<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?><article xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance">
<front>
<journal-meta>
<journal-id>0018-229X</journal-id>
<journal-title><![CDATA[Historia]]></journal-title>
<abbrev-journal-title><![CDATA[Historia]]></abbrev-journal-title>
<issn>0018-229X</issn>
<publisher>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Historical Association of South Africa]]></publisher-name>
</publisher>
</journal-meta>
<article-meta>
<article-id>S0018-229X2012000100008</article-id>
<title-group>
<article-title xml:lang="en"><![CDATA[The government teacher as mediator of a "superior" education in Colesberg, 1849-1858]]></article-title>
</title-group>
<contrib-group>
<contrib contrib-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[Ludlow]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Helen]]></given-names>
</name>
<xref ref-type="aff" rid="A01"/>
</contrib>
</contrib-group>
<aff id="A01">
<institution><![CDATA[,University of the Witwatersrand Wits School of Education History and Division of Social and Economic Sciences]]></institution>
<addr-line><![CDATA[ ]]></addr-line>
</aff>
<pub-date pub-type="pub">
<day>00</day>
<month>05</month>
<year>2012</year>
</pub-date>
<pub-date pub-type="epub">
<day>00</day>
<month>05</month>
<year>2012</year>
</pub-date>
<volume>57</volume>
<numero>1</numero>
<fpage>141</fpage>
<lpage>164</lpage>
<copyright-statement/>
<copyright-year/>
<self-uri xlink:href="http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&amp;pid=S0018-229X2012000100008&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso&amp;tlng=en"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_abstract&amp;pid=S0018-229X2012000100008&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso&amp;tlng=en"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_pdf&amp;pid=S0018-229X2012000100008&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso&amp;tlng=en"></self-uri><abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="en"><p><![CDATA[This article is set in the socially fluid context of a northern frontier town in the nineteenth-century Cape Colony. It examines the identity of James Rait, the young teacher at Colesberg Government School from 1849-1858. Rait was charged with implementing the complex curriculum of the New System of state education which had been introduced to the colony in 1839. Both the curriculum and textbooks were strongly rooted in Scottish educational discourses and this article investigates the teacher as mediator of a particular construction of knowledge and dispositions. It reflects on this role as the teacher who taught over 100 children of diverse cultural, class and racial backgrounds. It also examines the teacher's attempts to manage his growing incapacity to sustain a respectable manly identity. This was because of the incommensurate demands of his career and family on his ailing body and limited income. Disease can be seen to feminise the body; and while illness increasingly removed Rait from his classroom, his wife and particularly his female assistant were to bridge the domestic and working worlds and make up for his deficiency.]]></p></abstract>
<abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="af"><p><![CDATA[Hierdie artikel is 'n ondersoek na die sosiaal vloeibare konteks van 'n noordelike Kaapkolonie grensdorp in die midde-negentiende eeu. Daar word ondersoek ingestel na die identiteit van die jeugdige James Rait, wat tussen 1849 en 1858 onderwyser by Colesberg se Staatskool was. Rait is belas met die implementering van die "New System" van staatsonderrig se komplekse leerplan wat in 1839 in die kolonie ingestel is. Sowel die leerplan as die handboeke is sterk binne Skotse opvoedkundige diskoerse gewortel. En dus is daar n ondersoek in hierdie artikel van hoe die onderwyser as bemiddelaar van n besondere samestelling van kennis en geaardhede optree. Daar word gereflekteer oor die rol van die onderwyser wat aan 100 kinders van uiteenlopende kulturele, klas- en ras-agtergronde moes onderrig gee. Die artikel stel ondersoek in na die onderwyser se groeiende onbekwaamheid in sy pogings om 'n ordentlike manlike identiteit te handhaaf as gevolg van die oneweredige eise van sy loopbaan en familie op sy liggaamlike ongesteldheid en beperkte inkomste. Siekte word hier beskou as die vervrouliking van die liggaam. Terwyl siekte toenemend Rait van sy klaskamer weggehou het, het sy vrou en in besonder sy vroulike assistent die węrelde tussen die huislike en die werkende oorbrug om sodoende vir sy gebrek te kompenseer.]]></p></abstract>
<kwd-group>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[liberal education]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[state education]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[colonial project]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[government teachers]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[nineteenth-century Cape Colony]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[Colesberg]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[race]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[gender]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[health]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="af"><![CDATA[liberale opvoedkunde]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="af"><![CDATA[staatsonderrig]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="af"><![CDATA[koloniale projek]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="af"><![CDATA[regeringsonderwysers]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="af"><![CDATA[negentiende-eeuse Kaapkolonie]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="af"><![CDATA[Colesberg]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="af"><![CDATA[ras]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="af"><![CDATA[geslag]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="af"><![CDATA[gesondheid]]></kwd>
</kwd-group>
</article-meta>
</front><body><![CDATA[ <p align="right"><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><b>ARTICLES</b>    ARTIKELS</font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><a name="top"></a><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="4"><b>The    government teacher as mediator of a "superior" education in Colesberg, 1849-1858</b></font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><b>Helen Ludlow<a href="#back"><sup>*</sup></a></b></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">History and Division    of Social and Economic Sciences at the Wits School of Education, University    of the Witwatersrand</font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p>&nbsp;</p> <hr size="1" noshade>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><b>ABSTRACT</b></font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">This article is    set in the socially fluid context of a northern frontier town in the nineteenth-century    Cape Colony. It examines the identity of James Rait, the young teacher at Colesberg    Government School from 1849-1858. Rait was charged with implementing the complex    curriculum of the New System of state education which had been introduced to    the colony in 1839. Both the curriculum and textbooks were strongly rooted in    Scottish educational discourses and this article investigates the teacher as    mediator of a particular construction of knowledge and dispositions. It reflects    on this role as the teacher who taught over 100 children of diverse cultural,    class and racial backgrounds. It also examines the teacher's attempts to manage    his growing incapacity to sustain a respectable manly identity. This was because    of the incommensurate demands of his career and family on his ailing body and    limited income. Disease can be seen to feminise the body; and while illness    increasingly removed Rait from his classroom, his wife and particularly his    female assistant were to bridge the domestic and working worlds and make up    for his deficiency.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><b>Keywords:</b>    liberal education; state education; colonial project; government teachers; nineteenth-century    Cape Colony; Colesberg; race; gender; health.</font></p> <hr size="1" noshade>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><b>OPSOMMING</b></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Hierdie artikel    is 'n ondersoek na die sosiaal vloeibare konteks van 'n noordelike Kaapkolonie    grensdorp in die midde-negentiende eeu. Daar word ondersoek ingestel na die    identiteit van die jeugdige James Rait, wat tussen 1849 en 1858 onderwyser by    Colesberg se Staatskool was. Rait is belas met die implementering van die "New    System" van staatsonderrig se komplekse leerplan wat in 1839 in die kolonie    ingestel is. Sowel die leerplan as die handboeke is sterk binne Skotse opvoedkundige    diskoerse gewortel. En dus is daar n ondersoek in hierdie artikel van hoe die    onderwyser as bemiddelaar van n besondere samestelling van kennis en geaardhede    optree. Daar word gereflekteer oor die rol van die onderwyser wat aan 100 kinders    van uiteenlopende kulturele, klas- en ras-agtergronde moes onderrig gee. Die    artikel stel ondersoek in na die onderwyser se groeiende onbekwaamheid in sy    pogings om 'n ordentlike manlike identiteit te handhaaf as gevolg van die oneweredige    eise van sy loopbaan en familie op sy liggaamlike ongesteldheid en beperkte    inkomste. Siekte word hier beskou as die vervrouliking van die liggaam. Terwyl    siekte toenemend Rait van sy klaskamer weggehou het, het sy vrou en in besonder    sy vroulike assistent die w&ecirc;relde tussen die huislike en die werkende    oorbrug om sodoende vir sy gebrek te kompenseer.