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1820 THOMAS CHALMERS. Excellent Document from the Founding of the First Parish School in Glasgow.

1820 THOMAS CHALMERS. Excellent Document from the Founding of the First Parish School in Glasgow.

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An excellent and interesting little document from one of the most overlooked facets of the ministry of the polymathic, Thomas Chalmers. He was a theologian, pastor, college principal, revivalist, and influenced young men like Robert Murray M'Cheyne, Horatius and Andrew Bonar, Edward Irving, etc., 

One of the projects he invested the most time in was bringing the Gospel to bear on the poverty caused by rapid industrialization in Glasgow. He believed making education accessible would be a significant step. So, in 1820, he launched a pioneering experiment in Glasgow’s St. John’s parish. By establishing a system of parish schools, he sought to extend the traditional Scottish parochial education model, which had successfully linked education and church-supervised poor relief in rural areas, into a dense, urban environment. Chalmers built these schools to ensure that children from working-class families received a structured mix of basic literacy, numeracy, and rigorous moral and religious training. Significantly, he insisted these schools be self-funded through modest, affordable tuition fees and local church collections rather than state aid or public taxes. While his localized, self-supporting approach ultimately proved unsustainable against the overwhelming tide of urban poverty, his Glasgow schools profoundly influenced mid-nineteenth-century debates on the intersection of education, social welfare, and church responsibility in industrialized Britain.

A two part document, including a front page describing the contributions of various donors to the Parish School, and the reverse pertaining to his inability to attend one of the meetings, but with promises of sending an Elder in his stead. 

Chalmers' hand, as usual, not inscrutable, but, well, not entire scrutable either. 

 

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