L61 t B5 (6 »y l REVIEW OF THE 6 % EEPORTS OF THE ANNUAL VISITING COMMITTEES OF THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS OF THE CITY OF BOSTON, FOR 1845. b ^gD( REVIEW OF THE REPORTS OF THE ANNUAL VISITING COMMITTEES Erratum. On the 9th page, 14th line from top, for "scurrility," read "severity." CITY OF BOSTON, 1845. BOSTON: CHARLES STIMPSON. 1846. -& REVIEW. A "City Document" of no ordinary character was, early in the last Autumn, distributed to the good people of this Metropolis. It is entitled, " Reports of the Annual Visit- ing Committees of the Public Schools of the City of Boston, 1845." On the expediency of making public such a doc- ument, there has, doubtless, arisen some difference of opinion in the community, as, it is reported, there was in the Committee. Much that may properly come before the constituted authorities and give shape to their proceedings, is not suitable to lay before the people to prejudice their opinions ; — especially when, as in this case, the course of the Authorities has been in one direction, and their pub- lished papers point in another. For, in fact, the tendency of this document is to create utter distrust in the school system of the city, and in nearly all the teachers by whom it is administered, while the Committee which put it forth, left the system unchanged, and re-elected all the Masters, save four. It is much to be hoped, that before the citizens read the " reports" they read the -" resolutions " of the whole Com- mittee respecting their publication, which appeared on the second page of the "document," one of which is on this •wise :—" Resolved, That in ordering the Reports on the Grammar and Writing Schools to be printed and distrib- uted, this Board are not to be understood as adopting or rejecting the vieivs therein contained, or expressing any opinion respecting them. And that this resolution be print- ed with the Report." For, however this fact may impli- cate the good judgment of the Committee, it leaves the reports sustained by no other sanction than that of the names subscribed to them. And, perhaps, before I shall have done with the subject, I may make it appear that some of the names which claim the distinction of gracing these Reports, (or being disgraced by them,) are not so much responsible for the matter of them as the public have been left to suppose. I will not enlarge upon the strangeness of that act of the late School Committee which has thus thrown out to the community a mass of crude opinions upon institutions which are linked with our dear- est interests, — opinions so novel and uncertain, that these delegated curators of the establishments which they con- cern, could decide neither on " adopting or rejecting" them. There were some strange elements in the Com- mittee, and at the period of this publication, these discord- ant elements had wrought matters into a strange condition. Weariness of resistance to iheir protean vagaries, betrayed the Board, at last, into a measure to which their fresh, unjaded judgment could never have assented. To a per- severance on the part of the majority of the Committee, only surpassed by the pertinacity of their restless asso- ciates, the City is indebted for the conservation of its long tried, and eminently successful public school system. No set of men ever gave a larger portion of gratuitous time and labor to the public service than they. That they were tasked beyond their power of patient continuance in well doing, is more a matter of regret than of surprise. Chiefly is this final concession to be deplored, because it is an encouragement to mischief to strive by dogged per- sistency to accomplish purposes which justice and sound reason will resist to their uttermost. The inquiry may naturally arise in the reader's mind, ' Why meddle with a defunct production, on which the public has already passed a very emphatic judgment at the ballot box 1 ' For no other reason than this — gross misrepresentation of the schools has been committed to the press. It has not been exposed and confuted. The record abides : scrlpta litera manet. And though a tri- umphant majority of the citizens of Boston have borne witness that they do not believe these slanders, yet it is due to future years, that their refutation should follow them, in equally permanent form. Moreover, though a majority of the people sustained the schools and rebuked their assailants, a few betrayed, by their votes, that their minds had been perverted, and their imaginations bewil- dered by the misstatements and specious schemes put forth in these reports. And again, though the public have not been led into actual disaffection against the pres- ent school system, none can tell to what extent the con- fidence in it which once prevailed has been shaken. And, finally, though the adult population of this community may have been ever so slightly influenced by this impos- ing " document," yet how unhappy must be the unar- rested effect of some statements contained in it, upon the children now attending the common schools. The