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><b>Sleutelwoorde:</b>    liberale opvoedkunde; staatsonderrig; koloniale projek; regeringsonderwysers;    negentiende-eeuse Kaapkolonie; Colesberg; ras; geslag; gesondheid.</font></p> <hr size="1" noshade>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <blockquote>        <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Some eighteen      or twenty years ago, the Government of this Colony introduced a scheme of      public education ... which promised much for the future benefit of the country.      The scheme was drafted by Sir John Herschel, one of the first men of the day;      and in liberality and catholicity of range, it was perhaps as much ahead of      existing systems, whether in Europe or elsewhere ... South Africa received      the scheme with open arms, and cordially welcomed the introduction of the      highly-educated gentlemen who were invited from Europe to carry it out ...      A giant, verily, was born to South Africa; but ... his physical development      was restrained and crushed in his infancy, his intellectual vigour and energy      were cramped and paralysed (George Bremner, government teacher, Graaff-Reinet,      18 August 1858).<a name="top1"></a><a href="#back1"><sup>1</sup></a></font></p> </blockquote>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="3"><b>Introduction</b></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">In May 1849, the    Scottish-born assistant teacher at the Stellenbosch Government School, James    Rait, was promoted to the remote Karoo village of Colesberg. To be a government    teacher at the Cape Colony in the mid-nineteenth century was to assume a position    associated with high status and respectability within the colonial order.<a name="top2"></a><a href="#back2"><sup>2</sup></a>    Government schooling was, however, a novel project in the British Empire.<a name="top3"></a><a href="#back3"><sup>3</sup></a>    The failure of the metropolitan government to commit sufficient resources to    make state schooling work meant that the ability of government teachers to sustain    a respectable identity varied. It became local circumstances rather than colonial    or metropolitan ambitions which set the parameters within which teachers established,    defended and performed their own identity. This article provides a case study    in which the career of James Rait at Colesberg is used to explore teacher identity    in the context of a small northern frontier town.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">An important document    survives from Rait's tenure; his "Report ... for the Quarter ending 30th September    1851".<a name="top4"></a><a href="#back4"><sup>4</sup></a> Its pages allow access    to Colesberg pupils and particularly to the way in which the curriculum was    implemented. This article thus investigates the teacher as mediator of a particular    construction of knowledge, attitudes and dispositions in frontier Colesberg.    It also examines his attempts to manage his growing incapacity to sustain a    respectable and successful manly identity. This was because of the incommensurate    demands of his career and family on his ailing body and limited income.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">As Rait's illness    advanced, he was granted permission to employ one of his senior pupils, Eliza    Arnot, as a paid pupil-teacher. What makes her role significant is that she    is one of very few young women to be given a formal, if junior, position within    state education. In addition, the racial mix of her family was notable. This    case study thus examines teacher identity within an important colonial project.    At the same time it opens up a local view of the workings of race, gender and    class in a more fluid social context than that of many of the contemporary government    schools.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The launch of the    "New System" or Established System of Schooling in 1839, was an attempt by local    colonial officials to improve the quality of Cape education.<a name="top5"></a><a href="#back5"><sup>5</sup></a>    Elsewhere I have argued that this may be seen as part of an attempt to create    greater government regularity in a relatively newly acquired British colony    which was dealing with the consequences of the abolition of slavery.<a name="top6"></a><a href="#back6"><sup>6</sup></a>    Free primary education could be seen both as a way of regulating and uplifting    the poor; its location in non-racial schoolrooms a reflection of post-emancipation    humanitarian egalitarian discourses. The additional provision of a liberal secondary    education (for a fee) could be used to develop an educated local leadership    suited to a colony embracing a settler-led commercial future.<a name="top7"></a><a href="#back7"><sup>7</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The New System    was the brainchild of the colonial secretary, John Bell, his fellow Scot John    Fairbairn, and the visiting English astronomer, Sir John Herschel;<a name="top8"></a><a href="#back8"><sup>8</sup></a>    its conception liberal, utilitarian, moralising. As evident in the article's    opening quotation, Herschel was regarded as the prime author of the system,    and his construction of the ideal teacher of the New System was one which resonated    with the Graaff-Reinet teacher and with James Rait, the subject of this article.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The efficiency    of the system, Herschel argued, would hinge on having "talented", knowledgeable    teachers, men of sound Christian character; men who would be rewarded financially    and through promotion for seeking their own improvement.<a name="top9"></a><a href="#back9"><sup>9</sup></a>    His good teacher was eventually to be epitomised by the graduate of a Scottish    university - with a classical or mathematical degree. This vision was reinforced    by another Scot, James Rose Innes, who was appointed as the first superintendent-general    of education (SGE) in 1839. In his selection and supervision of the first-class    government teachers, it is evident that Innes demanded high levels of academic    proficiency. Part of this was to ensure that they were able to pass a thorough    examination on the curriculum to be delivered, which was based on the Edinburgh    published <i>Chambers's Educational Course.</i><a name="top10"></a><a href="#back10"><sup>10</sup></a>    He also steadfastly refused to promote any who failed to achieve this qualification.<a name="top11"></a><a href="#back11"><sup>11</sup></a>    James Rait clearly met the SGE's exacting criteria and was promoted to Colesberg    in 1849.</font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="3"><b>Colesberg</b></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Colesberg was an    arid frontier town shaped by complex connections between the interior and coast    in ways that belie its remoteness and smallness. It lay 40 kilometres south    of the Orange River, far from the centre of government in Cape Town and its    closest port at Port Elizabeth (800 and 450 kilometres respectively). Its nearest    neighbour was the humble Griqua village of Philippolis, 56 kilometres to the    north "across the river".<a name="top12"></a><a href="#back12"><sup>12</sup></a></font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Colesberg originated    as a church centre, an offshoot of the Graaff-Reinet Dutch Reformed Church.    In 1824 the northeast boundary of the Cape Colony was moved to the Orange River    and the village of Colesberg was formally proclaimed in 1830.<a name="top13"></a><a href="#back13"><sup>13</sup></a>    The Colesberg Division was carved out of the Graaff-Reinet District in 1837,    at which date Fleetwood Rawstorne was appointed as resident magistrate and civil    commissioner (CC) of Colesberg.<a name="top14"></a><a href="#back14"><sup>14</sup></a>    The extension of the Cape's northern frontier and increasing emigration of colonial    farmers, especially after the Great Trek, created a connection between the Cape    and Transorangia that would characterise Colesberg's orientation throughout    the period under examination.<a name="top15"></a><a href="#back15"><sup>15</sup></a>    By the late 1840s, British political authority was uncontested in the northern    Cape Colony, although distant reverberations from eastern frontier conflict    and Boer-Griqua and Boer-Basuto contestations across the Orange River occasionally    disturbed Colesbergers' equanimity.<a name="top16"></a><a href="#back16"><sup>16</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Its frontier position    saw Colesberg host a variety of diplomatic, military and missionary delegations,    but it was pre-eminently an economic connection that tied Colesberg to the interior.    As in the Graaff-Reinet District, the Colesberg Division saw British, German    and other settlers leaving the eastern frontier, buying up trekker farms and    setting up businesses to service the northern frontier community. Colesberg's    economic life was sustained by provisioning farmers, hunters and various expeditions    to the interior. Wagons, trek oxen, horses, general supplies, guns, and gunpowder    in seemingly vast amounts were supplied by a growing number of local merchants,    both independent and increasingly, off-shoots of larger national merchant houses.    In return they purchased ivory, skins, cattle and provided a market for wool    clips; at times, long lines of credit too. <a name="top17"></a><a href="#back17"><sup>17</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">From the 1840s,    a "new era of imperial expansion" was evident in southern Africa, driven by    the rise of local rural capital.