As often seems to happen with me, I start off reading a little bit about one thing and then get dragged down a deep rabbit hole of all kinds of extreme and unexpected tangents. So let's unravel a bit of the Sciennes School Strike of 1925 🧵👇
Sciennes, if you don't know, is a neighbourhood in Edinburgh. You pronounce it to rhyme with "machines" (it's a Scottish corruption of Sienna, after a convent that long ago stood here) and it is home to a school of the same name (📷CC BY-SA 4.0 Stephencdickson)
To get to the root of things, we go back to 1872, when the Education (Scotland) Act of that year brought control of mandatory schooling in Scotland under the control of local School Boards.
Most of the existing schools at that time were either church, parish or charitably provided and those of the protestant churches and parishes were transferred into the School Boards. Most of the facilities were too small and inadequate, so a crash building programme was initiated
Sciennes was a product of this program, completed in 1892. Other public schools in the Southside of Edinburgh at the time included the 1875 Bristo School on the long demolished Marshall Street and Causewayside at Salisbury Place, and the later 1896 Preston Street school.
Board schools, while largely Protestant in outlook, were strictly speaking non denominational and there was no direct church control. Crucially to what would happen in the future though, Catholic schools were not covered by the 1872 act and remained in control of that Church
To provide for a Catholic education in central Edinburgh, the Church set up a school, St. Columbas. It moved around a bit before settling in a converted townhouse at 81 Newington Road. You can still see where the sign once was.
Edinburgh's Catholic population was growing quite rapidly at the time with immigration into the city centre from both Ireland and Italy.
And then came the 1918 Education (Scotland) Act, which brought the Catholic schools into control of the School Boards, which were themselves expanded into local Education Authorities with wider responsibilities.
The Edinburgh Education Authority was directly elected by popular ballot and was outwith direct control of the City Corporation or any church, although a system of proportional representation meant a balance of Presbyterian, Episcopal and Catholic representation
The Education Authority was unimpressed by the size and quality of the facilities it had inherited off the R.C Church (actually, it bought them off them under the provisions of the 1918 act) so set about trying to relocate St. Columba's
Post-war economic slump meant there wasn't the money to go around to build a new school (particularly a minority school), so the Education Authority looked to rationalise its Public Schools in the Southside, which were largely under capacity, and make one R.C.
The plan seemed simple enough; move St. Columba's to the 50% under occupied Causewayside School, and transfer that school roll to whichever school was closest to the family home out of Sciennes, Bristo or Preston Street Schools.
After the numbers were crunched, 154 children were to be relocated to Sciennes, 101 to Preston Street and 66 to Bristo. 291 children were to transfer from St. Columba's into its new home. All simple enough and making better use of the Authority's resources.
So it should be relatively uncontroversial administrative change, yes?
What happened next was the relatively young Scottish Protestant League decided to wade into things and try and make it a wedge issue - stirred up in part by local lawyer, political dabbler and green inker, Sterling Craig Esq SSC, a man with a clear anti-Catholic bent.
When the Authority announce its decision towards the end of the school term in June 1924, Sterling Craig and a local parish councillor, Mrs Inglis Clark, organised a public meeting in protest "in the strongest way".
What followed next was a rather predictable series of conflicting arguments by Craig and Clark which began to descend into the disingenuous, e.g. The alternatives would be too far, causing 2 or 3 mile walks to school (Sciennes and Preston Street were less than 500m away).
Craig accused the Education Authority of inflating the roll of St. Columba's School by "stuffing" it with children from the Catholic Home (an orphanage), a claim the EA flat out denied. Craig claimed 477 children were being displaced - the EA said it was 321.
Craig simultaneously claimed that Causewayside was a non-denominational school (it was) but also "Protestant" (it wasn't, although likely much of the school roll was)
Sterling Craig's loud and authoritative voice drowned out the views and representations of the parents and children impacted by this - he was standing for the upcoming Education Authority election and was making this a key plank of his campaign.
Craig's letters to the Scotsman refer to "the Roman Catholics" and "the Roman Catholic Children" in a very othering tone - they are quite unpleasant to read in places with retrospect.
Craig was upset that a "central" school was being located in the Southside, that children would be bused (actually, trammed) in at the Education Authorities expense. That they would be given school meals at the EA's expense - all provisions in line with the 1918 act.
