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  • June 1, 1878
  • Page 28
  • ON SELECTING THE BEST CHARITY.
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The Masonic Magazine, June 1, 1878: Page 28

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Page 28

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On Selecting The Best Charity.

ON SELECTING THE BEST CHARITY .

W . E have seen a paper , which is , Ave believe , put forAvard by one of our " Charity Eeform " associations , as they like to call themselves , under this heading , and Avhich , as it is full of fallacies and mischievous mistakes , according to our vieAA ' , Ave think Avell to reproduce and comment upon to-day . There is no more important question than that which is contained in this proposition , at the same time there is none more difficult .

J . " The selection of the Charities most deserving of support Ai'ould not be so difficult or so invidious a task if it did not involve a careful previous general inquiry , and a comparison of all the Charities and their objects , ancl modes of action and management , for the purpose of making the selection a just one ; in fact , such an inquiry aud comparison as Darwin tells us that Nature makes Avhen she is engaged in tho " elimination of inefficient competitors in the struggle for life . " This is necessarily a painful operation ,

yet Nature performs it Avith the utmost rigour . Can Ave be more kind AA'hen Ave are trying to tell the very truth about the Charities , and to point out which of them arc the most deserving of support 1 " Such is the modest exordium , Avhich , if it be truly intended , is likely also to be very useful . But let us proceed . II . " The more the Charities have recently been examined intothe more

unsatisfac-, tory has been the result , and the less are they shoAvn to have adapted themselves to the changing circumstances of the times . Indeed , most of them having been established many years ago , they have taken no account of the vast changes made by legislation , and by the altered conditions and modes in AA'hich the Poor LaAv has come to be administered . They are all built still upon the same old ivooden lines . No IAVO of

them co-operate for any purpose , even for that of informing each other Avhether they arc relieving the same applicants . " In our opinion this is far too hasty and far too sweeping a charge , and is in no ways justified by the facts of the case . III . " TAA ' classes of charities have lately been reported on by Special Committees of the most skilled persons connected Avith them , and of noblemen and gentlemen

acquainted Avith the subject , together with members of the Charity Organisation Society . These are the Charities for the Blind and those dealing Avith Imbeciles . Of the Blind Charities dealing AA'ith the education of the young , and the training of adults , it may bo safely said that the state of disorganisation could hardly have been more complete , nor the effects more disastrous . It AA'as proved that out of 3 , 000 blind in the metropolis , industrial training Avas only available for about 50 and the number of adults AVIIO had

, been trained , and for AA'I IOIH employment Avas provided , Avas 150 ; yet the number capable of being trained Avas 1 , 000 , " and the sums raised by 26 Blind Charities for children and adults Avas £ 1 : 2 , 936 , As to the principal charities for blind children , they could not , Avith the exception of the Normal College , be more inefficient . Educated at an annual cost of , £ 40 , and remaining for . several years at the schools , not above 2 per cent , of them are afterwards ' , able to earn a livelihood . "

We do not profess to understand the " drift" of these remarks , Avhich may be supposed to have a meaning . IV . " The Charities for Imbeciles , receiving £ 54 , 460 , Avere found to be excellently managed , but quite inadequate for the numbers requiring admission , excepting for London pauper cases , Avho are all taken b y the Metropolitan Asylums Board and dealt with in an admirable manner . Outside the metropolis there are only three or four for all England besides , and the consequence is that cases from all parts of England compete with the loAA'er middle and artisan classes for admission to the London Charities , aud the few who succeed have to run the gauntlet of the voting system . The Deaf and