<a name="top18"></a><a href="#back18"><sup>18</sup></a>    The market value of hitherto undesirable semi-desert Karoo land in the Colesberg    area escalated rapidly with the introduction of merino sheep and the wool boom    of the 1840s and 1850s.<a name="top19"></a><a href="#back19"><sup>19</sup></a>    As sheep farming flourished many Colesberg merchants also became landowners.    Some farmed, others bought speculatively on both sides of the river.<a name="top20"></a><a href="#back20"><sup>20</sup></a>    Generally the 1850s (the time of Rait's incumbency) were prosperous. This was    until Colesberg, like much of the Cape Colony, was devastated by the drought    and famine of the 1860s.</font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="3"><b>James Rait and    schooling in Colesberg</b></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">An 1841 census    of the Colesberg District ("11 654 square miles") recorded it as having one    town, no schools and no missionaries. The population was 4 248 whites and 4    778 coloureds.<a name="top21"></a><a href="#back21"><sup>21</sup></a> The 1840s    saw moves made to correct the village's lack of educational provision. By 1843    basic literacy was provided in a Dutch Reformed Church (later London Missionary    Society-run) school for coloured congregants.<a name="top22"></a><a href="#back22"><sup>22</sup></a>    Colesberg was not originally granted a government school but by 1843, a government    schoolroom was being hired in the village. By 1851 there were girls in Colesberg    attending a "female school".<a name="top23"></a><a href="#back23"><sup>23</sup></a>    Class sensibilities saw some of the more affluent send their children to private    establishments in Cape Town and some wealthier farmers employed private tutors    for their children.<a name="top24"></a><a href="#back24"><sup>24</sup></a> Generally,    however, it appears that the government school came to be regarded as an acceptable    source of education for a wide spectrum of Colesberg residents. <a name="top25"></a><a href="#back25"><sup>25</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">James Rait was    a 26-year-old bachelor in 1849 when he became the third teacher to take up the    first-class government post. He appears to have had a sense of vocation, referring    to educating "the Rising generation" as entailing "important duties" and a "sacred    responsibility". <a name="top26"></a><a href="#back26"><sup>26</sup></a> He    was able both to deliver the higher branches,<a name="top27"></a><a href="#back27"><sup>27</sup></a>    and achieve good results with a large number of pupils ranged across the five    classes of the elementary section of his school. Evidence of this was a rapid    rise in enrolled scholars from 29 in September 1849 (five months after his arrival)    to 101 a year later.<a name="top28"></a><a href="#back28"><sup>28</sup></a>    In carrying out his duties, he received gratifying support from the local authorities.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><i>Race and the    government school</i></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Despite the stated    intention that government schools should include children of all races, the    fact that the Colesberg school did so was unusual. A number of coloured children    attended it from at least 1850 through to its final dying days.<a name="top29"></a><a href="#back29"><sup>29</sup></a>    Specific details of the coloured families attending the government school are    almost impossible to find, other than of the Arnot family discussed below. There    may well have been coloured artisans in the village. There were many Khoisan    labourers on Colesberg farms, the major decimation of indigenous (largely San)    frontier communities having been completed by the 1790s.<a name="top30"></a><a href="#back30"><sup>30</sup></a>    There were also many "Hottentots and Bushmen ... squatting" on the 40 000 acres    of Colesberg commonage in 1850, living off small flocks earned as shepherds    and "occasional service in town".<a name="top31"></a><a href="#back31"><sup>31</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The existence of    the Dutch-medium London Missionary Society (LMS) mission school in the town    has been noted, and its pupils, "chiefly ... children of Hottentots and Bushmen"<a name="top32"></a><a href="#back32"><sup>32</sup></a>    would have been given a basic 3R curriculum. Who chose to go to the government    school and why is not spelt out, and the admission of coloured children to the    Colesberg Government School seems to have happened amid unusual circumstances.    The only reference to this is Rait's comment on 16 August 1850:</font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<blockquote>        <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">&#91;A&#93; considerable      number of the panes of the windows are broken / several of which were broken      during the excitement consequent upon the introduction of the coloured children      into the school/ &amp; in consequence of exposure several of the children      have caught colds. I trust that you will see to their being put in, as soon      as possible.<a name="top33"></a><a href="#back33"><sup>33</sup></a></font></p> </blockquote>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">There are two clues    as to the circumstances. A petition written by the deacons of the coloured congregation    of the Union Chapel in Port Elizabeth on 22 February 1856, protested at the    their exclusion from the government school in that town, and pointed to a similar    situation having occurred in Uitenhage and Colesberg: "it create there only    Animosity stil there was Redress also in Colesberg an thare of couse the same    feeling stil thare.'<a name="top34"></a><a href="#back34"><sup>34</sup></a>    This petition importantly shows a bid by coloured Christian leaders for their    inclusion in the educational dispensation that was theirs by right.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">In the early 1860s,    Innes engaged with LMS agent, the Revd W. Thompson on the subject of racial    exclusion from state schools. Thompson argued strongly that colonial prejudices    had largely excluded coloured children from government schools. Innes described    how he had handled the situation in what might well have been Colesberg:</font></p>     <blockquote>        <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">To show the working      of the system: a coloured man in one of the country towns had his child first      educated at the mission school, but, being able to pay for the higher branches,      was anxious that his child should join the Government school. This created      great excitement among the European population, and the matter was referred      to me. <b>My reply was, that the parent could no more be deprived of the privileges      of the Government school than of the court of justice when he had to plead      his rights.</b> The child was, in consequence, at once admitted, and, in half      an hour, twenty-eight of the European children left the school. This was subsequently      thought better of, and the children returned, whilst the coloured child remained.      Do you not think that if firmness were calmly exercised in every instance      of this kind, objections would gradually give way, especially if the teacher      were successful?<a name="top35"></a><a href="#back35"><sup>35</sup></a> (my      emphasis).</font></p> </blockquote>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The legal position    was clear, but it took endurance to remain in a school where you were not wanted.    As Revd Thompson said, "I believe that where something of the kind has been    tried, the children themselves have been as like speckled birds; they have found    themselves very uncomfortable <a name="top36"></a><a href="#back36"><sup>36</sup></a>At    Colesberg it was apparently possible to endure this, nonetheless.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">It is not clear    how many coloured children attended at Colesberg, but those on the roll who    may have belonged to coloured families include M. Bloem, M. Jantjies, R. Sapphira    and David Struis. The four Arnot children on the list had white parents but    coloured half-siblings because their father, David Arnot snr's, first marriage    had been to a Bethelsdorp resident, Catharina (or Kaatje) van der Jeugd, daughter    of Jacobus van der Jeugd and Mina Piet van de Kaap. Catharina van der Jeugd    was mother of David Arnot jnr, born in 1821. <a name="top37"></a><a href="#back37"><sup>37</sup></a>    See <a href="/img/revistas/hist/v57n1/08f01.jpg">Figure 1</a>.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">As important figures    in Colesberg, it may have been the Arnots - the older Scottish blacksmith who    had spent a number of years living and working at Bethelsdorp, and his half    "Hottentot" son - whose influence made the entry of coloured children into the    Colesberg School more acceptable to the wider community. Added to this, the    paternalistic CC and school commissioner, Rawstorne, had been an assistant guardian    to the slaves at Swellendam.<a name="top38"></a><a href="#back38"><sup>38</sup></a>    He may well have been committed, as was Rait, to the improving role of education.    The fourth person who may have created the possibility for all local children    to attend the government school was its other school commissioner, Charles Orpen.    The Irish surgeon had arrived in Colesberg late in 1848 to serve as an Anglican    priest. A philanthropist with an interest in deaf education,<a name="top39"></a><a href="#back39"><sup>39</sup></a>    he had attempted to implement the ideas of Pestalozzi on child-centred, activity-based    learning while in England.