The school strikes of 1911 were a series of mass
walkouts of schoolchildren in the United Kingdom, protesting against
corporal punishment and poor conditions in schools. Originating in
Llanelli, in Wales, at least 62 towns across the UK saw school strikes in September 1911.
Background
School corporal punishment is the deliberate infliction of physical pain or discomfort and psychological humiliation as a response to undesired behavior by a student or group of students. It often involves striking the student directly with a tool such as a rattan
cane, wooden
paddle,
slipper, leather
strap
A strap, sometimes also called strop, is an elongated wikt:flap, flap or ribbon, usually of leather or other flexible materials.
Thin straps are used as part of clothing or baggage, or bedding such as a sleeping bag. See for example spaghetti s ...
or wooden yardstick. Much of the traditional culture that surrounds corporal punishment in school, at any rate in the
English-speaking world, derives largely from British practice in the 19th and 20th centuries, particularly as regards the caning of teenage boys.
["United Kingdom: Corporal punishment in schools"](_blank)
World Corporal Punishment Research.
Strikes
On 5 September 1911, students erupted in protest at Bigyn council school in Llanelli, Wales, after an assistant teacher unfairly struck a student. Around 32 students walked out of school that morning, marching down the streets of Llanelli and calling for students in other local schools to join them, culminating in a meeting at Park Street Chapel where they attempted to formulate a strategy on what to do next. The walkout, however, ended quickly, after headmaster Gwilym Harris, who had been at home on sick leave and who had previously been investigated by the Llanelli school board for excessive violence, appeared and threatened further punishments.
The Llanelli school strike was initially dismissed by school officials and reporters as just students taking advantage of their headmaster's absence to cause trouble, or just children trying to imitate their parents - there had been a number of strikes across the UK in 1911, the beginning of a period known as the
Great Labour Unrest
The Great Unrest, also known as the Great Labour Unrest, was a period of labour revolt between 1911 and 1914 in the United Kingdom. The agitation included the 1911 Liverpool general transport strike, the Tonypandy riots, the National coal strike ...
, with a
violent police crackdown in Llanelli resulting in several deaths in August. However, word of the strike soon spread to other schools across Wales and the UK. Within the next few days, students in other schools in other cities in Wales began striking against corporal punishment, including in
Cardiff and
Newport
Newport most commonly refers to:
*Newport, Wales
*Newport, Rhode Island, US
Newport or New Port may also refer to:
Places Asia
*Newport City, Metro Manila, a Philippine district in Pasay
Europe
Ireland
*Newport, County Mayo, a town on the ...
. In
Swansea
Swansea (; cy, Abertawe ) is a coastal city and the second-largest city of Wales. It forms a principal area, officially known as the City and County of Swansea ( cy, links=no, Dinas a Sir Abertawe).
The city is the twenty-fifth largest in ...
, students took the leather
straps
A strap, sometimes also called strop, is an elongated flap or ribbon, usually of leather or other flexible materials.
Thin straps are used as part of clothing or baggage, or bedding such as a sleeping bag. See for example spaghetti strap, sho ...
that had been used to hit them and used them instead to tied school gates shut.
As the strikes grew, the scope of the demands of the strikers also grew, depending on local circumstances - the length of school hours were often protested against, as a significant number of students had to work to help support their families and suffered from exhaustion as a result of trying to both work and attend all school lessons. Some schools also made cuts to student lunch break periods and to holidays. The
school-leaving age and school fees also featured as a point of contention in some strikes, as well as heavy homework loads that students were often effectively unable to meet due to the poverty inflicted on their families leaving home conditions unsuitable for proper studying.
The strikes soon spread outside of Wales, affecting over 60 towns across the United Kingdom, including
Liverpool,
Manchester,
Sheffield,
Birmingham,
London, and
Glasgow.
