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KKxyz3,59957
The paddle seems to be very much the preferred implement in USA schools. When did it first come into widespread use? I am particularly interested in early mentions of the school paddle in dated factual or fictional literature, and in official documents.Have other cultures used the paddle in schools?
The following amusing excerpt suggests the judicial punishment paddle was well known in Ohio in 1885. All four parts of the poem need to be read to properly understand the story and the twist at its end.
Story! A new unique, original collection of humourous tales, histories, curious conceits, quaint rhymes, jests, comical misconcepcions and laughable happenings among typographic printers throughout ye U.S. of N. America
Author: George W Bateman
Publisher: Cincinnati, Ohio, The compiler, 1885.
http://hdl.handle.net/2027/uva.x0308039 … =%3Bseq=46
page 24
Jim Dash A Doggerel in four takes [parts]
page 26
THIRD TAKE
The Judge to Jim Dash: “How canst thou explain
The charges on which the boys thee arraign?
Ah-ha! he says nothing. Then guilty he is –
I see, by the look on his mis-shapen phiz.
A sentence I’ll pass, and a punishment mete,
That’ll rack him clear down to the soles of his feet!
Know, therefore, Jim Dash, that for all these thy tricks
The boys shall administer one hundred licks.
Bring forth the great paddle, and take off his clothes!
And spare him not, lads – unless money he shows.”
The boys had been aching to join in the racket,
So quickly they pulled off his pants and his jacket;
And, in spite of the way he for mercy did beg,
They bended his body around a beer keg.
The paddler stood ready, with oak stave in hand,
To ply it with vigor when came the command.
A silence, most awful and serious prevailed,
When, sudden, the victim most piteously wailed:
“For heaven’s sake, boys, I will buy all the beer
In the house, if you’ll only release me from here!”
“Well said, my good fellow!” the Judge then did cry;
“You spoke just in time, for we’re all very dry.
Release him, you villain, and let him alone;
For if he does want to amend and atone
We’ll spare him the paddle, and drink to his health –
He talks just as if he had plenty of wealth –
We’ll toast him in bowl after bowl of Gambrinus,
And all in the house now shall set in and jine us.”
Chris L Ruth [?]
The paddle seems to be very much the preferred implement in USA schools. When did it first come into widespread use? I am particularly interested in early mentions of the school paddle in dated factual or fictional literature, and in official documents.Have other cultures used the paddle in schools?
http://www.archive.org/stream/psycholog … #page/n264
The Psychological clinic: a journal of orthogenics for the normal development of every child. Psychology, hygiene, education, Volume 6
1913
Editer: Lightner Witmer
Constructive Morals and School Life. Page 252-
Herbert F Clark. Principal Olive Special School, Los Angles, Cal
Dealing with burglary on a school trip. The paddle would seem to be well established.
Excerpt:
On Monday morning when I arrived at school the guilty boys met me with penitent spirit and tear bedimmed eyes and begged for a chance to recompense the man on the hill for his expense and trouble. They said they would refund the money he paid out, and would pay him for any trouble he had been put to, and they said that they would be good in future. I took the matter up with the rest of the class and we decided to grant the boys their request provided the penalty of “swats” be added. This meant that the guilty boys must lean over a desk and allow each of the other boys to give them a hard “swat” with a long paddle. The “swats” were administered immediately to seal the bargain and the boys set about getting the money. This took two or three days. When that was done I put on the board the following letter, and for a language lesson required all the boys to write it with the understanding that the one best written should be signed by each one of us and sent with the money to Mount Wilson.
The paddle seems to be very much the preferred implement in USA schools. When did it first come into widespread use? I am particularly interested in early mentions of the school paddle in dated factual or fictional literature, and in official documents.Have other cultures used the paddle in schools?
http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=Jj … 12,2915492
The Herald, Carroll, Iowa, Wednesday 27 April 1910
Girls Are Spanked With Wooden Paddle Whipped With Rubber Hose and Clothed Only in Thin “Nighties”
Des Moines. IA., April 21. – Rev. R H Bell, pastor of St. Paul’s Episcopal church, investigated the Mitchellville school at the request of Governor Carroll, and makes a sensational report charging that the girls are spanked with a wooden paddle 19 inches long, that they are whipped with a piece of rubber hose, and that naughty girls are locked up in a lonely room and deprived of all clothes except a night gown, and forced to go to bed for days at a time. He pays tribute to the cleanliness of the place and says the girls are given a fair and liberal education.
