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'When I Was a Child' - autobiography of Charles Shaw
a first hand account of life as a child worker in the North Staffordshire
Potteries in the 1840's
Chapter 16 - The Sunday School and my Young Life
next: Joseph Capper of Tunstall
previous: Beginning of Life Again at Ten Years of Age
When I left the workhouse, one of my brightest hopes was that I should soon be back at my old Sunday school. The inward joy I got from this no words can tell. Next to having a home of my own was the proud thought of being again in my Sunday school class. I had really loved my teacher, and as it was a grief to be parted from him, so now it was a joy to get back to him.
When I went to the workhouse all my clothes were taken away, as I have already related, after having a cold bath on a cold day.
The Sunday school I attended was a three-storied one, and my class was in the top room, in the north-west corner, in a sort of recess. The other boys in the class were bigger and older than myself, but as I could read as well as any of them, I was promoted to this high position, thanks to old Betty's tuition. The teacher was Ralph Lawton, "a butty collier." He was a man whose strength of character lay in a simple and sincere piety.
When I went to my class on this fateful Sunday morning, Ralph Lawton received me with more than his usual tender interest. But the scholars in the class looked at me askance, and whispered to each other. I saw their eyes travelling, sometimes furtively, and sometimes boldly, over my clothes. They also kept apart from me. In a very few minutes I was given to understand that I was not to sit near them. Ralph Lawton did all he could to see nothing unusual as between the other scholars and myself. Still I went again to the school in the afternoon as I had not yet the consciousness that the workhouse clothes, and my having been to the workhouse, had made such a difference. But I found it out during the afternoon. No cry of leper, in the old days of Israel, could have put people more apart than I was apart from my old schoolfellows. In the afternoon they had become bolder. My clothes were mockingly pointed at, I was laughed at, jeered at, and I saw that I was clothed with contempt in their eyes.
In all this there was seen the deep repugnance which pauperism had created even among the children. Many of the boys in my class were almost as poor as I was, but they had not been in the Chell shadow, they had not been branded with a workhouse "brat." Cruel as all this was, it yet indicated a healthy influence in the midst of the barest poverty, and a self-respect which shunned the devil of parish beneficence. Yet we sang in those days, "Britons never shall be slaves." Who was it who said if he knew the songs of a people he could tell their history? From this song could he have told the history of the poor in the Thirties and Forties? For weeks after this I was too shamefaced to venture out on a Sunday. It was winter time, so the near fields were not available; But the passion for the Sunday school would give me no rest. Every week I got uneasier, until one Sunday afternoon I broke through all shame and fear.
While standing there, a young man came to the door of the chapel, evidently on the lookout for scholars who might be loitering outside. When he saw my brother and myself, he came to us at once, and bending down, asked me, as the eldest, if we went to any Sunday school. I told him in
hesitating words we had gone to Sunday His name was George Kirkman. His name has been on a gravestone erected more than fifty years ago in Tunstall Churchyard, as a tribute of public respect, and describing the rare virtues of a young man who pre-eminently distinguished himself in all good works in the town.
He was teacher of the Bible class, as well as assistant superintendent, and as soon as he could he got me removed into his class among much older and bigger boys. Tunstall was then a small town, with only some seven or eight thousand of a population, but that population poured into the streets on the day of George Kirkham's funeral. Our scholars and other public bodies joined the procession, and as we walked through the crowds on either side of the streets the common grief expressed itself in many tears and sobs.
After George Kirkham's death I felt a loneliness that chilled me. He had given me a dawning interest in a larger world than I had ever dreamed of. Like the blind man in the Gospel, I had begun to "see men as trees walking." I had not focussed many questions, but I had been made to feel there were many questions whose dimness spurred my interest in them. But now I felt my lack of guidance. No other adult human being had interest and ability enough to continue this guidance. I should in this perilous interval have lost all I had gained but for the Sunday school and the companionship of a few youths a little older than myself. Of this
I shall have more to say later on, but for the time I was under a dark cloud. |
next: Joseph Capper of Tunstall
previous: Beginning of Life
Again at Ten Years of Age
Related Pages.. Methodist New Connexion chapel in Tunstall also see... |