A strike in
Dundee
Dundee (; sco, Dundee; gd, Dùn Dè or ) is Scotland's fourth-largest city and the 51st-most-populous built-up area in the United Kingdom. The mid-year population estimate for 2016 was , giving Dundee a population density of 2,478/km2 or ...
on 14 September was reported to have been the biggest, with several thousand students taking part in demonstrations. The students that went on strike were mostly working class, mostly in industrial towns, and both schoolboys and schoolgirls participated, however, reporters tended to focus on strikes led by schoolboys.
Some of the strikes were more organised than others, and saw picketing and the formation of committees, whereas some strikes were only a token protest. Most of the strikes were peaceful, with students signing and organising lunches, however, some became heated, such as in East London, where students marched with iron bars and sharpened sticks, or in Dublin, where students threw rotten cabbages at their teachers.
Local authorities often responded harshly to strikes, sending attendance officers to homes, with police being called in, students being arrested, and parent threatened with loss of government welfare grants.
The leaders of the strikes were particularly targeted - Clyde Roberts, a student of
West Indian descent who had led strikes in Cardiff, was held down against a desk and beaten by teachers in front of his classmates, whereas Harry Carly, one of the leaders in Newport, had his father be legally prosecuted for violating
compulsory education
Compulsory education refers to a period of education that is required of all people and is imposed by the government. This education may take place at a registered school or at other places.
Compulsory school attendance or compulsory schooling ...
laws. In Southwark, a six year old and an eight year old were brought before the magistrate on charges of wandering without a guardian.
In some schools, teacher convinced non-striking students to attack the strikers and break the strike.
Parents' attitudes towards the strikes varied from city to city, with some newspaper reporting on parents dragging their children back to school and issuing punishments at home, but with parents in other places, especially working-class parents, speaking out in favour of the students. Middle class adult commentators blamed local authorities for hiring weak teachers who couldn't crack down on students, blamed the press for spreading the stories of the strikes, or blamed
nonconformism Protestantism, which was particularly strong in Wales, for reducing Biblical education in day-to-day schooling.
The number of students who participated in the strikes was relatively small compared to the total number of students in the UK, however, there is little reliable data on the precise number of strikers. In the end, the wave of strikes was short-lived, and few of the students' demands were met.
Aftermath
The Great Unrest period from 1911 to 1914 would see a number of other school strikes, most notably the
Burston Strike School
300px, Burston Strike School
The Burston Strike School was founded as a consequence of a school strike and became the centre of the longest running strike in British history, that lasted from 1914 to 1939 in the village of Burston in Norfolk, E ...
, where students striked in support of
Annie Higdon
Annie Catherine "Kitty" Higdon (''née'' Schollick; 30 December 1864 – 24 April 1946) was a British schoolmistress. She and her husband, Tom, were at the centre of the 25-year long Burston School Strike. Their battle with authority is celebrate ...
, a teacher who had been fired for complaining about dire conditions in schools and who was a socialist who had spoken out in favour of local farm labourers.
[Pamela Horn]
"Higdon , Annie Catharine [Kitty] (1864–1946)"
''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'', Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, January 2008. Retrieved 27 April 2017.
In the 1970s, in the wake of the protest about school corporal punishment by thousands of school pupils who walked out of school to protest outside the Houses Of Parliament on May 17, 1972, corporal punishment was toned down in many state-ran schools, and whilst many only used it as a last resort for misbehaving pupils, some state-ran schools banned corporal punishment completely, most notably, London's Primary Schools, who had already begun phasing out corporal punishment in the late 1960s.
Britain finally outlawed the practice of corporal punishment in schools in 1987 for state schools, following a 1982 ruling by the European Court of Human Rights that such punishment could not be administered without parental consent, and that a child's "right to education" could not be infringed by suspending children who, with parental approval, refused to submit to corporal punishment, and in 1998 for all private schools.
[Brown, Colin (25 March 1998)]
''The Independent'' (London).
References
{{reflist
See also
Burston School Strike (1914)
1911 labor disputes and strikes
1911 in Wales
History of education in Wales
History of Llanelli
Student rights