whole system of public instruction is declared to be sadly defi- cient, even inferior to that which obtains in the neighbor- ing towns : a majority of the masters described as mere vocal editions of the text-books, neither aspiring, nor competent to communicate any more knowledge, or in any other form, than that imparted in the books. The men whom they have heretofore esteemed as very foun- tains of information, children are now bidden to recognize as mere conduit-pipes, dribbling stale truths from shallow cisterns. From any source such suggestions would be mischievous to the ductile minds of the young, but from the guardians of the schools, the chosen literati of the city, for whose opinions their first lesson had taught them to entertain the most undoubting respect, these influences 1* have fallen upon the scholars, with a power of detriment which the most successful resistance can but abate, — which long years can alone repair. All these considera- tions have seemed to enforce the propriety of a calm, yet plain and fearless Review of the Reports of the Annual Visiting Committees for 1845. It is published at a time when it camiot be suspected of having any reference to a city election. There is none of that studied adaptation to political effect in the juncture at which it is allowed to come before the public, which has characterized the mis- siles of those who have assailed the public schools, and their accomplished and faithful teachers. It is put forth for the honest purpose of reinstating the school system of the City in the confidence of all good citizens, and of directing attention to the source and " motive-power" of the attacks which have been recently made upon it, in such way as to forefend future annoyance from either the one or the other. The authorship of the following pages is a matter of the least possible concern. They must be judged on their own merits. — if they do not disclose some awk- ward truths respecting these " reports," and cast some strange lights and shadows on the prominent actors, and the stage manager who stands scarcely behind the scenes, the failure will proceed not from lack of material, but of skill to turn it to a proper use. Suffice it to say, that no master or masters in the Boston school service has touched his pen to this document, or is responsible for its publication. The writer is in no way interested in the vindication of their fame, or the continuance of their emoluments, except in so far as every honest man is con- cerned to see merit appreciated, and good service recom- pensed. He lays this spontaneous utterance of his own outraged feelings, and insulted understanding, an oblation on the shrine of Justice, in humble confidence that where she presides, it will be an accepted offering. Before we proceed to the internal examination of thes " reports," let us devote a few pages to a review of their history. Having no official access to the archives of the Committee, and no intimate converse with the knowing ones who could doubtless tell some things which they have not put on record, we can report but notorious facts, and such others as may be fairly inferred by a collation of those which are already in evidence before the world. Boston has not yet forgotten that most of its public teachers have, notwithstanding their large experience in the work of education, unhappily found their views on that subject at variance with the theories of the Hon. Horace Mann, the accomplished and astute Secretary of the Massachusetts Board. His prolific pen has been ex- ercising its fecundity on the subject of education for the last nine years. His small practical knowledge of a sci- ence which is eminently experimental, seems to have inspired him with no modesty in the expression of his opinions. Had more of the exuberant vigor of his mind, which has been so lavished on expression, been given to calm, deliberate, patient reflection, and docile inquiry, the world would have had less proof indeed of his activity, but more of his wisdom. He has written in haste, under spasmodic impulse, and his jealousy of any deliberate in- vestigation into the real merits of his doctrine, is very naturally in the ratio of his consciousness that it never had the moulding touch of a cool judgment to give it strength, or comeliness of proportion.