Minutes of Central Committee, 1896-1902 (1 vol.) [O 22]; including minutes of origin; Minutes of United Quarterly Meetings, 1896-1906 (1 vol.) [O 21]; Printed list of Adult Schools of the Society of Friends, no date [O 11/14]
Records of Leeds Friends Adult Schools Central Committee
This material is held atUniversity of Leeds Special Collections
- Reference
- GB 206 MS Dep. 1979/1 (Carlton Hill archive) Leeds Friends Adult Schools Central Committee
- Dates of Creation
- 1896-1906
- Name of Creator
- Language of Material
- English
- Physical Description
- 3 items
Scope and Content
Administrative / Biographical History
By the end of 19th century, there were three times as many Adult School members in Leeds than there were Friends. Over the period 1886 to 1901, the total membership of the five schools in Leeds (based at Burley Road, Carlton Hill, Great Wilson Street, Pontefract Lane and Woodhouse Carr) increased 21% from 585 to 709 members. This is accounted for by the fact that the schools in Burley Road and Woodhouse Carr opened in 1885 and 1887 respectively, both with 100s of members, and a new junior class of 96 members was also started. The Adult School based at the principal Friends Meeting in Leeds, Carlton Hill, peaked at 266 members in 1884/5, and was weakened by the establishment of successful branch schools. In 1896 a Central Committee was formed, on the initiative of Carlton Hill, to bring together the various Adult Schools in Leeds. The committee's main work was to organise United Quarterly Meetings, with each school reporting on attendances and events, followed by a talk on a special subject. The first such meeting was held in September 1896 and was addressed by Arthur Priestman on the Labour Bureau proposed by the Yorkshire District of the Friends First Day School Association. In 1903 a decision was made to form a Leeds and District Adult School Sub Union, on undenominational lines, in an attempt to reinvigorate the movement. United Quarterly Meetings seem to have ended around 1906 due to lack of interest amongst scholars.
Arrangement
The records are numbered and arranged according to the system used when they were in Carlton Hill Meeting House
Access Information
The conditions of deposit include a clause requiring written prior permission from a Friend Custodian for access to consult current legal documents and any material less than fifty years old
Acquisition Information
The collection of archives of the Society of Friends formerly held at the Friends Meeting House at Carlton Hill, Leeds
Note
In English
Other Finding Aids
Contents listed in Handlist 99, Inventory of the records of Brighouse, Knaresborough, Leeds, and Settle Monthly Meetings of the Society of Friends formerly preserved at the Friends Meeting Housem, Carlton Hill, Leeds, 2nd edition, 1997
Conditions Governing Use
As with access, the photocopying of current legal documents and any material less than fifty years old requires the permission of a Friend Custodian
Bibliography
See W. Allott, "Leeds Quaker Meeting", in Thoresby Society Miscellany, vol.14 part 1, 1966, pp. 61-62; J. W. Rowntree & H. B. Binns, A history of the Adult School movement (Headley, 1903), pp. 12, 21-22, 46-47, 56; [S. Southall], The story of the Leeds Adult Schools (Leeds and District Adult School Sub Union, 1909)
Additional Information
The records are deposited and remain the property of the Society of Friends