<a name="top40"></a><a href="#back40"><sup>40</sup></a>    He appears to have brought that same concern for the needy to Colesberg and    he supported Rait with a loan of maps and natural history plates, without which    "the children would not possibly be well taught (as Mr James Rait the master    wished) ..."<a name="top41"></a><a href="#back41"><sup>41</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><i>Pedagogy and    pedagogic space</i></font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">From early on,    Rait's classroom was filled to capacity with children, seemingly of all ages,    genders and races. In his discussion of pedagogic space, Vihao points out the    relationship between prevailing pedagogy and the organisation of this space.    A school's space can be seen to perform three functions - productive, symbolic    and disciplinary.<a name="top42"></a><a href="#back42"><sup>42</sup></a> An    overcrowded and ill furnished schoolroom would be unable to fill any of these    roles satisfactorily. Thus, urged on by teacher and local school commission,    the government approved the construction of a new schoolroom on the same site,    erf 22 Ryneveld Street, in the centre of the village.<a name="top43"></a><a href="#back43"><sup>43</sup></a>    By October 1850, occupation was taken of one of the larger government schoolrooms:    7' by 25' and a lofty 20' in height.<a name="top44"></a><a href="#back44"><sup>44</sup></a>    Its interior was whitewashed, its floor made of stone, and it was furnished    with writing desks around the periphery and forms across the room. This was    an important if modest specialised space.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">By the time Rait    was teaching, the monitorial system employed in earlier forms of local schooling    was no longer in favour. It was seen to have sacrificed real learning to mindless    discipline. Instead, the teachers of the government schools engaged essentially    in class teaching - "classification" resulting in five elementary classes, though    there was no ascription of age to a particular level or rate of proceeding from    one to the next. Advancement through the educational course was thus more flexible    than in later systems of classroom based teaching. The Colesberg School had    only one room, and continued the practice in preindustrial settings of placing    all pupils in one space.<a name="top45"></a><a href="#back45"><sup>45</sup></a>    There was an integrated organisation of time and space where time was categorised    as "Time under the Master"; "Time under the Assistant or Monitor"; and "Preparing    at the Desk"<a name="top46"></a><a href="#back46"><sup>46</sup></a> (see <a href="#f2">Figure    2</a>). Activity would shift around the room in relation to this categorisation.</font></p>     <p><a name="f2"></a></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p align="center"><img src="/img/revistas/hist/v57n1/08f02.jpg"></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The inclusion of    exterior pedagogic space in the form of playgrounds was to be emphasised by    David Stow, the pioneer of Scottish teacher education.<a name="top47"></a><a href="#back47"><sup>47</sup></a>    This practice spread to the Cape and by 1855 the lessor of the Colesberg Schoolroom    had been persuaded to construct separate, walled in boys' and girls' playgrounds.<a name="top48"></a><a href="#back48"><sup>48</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The school day,    as in all government schools, was from 9am to 12 noon and 2pm to 4pm. In 1851,    there were 101 pupils spread fairly evenly over the five classes of the elementary    school. (In addition, there were five pupils taking the higher branches for    which they would pay the quarterly fee of &pound;1). Three classes made up the    Junior Division, the 1st being the most junior; there were two classes in the    Senior Division, where again the 1st was junior to the 2nd.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">For most of his    career in Colesberg, Rait conducted his school on his own, with the periodic    assistance of a senior pupil acting as a pupil-teacher. The lack of assistance    was to become a widespread cause for complaint by government teachers, but finances    for these were not part of the initial budgeting of the New System and it took    many years and the virtual (literal) collapse of the teachers before the situation    was improved. It appears that in 1851 most of the teaching of the younger children    was done by a pupil-teacher with Rait's role in the first three classes confined    to a combined daily lesson in Religious Instruction and some teaching of reading    and writing. In February 1856, however, he wrote:</font></p>     <blockquote>        ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The progress      of the more advanced classes has been considerably retarded for want of an      Assistant. I have no confidence in Monitors, and have therefore arranged my      time as to give each class the advantage of my immediate tuition. The result      is on a given day, one part of it I devote to teaching the A,B,C; another      to teaching children beginning to master small words, and so on. The progress      of the more advanced scholars cannot, consequently be such as if I devoted      my whole time to them; and an estimate of my deserts must be formed from the      state of the whole school.<a name="top49"></a><a href="#back49"><sup>49</sup></a></font></p> </blockquote>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Children were not    obliged to be at school, however, a frustrating source of irregularity that    most schoolmasters bemoaned. As the years passed, the school seems to have increased    proportionately in younger children, mostly Dutch-speaking, and from families    less committed than his original intake to obtaining more than a basic education.<a name="top50"></a><a href="#back50"><sup>50</sup></a>    With continuing large numbers and his declining health, Rait was hard-pressed    to continue with provision of the higher branches, although he had three pupils    engaged in these studies in 1855.<a name="top51"></a><a href="#back51"><sup>51</sup></a>    It was only as his illness became critical by 1856, that Rait acquired the formal    services of Eliza Arnot as a paid pupil-teacher.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><i>Discourses in    and of the Colesberg classroom</i></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Rait's itemisation    in his 1851 report of the subjects studied and the <i>Chambers</i> texts used    in his classes, provides an opportunity to engage with the discourses these    represent. It offers a glimpse at the intriguing interplay between the Scottish    context and worldview in which they were constructed and the children of the    town and district, Colesberg, that has been presented thus far.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Drawing on the    literary culture of Scotland, and writing and publishing on matters as diverse    as Scottish folklore, English literature and new ideas in science, William and    Robert Chambers "helped feed the growing taste for popularizations of science    and culture".<a name="top52"></a><a href="#back52"><sup>52</sup></a> <i>The    Chambers's Educational Course</i> was published in Edinburgh as one branch of    the burgeoning Chambers publishing empire. The educational series was eventually    used throughout Britain and introduced to the Cape by Innes. The significance    of the course, argues Sondra Cooney, was this: "Partly inspired by an unconventional    philosophy, it advocated a broad moral, intellectual secularity at a time when    educational institutions and practices were infused with the worst in narrow,    anti-intellectual sectarianism."<a name="top53"></a><a href="#back53"><sup>53</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The Chambers educational    approach was directly influenced by the Scottish phrenologist, George Combe,    and indirectly by European educational philosophers such as Pestalozzi and Froebel.<a name="top54"></a><a href="#back54"><sup>54</sup></a>    It followed a theory of learning that saw children as possessing innate potential    that needed to be unfurled. Phrenology emphasised the role of the brain as seat    of the mind and it provided (a later discredited) "scientific" backing for the    Chambers belief in human improvability through education.<a name="top55"></a><a href="#back55"><sup>55</sup></a>    A good environment in which the brain could develop became an important part    of education. Diet, play, exercise and, importantly, learning that related to    children's developmental stages informed the design of these educational texts.    Authors for the series included experienced teachers, while Robert Chambers    himself wrote some of the most popular books. The emphasis was on quality texts    which were both practical and cheap.<a name="top56"></a><a href="#back56"><sup>56</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The introduction    of the <i>Chambers's Course</i> into Cape classrooms, as the defining way in    which the curriculum of the New System was implemented, brought with it "rules    and standards by which to 'reason' about &#91;the&#93; world"; a vocabulary,    subject matter and a frame of reference that was Scottish and British. Not only    were subjects taught, but also "dispositions, awareness and sensibilities".<a name="top57"></a><a href="#back57"><sup>57</sup></a>    To the extent that they acquired the educational discourses in the limited time    they stayed at school, the children of Colesberg were absorbing the knowledge    and social rules to shape their identities as male or female subjects of the    British Empire. In the books Rait used and the content he taught, there were    messages that cohered with a rational and inclusive identity. At the same time    there was much that naturalised acceptance of a gendered, hierarchical social    order, British civilisation and imperial power.