His argument in Tl;dr format seemed to be "I'm not anti-Catholic, but can't they just go some place else". To this extent he suggested wholly inadequate facilities at Old St. Patrick's in the Canongate that the Education Authoritity didn't even own.
It was all very "not from round here" and Craig and his allies in Mrs Inglis Clark began to seriously go down the route of sectarian scaremongering. However the Education Authority stuck to its plans and seemingly managed to get most of the parents on side.
Sterling Craig and Mrs Inglis Clark were not placated however, and with the nascent Scottish Protestant League of Alexander Ratcliffe, organised a "Great Protestant Rally" at the Livingstone Hall on South Clerk Street in January 1925, which was attended by around 500.
Long story short, the SPL - which claimed itself apolitical - and Craig agreed on a platform of trying to take over the Edinburgh Education Authority (elections were upcoming) and campaigning to repeal the provisions of the 1918 Education (Scotland) Act around RC education
Craig's words were reported as "the only thing that prevented 'the Catholics' walking back to St. Columba's and the old school going back to Causewayside was the laziness of the ratepayers". If only people would turn out and vote for the SPL / him, they would sort it out.
In case you didn't realise it by the way - 1920s and 30s Edinburgh local politics was quite a hotbed of anti-Catholicism. The Scottish Protestant League stood 7 candidates in the 1925 Education Authority election, Sterling Craig stood himself.
1 of the SPL candidates - it's leader and founder Alexander Ratcliffe (who went as far as to refer in public to St. Columba's as "the now misnamed St. Columba's) - was elected, as was Sterling Craig.
Ratcliffe got a bit bored of Edinburgh local politics and would move to Glasgow where he made some inroads with the SPL in the Glasgow Corporation. In Edinburgh it was the Protestant Action Society under John Cormack that took up the anti-Catholic political mantle.
The SPL split with the Ulster Protestant League that it has inspired in 1933 when Radcliffe's wife and another member attacked and defaced a (factually correct) painting in the Northern Irish Parliament that showed the Pope celebrating William of Orange's victory at the Boyne
The SPL fell apart not long after that due to internal divisions and the Scottish protestant mainstream distancing itself from the increasingly extremist and unpredictable SPL.
Alexander Ratcliffe, who started his political life on the Edinburgh Education Authority, dabbled with the Scottish fascists (who kicked him out as being too extreme) has been described as "one of the very first Holocaust deniers in the country and perhaps even the world"
Ratcliffe was an extreme anti-Catholic, anti-Semite and racist to his core. He also thought that Hitler and Mussolini were in league with the Pope to smash Protestantism... He was a very conflicting and thoroughly distasteful man, who died at his home in Glasgow in 1947.
Back in Edinburgh and back to 1925, we return to the transfer of those children from Causewayside School to Sciennes, Preston Street and Bristo schools. How did that end up in a strike?
Well what happened was that in true local authority style, after winning parents over to its plans, and dispersing the children of Causewayside School to Sciennes, Preston Street and Bristo, the Education Authority went back on its word over the summer holidays.
Sciennes, it said, was actually too full. Around 150 children who had just recently been moved from Causewayside and settled in at Sciennes and returned there after the summer holidays, would instead need to go to Bristo School instead.
This poured salt on a wound that had not yet had a chance to heal, and the mothers of the Southside were having none of it. Official phrases such as "arriving at a more equitable distribution of scholars" made things even worse.
The problem was not just the repeated, forced relocation of children, it was where they were to be moved to. Bristo was in a neighbourhood later given the "slum clearance" treatment, and as you can see from the aerial photo it had a tiny playground and was penned in on all sides
It was too small, it was too dark, it was dingy, it was badly lit and ventilated. And it was fundamentally on the wrong side of the (tram) tracks. (📷Edinburgh City Libraries)
Without the distraction of Sterling Craig or Mrs Inglis Clark and their anti-Catholic agenda, the mothers of the affected children quickly formed an effective deputation to the Education Authority to resist the change.
They literally went straight to the Education Authority - turning up at its offices on Castle Terrace on September 2nd, to demand an audience. And for good measure, a party was also send to the house of the EA Chairman - Councillor P. H. Allan - to wait for him there.