The paddle seems to be very much the preferred implement in USA schools. When did it first come into widespread use? I am particularly interested in early mentions of the school paddle in dated factual or fictional literature, and in official documents.Have other cultures used the paddle in schools?
The following item could be fiction but it does disclose a knowledge of and interest in the domestic paddle.
http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=Wh … 19,6835311
The Pittsburg Press, 20 October 1903.
SPANKING MACHINE Almost Kills Its Inventor While he is making a Test.
Harvey Miller, a farmhand, working for J. E. Reynolds, a prosperous farmer at Cedar Point, a few miles west of here, was spanked almost to death by a machine of his own contrivance.
Miller, who is an inventor, discovered a “mother help” machine. It consists of a series of phonographs to be set in each room of the house. On pressing a button, any one of the phonographs desired will call out, “Stop that, Robert, and be a good boy.” Or will call out. “If you aren’t a good boy mamma will whip you.” The device is worked by electricity and is supposed to relieve the mother of much running to and fro after her offspring and to make the latter behave.
Miller has also a graduated spanking attachment. The person to be spanked is strapped flat down on a board, while a strong hardwood paddle operated by an electric motor does the -work. Two dials control the mechanism. On the dial are printed ages from 2 to 16 so that the force of the blows can be regulated according to age. On the other are the words “light, fair, good, hard, serious,” to correspond with the offense for which punishment is to be inflicted.
Miller had finished the mechanism last week, and after vainly attempting to secure a friend to try it had himself strapped down on a board while a number of friends operated the works. The paddling was started at age 2, slight, and gradually tugged on until age 16, serious, was reached.
Miller was by this time roaring for mercy and promising to be good, while the onlookers were rolling on the floor doubled up in laughter, not knowing that Miller, the inventor, had been terribly punished.
Miller’s strength was rapidly failing when his friends noted his condition, but not being familiar with the machine were unable to make it stop.
Miller had lost consciousness when someone released the buckles of the strap which held him down and rescued him.
Miller’s first act on regaining his senses was to destroy the “mother’s help.”-.Anoka, Minn , Cor. Chicago American.
The paddle seems to be very much the preferred implement in USA schools. When did it first come into widespread use? I am particularly interested in early mentions of the school paddle in dated factual or fictional literature, and in official documents.Have other cultures used the paddle in schools?
This item confirms there was a concern about marking.
http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=Ar … 292,480184
Spokane Daily Chronicle 17 June 1910
Spanking Chair for Juveniles Unruly Boys Promise to Be Good after Receiving a “Dressing”
Although the whipping post is a thing of the past, the principle in revised and modern form and judiciously applied is expected to work wonders in enforcing good behavior upon soma of the worst offenders brought before the juvenile court, says the Columbus Dispatch.
A “spanking chair” has been set up in the basement of the juvenile home, and Ellsha Searls was the first to occupy it. He promised to be good for all time when he had been given a “dressing,” and he was instructed to relate his experience to other lads who have an inclination to be very, very naughty.
The juvenile court paddle consists of a long leather strap, wide and heavy, and it is bound with felt, so that the edges will not cut or bruise the flesh. The paddle “stings right,” but leaves not marks, and is much more humane than a switch or a slipper and more effective.
The paddle seems to be very much the preferred implement in USA schools. When did it first come into widespread use? I am particularly interested in early mentions of the school paddle in dated factual or fictional literature, and in official documents.Have other cultures used the paddle in schools?
The following may contain OCR error.
http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/ … d-1/seq-13
The San Francisco Call, March 23, 1902, page 13
The Sunday Call
SHOULD WHIPPING IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS BE ABOLISHED?Should boys be whipped at school? The question always brings out a loud chorus of noes and ayes. But the ayes have it and, according to Superintendent Webster, there are from 700 to 900 boys whipped during each school year in San Francisco.
The rod has always had an honored place as a factor in school discipline. In early days in San Francisco, as elsewhere, it was used without stint, without fear, without favor. Then came a time when it was not permitted to punish girls by whipping. Then came a rule providing that only principals or vice principals should administer corporal punishment. This was followed by rules limiting the methods of punishment to the use of rattan or strap, such punishment to be resorted to only in extreme cases, when all other means fail. There is a special clause that no excessive, cruel or unusual punishments shall be allowed. While all this has been taking place boys have kept on being boys. Boys are the same today, yesterday, forever.