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The pedagogy used    is not recorded, but a teacher or assistant might follow the guidelines supplied    at the beginning of each of the Chambers texts. Thus the Colesberg beginner    reading class of over 20 children might learn to form their letters by copying    the teacher in inscribing them in chalk on their boards. Following a phonic    rather than alphabetical system, they would also learn to sound these by using    them in words. "Let the vowels be sounded boldly, and the consonants with a    considerable emission of breath." Pronunciation was important, and in order    to help children "really understand the idea represented by the word employed",    they should be provided a mental image through "object, experiment, drawing,    pantomime, anecdote" and the like.<a name="top58"></a><a href="#back58"><sup>58</sup></a>    Words were generally learnt in isolation and only put together meaningfully    at the end of the book as "Lessons of Mixed Words". The second story below typifies    those in the Chambers readers; an engraved illustration is accompanied by a    text relating in part to the world of children while at the same time conveying    a moral message which positions them as either "good" or "bad". See <a href="#f3">Figure    3</a>.</font></p>     <p><a name="f3"></a></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p align="center"><img src="/img/revistas/hist/v57n1/08f03.jpg"></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The <i>Second Book    of Reading</i> has a similar methodology though denser texts. In the stories,    "God is good, and great, and wise"; "We should be kind to animals"; "Sheep are    pretty and innocent animals". The stories are gendered and straddle respectable    working class and middle class discourses. A "pretty little girl" feeds chickens    in one story, in another a girl stands by "in a clean white frock", ready to    water the garden which is being tended by a man and a boy.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The second class    of the Junior Division of Colesberg Government School was engaged, in 1851,    in reading from the third reader in the <i>Chambers's Educational Course.</i>    It was called <i>Simple Lessons in Reading,</i> and continued in the same vein    as the earlier readers. Its preface states that developing the art of reading    and spelling is intended to prepare the child "for methodic intellectual culture    in the books which follow".</font></p>     <blockquote>        <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">At the same time,      in order to <i>amuse,</i> and induce reading <i>for the pleasure it communicates,</i>      the subjects of the lessons are of that species of narrative which uniformly      delights the infant mind, bearing in each case a reference to the moral perceptions      of the pupil, or tending to encourage in him a love of the beautiful in nature      ... <a name="top59"></a><a href="#back59"><sup>59</sup></a></font></p> </blockquote>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Its authors recommend    not cramming the child with too much explanation, but that the teacher should    ask good questions, make constant use of illustrations and objects, and raise    simple ideas that will "interest and encourage the dawning faculties."<a name="top60"></a><a href="#back60"><sup>60</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">There is a vibrant    and unrelenting moral purpose in these writings. But the authors manage to imbue    their tales with a sense of affection, enthusiasm for the Godgiven beauty of    the world, and occasional humour. "The Milk-Maid" forgets the pail of milk balanced    on her head as she imagines herself clad in "Green - let me consider - yes,    green becomes my complexion best, and green it shall be". Tossing her head at    the thought of her ability to refuse her many suitors, she proves the moral:    "When we dwell much on distant and un-cer-tain pleasures, we neglect our present    bu-si-ness, and are exposed to real mis-for-tunes."<a name="top61"></a><a href="#back61"><sup>61</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The third class    of the Junior Division used <i>Rudiments of Knowledge</i> as a "Reading-book    which aimed 'strictly at an explanation of <i>external appearances</i> in the    natural and social world'". ("Principles" were to be dealt with in the sequel:    <i>An Introduction to the Sciences.)</i> The text normalises the authority of    God, parents and government. It is a world in which children are ignorant and    need to learn in order to prosper. "Mankind" is treated as one "human species"    endowed with reason, an ability to work, and to live together in society. As    for race,</font></p>     <blockquote>        ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">some people have      white skins, with blue or gray eyes and light hair on their heads. Other people      have dark skins, with black eyes and black hair. But all people are human      beings, and are the same way made; and it is no matter what the colour of      their skins or their outward appearance. We should never hate or ill-use any      persons because the colour of their skins is different from ours, or because      their outward appearance is not beautiful, but be equally kind to all. <a name="top62"></a><a href="#back62"><sup>62</sup></a></font></p> </blockquote>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Some people live    in the country in "cottages", but most people live in houses near each other    in "villages, towns", and "cities". Family and nationality are explained. Hard    work and property ownership are to be valued without sacrificing modesty, humility    and an understanding that poverty comes from misfortune, old age or illness    and not only as a consequence of idleness.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">While a common    humanity is claimed, societies are not the same. "We belong to the British nation    ... There are two kinds of nations - those which are <i>barbarous,</i> and those    which are <i>civilized."</i> It would be easy for Colesberg pupils to think    of the squatters on their commonage and classify them in the light of the following    description:</font></p>     <blockquote>        <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">In barbarous      nations, the people have not comfortable houses, food, or clothing, and they      live almost like beasts of the field. In civilized nations, there is a regular      form of government; there are comfortable houses, and well-built towns; there      are trades, commerce, and an abundance of everything that can make life agreeable;      the lands are well cultivated; and there are churches, schools, hospitals      for the poor, and other valuable institutions. We live in a civilized society.<a name="top63"></a><a href="#back63"><sup>63</sup></a></font></p> </blockquote>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The topics dealing    with the natural world move pupils towards some elementary categorisation, and    include animals, wood and trees, water and "objects".</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Arithmetic formed    part of each day's schedule for all five elementary classes, and Chambers's    <i>Introduction to Arithmetic</i> appears to have been written for the teacher    rather than pupils.<a name="top64"></a><a href="#back64"><sup>64</sup></a> It    sets out a rule-based methodology with detailed, wordy instructions and explanations    on addition, subtraction, multiplication and division. Tables and exercises    are included, the latter showing the application of arithmetic to daily life    and a mercantile future.All five classes spent some time doing Geography, mostly    with the monitor - capitals, in the case of the second class, and principal    lakes, rivers, mountains and "the World" in the third.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Focusing his efforts    on the two senior classes of the elementary school, Rait appears to have taught    them the same (unidentified) sections of grammar, and focused heavily on teaching    "Natural History and Physical Science". It appears that most science was taught    without apparatus (the absence of which was lamented by a number of the teachers),    knowledge being developed through "conversational lectures". These were based    on the widely used and very popular <i>Introduction to the Sciences</i> which,    claimed its author Robert Chambers, "presents a connected and systematic view    of Nature ... " His intention was to present information as</font></p>     <blockquote>        <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">a chain of principles,      calculated, in combination, to impress a distinct and comprehensive idea,      and to make it possible that even those who leave school at the early age      of ten, shall not go into the world without some knowledge of the parts of      which it is composed, and the laws by which it is regulated.<a name="top65"></a><a href="#back65"><sup>65</sup></a></font></p> </blockquote>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">It was at this    stage, therefore, that government school pupils were introduced to the analytical    thinking that the scientists of the era were engaged in. While the senior class    paid attention to "Matter and Motion", and "Hydrostatics", there was a particular    emphasis, in the September 1851 examination, on "Cuvier's Arrangement of the    Animal Kingdom".