* The Boston teach- * Of his multifarious works, read his own account, written a year and a half ago. " During the last .seven years, I have published six large volumes of School Abstracts, which contain as much reading matter as five of the great volumes of Sparks' Life of Washington. These abstracts contain selections from the School Committees' reports, principally man- uscript, all of which I have carefully read. These reports of Committees which I have examined for this purpose, I think would make at least fifteen such volumes as Sparks' Washington. * * * During the same time, the Annual Reports which I have written have amounted to eight hundred octavo pages. My correspondence has been at least ers, whose practice in the work of instruction had not been modified into conformity with the honorable Secre- tary's schemes, felt, at length, that his official station, and his fervent, captivating style, rendered his publications dangerous to the permanency of a sound public opinion on the momentous subject of popular education. They ventured therefore to join issue with him by publishing a review of some parts of his most voluminous Seventh Annual Report. The pages of their pamphlet were hardly dry, before a sheet of ''Observations" thereon, (subscribed with the initials of one whom Mr. Mann, in recompense for his service, eulogized as " that pure-minded, truth-seeking man,") was let off, the signal gun of that broadside which was soon to follow. It was for the most part gentle, like the character of its reputed author, and only demands notice in this connection, as containing a remarkable prophecy or adumbration of the events which have since followed. The augury is in these ominous words : "A current has been set in motion which is not to be checked. It will move onward. These gentlemen cannot stem it. * * Let men club together in common cause by scores or by thirties ; they may, doubtless, stay the tide for a time ; but the deep waves go surging on, and will at last three times as much as my reports. * * * I am now completing 1 the sixth volume of the Common School Journal, every number of which — with the exception of those issued during my six months' absence abroad — I have prepared. * * * * I have delivered thir- ty-six lectures and addresses on education every year since my appoint- ment." To accomplish all this, and much more in other departments of labor, the Secretary declares that he has " made little difference be- tween day and night." The offspring of this " over-sensitive and over- worn spirit," in conformity with nature's law, bear the traces of this confusion. Light and darkness are so blended in them, as to diffuse a most obscure and confounding twilight. Should the honorable Secre- tary retain his office a few years longer, and continue subject to this cacoetlies scribendi — this literary diarrhoea — " I suppose that even the world itself could not contain the books that should be written." I can- not add with St. John, " Amen ! " reach even them.' 1 '' The surge did not disclose to the eye how deep, nor how far-reaching were the insatiate waves. Like the prophecies of inspiration, the predictions which I have put in italics — obscure at the time of their utter- ance — have been expounded by fulfillment. Mr. Mann's " over-sensitive " spirit could not, however, be quieted by the intervention of his friend. The tempest in his soul, like the winds in the cave of Eolus, struggled for egress. Printer's ink was scarcely black enough to be made the symbol of his gloomy and boding thoughts, — type-metal scarcely hard enough to withstand the melting heat of his excitement. His " Reply to the remarks of thirty- one Boston Schoolmasters," is a specimen of rancorous vituperation, and bilious scurrility, rarely equaled in the world of letters. I advert to that pamphlet in this place, to call attention to one or two expressions which harmo- nize with the vaticinations of " G. B. E." aforesaid. "I propose to call them," says Mr. Mann, "the 'Thirty-one.' This I do, without intending the slightest disrespect ; and I perceive no objection to it, unless, indeed, it may render that, hereafter, an unlucky number." The emphasis which attaches to these last words was given by their author. Their meaning is somewhat obscure,— like the famous response of the oracle, " Aio te Eaciden vincere posse" it might be afterward interpreted to signify one thing, or another, as events should direct. But its most palpable construction is this : — ill luck may therefore befall the individuals comprehended in that number which I now attach, as a mark of proscription, to the whole association. And again. " It (the conflict between him and the mas- ters) is a question of justice, of truth, of moral power, where annihilation awaits the wrong." Of course Mr. Mann, in this statement of the issue, regarded himself as the exponent "of justice, truth, and moral power," and the dissentient schoolmasters as representatives of " wrong." The italicised word indicates the destiny of the van- 10 quished, which of course he did not covet for himself or his cause, and, therefore, allotted in his own resolute pur- pose to his opponents. Moreover, Mr. Mann, looking for- ward with prescient eye to the unfolding results of this conflict, and gloating over the distress of men who shrink from impending " annihilation," utters the visions of his head in these portentous accents : " If I do not greatly mistake, it will cost them more sleep to have written the ' Remarks,' than it did to write them." The reader is desired to keep these minatory expresssions of the Secretary and his ally in memory. A further devel- opment of events will, I think, show that they were not the language of mere effervescent feeling, but of deep, patient, implacable revenge. Hannibal's