Ask any schoolboy why he gets whipped at school and he will answer, “for havin’ fun.”
“Havin’ fun” covers everything from spitballs to staying away from school with no one’s permission, and no excuse next day. You who were boys when you were little, and those of you who were and not too goody-goody, just go to the days when you kinked your knees under those low desks with the stiff, hard seats.
What did you do? Why, you shot notes across the aisle, scraped your feet on the floor, acted the clown when the teacher wasn’t looking and some other boy was; you whispered and pinched your seat mate or the boy in front of you, you swopped marbles, made faces, told stories, played “hockey.” fought – in fact, what didn’t you do?
Boys are doing all these things today, and girls, too, for that matter. They seem like little things to you, perhaps, but that is because you are not a teacher whose business it is to make a half-hundred or more restless, wriggling youngsters sit up like little wooden images and do nothing but study and recite. Every day of the year, boys are being whipped for doing these things. Now and again one boy’s whipping attracts particular attention, and then people begin to ask should boys be whipped at school? By whom? How? Why?
These are big questions with many answers .
There are those who think it a cruel shame that the teacher is not allowed to punish: that the only thing she can do is to send the child to the principal, who may or may not believe in whipping. In reply, there are those who say that the teacher against whom the offense is committed is not the proper one to administer punishment.
When the matter is up to the principal there comes the question of how far the parent will support him. Some parents say “Whip,” others say “Hands off.” In a case where teacher can’t, principal don’t and parent won’t, what is to be done?
It is hinted that the rules in regard to corporal punishment may be revised. It is whispered that in the next revision the Board of Education may consult with the principals as to what methods would be conducive of best results.
Here are opinions gathered from people intercepted in school work. The principals quoted represent every district from Telegraph Hill to Pacific Heights, from the center of town to the Mission, covering the various conditions which affect the question of corporal punishment in the schools.
______________
REGINALD H. WEBSTER,
Superintendent of Schools.
“Principals and teachers should employ other restraining influences, but if they prove ineffectual corporal punishment should be administered in a proper manner, and by that I mean on the palm of the hand. In every school there will appear occasionally cares which can be reached in no other way. Suspension from school, while it might with many be regarded as a humiliation and a disgrace, would be by others used as a vacation. Expulsion from school often means the destruction of the individual for future usefulness. Excluded from the discipline and instruction of the schoolroom, a boy who has demonstrated that he is to some extent incorrigible will very likely, given his freedom, contract vicious and idle habits, and good citizenship will be lost to the State. Therefore, I believe in the infliction of corporal punishment upon those who are not disposed to be controlled in any other manner.
“Discipline is like everything else; it is a business proposition. A teacher is born, not made. A firm, just person will request something done once, and if the offense be deliberately repeated it will not go unrebuked and corporal punishment must be resorted to at times.
“Humanitarianism is absolutely humbug. It is a silly sentimentalism that makes heroes of criminals and that encourages by mild treatment Iteration, of offense.
“Yes. I was punished in school – once. It was for truancy. I was a little fellow of 9 and had up to that time been in a private school. When put in the public school I was alarmed at the discipline and that was the cause of my absenting myself. The teacher had threatened to punish all who did not have a certain lesson at a given time, and, while I had it. I was afraid and stayed away. I was punished both at school and at home. I remember she used a big black walnut ruler, very long, very wide and very thick, and sympathetic playmates said she gave me twenty-five strokes on each hand. I didn’t have time to count them, but I think it was a rather severe punishment for a little fellow. However, I did not resent the chastisement. It put me in a proper sense of humiliation and respect for law and I regard that teacher to-day with a great deal of affection.”
JAKES DENMAN,
President of School Board.
“I do most emphatically believe in corporal punishment, but think it should be used very sparingly. Of course, it should not be used any more than we should shoot people, but how safe would your property be or your life if there were no such thing as shooting? It is physical power that makes people behave themselves.
It should not be used as a means of keeping order, but as a power to prevent outrage. A teacher that cannot keep order without that means is a very poor teacher: but now and then there is an outbreak that makes corporal punishment necessary.
“I believe that 60, if not 75 per cent of our teachers, could maintain discipline without corporal punishment.
“I do not think teachers should have the privilege of punishing pupils. They might do it in a burst of passion, whereas the principal, who is free from the annoyance caused by the offense, is better able to judge, whether the case warrants such punishment. Young teachers are more severe than old ones, and my opinion is that women punish more than men.
