The million-peopled city
Garwood, John
1853
Importance of Increased Exertions, in order to bring the whole of this Class under Ragged School Instruction.
At present there are probably, at the very least, from 8,000 to 10,000 more of this class in London to be brought under instruction, supposing that the children now attending are, as they should be, exclusively of the class for which the schools were designed. How important is it, then, that greater efforts should be made ! Ragged Schools have ordinarily hitherto arisen from the efforts of City Missionaries, nor would they be filled, if erected, without some such agency to bring in the outcasts. There is a very near proportion of the number of children yet brought within the walls of the schools of the , as compared with the total number of that class, and the number of poor brought under the visitation of the , as compared with the entire poor population of the metropolis. Support of the one Society, therefore, leads to the extension of the other. The Union itself also needs pecuniary help, and its schools much need additional voluntary teachers. The latter is a most blessed work, blessing those who engage in it as well as those who receive the more immediate benefit. | |