vow of eternal enmity to the Romans was not more faithfully kept, than has been and will be this settled purpose to annihilate the " un- lucky thirty-one.'''' They differed from Mr. Mann, and on the day that they uttered their dissent, began the opera- lion of that train of agencies, which, at length, brought out the Reports of the Annual Visiting Committees of 1845. The "deep waves" were then agitated, which, at first with frothy surgings, and afterwards with a treacherous ground -swell, have reached at last even to them. But let us proceed with what Mr. Mann would call the " ante-natal history" of these Reports. It will afford a striking exposition of the portentous language which I have already committed to the reader's memory. Very soon after the appearance of Mr. Mann's entertaining "reply" to the "thirty-one," in the Autumn of 1844, occurred the City Election. I call his pamphlet entertain- ing^ — that is its true characteristic. It was eminently calculated to catch popular favor : not cogent, nor philo- sophical ; for so, it would have required too much reflec- tion to give it acceptance with the mass ; but personal, pungent, witty, and sarcastic, and so adapted to gratify that universal, but degrading frailty of our nature, a relish 11 for the home thrusts which other people receive. Busy tongues were soon put in action, to cry up the necessity of a change in the Boston schools, and this, it teas said, could be done only by making preparatory changes in the School Committee. Who they were, that thus strove to sway public opinion^ and to give practical efficacy to the honor- able Secretary's malediction, it would be as impossible to specify now, as it was to find at the time. What " they say," has a most alarming influence in the political world. Few take the trouble to inquire who " they" are ; — and proceed at once to quadrate their own opinions, and con- form their action, to the dictum of this invisible autocrat, "THEY" — whose only influence results from the grim- ness and impudent inflexibility of his mask. The rumor that such a change must be had, brought together in the ward meetings all the malcontents, and discontents, and non-contents of the city, — that is, such as were averse to the schools, and the system of administration, — such as were yearning for something better, though not ^satis- fied with what they had ; and such as were mere change- lings, who live by experiment, — glory in revolution, and, out of pure benevolence, long to see the whole world as shiftless as themselves. So far as the hue and cry could be trusted as an index of popular opinion, Mr. Mann and his doctrines were quite in the ascendant. He had given the last blow, — and lookers-on are prone to consider the last stroke in a conflict decisive, until they see it returned. Favored by this prestige, his representatives succeeded in some of the wards in procuring the nomination of individ- uals for School Committee, who would favor the applica- tion of Mr. Mann's views, and, I will add, the gratification of his spite upon the Boston schools. Nomination and election are, under ordinary circumstances, nearly tanta- mount. It is enough for many voters that respectable men are named on a ticket. They accept, and deposit it in the ballot-box without raising questions concerning 12 their peculiar affinities. And so it happened that many electors were unconsciously implicated in the work of en- trusting the care of their schools to persons whose theory of education (if there be one compacted) fills, by its spirit- ual presence, the encephalon of the Hon. Horace Mann. The variety and character of the appliances, whereby something was accomplished in this sort, it would be dif- ficult to trace out. Thus much has transpired : that one individual; a candidate for election in one of the wards — (and, alas ! a successful one) — by some electro-magnetic telegraph, communicated his thoughts and wishes across the bay to sundry individuals, respecting the person who, in his judgment, " would be a good man for the office" of School Committee in their ward. The person so named having been a subordinate to his interested, 1 hough distant friend in one institution, would, by force of habit, it was doubtless thought, prove equally subservient in another.* * At a public meeting held at East Boston, on the evening of the 18th of August, 1845, the " following statement was made by a gentleman present, an active and influential member of the Whig party." [From the Boston Daily Times, of Sept. 1st.] Sometime last fall, previous to the Presidential election, Mr. a young: gentleman residing at East Boston, who I have understood was formerly an assistant in the Asylum for the Blind, called on me and said there would be a vacancy in the School Committee from East Boston, and he would like the office ; that Dr. Howe had called on him, and said he thought he would be a good man for the office, and he had bet- ter attend to it, &c. I replied that I had heard nothing: about it, and inquired if Mr. Morgan had declined being a