1st Edition

Opening Schools and Closing Prisons Caring for destitute and delinquent children in Scotland 1812–1872

By Andrew G. Ralston Copyright 2017
    194 Pages
    by Routledge

    194 Pages 9 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    The book covers the period from 1812, when the Tron Riot in Edinburgh dramatically drew attention to the ‘lamentable extent of juvenile depravity’, up to 1872, when the Education Act (Scotland) inaugurated a system of universal schooling.

    During the 1840s and 1850s in particular there was a move away from a punitive approach to young offenders to one based on reformation and prevention. Scotland played a key role in developing reformatory institutions – notably the Glasgow House of Refuge, the largest of its type in the UK – and industrial schools which provided meals and education for children in danger of falling into crime.

    These schools were pioneered in Aberdeen by Sheriff William Watson and in Edinburgh by the Reverend Thomas Guthrie and exerted considerable influence throughout the United Kingdom. The experience of the Scottish schools was crucial in the development of legislation for a national, UK-wide system between 1854 and 1866.

    List of Figures

    Preface

    Chapter 1:

    Punishment, reformation and prevention: changing attitudes to juvenile crime in mid-nineteenth century Britain

    Chapter 2:

    ‘The lamentable extent of youthful depravity’: the Tron Riot of 1812

    Chapter 3:

    Stirrings for change: developments in Edinburgh, 1812-1846

    Chapter 4:

    ‘An intermediate step’: the Glasgow House of Refuge, 1838-1854

    Chapter 5:

    Prevention is better than cure: the Aberdeen industrial schools, 1841-1854

    Chapter 6:

    Ragged school rivalry: the Original versus the United Industrial School in Edinburgh, 1847-1854

    Chapter 7:

    ‘A better model’: the influence of the Scottish approach in England

    Chapter 8:

    The formation of a national system (i): reformatory and industrial schools legislation, 1854-1872

    Chapter 9:
    The formation of a national system (ii): the effects of legislation on individual schools

    Chapter 10:

    Schooling for all: industrial schools and the 1872 Education Act

    Chapter 11:

    Change and continuity: nineteenth century approaches in context

    Bibliography

    Index

    Biography

    Andrew G. Ralston, a student at Glasgow University in the late 1970s, was encouraged by the late Geoffrey Finlayson, author of the definitive biography of Lord Shaftesbury, to take an interest in the history of the treatment of destitute and delinquent children in nineteenth-century Scotland. Having completed a degree of D.Phil at Balliol College, Oxford University, he has subsequently co-authored over twenty successful school textbooks.