<a name="top66"></a><a href="#back66"><sup>66</sup></a> Chambers    (who was to undertake an anonymous investigation of his own into the evolution    of species)<a name="top67"></a><a href="#back67"><sup>67</sup></a> entitled    the section, "The Animal Creation". The introductory paragraph would surely    have stymied most ten-year olds, particularly those for whom English was used    only at school. It nevertheless demonstrates the movement into evolutionary    thinking.</font></p>     <blockquote>        <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">All parts of      the earth's surface, except those exposed to intolerable degrees of cold,      are peopled by <i>Animals</i> - that is, by beings which not only possess      an organised structure, as the plants do, and, like them, are capable of being      nourished by assimilating various other substances, but are animated by an      <i>internal principle,</i> which can be traced in many very remarkable results,      particularly motion from place to place, a selection of advantageous circumstances,      and a power of adapting means to ends. At the head of this class of beings      stands <i>Man</i>.<a name="top68"></a><a href="#back68"><sup>68</sup></a></font></p> </blockquote>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Rait's pupils were    introduced to the divisions of Cuvier's classification of the animal kingdom    with the aid of Orpen's four "coloured and varnished large plates of Natural    History".<a name="top69"></a><a href="#back69"><sup>69</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Also itemised on    the report as part of the Natural Science curriculum is the section on "The    History of Man". Having classified "man" with the vertebrates, it is now noted    that he is distinctive for his intelligence and moral nature. Then, in a shift    from the presentation in <i>Rudiments of Knowledge</i> of all "mankind" as essentially    the same, although living in differing state of civilisation, there appears    an exposition akin to later social Darwinism:</font></p>     <blockquote>        <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">He is not, however,      in every country the same creature. Europe, the western part of Asia, and      the north of Africa, have been possessed since the dawn of authentic history      by a white-skinned race, the highest in intelligence, and the most elegant      in form, named the Caucasian variety, ... The remainder of Asia has been at      the same time occupied by an olive-coloured race, of less intelligence and      vigour of character, named the Mongolian variety, from Mongolia ... A third      race, of black skin, coarse features, and small intelligence, have inhabited      the greater part of Africa: they are denominated the Negro or Ethiopian variety.      In America, when it was discovered three hundred years ago, a fourth race      of a copper-colour, and of no great intelligence, was found in a generally      barbarous condition. The white-skinned variety are remarkable for their cultivation      of letters and science, and as the only race amongst which any considerable      progress is made in intelligence from age to age.<a name="top70"></a><a href="#back70"><sup>70</sup></a></font></p> </blockquote>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">We close our time    in the Colesberg school with a taste of the history lesson that the first class    of the Senior Division was having. Another widely used text was Robert Chambers's    <i>History and Present State of the British Empire,</i><a name="top71"></a><a href="#back71"><sup>71</sup></a>    which tracks British history through the reigns of various monarchs. This time,    the pupils were studying the "concluding portion of the Reign of George IV,    Commencement of the Reign of William IV". The textbook mentions the passing    of the Reform bills, and other improving measures, though very briefly. "The    most important of these, in a moral point of view, was the abolition of slavery    in the colonies ... which had long been a disgrace to humanity." <a name="top72"></a><a href="#back72"><sup>72</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">It is likely that    the pupils would have been far more entertained by the section on Queen Elizabeth,    which begins with the statement that "while Elizabeth increased in power and    resources, she became more noted for feminine weaknesses". This included volatility,    susceptibility to bad influence, hypochondria, melancholy and agitation.<a name="top73"></a><a href="#back73"><sup>73</sup></a>    Despite a concern to amuse and entertain that the Chambers brothers seem always    to have borne in mind, the presentation of the foibles of certain (English)    monarchs did not prevent Robert Chambers from concluding that:</font></p>     <blockquote>        ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The British Empire      ... is universally acknowledged to be one of the greatest which exists, or      ever existed on the face of the globe ... &#91;The&#93; extension of the English      tongue, and with it English literature and habits of though, as also Christianity,      over so large a portion of the earth's surface, is perhaps the most extraordinary      fact connected with the history of modern civilization.<a name="top74"></a><a href="#back74"><sup>74</sup></a></font></p> </blockquote>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Thus might the    Colesberg children be disposed to interpret disruptive events on the not too    distant frontiers of their own colony - the Kat River Rebellion and the War    of Mlanjeni (8th Frontier War of 1850) - as unwarranted resistance to the inevitable    expansion of British civilisation?</font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="3"><b>The challenges    of maintaining a respectable status if/when a married teacher</b></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">In common with    his colleagues elsewhere, James Rait very soon took up the theme of sustained    respectability requiring a better income. His initial salary at Colesberg was    a meagre &pound;100 per annum (plus house rent) in line with the school's humble    location. While a bachelor, this did not concern him unduly. His agitation for    a raise to &pound;150 p/a seems to have coincided with his decision to marry    and in March 1852 he wrote at length to the local school commission asking them    to support him on the strength of their acknowledged high satisfaction with    his services.<a name="top75"></a><a href="#back75"><sup>75</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Rait provided a    clear statement of his entitlement, claiming his achievements to equal those    of "Schools to which Two Hundred pounds per annum is attached" - in other words    the best remunerated schools at which the teachers initially selected by Herschel    himself had been placed. These included Stellenbosch (Rait's own school) and    nearby Graaff-Reinet. He justified an increase in salary through his high numbers    (95- 100) and by the progress of his pupils. His third point was that the cost    of living in Colesberg would make it impossible, "were I married, to maintain    that status in society which my situation entitles me to hold".</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Rait harnessed    Herschel to his cause, citing Sir John's founding memorandum of the New System    as authority for his own position:</font></p>     <blockquote>        <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The salaries      of Civil servants ... mark to a <u>considerable</u> extent their status, ...      it is not in human nature, that a service should carry with it any show of      <b>public respect,</b> which is considered inadequately remunerated by a salary      barely sufficient to maintain an individual, insufficient for a family, and      <b>accompanied by no power, no privilege, no honorary circumstance whatever      of any description, but on the contrary associated with proverbial drudgery</b><a name="top76"></a><a href="#back76"><sup>76</sup></a>      (my emphasis).</font></p> </blockquote>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Rait was demonstrating    a familiarity with the origins of the New System and, surely, hoping to show    up "government" if it failed in its own commitments.</font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Rait was assured    of appreciative support from the school commission<a name="top77"></a><a href="#back77"><sup>77</sup></a>    and Innes' endorsement of "the very efficient &amp; successful manner" in which    he conducted his school. The SGE was, nonetheless, unwilling in 1852 to depart    from the principle that increased salary came with promotion to a superior school.    He did, however, recommend a "Special Gratuity in acknowledgement of past services"    and said he would decide on this when inspecting the school later in the year.<a name="top78"></a><a href="#back78"><sup>78</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The inspection    came and went. It was one of only two visits made to this most remote of his    schools by Innes (himself constantly unwell after 1853<a name="top79"></a><a href="#back79"><sup>79</sup></a>)    in the eight years that Rait was government teacher. Satisfaction was expressed    and a gratuity accordingly recommended. Yet two years later the gratuity had    yet to be received - an act of administrative neglect that created in Rait a    sense of abandonment. Rait re-sent his 1852 letter, changing only the phrase,    "if he were married" to "now since I am married". The cost of living in Colesberg    precluded a comfortable and respectable life for his family unless his salary    was raised. This time he promoted the earnestness of his cause through statistics,    listing the large pupil enrolment at his school for every quarter since he had    arrived. <a name="top80"></a><a href="#back80"><sup>80</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">James Rait's identity    as a married man, with responsibilities to support his family in a matter fitting    for his situation and status sat heavily with him all the time. The theme of    financial stress continued throughout his career, although somewhat alleviated    by increases in 1855 and 1857 which left him with an annual salary of &pound;150.