Swindon Advertiser: Monday 4th July 1910

Although the figures are easily accessible, very few of us realize that in England and Wales alone there are well over a quarter of a million people who are mentally defective … (continues) … AS Mrs. Hume Pinsent (one of the Royal Commissioners) points out in her excellent article in this month’s Nineteenth Century Review, the expense under our present muddled ways of dealing with the problem is far greater in the long run than it would be if the problem were attached systematically and thoroughly. Almost all the feeble-minded are capable of receiving training and becoming productive. … (continues)


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Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Peterborough Standard: Saturday 2nd July 1910

The Church Congress: This Year’s Gathering in the Ely Diocese: … Wednesday Morning Speakers … includes … Mrs. Pinsent…


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Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Lloyds List: Saturday 2nd July 1910

Magazine: Monthly, Price 3s 6d: Nineteenth Century and After: For July: Care and Control of the Feeble-Minded, by Mrs. Hume Pinsent (One of the Royal Commissioners). 


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Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Birmingham Daily Gazette: Saturday 25th June 1910

City Education Committee:  Offer from Mr. and Mrs. Barrow Cadbury: Open-Air Schools: After-Care of Defective Children: The Birmingham Education Committee at their meeting yesterday were informed of a generous offer made by Mr. And Mrs. Barrow Cadbury to provide the land and necessary equipment for an open-air school near Kings’ Heath … After-Care of the Feeble Minded: The annual report of the Special Schools After-Care Sub-Committee stated that the necessity for legislation on the lines suggested by the Royal Commission on the Care and Control of the Feeble-minded had been demonstrated by their records year after year, and each year more clearly than before. … … (discussion of report) … …  Mrs. Pinsent said that the report this year presented one or two new features. For the first time, through the kindness of the committee of the Blind Institution, they were able to include some account of the after care of the blind children for whose education they were responsible. The committee of the Blind Institution; seemed to have realized fully that defectives, however carefully trained, were rarely or never able to compete on ordinary terms in the open labour market, and they had, therefore, established their own workshops, where the special conditions necessary for blind workers could be provided. Their pioneer work in this line had been most successful, and it would be well if those interested in other forms of defect would learn their lessons from the Blind Asylum. In regard to cripples for instance, some organised workshops where those children could continue working after they had left school might be of real use. Exclusive of the children who recovered sufficiently to be returned to ordinary schools only 30 per cent of the cripples educated by the Birmingham authority were earning wages — and the wages they earned were so small in amount as to suggest that under more suitable conditions those children might be helped to earn more than they were now doing. Deafness seemed to be the least incapacitating of all the defects, for here it was found that 61 per cent were earning wages while 31 percent earned 10s a week or over. Even here however, there were always a number who could not get along alone, and for these some organised work under special conditions and after the example of the Blind Institution would probably be valuable. PROBLEM OF MENTAL DEFECT: The problem presented by mental defect, went on Mrs. Pinsent, was very different and much more serious. The numbers the subcommittee dealt with were far greater. They were educating about 80 deaf, 240 crippled, and 40 blind children but they had about 200 mental deficient school children on the registers. There was no longer any doubt that to give these children a very expensive training and then turn them out at sixteen, was simply a waste of the community’s money and energy. As far as they went the special schools were doing good work, and schools of that kind would always be necessary; but until the recommendations of the late Commission were carried out and the care of the mentally deficient became continuous, very little permanent good could be affected. “It is pitiable to think of the waste!” Mrs. Pinsent continued. “The money spent on this generation has simply poured into a sieve. The best we can say is that the knowledge and experience we have gained have demonstrated this waste so plainly that all who deal with defectives have come to the unanimous conclusion that we must have continuous control. The only question is how soon the nation will recognise these facts and refuse to allow money to be spent in a manner which gives no hope of any adequate return?” Mr. R. Cary Gilson, moved to add to the Sub committee’s report a rider to the effect that a copy of the report be forwarded to the Prime Minister, together with a memorandum expressing the committee’s conviction that mentally defective children could not be withdrawn from public control at the age of sixteen without grave danger and injury to the national welfare, and their earnest hope that the Government would introduce legislation in accordance with the recommendations of the Royal Commission on the Care and Control of the Feeble-minded … … (discussion of desirability of adding the rider) … … Eventually, it was agreed to add the rider to the report: – Mrs. Pinsent concurring, – and it was adopted.