“For girls the best punishment is suspension, and for most boys, but not every boy. When a child is suspended, he cannot return to school until the father or mother comes with him. This often means that the father must leave his business, which annoys him a little.’ and he hears the truth about, the child’s conduct in school.
“There is very little corporal punishment in the San Francisco schools. Seven to 900 cases in a year, with about 50,000 school children, is not a bad showing.”
MAYOR E. E. SCHMITZ.
“I believe boys should be whipped, but not brutally whipped. It is not so much the severity of the whipping which does good as the humiliation it causes. I look back to a belting I once got and have never forgotten. I was whipped very brutally, and instead of looking up to the man who did it, I only think he was a brute.
“It was a peculiar affair, as I see it now. The teacher had told each one of us to write a letter at home and bring it to school. When I read mine, she said it was not my own work; that I had had help. I told her I had not, and she said to me. ‘You lie.” Boy like, I said ‘You lie back. She sent for the principal, who is still in the department, and he gave me a beating which I felt I deserved no more than the teacher.
“I don’t believe any good ever came from beating a boy brutally; but for those who prove incorrigible, there is no doubt about the necessity of corporal punishment. I think this should be restricted to blows on the hand with the rattan or strap. If it is right to take a boy and whip him until he is black and blue, then it would be just as right to go further than that, if he does not behave, and treat him still more brutally. Whipping on the hand has the proper moral effect and is not cruel.”
JAMES T. HAMILTON
Principal of Lincoln Grammar School.
“Well, yes, in certain cases corporal punishment is necessary; for instance, where a boy defies the authority of teachers and principal and sets himself above the law, as he can do in many ways.
“As for truancy, that” is an open question just now. It depends on whether you have the support of the parents. It doesn’t do much good unless things are I made uncomfortable for the boy at both ends of the line. If his parents write, an excuse when I know the boy has been playing truant, whipping will not cure the boy of truancy.
“As to whether teachers should be allowed to punish, I would say some should and’ some should not, and it is hard to draw the line. It is necessary for the vice principal to have authority to punish when he has charge of the boys in the yard, otherwise they would not respect his authority.
“No, indeed, I do not believe corporal punishment should be abolished. It was tried here once and we had a terrible time, and had to go back to it. Parents do not want it abolished and I know of no leaders in educational matters who advocate the abolishment of corporal punishment. There are people who have beautiful theories on the subject; but if we can govern without corporal punishment, why not govern without jails and penitentiaries?
MISS ALICE M. STINCEN,
Principal Pacific Heights Grammar School.
“In the ten years of my principalship in this school there has never been a case of corporal punishment. No child has been slapped, pinched or shaken.
“Firmness and kindness will accomplish what severity never would. I make truth the cornerstone of everything. I have the children understand that no matter what they do they should tell me the truth about it; then. I can excuse.”
MISS KATE CROWLEY,
Principal of Mission Grammar
“There is about one boy in fifty that nothing but corporal punishment will reach. However, in five years at this school I have had but three cases. We punish once in a while to let them see we will do it if necessary, and the children are made to feel that whipping is the very worst thing that can happen. I think it loses its effect when administered too often.
“I do not think it would be wise to abolish corporal punishment, as it would give boys a feeling of ‘They doesnt touch me. But I believe in few rules and in making children feel that any punishment is very serious. Of course, the teachers have a demerit system, and we keep an office book, and it is a very serious thing for a child to get his name in the office book. After the March vacation, we allow the children to work off the marks against them, and a child whose name remains on the, office book at the end of the term is deprived of his certificate. He is promoted, but has no certificate to take home with him until he works off his bad marks.
“We make a strong point of obedience, and the parents in this district co-operate with us in every way. Some parents deprive the children of privileges on Saturday and Sunday if they do not show a good report for the week. When parents propose to whip the child at home I advise against it, suggesting that they use some of the many ways they have of making the child feel that he has done wrong.
“We have very little truancy, and we leave that to the parent to correct. For tardiness, we have a stragglers’ book, and it is accounted a bad thing to have one’s name in that book. The three cases of corporal punishment I have had to report have been for rough conduct in the yard. It is hard for boys not to run and play in the yard, but we try to make them understand it is not because we do not want them to have fun, but rather as a matter of protection to them on account or the limited space.
