Article contents
The Workers in the Workers' Educational Association, 1903–1950*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 July 2014
Extract
The history of British continuing education has been written almost entirely as institutional history. The impact of the 1924 Board of Education regulations on the funding of adult classes has been thoroughly examined, and we know a good deal about the various district secretaries of the Workers' Educational Association. But we have yet to tackle a set of more fundamental and revealing questions about the WEA: Who were the students? Why did they enroll in WEA courses? What were their intellectual goals? What cultural equipment did they bring to their classes? What went on inside the classroom? Most importantly, how, if at all, did the WEA change the lives and minds of its students?
This article focuses on a controversy that erupted shortly after the WEA was launched in 1903, and which persists today: a question that can only be resolved by studying WEA students at close range. According to a number of Marxist critics, the WEA played an important role in steering the British working class away from Marxism. Roger Fieldhouse argues that the WEA'S emphasis on objective scholarship and open-mindedness “could have the effect of neutralising some students' commitments or beliefs and integrating them into the hegemonic national culture.”
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © North American Conference on British Studies 1989
Footnotes
The research for this paper was supported by the British Institute of the United States and the American Philosophical Society.
References
1 Fieldhouse, Roger, “The Ideology of English Adult Education Teaching 1925–1950,” Studies in Adult Education 15 (September 1983): 29–30.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
2 Fieldhouse, Roger, “Conformity and Contradiction in English Responsible Body Adult Education, 1925–1950,” Studies in the Education of Adults 17 (October 1985): 123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
3 Macintyre, Stuart, A Proletarian Science: Marxism in Britain, 1917–1933 (London, 1986), pp. 89–90.Google Scholar
4 Weaver, Stewart, review of Macintyre, Stuart, A Proletarian Science, Albion 20, 1 (Spring 1988): 150Google Scholar. See also Thomas, J. E., Radical Adult Education: Theory and Practice (Nottingham, 1982), pp. 58–60.Google Scholar
5 Brown, Geoff, “Independence and Incorporation: The Labour College Movement and the Workers' Educational Association before the Second World War,” in Thompson, Jane L., ed., Adult Education for a Change (London, 1980), pp. 113–15.Google Scholar
6 PRO, T. 161/186/S. 17166. Lord Eustace Percy to Walter Guiness, 7 October 1925, quoted in Fieldhouse, “Conformity and Contradiction,” pp. 123–29.
7 Mansbridge, Albert, The Trodden Road (London, 1940), p. 139Google Scholar; and University Tutorial Classes (London, 1913), pp. 10–11.Google ScholarPubMed
8 An Old Student, “Looking Backwards: A Tutorial Class Anniversary,” Rewley House Papers (February 1929): 72–73.Google Scholar
9 Kenney, Rowland, “Education for the Workers,” New Age (26 March 1914): 652–53.Google Scholar
10 Ethel Carnie and Lavena Saltonstall, letters to the Cotton Factory Times, 20 March, and 3, 10, 17 April 1914.
11 Cox, F., Carton, R. C., and Humphrey, A. W., letters to the Daily Herald, 8 July 1912.Google Scholar
12 Smith, H. P., Labour and Learning (Oxford, 1956), p. 83.Google ScholarPubMed
13 “The History of the Tunstall II Tutorial Class: 1913–34,” Rewley House Papers (March 1935): 348.Google Scholar
14 Oxford University Extension Delegacy Tutorial Classes Committee Report, 1912, pp. 11–12.
15 Ibid., pp. 15, 24–28, 59–60.
16 “The Invasion of a University,” Highway 3 (September 1911): 187–88.Google Scholar
17 Oxford Tutorial Classes Report, 1912, p. 42.
18 “Summer Classes, 1912,” Highway 5 (October 1912): 15–16.Google Scholar
19 “Invasion of a University,” pp. 189–90.
20 Ibid., pp. 188–89.
21 Mansbridge, , Tutorial Classes, p. 13.Google Scholar
22 Saltonstall, Lavena, letter to Halifax Evening Courier, 19 July 1910.Google Scholar
23 “Invasion of a University,” p. 188.
