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CHAPTER XIV - 1896—1898: Conference on Secondary Education.—Visit to the Riviera.—Voluntary Schools' Grant Bill. Sir John Gorst's Education Bill. Burial Grounds Committee

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 September 2010

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Summary

The new Parliament met on February 13th, 1896, with Lord Salisbury as Prime Minister. On the 31st of March, Sir John Gorst, Vice-President of the Committee of Council on Education, introduced an Education Bill in a lucid and able speech. It found many friends among the organizations devoted to education. The National Union of Teachers gave it almost unqualified approval, and indulged in prophecies of the good that would follow its adoption.

The fate of the Bill is an old story now. It failed then as other Education Bills have failed since. To attempt to explain its provisions here would be needless, but something must be said of it as part of the parliamentary life of Richard Jebb. Keenly interested in its success, he spoke on both the first and second readings, the second speech being held by some to be the finest he had yet delivered in the House. It was described as a “masterly vindication of the principle and scheme of the Bill—the more weighty and effective because conjoint with a considerable amount of trenchant and independent criticism of questions of detail.” Mr Haldane, who rose when Jebb sat down, said,

“The House had listened to two speeches from the benches behind the Government, both of them by remarkable men, both of them characterised by unusual felicity of diction and both in defence of the Bill, though in different ways. The speech to which they had just listened was that of an honourable member who represented a University constituency—the very hotbed of the old Toryism—but it was one which might have been made by an Old Liberal.”

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Life and Letters of Sir Richard Claverhouse Jebb, O. M., Litt. D.
With a Chapter on Sir Richard Jebb as Scholar and Critic by Dr. A. W. Verrall
, pp. 313 - 329
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010
First published in: 1907

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