MRS. FRANCES A. BANNING,
Principal of Everett Grammar School
I do not think it would be wise to abolish corporal punishment. We would have to substitute something else that would not be of benefit to the child. The choice is between suspension, expulsion from school and corporal punishment. I do not resort to suspension, as I do not think it is efficacious. I believe children should be kept in school, and corporal punishment judiciously administered serves to keep many boys from the street.
“It is no pleasure to .any one to punish a child, and I think parents should be grateful to principals for not turning the boys out of school when they have the option of suspension and punishment.
“Cases of truancy I report to the parent, or if necessary, to the truant officer; but I sometimes punish for tardiness. There are many cases where parents ask us to punish the children; but if they do not wish it then we have to find some other way.
“I think corporal punishment is more necessary among smaller children. Above the sixth grade children have sense enough to know what they come to school for. There are some little girls that I think would be benefitted by corporal punishment.
“In the discretion of the principal it might be wise to give teachers authority to punish, and this is allowed in the lower grades; but teachers as a rule do not want the privilege. They prefer to let the principal do the whipping.
Most parents feel that while their children are in school they should be under the authority of teacher and principal. That is right. The school should have absolute authority in its own province; and by its not having this power many children are upon the street who should be in school.”
T. B. WHITE,
Principal of Washington Grammar School.
“I believe in keeping corporal punishment down to a minimum. In this school, we average about thirty cases a month with between 500 and 600 boys. There are some boys benefitted by corporal punishment reasonably administered.
“However, I would be In favor of abolishing corporal punishment, let the consequences be what they may. I say this because mistakes are sometimes made in administering corporal punishment. One cannot always understand the disposition of the child, and there may be cases where punishment is remembered with bitterness in after years.
“Another bad feature of corporal punishment is that there are timid children in school who are frightened and terrified by the thought of it. Of course, we never punish in the presence of the class, but they know of it, and the timid child constantly fears he may do something that will cause him to be punished.
“I think discipline could be maintained without it because more responsibility would be thrown on the parents, and in time the thought of being turned out of school on account of tau conduct would have a deterrent influence on most boys
I believe in constant, persistent training in right doing. If there could be perfect uniformity in this from the lowest to the highest grade there would be little need of corporal punishment.
“I believe in corporal punishment only to correct some bad trait of disposition – not for the ordinary offenses that more boys commit. I very seldom punish for truancy. I try to have parents deal with that, and it is only at their request that I punish the truant. If tardiness is habitual I first notify the parents and to try to have them correct it. If that fails, I punish.
“I remember being punished twice in school, and it made me very indignant. Even now, I feel that the punishment was too severe for the offense. I was only 9 or 10 years old and when my name occurred in one of the sentences given the grammar class for parsing I laughed. For this I was whipped severely with a bunch of switches, after the fashion of those days. Another time I was whipped for fighting.
MRS. K. E. BROGAN,
Principal of the Moulder Primary School.
“I do not believe in abolishing corporal punishment. There are a few boys who cannot be controlled in any other way yes, and there are some girls that deserve it too. In my school of over 600, I average two or three cases a month. These are for willful disobedience.
“For truancy? Never. For tardiness* Never To me it seems the height of folly to punish a boy for truancy, for in most cases truancy, as well as tardiness, is the fault of the parent. But where a boy is disobedient and defiant, the only remedy is whipping. Corporal punishment is more necessary with smaller boys than larger ones. You can appeal to the reason of older boys.
I would not favor giving teachers the power to punish and I do not think my teachers desire it. The children in our school are well bred, responsive and inclined to do right, and where such conditions exist all that is necessary is to make the school work interesting and there is little trouble with discipline
MISS H. F. McFARLAND,
Acting Principal of the Clement Grammar School.
“I am and have, always been strongly opposed to corporal punishment. I do not believe in it at all, and I find that we get along very well without it.
“There are so many other ways of reaching a child. When one is reported to me for disorder, I appeal to him on the ground of his having broken a rule probably through thoughtlessness, but I let him plainly understand that if he returns to my office on a similar charge he will be dealt with more severely. By this I mean that he will be retained after school, given extra work, or that his parents will be sent for to talk the matter over. One of these methods usually has the desired effect, for we have the support of parents in dealing with the children.
“We have been asked by parents to punish their boys, but I always say I will try to reach the boys in some other way, and I do reach them in some other way for I am a strong enemy to corporal punishment.