<a name="top81"></a><a href="#back81"><sup>81</sup></a>    The sense existed that respectability was a precarious status to maintain given    the financial demands on a small salary. The granting of a gratuity as a result    of persuasive performance in a public examination, or through convincing statistical    information, could help to promote short-term security. The loss of pupils if    parents did not bother to send them to school could imperil his enterprise.    Rait was sure that his performance was equal to that of any other teacher in    the New System but it was a status that would be further threatened by poor    health, as we shall see.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">In the period between    his two major letters on record concerning his salary, Rait's correspondence    shows him to have become intensely anxious about a drop in attendance at his    school (from a peak of 107 in March 1851 to 60 in March 1853) and the impression    this would make on the SGE.<a name="top82"></a><a href="#back82"><sup>82</sup></a>    He became very critical of irregular attendance which he felt was condoned by    apathetic and indifferent parents. Rait echoed other teachers in his characterisation    of a "Boer" education which required limited time in school: "The boer idea    of education is ... very low. Generally, their standard is a knowledge of the    Dutch catechism, to be able to sign the name, and to read the Bible."<a name="top83"></a><a href="#back83"><sup>83</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Rait made no differentiation    on the basis of race but generally seems to have found the children of lower    classes least conditioned to attend school with serious regularity. Linking    his frustration with irregular attendance to his support for the purposes of    a first-class education, he commented further:</font></p>     <blockquote>        <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">&#91;T&#93;o      render the School what, I am sure, you &#91;Innes&#93; intend it to be, an      efficient instrument for elevating and improving the youth of this Community      - the Humbler classes in particular - I must again take the liberty of expressing      my unaltered conviction that regularity of attendance must be strictly enforced.      <a name="top84"></a><a href="#back84"><sup>84</sup></a></font></p> </blockquote>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Asked by Innes    to account for poor attendances in the quarter ending March 1853, the school    commissioners reported that it was due largely to illness of the children or    members of their families.<a name="top85"></a><a href="#back85"><sup>85</sup></a>    Rait's letter to Innes shows him to be less persuaded of his misinterpretation    than Rawstorne believed, but his high levels of frustration and irritability    may also have been due to the onset of illness. This was to plague the next    five years of his career.<a name="top86"></a><a href="#back86"><sup>86</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><i>The failing    body of the married teacher</i></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">In April 1855,    Rait "deemed it &#91;his&#93; duty to make &#91;Innes&#93; acquainted" with    the state of his health for the first time. He requested to be moved to a less    taxing position in the civil service as he had "been subject for some months    past to an irritating cough, accompanied, at times, by the spitting of blood,    and by loss of appetite". He clearly understood the possible seriousness of    his condition, expressing the "fear that the continued pulmonary irritation    caused by the amount of speaking requisite for the efficient teaching of from    80 to 100 children, may develope in my system the insidious malady, 'consumption'."<a name="top87"></a><a href="#back87"><sup>87</sup></a></font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">An accompanying    medical certificate from the Colesberg district surgeon confirmed deterioration    in the teacher's health over the previous three years. Despite improvements    to the school's infrastructure, it was not a healthy environment for a teacher    with chronic respiratory problems:</font></p>     <blockquote>        <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">I should strongly      advise &#91;Mr James Rait&#93; to discontinue, or change his occupation which      confines him to considerable and sudden alterations of temperature, being      obliged to pass many hours a day in a highly heated and dry atmosphere of      the schoolroom and the immense amount of labour and incessant talking to scholars      - mostly children under ten years of age - numbering from eighty to one hundred,      has increased his ailment considerably.<a name="top88"></a><a href="#back88"><sup>88</sup></a></font></p> </blockquote>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The rest of James    Rait's career was beset with the management of his illness, and it is this illness    that invites us to engage with the health of the government teachers as a significant    theme. Christopher Forth describes a model of nineteenth-century manliness which    drew on notions of a bounded and naturally robust male body. Physical strength,    associated as it was with both work and war, was generally necessary if a man    was to claim moral strength.<a name="top89"></a><a href="#back89"><sup>89</sup></a>    In the case of scholarly men, middle class intellectuals, however, there was    some ground for claiming to be manly if one's health was sacrificed in a noble    cause - war - and by implication the war on ignorance and savagery that education    represented. 'Like battle wounds borne by warriors, health problems could be    embraced as proof of a man's willingness to endure physical distress in the    name of some higher ideal."<a name="top90"></a><a href="#back90"><sup>90</sup></a>    Though never explicitly claiming this consideration of his illness, Rait's setting    out of his claims to financial recognition was based on such a construction    of his efforts as nobly sacrificial. There is little information on how Rait    was received by other men, but Rawstorne and Innes appear to have showed nothing    but sympathy for him. Likewise, the parliamentarians discussing his case in    an 1857 inquiry perceived him to be among the most oppressed of government servants,    "breaking down from excessive labour".<a name="top91"></a><a href="#back91"><sup>91</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Historian of the    British Raj, E.M.Collingham notes that the British experience of India was intensely    physical, assailing all senses. Values, attitudes and ideologies were literally    embodied.<a name="top92"></a><a href="#back92"><sup>92</sup></a> It is "clear    ... that the body was central to the colonial experience ... as the site where    social structures are experienced, transmuted and projected back on society    ..."<a name="top93"></a><a href="#back93"><sup>93</sup></a> How, then, might    Rait, with his sickening body be seen? Collingham demonstrates the "burden on    the physique" of the British official in India, resultant from long hours of    bureaucratic duties<a name="top94"></a><a href="#back94"><sup>94</sup></a> and    Rait may likewise be seen to carry in his body the demands of the educational    state. While he could convince everyone - pupils, parents, school commissioners,    SGE - of his moral reputation and conscientiousness, the large numbers of pupils    of differing ages, the huge range of subjects to be taught, and the lack of    effective assistance weakened his resistance such that the random occurrence    of a TB bacillus was able to take hold and sap his vitality. Rait's illness    ended in his death in 1858, but was arguably just an intensification of the    malaise that affected many government teachers, and the SGE himself. The complaints    of fatigue and bodily ailments resulting from the arduous duties of teaching    and supervising in the New System are too many to be glossed over.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Rait also came    to carry in his body the impact of the environment and the temporal and spatial    separation of the town from adequate medical care. This is most poignantly conveyed    in the image of the weakened teacher being jolted to and from Port Elizabeth    in Mr Grant's cart in December 1856 "to secure a change of air and scene for    a short time, and to obtain better medical aid than can be got in Colesberg".    It is captured, too, in his final journey to Queenstown in November 1857, from    which the CC Rawstorne feared there was "very faint hope of his return or recovery".<a name="top95"></a><a href="#back95"><sup>95</sup></a>    His illness weakened him and affected his ability to deliver - to the point    where two women stepped in to provide what he was expected to provide - education    for his charges and support for his family. Disease can be seen to feminise    the body, and while illness increasingly confined Rait to a private space, his    female assistant and his wife, Julia-Anne (ne&eacute; Nelson), were to bridge    the domestic and working worlds.