24 Wootton, Barbara, “A Plea for Constructive Teaching,” Adult Education 10 (December 1937): 91–105.Google Scholar
25 Williams, W. E. and Heath, A. E., Learn and Live (Boston, 1937), p. 206.Google Scholar
26 Fieldhouse, , “Ideology of Adult Education,” p. 29.Google Scholar
27 Morris, R. W., “Autobiography of R. W. Morris,” TS in Brunei University Library, part 2, pp. 120, 124Google Scholar. The WEA also had no discernible political influence on Scott, George, Time and Place (London, 1956), p. 106Google Scholar; Dickens, Stan, Bending the Twig (Ilfracombe, 1975), p. 174Google Scholar; Roberts, T. Lloyd, Life Was Like That (Bala, n.d.), ch. 5Google Scholar; Mays, Spike, No More Soldiering for Me (London, 1971), p. 89Google Scholar; and McGeown, Patrick, Heat the Furnace Seven Times More (London, 1967), p. 117.Google Scholar
28 Kitchen, Fred, Brother to the Ox (London, 1942), p. 244.Google Scholar
29 Randle, Marjorie, “Brother to the Ox,” Highway 32 (January 1940): 71.Google Scholar
30 Dorrell, Harry, “Falling Cadence: An Autobiography of Failure,” TS in Brunei University Library, pp. 152–55Google Scholar; Goldman, Ronald, ed., Breakthrough: Autobiographical Accounts of the Education of Some Socially Disadvantaged Children (London, 1968), pp. 85–88.Google Scholar
31 Brown, , “Independence and Incorporation,” p. 117.Google Scholar
32 For instance, Brown, George, In My Way (London, 1971), pp. 27–29Google Scholar, leaves the reader with the extremely misleading impression that his summer course at Balliol was sponsored by the NCLC as well as the WEA.
33 Stone, L. C., letter to the editor, Highway 18 (November 1925): 30Google Scholar. This point is confirmed by one of the earliest WEA recruits, Frederick Padley, in an interview with the author, 24 August 1987.
34 Horrocks, Bill, Reminiscences of Bolton (Manchester, 1984), pp. 27–31.Google Scholar
35 Jack, and Braddock, Bessie, The Braddocks (London, 1963), pp. 10–11Google Scholar; See also Cain, Edward, “Memories,” TS in Brunei University Library, p. 11Google Scholar: Davies, Walter Haydn, The Right Place — The Right Time (Llandybie, 1972), pp. 88, 97, 105–07Google Scholar; Griffiths, James, Pages from Memory (London, 1969), pp. 19–25, 48, 197–98Google Scholar; Finch, Harold, Memoirs of a Bedwellty MP (Risca, Newport, 1972), pp. 12–13, 37–39.Google Scholar
36 Durham Strong Words Collective, But the World Goes on the Same: Changing Times in Durham Pit Villages (Whitley Bay, 1979), pp. 62–65.Google Scholar
37 Smith, T. Dan, An Autobiography (Newcastle-upon-Tyne, 1970), pp. 16–20, 28–30.Google Scholar
38 Todd, Marjory, Snakes and Ladders (London, 1960), pp. 188–89Google Scholar. See also Whittaker, James, I, James Whittaker (London, 1934), pp. 310–11.Google Scholar
39 Goldman, , Breakthrough, pp. 17–20.Google Scholar
40 Mansbridge, Albert, The Older Universities of England (London, 1923), pp. 186–91Google Scholar; and Tutorial Classes, pp. 11–14.
41 Begbie, Harold, Living Water (London, 1918), pp. 25–28Google Scholar. Mansbridge, , Trodden Road pp. 174–79.Google Scholar
42 Poole, H. Edmund, The Teaching of Literature in the WEA (London, 1938), p. 8.Google Scholar
43 Halpern, D. B., “The Balance of Subjects in WEA Classes, 1913–58,” Rewley House Papers 3 (1959–1960): 24–25.Google Scholar
44 “Tunstall Tutorial Class,” pp. 351–52.