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Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Birmingham Mail: Friday 24th June 1910

Birmingham Education Committee: … … After Care Problems: Mrs. Pinsent moved the adoption of the annual report of the Special Schools After Care sub-committee. In this report is an important reference to the Royal Commission report on the Care and Control of the Feeble-minded. The necessity for legislation for the direction of vesting the responsibility of one authority, with continuity of control, was emphasized, and the report pointed out that there was real ground for complaint that necessary legislation was still delayed. … …


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Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

London Evening Standard: Tuesday 21st June 1910

Church Congress: The Programme for Cambridge: … … Examination Hall: The Church and Recent thoughts: … … Wednesday Morning: September 28th: Science Heredity and social Responsibility with special reference to 1: The Feebleminded. Parentage: Speakers: 1. Dr. G. E. Shuttleworth, Mrs. Pinsent, 2, Bishop of Ripon, Mr. W. C. D. Whetham. Wednesday Evening: … … (continues) … … 


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Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Nottingham Guardian: Tuesday 21st June 1910

Church Congress: Interesting Programme for Cambridge: … On Wednesday morning, will be discussed heredity and social responsibility, with special reference to “The Feeble Minded – on Which Dr. G. E. Shuttleworth and Mrs. Pinsent will speak – “Parentage” to which contributions will be made by the Bishop of Ripon and Mr. W. C. D. Whetham. …


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Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

London Evening Standard: Wednesday 6th June 1910

Care of the Feeble-Minded: Discussion at a Conference in London: In the absence of Lord Radnor, Lord Shuttleworth presided at Denison House yesterday, at a conference of persons interested in the care and control of the feeble-minded. Dr. H. B. Deakin remarked that the Royal Commissioners were practically in their conviction that a single central authority to supervise any form of administration dealing with the care and control of the mentally defective was absolutely indispensable, and Mrs. Hume Pinsent, a member of the Royal Commission, said that the injustice and even cruelty caused by the inefficient methods of the four authorities dealing with the feebleminded was really beyond description … (continues)


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Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Sheffield Daily Telegraph: Saturday 4th June 1910:

SURVIVAL OF THE UNFITTEST: Sheffield, June 3, 1910. Sir, — Your correspondent “Behosh” entirely misunderstands the object of the “Defective Schools” so-called, and still more of the proposed legislation for the care and (especially) segregation of adult defectives. It is not by protecting and as far may be, educating the imbecile and epileptic that we “aid the bad in multiplying.” If “Behosh” had heard the admirable lecture of Mrs. Hume Pinsent on “The Care of the Feeble-minded.” or had read with comprehension the report of the subsequent meeting of the Education Committee, at which the subject was discussed, he would see that the urgent demand of all experts on this painful question is that the mentally deficient, instead of being (as at present) educated, up to the age of 16, and then set adrift in the world to relapse into hopeless imbecility and reproduce their kind, should be segregated in homes or colonies under strict and kindly supervision — not for a time, but for life. In this way the defective can be trained to be at all events partly self-supporting, and what is of far more importance — prevented from “bequeathing to posterity an increasing population of imbeciles and idlers and criminals.” Herbert Spencer is not Gospel, and if by “fools” meant imbeciles (but perhaps he did not), he never wrote anything more untrue and mischievous than that “the result of shielding men from the effect of folly is to fill the world with fools.” The exact reverse is the case. The effect of unshielded folly, as every social student knows, is to fill the asylums with idiots, the gaols with (often irresponsible) criminals, the streets with unfortunates and the hospitals with patients.  All these have to be paid for, and the protection of the fool from his own misfortune must in the long run result in economy to the rates and the “benefit of the healthy community:” — Yours, etc., CORNELIA


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Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Sheffield Daily Telegraph: Tuesday 24th May 1910:

The Feeble-Minded: Attitude of Sheffield Education Committee: Permanent Control Needed: The principal question before the Sheffield Education Committee yesterday was that of the control of the feeble-minded, on which a lecture was recently delivered in the city by Mrs. Hume Pinsent. There was complete agreement on the matter among the members present, and following resolution carried without dissent, on the motion Miss Maxfield, seconded by Councillor Neal: “That, the Committee, having had experience of the working of special schools for mentally defective children, and being convinced of the undesirability of withdrawing such persons from public control on their attaining the age of 16 years, earnestly hope that His Majesty’s Government will, at the earliest possible period, introduce measures for securing legislation in accordance with the recommendations contained in the report of the Royal Commission on the Care and Control of the Feeble-Minded.


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Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949