When it became clear that the man at the Authority was not for budging, the mothers organised a public meeting on September 4th, packing out the Nicolson Square public hall. They found a sympathetic ear on the council in one Wilson Mclaren.
At the meeting, the mothers of around 110 of the affected children agreed to stop sending their children to school entirely if they could not send them to Sciennes.
The Sciennes School Strike had begun.
Councillor Mrs Adam Millar inflamed the situation further by saying it was not the Education Authority's fault, it was the fault of parents as they had voted for the EA - or hadn't bothered (turnout for the EA election being about 20%).
On September 8th it was reported there were rumours reported that the strike would spread, with some children from Craiglockhart, Roseburn and Gorgie schools being dispersed to Dalry, again to try and achieve a "more equitable distribution of scholars".
The strike did not spread. However it did not go away. The EA tried to offer an olive branch and say children from Buccleuch Street would not have to go to Bristo but could stay at Sciennes. However those from George Square would still have to go to Bristo. This failed.
September 15th, into the 3rd week of the strike and it was still ongoing. 55 children were still out of school. The mothers caused uproad in the Education Authority board room by turning up en masse with their younger children in tow and "infants in their arms".
The mothers had sympathisers in the Education Authority, and a Mrs Swan Brunton on the EA spoke out in their favour. At a deadlock, the EA eventually conceded to set up a Special Committee on School Congestion to look into the matter further.
September 21st. No resolution was in sight. 58 children from Sciennes were on strike, and in total 86 across the city were.
On September 24th, the Scotsman reported from the Education Authority that the strike had been broken and large numbers of the affected children had now gone back to the schools which the EA wished them to attend.
On September 25th, the Scotsman printed something of a retraction. The children had not, in fact, gone back to school and were still on strike and at a public meeting of ratepayers, it had been agreed that a general strike of children should be called in the Central District.
September 26th. The Education Authority was not backing down, and it issued a statement that it had acted in accordance with its legal rights, and if the 42 children on strike form Sciennes were not sent to school they would start taking legal action.
But the strike was not broken. A week later and a month into the strike, on October 6th, the Education Authority called a special meeting. Mrs Swan Brunton implored the authority to use their common sense and allow the 40 to go to Sciennes.
Mrs Mclaren of the committee spoke in support of Mrs Swan Brunton and the strikers. There was plenty room in Sciennes, let them go there as had been promised. Mr Alexander Ratcliffe blamed the Catholics.
Unfortunately, Mrs Swan Brunton's motion, seconded by Mrs Mclaren, was voted down.
October 14th, five weeks in and the strike went on... It was suggested by a 1925 techbro that if the Corporation would pave the street outside Bristo School in wood that the noise of traffic would be reduced significantly to entice the strikers to attend there.
The chairman of the Education Authority tried to force through a resolution in its favour. Mrs Swan Brunton challenged the count on it not reaching a quorum of 3/4 of the members, and she prevailed this time.
The meeting then collapsed into farce and had to be adjourned.
The Education Authority tried again the next week, 7 weeks into the strike. One proposal was to set up yet another sub-committee - the "Special Committee on School Areas". Alexander Ratcliffe agitated against "the Catholics" and also this time Episcopalians.
The Education Authority agreed to set up the sub-committee and spent the rest of its time listening to the extremist ramblings of Alexander Ratcliffe, supported by Sterling Craig as seconder.
8 weeks in, Oct. 26th. Another meeting was held by the Education Authority. It lasted precisely 2 minutes, without resolution and again collapsed into farce when the chairman over-rode Mrs Swan Brunton's motion for resolution. He left to the mothers in the gallery crying "Shame!"
November 2nd. Week 9. The Chairman called a private meeting of a restricted number of members of the Education Authority. The mothers were forced to wait outside the offices.
The Authority could not bring itself to publicly concede, but fundamentally capitulated when it agreed that the 46 children who had been moved from Sciennes to Bristo could instead have their pick of Castlehill, Preston Street, Tollcross or St. Leonard's schools.
The mothers decided en masse that they would send their children to Preston Street. And they were true to their word, 37 mothers and 46 children arrived at the school door the very next day, November 3rd, exactly 2 months from the start of the strike.