“The Masonic Magazine: 1878-06-01, Page 28” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 1 April 2023, masonicperiodicals.org/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01061878/page/28/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
AN HERMETIC WORK. Article 2
PAPERS ON THE GREAT PYRAMID. Article 5
"KICK HIM DOWN." Article 10
THE ADVENTURES OF DON PASQUALE. Article 11
THE WORK OF NATURE IN THE MONTHS. Article 13
T. CH. BARON ZEDLITZ. Article 20
THE PAST. Article 20
THE PRESENT. Article 20
THE FUTURE. Article 21
STANZAS. Article 21
UNCERTAIN LIGHT. Article 21
A LOOK TOWARDS HEAVEN. Article 22
AMABEL VAUGHAN. Article 23
WOMEN'S RIGHTS AND WOMEN'S WORK. Article 27
ON SELECTING THE BEST CHARITY. Article 28
LOVE AND MASONRY. Article 31
Review. Article 35
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 39
LOST AND SAVED ; OR NELLIE POWERS THE MISSIONARY'S DAUGHTER. Article 42
ON THE TESTING AND STRENGTH OF RAILWAY MATERIALS, &c. Article 44
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 46
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Page 28

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

On Selecting The Best Charity.

ON SELECTING THE BEST CHARITY .

W . E have seen a paper , which is , Ave believe , put forAvard by one of our " Charity Eeform " associations , as they like to call themselves , under this heading , and Avhich , as it is full of fallacies and mischievous mistakes , according to our vieAA ' , Ave think Avell to reproduce and comment upon to-day . There is no more important question than that which is contained in this proposition , at the same time there is none more difficult .

J . " The selection of the Charities most deserving of support Ai'ould not be so difficult or so invidious a task if it did not involve a careful previous general inquiry , and a comparison of all the Charities and their objects , ancl modes of action and management , for the purpose of making the selection a just one ; in fact , such an inquiry aud comparison as Darwin tells us that Nature makes Avhen she is engaged in tho " elimination of inefficient competitors in the struggle for life . " This is necessarily a painful operation ,

yet Nature performs it Avith the utmost rigour . Can Ave be more kind AA'hen Ave are trying to tell the very truth about the Charities , and to point out which of them arc the most deserving of support 1 " Such is the modest exordium , Avhich , if it be truly intended , is likely also to be very useful . But let us proceed . II . " The more the Charities have recently been examined intothe more

unsatisfac-, tory has been the result , and the less are they shoAvn to have adapted themselves to the changing circumstances of the times . Indeed , most of them having been established many years ago , they have taken no account of the vast changes made by legislation , and by the altered conditions and modes in AA'hich the Poor LaAv has come to be administered . They are all built still upon the same old ivooden lines . No IAVO of

them co-operate for any purpose , even for that of informing each other Avhether they arc relieving the same applicants . " In our opinion this is far too hasty and far too sweeping a charge , and is in no ways justified by the facts of the case . III . " TAA ' classes of charities have lately been reported on by Special Committees of the most skilled persons connected Avith them , and of noblemen and gentlemen

acquainted Avith the subject , together with members of the Charity Organisation Society . These are the Charities for the Blind and those dealing Avith Imbeciles . Of the Blind Charities dealing AA'ith the education of the young , and the training of adults , it may bo safely said that the state of disorganisation could hardly have been more complete , nor the effects more disastrous . It AA'as proved that out of 3 , 000 blind in the metropolis , industrial training Avas only available for about 50 and the number of adults AVIIO had

, been trained , and for AA'I IOIH employment Avas provided , Avas 150 ; yet the number capable of being trained Avas 1 , 000 , " and the sums raised by 26 Blind Charities for children and adults Avas £ 1 : 2 , 936 , As to the principal charities for blind children , they could not , Avith the exception of the Normal College , be more inefficient . Educated at an annual cost of , £ 40 , and remaining for . several years at the schools , not above 2 per cent , of them are afterwards ' , able to earn a livelihood . "

We do not profess to understand the " drift" of these remarks , Avhich may be supposed to have a meaning . IV . " The Charities for Imbeciles , receiving £ 54 , 460 , Avere found to be excellently managed , but quite inadequate for the numbers requiring admission , excepting for London pauper cases , Avho are all taken b y the Metropolitan Asylums Board and dealt with in an admirable manner . Outside the metropolis there are only three or four for all England besides , and the consequence is that cases from all parts of England compete with the loAA'er middle and artisan classes for admission to the London Charities , aud the few who succeed have to run the gauntlet of the voting system . The Deaf and

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