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Another_Lurker10K289
The paddle seems to be very much the preferred implement in USA schools. When did it first come into widespread use? I am particularly interested in early mentions of the school paddle in dated factual or fictional literature, and in official documents.Have other cultures used the paddle in schools?
Amazing stuff KK! The amount of work you are putting into this must be enormous, but the results are fascinating and are an excellent feature of this estimable Forum.
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KKxyz3,59957
The paddle seems to be very much the preferred implement in USA schools. When did it first come into widespread use? I am particularly interested in early mentions of the school paddle in dated factual or fictional literature, and in official documents.Have other cultures used the paddle in schools?
The following are snippets, in random order, from a poem called A Ban on Spanking that is attributed to the now defunct Los Angeles Express newspaper. Note that the implements mentioned are paddles, shingles, slippers and hair brushes.
The poem is reproduced on page 284 of Will Carleton’s Magazine Every Where Vol. XIX February, 1907 No. 6.
http://books.google.com/books?id=-mNMAAAAMAAJ
http://www.amazon.com/EVERY-WHERE-MAGAZ … B005523RU8
Page 284, col. 2 (snippets, correct order unknown)
A ban on spanking With the folks who spank,
If the spud is needed,
Willie to command,
Let this rule be headed:
Never use your hand!
Put away the shingle
Put away the shingle,
And the hairbrush, too,
Instruments that tingle
Baby through and through,
Do not use the slipper,
For we have the word –
Doesn’t do to whip her-
Spanking is absurd!
Put away the shingle-
When the boy is bad.
Do not use a single
Stick upon the lad
Never let him feel the
Put away the shingle,
When the boy you’d warm,
Just recall this jingle
Get wise and reform
There are times the lad’ll
Not do as he is bid,
But suppress the paddle
Never let him feel the
Warmth that it will bring,
But go and conceal the
Horrid spanking thing!
Put away the shingle
Do not be a crank
Never intermingle
Put away the shingle,
But suppress the paddle –
Never spank the kid!
[Los Angeles Express.]
The paddle seems to be very much the preferred implement in USA schools. When did it first come into widespread use? I am particularly interested in early mentions of the school paddle in dated factual or fictional literature, and in official documents.Have other cultures used the paddle in schools?
Do not do this at home
http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=MJ … 60,5359340
The Lewiston Morning Tribune
Lewiston, Idaho, Monday 2 September 1907
USED SHINGLE ON BOY Boy Had Dynamite Cap In Hip Pocket Exploded and Mother’s Fingers Torn Off
Sheboygan, Wis., Sept. 1. – Mrs. Fred Williams, living at Bear Point on Crooked lake, near this city, was severely injured and her seven-year-old son was fatally hurt when a dynamite cap in the boy’s pocket exploded while the mother was spanking him. The boy had been watching his father using dynamite in blowing up stumps and had slipped one of the caps in his pocket. Mrs. Williams used a shingle. The first blow exploded the cap and tore a large hole in the boy’s side. The mother lost two fingers and sustained other injuries.
http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=-z … 73,4071387
The Ottawa Free Trader, 6 September 1907
EXPLODES WHEN SPANKED
MICHIGAN BOY FATALLY INJURED AND MOTHER MAIMED Lad Had Dynamite Cap in His Hip Pocket When Parent Struck Him with Shingle.
Cheboygan, Mich., Sept. 2. – Mrs. Fred Williams, living at Bear Point, on Crooked lake, near this city, was severely injured, and her seven-year-old son was probably fatally hurt when a dynamite cap in the boy’s hip pocket exploded while the mother was spanking him for a minor offense.
The little boy had been out in the field where his father was using dynamite to blow up stumps, and had slipped one of the percussion caps which Mr. Williams was using in his pocket. He later returned to the house, where his mother called him in to be punished for some childish misdemeanor. Mrs. Williams used a shingle as the instrument of punishment.
The first blow from the shingle exploded the cap in the boy’s pocket and the explosion tore a large hole in his hip, from which he is believed to be dying. The mother lost two fingers and received a number of minor cuts about her face and body.
The paddle seems to be very much the preferred implement in USA schools. When did it first come into widespread use? I am particularly interested in early mentions of the school paddle in dated factual or fictional literature, and in official documents.Have other cultures used the paddle in schools?
May contain OCR errors. Headings added and paragraphing changed. The problems 100+ years ago still pertain.
http://www.archive.org/details/american … 15unkngoog
The American educational review: Volume 31
No. 1. October 1909, pages 29 – 35.