45 Poole, H. Edmund, “English Literature as a Subject in WEA Classes,” Adult Education 12 (June 1940): 170–71.Google Scholar
46 Plebs 28 (March 1936): 68.Google Scholar
47 See Gagnier, Reginia, “Social Atoms: Working-Class Autobiography, Subjectivity, and Gender,” Victorian Studies 30 (Spring 1987): 342.Google Scholar
48 Royden, A. Maude, “Classes for Women,” Highway 1 (February 1909): 78.Google Scholar
49 Williams, and Heath, , Learn and Live, pp. 2–13, 95–96, 105–11.Google Scholar
50 Dobrin, Nancy, Happiness (London and New York, 1980), pp. 26–27.Google Scholar
51 Ibid., pp. 13–14, 31, 36.
52 Ibid., pp. 50–51.
53 Ibid., pp. 59–60.
54 Hall, Edith, Canary Girls and Stockpols (Luton, 1977), pp. 39–40.Google Scholar
55 Petty, John, Five Fags a Day (London, 1956), pp. 85–87Google Scholar; Benjamin, Harry, Adventure in Living: The Autobiography of a Myope (London, 1950), pp. 39–45, 58–59Google Scholar; Williams, and Heath, , Learn and Live, pp. 111–18.Google Scholar
56 George Gregory, untitled TS in Brunei University Library, pp. 99–100.
57 Mansbridge, , Trodden Road, pp. 51–52.Google Scholar
58 “The Historical Association,” Western Daily Press, 12 January 1914.
59 Terrill, Ross, R. H. Tawney and His Times (London, 1974), p. 39.Google Scholar
60 “Tunstall Tutorial Class,” p. 352.
61 Student, Old, “Looking Backwards,” pp. 70–71.Google Scholar
62 Report on Adult Education in Yorkshire for the Period Ending on the 31st July, 1927 (London, 1928), p. 41.Google Scholar
63 Finch, , Memoirs, pp. 37–39.Google Scholar
64 McLaughlan, Thomas, The Life of an Ordinary Man (privately printed, 1979), Brunei University Library, pp. 17–20, 24–25.Google Scholar
65 Thornton, A. H. and Stephens, M. D., The University and Its Region: The Extra-Mural Contribution (Nottingham, 1977), p. 54.Google Scholar
66 Williams, and Heath, , Learn and Live, pp. 129–31.Google Scholar
67 ibid., pp. 82–90.
68 Ibid., pp. 49–52.
69 Norris, George W., “The Testament of a Trade Unionist,” Highway 39 (May 1948): 158–59.Google Scholar
70 Williams and Heath, Learn and Live, ch. 5.
71 Saltonstall, Lavena, “The Letters of a Tailoress,” Highway 3 (January-February 1911): 52, 77.Google Scholar
72 Fieldhouse, , “Conformity and Contradiction,” p. 122.Google Scholar
73 Cole, G. D. H., “The Place of Marx in Economic Teaching,” Highway 12 (November 1919): 34–35.Google Scholar
74 Fieldhouse, , “Ideology of Adult Education,” pp. 14–19, 23–27.Google Scholar
75 For example, Mactavish, J. M., “Karl Marx and Modern Socialism,” Highway 13 (June 1921): 149–51.Google Scholar
76 Anonymous review of Beer, M., The Life and Teachings of Karl Marx, Highway 14 (October 1921): 4.Google Scholar
77 Owen, J., Wilson, J. Dover, and Dunn, W. S., Board of Education; Report on University Tutorial Classes in England (1922), pp. 17–18.Google Scholar
78 John Thomas, “The Economic Doctrines of Karl Marx and Their Influence on the Industrial Areas of South Wales, Particularly among the Miners,” TS in South Wales Miners' Library, Swansea.
79 Llewelyn, Michael Gareth, The Aleppo Merchant (London, 1945), p. 63Google Scholar; Griffiths, , Pages, pp. 24–25.Google Scholar
80 “The Labour Party and the Books That Helped to Make It,” Review of Reviews 33 (June 1906): 568–582.Google Scholar
81 Clay, Henry, “What Workpeople Read,” Highway 1 (September 1909): 182–83.Google Scholar
82 Box, labelled “Early Tutorial Classes,” WEA Central Office Library, London.Google Scholar
83 “The Leisure of Adult Students — A Sample Investigation in London,” Adult Education 9 (March 1937): 213.Google Scholar
84 Edwards, Will Jon, From the Valley I Came (London, 1956), pp. 146–47.Google Scholar
85 Griffiths, , Pages, pp. 197–98Google Scholar. See also Finch, , Memoirs, pp. 12–13.Google Scholar
86 Armbruster, G. H., “The Social Determination of Ideologies: Being a Study of a Welsh Mining Community” (Ph.D. diss., University of London, 1940), pp. 204–19.Google Scholar
- 5
- Cited by