The strike was over. Almost.
The Education Authority meeting had ended so late in the day, they hadn't bothered to write to Preston Street School to inform them of the decision! The school refused to admit them and sent them away. (📷Kim Traynor via Geograph)
Finally, on November 4th, the children were admitted to Preston Street School and the Great Sciennes School Strike of 1925 was finally over.
Footnote. The redoubatle Mrs Swan Brunton was Janet Swan Brunton, a suffragette of the Scottish Cooperative Women's Guild. In 1928 she became only the 5th woman elected to the Corporation of Edinburgh, as a Labour member. She died in 1932.
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Q. What links the Scottish industrialist🏴, the Spanish aristocrat 🇪🇸, the sleepy Ayrshire village 🏘️, aviation firsts 🛩️, and this date in history📅❓
A. Let's follow the thread and find out.🧵👇
The Scottish industrialist in question is James George Weir, of G. & J. Weir Ltd., that great survivor of Clydeside engineering who built (and still build) pumps for the world. (📷Aeroplane magazine archive)
James George was the son of James Weir snr., who with his brother George had founded the G. & J. Weir business in Liverpool before returning to Glasgow and making their fortune building feedwater pumps for the Clyde shipbuilding industry.
The "witches tree" was an ancient plane tree that grew on the south shore of the city's stinking swamp that was called the Nor' Loch, "in the shadow of the Castle Rock".
Alexander Nasmyth's beautifully romantic painting of the loch and castle in 1824 is drowning in artistic licence, but shows us where the Witches Tree was, somewhere on the back there beyond the figures in the foreground.
Today's Auction House Artefact is this 1777 cook book, "COOKERY and PASTRY.
As taught and practiced by
Mrs MACIVER
Teacher of those arts in Edinburgh"
But this is not just any old cook book, this is a very special cook book. In fact, if you were a member of Enlightenment Edinburgh's genteel classes, this was *the* cookery book.
"Mrs Maciver" (Or Mciver) was Susanna Maciver, born c. 1709. In her own words, "her situation in life hath led her to be very much conversant in Cookery, Pastry etc. and afforded her ample opportunity of knowing the most approved methods practiced by others"
Tynecastle secondary school was built 1910-11 to the designs of the School Board architect, John A. Carfrae, to provide a "technical and clerical" education for 1,200 children in the Gorgie and Dalry area (i.e. those who didn't pass the "quali" exams for Higher Grade school)
The school was built to a fairly strict budget and the use of brick, hidden behind the harling, was to greatly reduce the cost. The workshops, where practical skills were taught, to the rear could not be seen from the road so "were accordingly given Spartan treatment".
This can directly be compared to the far more lavishly finished and appointed neighbourhood Higher Grade school which was rebuilt and located to Carfrae's plans around the same time - Boroughmuir - "the last word in public school building".
And now I notice from my overflowing in-tray that we have received only slightly less than 2 tweets this week and it comes from a Mr. Trellis of North Edinburgh. "Dear Mr Naughtie", he writes "Redhall House, what's that all about then?" 🧵👇
The name Redhall itself is an old one, recorded as early as the reign of Alexander III of Scotland in the late 13th century, in Latin as "Rubea Aula" (or Red Hall). In Scots it later became Redehalle ; obviously all referring to a hall house built of the local red sandstone
The first recorded resident may have been its builder, William le Grant, an Anglo Norman landowner from Lincoln. The "Normanisation" of the governance of Scotland having been started in earnest by Alexander's predecessor David I a century earlier.
Väinämöinen was built in Finland's primary shipyard, which had the somewhat un-Finnish sounding name of Crichton-Vulcan. One of its predecessor companies was the Turku yard Wm. Crichton & Co., named for its Leith-born owner
Crichton made his fortune as an engineer in Finland, then part of Imperial Russia. He bought a half share in his former employer, Cowie & Eriksson, and renamed it. If you think Cowie doesn't sound very Finnish either, then you're right. David Cowie hailed from Montrose.
William was born in South Leith in 1827 to George Crichton Esq. and his wife Margaret Gifford Allan, known as Gifford. They lived in one of the fine Georgian villas of John's Place. George was a wealthy shipowner, and this was the corner of Leith where wealthy shipowners lived.