A brief account of ancient schools – Written AD 2300 By Carl Holliday, MA
Except page 32-
Schools managed by amateurs
It is a curious fact that members of school boards were then elected by popular vote, and not chosen by civil service examination, as is now the law. Some of these gentlemen were so ignorant as to cause even the school children to laugh at their mistakes! I found in a Tennessee newspaper of 1910 that one candidate for membership announced that he did not have much “book larnin” (knowledge gained from books), but that he had a lot of “horse-sense” (common sense) and would see that the children learned their three “R’s” (reading, ‘riting (writing), and `rithmetic).
No salary was given for serving on a school board. Think of it! Those in charge of what is now considered the most important department of government received absolutely no pay ! No educational qualification whatever was required. The only essential was popularity with the crowd ! The outcome of this may easily be conjectured.
Superintendents who had made a life study of education were considered fanatics and hobby-riders, and children’s souls were dwarfed through the stubborn ignorance of these “popular” supervisors. As the office paid nothing, the members devoted but a few hours of each month to educational matters, and generally these brief periods were given up to haggling over financial affairs. I found in the newspapers of the early twentieth century a vast amount of scandal about these boards. Frequently, I noted, they were accused of getting a “rake-off” from publishing houses, desk-makers, architects, etc. All this may seem exceedingly strange to us today; for not many know that not until 2025 did the government take over the printing of all school books, and not until ten years later did it begin to furnish all building plans and materials at actual cost price.
Women employed because they were cheaper [Did they bring domestic style spanking with them?]
Owing to the low salary paid teachers – in 1900 it averaged but $25.00 a month in states south of the Mason and Dixon line – the vast majority of instructors were women; for married men could not maintain a family on the wages offered, while many women to secure “pin money” (money for luxuries, dainties, etc.) accepted seemingly without conscientious scruples – the miserably low remuneration.
During the first decade of the twentieth century the female teachers of New York City demanded higher wages; but, upon being warned by a professor of education that if decent salaries were granted, their places would be offered to men with families to support, they speedily dropped the matter, and the old miserly method continued until near the year 2000. At this time, however, the newspapers complained bitterly that the boys in the higher grades were becoming “sissy” (effeminate) and that feminine ideas and ideals were ruining the manhood of the nation; and a commission appointed by the government to investigate the subject presented such a drastic report that the various states raised salaries to so tempting a point that men returned to the profession. In the earlier days of this change men attempted to teach all grades, but made such fools of themselves in their efforts to teach the smaller children that the women gradually regained those classes where some imitation of mother-love is essential. Thus it has remained to this day.
Schools not designed to suit children
It may seem ridiculous and yet it is really true that in the twentieth century laws had to be made compelling children to go to school! Part of the resistance came from the parents, but most of it from the children themselves. Whereas the child of today loves the activities of education and looks upon the school as his second home, I find that the normal boy of four centuries ago dreaded and even hated the institutionl But have we not seen enough to warrant this feeling? One or two educators of the time ventured to say that if the school were made as pleasant as the woods and the rivers, the boy would not play “truant” (run away from school for a day) ; but such men were long looked upon as irrational enthusiasts. One glance at the curriculum of that century would cause the modern boy to run forever, and one day of it would probably make him a suicide.
In practically every school the studies were all “book-studies” and enormous tests of the memory. As indicated above, the pupils sat in hard desks four or five hours and told, not what they had discovered, but what they had read. History, geography, literature, science, mathematics the same question was asked, “What did the book say?” Many of the more normal children rebelled against this method, and these were known as “bad” boys and girls ; and such “bad” youth were beaten with tree switches until out of sheer pain, but not from conviction, they submitted to the unnatural and barbarous system. In only one city (New York) was it against the law for the teacher thus to punish children, and even there instructors frequently presented petitions to the school board, begging the privilege of giving the youngsters just a little spanking (vigorous paddling on the hips with the hand or a board). The board had the wisdom, however, to believe that if the methods were right the boy would be interested enough to do right, and the “privilege” was refused. At length it was discovered that the cramped position long maintained in thus sitting at a desk would make any natural creature restive or dull or vicious, and by the year 1975 all schools had adopted a curriculum in which each hour of mental work was followed by an hour of physical work, such as carving, moulding, gardening, etc. There was an astonishing decrease not only of misbehavior, but also of truancy, and I suppose there has not been a case of punishment or unnecessary absence in a hundred years.
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