Birmingham: Wednesday 10th November 1909

Birmingham Education Committee: … … The committees were elected, and Mr. Howard Lloyd desired that Mrs. Hume Pinsent should be included in the Attendance, Finance and General Purposes Committee. Councillor Lacey that if the committee were agreeable, he would be glad to withdraw his name from that committee, and Mrs. Pinsent could then be added to the committee without it being enlarged. This course the committee agreed to. Mrs. Pinsent’s name was substituted for that of Mr. Lacey.


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Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Nottingham Evening Post: Monday 8th November 1909

Punishing Inefficients: At a meeting of the Birmingham Trades Council on Saturday, Mrs. Hume Pinsent, in dealing with the problem of the feeble minded, pleaded for continuity of control. The nation might follow the good example of America and try to treat inefficients methodically and rationally by seeking to check the supply or go on blindly punishing the feeble-minded. If the country wished to suppress crime and drunkenness, it should direct its energies to (1) industrial training and (2) continuous 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

Birmingham Daily Gazette: Monday 8th November 1909

A Grievance Against the City Gas Committee: Care of the Feeble-Minded: The monthly meeting of the Birmingham Trades Council was held at the People’s Hall, Hurst Street, on Saturday evening, Mr. W. J. Morgan presided. … … Mentally Defective: Mrs. Hume Pinsent keenly interested the members of the Council by an address dealing with the care of the mentally defective and the report of the Royal Commission thereon. She took two of the fundamental ideas of the new proposed Act. The first being unity of control and the second continuity of control. She held that as things were at present everything was done to discourage a working man from trying to obtain proper care and training for his child. If he did what it was his duty to do, he was made a pauper for so doing. Mrs. Pinsent showed the need of power to enforce residence in a boarding school where necessary, and of detaining cases after school when they were unfit for liberty. By means of charts she set forth in a striking manner the history of feeble-minded families and the generations of paupers and criminals produced. These illustrations demonstrated what degradation and suffering would have been saved by continuous treatment. Mrs. Pinsent asked her hearers to think of the urgency of dealing with the inefficient, or each year it would mean a fresh batch of boys and girls ruined and a fresh number of mentally defective, criminal and “workshy”. Mr. Fred Hughes said it was impossible to overestimate the value of Mrs. Pinsent’s work. The lines of dealing with the mentally defective proposed were largely preventive and would put them on the way towards the removal of a fearful evil in their midst. He commended the report of the Commission and hoped they would all do their best in pressing forward the need of reports. Mr. Eades said that if many of the workers would take the same interest in training their children as in training a canary or pigeon, or a whippet dog, much evil would be avoided. In replying to a vote of thanks, Mrs. Pinsent referred to several points raised in a discussion which followed her address. The first was that of “official interference,” and she said she did realize that it was a great difficulty in the minds of many parents. It seemed to her that the best way of getting over it was that of the Education Committee. A great many parents had objected to the official interference of the visiting officers and the interference altogether of those who had to administer the Education Act. The difficulty had, however, been got over to a great extent by voluntary work done by the Education Committee, and she thought that in the future if they had institutions for the care and control of the feeble-minded, they must all have very strong voluntary committees working in connection with them. In this way the feeling parents would have that there were ladies and gentlemen to whom they could apply for sympathy and help in their cases would do away with the unfortunate feeling of official interference. The question had also been raised of over-working imbeciles in some institutions. The feeble-minded, the imbeciles and all grades of the mentally defective were much better when regularly employed, but there again they wanted strong voluntary committees to overlook that king of work and see that no inmate was doing more work than he or she was fit for. She hoped these institutions would be under public control and not privately managed: (hear, hear). At the next meeting of the Trades Council the chairman said he should move a resolution urging the need of immediate legislation on the lines recommended in the report of the Royal Commission.


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

Aberystwyth Observer: Thursday 4th November 1909

Musical Missionary Meeting: These meetings which are being held at the Trefechan Mission Rooms every Sunday evening in connection with the Students Christian Union are increasing in popularity. There was an exceptionally large attendance at the meeting held on Sunday last when Mr. E. W. Evans, U.C.W., presided. An excellent address was delivered by Mr. Pinsent, U.C.W., whilst solos were rendered by Mr. W. L. Williams, Miss Lizzie Williams, and Mr. S. Thomas. The accompanist was Mr. R. Maldwyn Price.  … Also … Working Men’s Institute: The re-opening of the Institute, Chalybeate Street, for the winter months took place on Wednesday night when a concert was held, and a miscellaneous programme was gone through under the chairmanship of Mr. Peter W. Edwards. There was a large attendance of the young men of the town. Pianoforte solos were given by Mr. Pinsent and Mr. Rigby Jones, U.C.W., and solos by Miss Pollie J. Jones, Mr. E. Thomas, W.C.W., Mr. John Owen and Miss Eunice Lewis. Refreshments were supplied during the evening under the superintendence of the British Women’s Temperance Association.


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Referenced

GRO0072 Tiverton: Arthur Pinsent: 1888 – 1978

Birmingham Daily Gazette: Wednesday 3rd November 1909

Birmingham City Council: Proposed Constitution of Committees: … … Education Committee: Aldermen the Right Hon. William Kenrick; Sir G. H. Kenrick, Martineau, Sayer and Tonks; Councillors Chamberlain, Crompton, Herrick, Jephcott, Jones, Lord, Lovsey, Middlteon, Murray, Newey, Pentland, Pooker, and Wilkinson; Messrs. G. T. Bethune-Baker, A. H. Coley, Howard Lloyd, Jun., Joseph Sturge; Miss Dale, Mrs. Hume Pinsent, Miss Mabel Burrows, and the following “recommended members” … …


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Referenced

GRO0245 Devonport: Ellen Frances Parker: 1866 – 1949

Western Evening Herald: Tuesday 2nd November 1909

Plymouth is to have the opportunity to hear another Royal Commissioner on another of the great problems which face us — that of the care and control of the feeble-minded. A Poor Law Commissioner discussed his subject a few weeks ago. Mrs. Hume Pinsent, who was a member of the Royal Commission on the Feeble-Minded, will speak here at the Western Law Courts on Friday afternoon next at 5 o’clock, when she will have a larger audience than that which came to hear Mr. Hancock Nunn. The meeting has been convened by the mayor.


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