will probably commit graver crimes. In the penal establishments the percentage is, of course, not quite so high: AND DRUNKENNESS. What is true of crime is true of inebriety and pauperism. The life history of several individuals belonging to these classes was shown in a diagram form by Mrs. Pinsent. One man had spent 37 out of 46 years in prison. He was feebleminded but was not a lunatic, the authorities could only treat him as a person in full control of his faculties and punish him as a sane man. On the treatment of the feeble-minded in the Workhouse, Mrs. Pinsent spoke scathingly. Often there was no special ward, and they were classed with the sick. In one instance, she saw a rowdy imbecile in the next bed to a patient suffering from pneumonia who needed sleep above everything. In another all the feeble-minded were herded together, and the children imitated the most objectionable habits of the adults. At present what control there was exercised four bodies: The Board of Education, who dealt with children to be turned on the world at 16; the Local Government Board, through the Guardians, who had no sufficient means of caring for them; the Home Office, which deals with them when they fall into crime or enter inebriate reformatories; and the Lunacy Commission which deals with certified lunatics, amongst whom many feeble-minded persons are to found. The last-named body should be the central authority, and the County Councils, through a committee of control, the local body. THE RESOLUTIONST: The chair was taken by Mr. J. H. C. Crockett. A resolution, that this meeting urges the need of immediate legislation the lines recommended in the report of the Royal Commission, was proposed by Mr. Montague Browne: – Mrs. Calverley, in seconding, pointed out that the money now spent in dealing with the feeble-minded was wasted. — The resolution was carried unanimously. A vote of thanks to Mrs. Pinsent was passed on the motion the Rev. W. B. Sleight, seconded Mr. G. E. Abbott.


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Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Northampton Chronicle and Echo: Wednesday 22nd February 1911

Advertisement: Northampton: Charity Organization Society: A Meeting in connection with the National Society for the Care and Control of the Feeble-Minded will be held in the Lecture Hall, Free Library, Abington Street, on Thursday, Feb. 23rd, 1911, at 3 o’clock. The Chair will be taken by Dr. P. S. Hichens: Speaker: Mrs. Pinsent, Chairman of the Special Schools Committee: Birmingham Education Committee:


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Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Cheltenham Examiner: Thursday 16th February 1911

Charity Organization Society: Address by Mrs. Hume Pinsent: – Mrs. Hume Pinsent (Royal Commissioner) is to address the annual meeting of the Cheltenham Charity Organization Society on Friday, March 3rd, at 3 o’clock (Town Hall Drawing Room). Her subject will be “The Care and Control of the Feeble-Minded.” And her remarks are to be illustrated by diagrams.

[see similar Cheltenham Examiner: Thursday 23rd February 1911]


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Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Cheltenham Looker-On: Saturday 11th February 1911

Charity Organisation Society: Annual Meeting to be held in the Town Hall (Drawing Room) on Friday, March 3rd, at 3 p.m.: Chairman: W. F. Hicks Beach, Esq. J. P.: Speaker: Mrs. Hume Pinsent: on “The Care and Control of the Feeble-Minded” …


Transcribed in whole or part from scanned originals: Presented with or without modified text and punctuation. For absolute accuracy refer to the original newspapers. Source: The British Newspaper Archive.


Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949