<a name="top96"></a><a href="#back96"><sup>96</sup></a>    As his illness progressed, "Mrs Rait, by teaching at a female school, contribute&#91;d&#93;    considerably to the support of the family".<a name="top97"></a><a href="#back97"><sup>97</sup></a>    Sixteen-year-old Eliza became a paid pupil-teacher in the government school    in 1856.</font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="3"><b>Eliza Arnot    - the (limited) space fot women teachers in the government schools</b></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The rationale for    Eliza Arnot's appointment was "the very considerable number of Girls as well    as Young Children" at the school.<a name="top98"></a><a href="#back98"><sup>98</sup></a>    The appointment of a senior pupil, one of only three engaged in the higher branches    in 1855, offers an opportunity to reflect on a different teacher identity at    Colesberg; that of the woman teacher.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Writing about nineteenth-century    Australia, Marjorie Theobald makes the point that women teachers were often    present but invisible, teaching in the seclusion of private homes, and later    in ladies academies.<a name="top99"></a><a href="#back99"><sup>99</sup></a>    She also notes the opacity of sources about them and the need for the historian    to work with very little in trying to construct their lives.<a name="top100"></a><a href="#back100"><sup>100</sup></a>    This is true for Eliza Arnot, from whom no word is heard in the ten years that    she acted as pupil-teacher and assistant teacher at Colesberg. Her career is    pieced together from the limited references of the men who supervised her, at    home and in the school system. What we do know is that Eliza was not only Rait's    assistant teacher, but also his step-sister-in-law. <a href="/img/revistas/hist/v57n1/08f01.jpg">Figure    1</a> sets this out diagrammatically.</font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">It is possible    to gain a fair sense of Eliza's own education because she was for at least six    years a pupil in the government school. In 1851 she was listed as a pupil, along    with three of her siblings.<a name="top101"></a><a href="#back101"><sup>101</sup></a>    What is interesting about Eliza Arnot is the unusual trajectory of her educational    career. As daughter of an independent artisan, she would perhaps have been expected    to acquire a basic level of literacy, marry young and run her own home. The    existence of a free government school, mixed because it was located in a small    town, created unusual opportunities for her to be taught, not simply trained.    (This was a distinction Innes made). This, and the financial contribution of    her older half-brother.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">In the male negotiation    that took place to secure her services, Rait first approached David Arnot jnr.    He was at this time a "general agent" and a local dignitary, although his fortunes    fluctuated somewhat.<a name="top102"></a><a href="#back102"><sup>102</sup></a>    David Arnot did not object to Eliza becoming a teacher but argued for a higher    salary than the &pound;15 offered, as his father was poor and his own circumstances    not as good as formerly. Eliza would need "in a manner to support herself."    Rait reported that Arnot "had always taken a great interest" in his half-sister    (some nineteen years his junior). Significantly it was David Arnot who had paid    for her to study the higher branches and to be given music lessons - that great    marker of a female accomplishment.<a name="top103"></a><a href="#back103"><sup>103</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Innes met Eliza    himself in February 1856 while in Colesberg to carry out an examination of the    school. She had, he reported, "passed a creditable examination in Latin, the    Elements of Euclid and Algebra". The texts from which she was examined along    with two male pupils, were "Caesar's Commentaries, Main's Syntax, Euclid, Chambers'    Algebra, and Valpy's Delectus". <a name="top104"></a><a href="#back104"><sup>104</sup></a>    Eliza Arnot was thus unusual for her time; a young woman who had been given    the classical education essentially regarded as suited to more able boys. This    was instead of what Marjorie Theobald refers to as the "female accomplishments    curriculum" offered by female academies - the choice, by contrast, of David    Arnot jnr for his eldest daughter, Helen. <a name="top105"></a><a href="#back105"><sup>105</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Innes immediately    appointed Eliza at a salary of &pound;20 per annum, subject to government approval.    She was to teach the junior classes, allowing Rait more time for the senior    section of his school.<a name="top106"></a><a href="#back106"><sup>106</sup></a>    While Eliza's classical education was unusual, her move into caring for the    young children in the school was less so - although it took central government    authorities some time to adjust to the thought of any women staff in government    schools.<a name="top107"></a><a href="#back107"><sup>107</sup></a> Those in    charge of Cape education appear to have reflected the commonly held view that    although acceptable as carers of small children, women were endowed with intuitive    strength but delicacy rather than rationality of mind.<a name="top108"></a><a href="#back108"><sup>108</sup></a>    The grounds for exclusion, or at best a junior role for women teachers, were    mental incapability and an accompanying lack of moral authority.<a name="top109"></a><a href="#back109"><sup>109</sup></a>    This would naturally exclude them from leadership roles in the more prestigious    schools which the authorities regarded as the domain of male teachers. How strongly    Innes felt about the matter is evident in his argument against the permanent    appointment of Miss Read as head teacher of the humbler aided mission school    at Phillipton. They were sentiments with which both Rawson, the colonial secretary,    and the governor, Sir George Grey, concurred: "Juvenile Schools which are to    provide for the instruction of both sexes between the ages of five and fifteen    cannot be solely in charge of a Female Teacher, with any reasonable hope of    efficiency and success."<a name="top110"></a><a href="#back110"><sup>110</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">The moral influence    and helping presence, first of female pupil-teachers and later women teachers    under male leadership, gradually came to be regarded as desirable, however.    Eliza Arnot clearly had the academic skills which would have been accepted in    any aspiring male pupil-teacher and we have noted the urgent need of assistance    for the government teachers. Innes seems not to have hesitated to recommend    senior girl pupils to such assistant posts when the need and opportunity arose.    Regarding it an economic necessity in smaller centres to continue with co-educational    or "mixed" schooling, Innes and his successor, Langham Dale, were both nervous    of its moral implications when teachers were men alone.<a name="top111"></a><a href="#back111"><sup>111</sup></a>    Although the Colesberg school remained too small to develop separate boys' and    girls' sections, the appointment of Eliza Arnot under Rait and subsequent male    head teachers was in line with Stow's moralising "family model" of schooling    <a name="top112"></a><a href="#back112"><sup>112</sup></a> emerging both in    Scotland and at the Cape from the end of the 1850s.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Little was subsequently    written of Eliza Arnot's career, but the evidence of Rait's periodic absences    from the school in late 1856 and early 1857 suggests that she may have had to    compensate a great deal for his frailty.<a name="top113"></a><a href="#back113"><sup>113</sup></a>    When Rait left Colesberg in November 1857, Eliza temporarily assumed the responsibilities    of a head teacher, by implication a male teacher. This was permitted at moments    of crisis but she was never paid more than the allowance given a female teacher    who was assumed to have family support.</font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Eliza Arnot remained    in government employ through the three-and-a-half year tenure of another Scot,    the unpopular John Tennant.<a name="top114"></a><a href="#back114"><sup>114</sup></a>    For a good part of 1862, until the appointment of Peter McNaughton, Eliza again    kept the school going on her own.<a name="top115"></a><a href="#back115"><sup>115</sup></a>    They then taught together until, following the pattern of the other government    schools, the Colesberg Government School was closed in March 1866 and replaced    by a less costly aided First-Class Public School.<a name="top116"></a><a href="#back116"><sup>116</sup></a>    The new mixed public school, managed by the residents of the town, was headed    by "a superior teacher ... specially introduced from Europe."<a name="top117"></a><a href="#back117"><sup>117</sup></a></font></p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">At this point twenty-six-year    old Miss Eliza Arnot was awarded a small government gratuity in appreciation    of her services and disappeared from the records of the colonial education department.<a name="top118"></a><a href="#back118"><sup>118</sup></a>    She then embraced a more conventional role as wife and mother after marrying    John Bradfield, the son of an 1820 Settler. <a name="top119"></a><a href="#back119"><sup>119</sup></a></font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="3"><b>Conclusion</b></font></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">This article has    offered a cameo of a young male teacher with the self-image of a respectable    and dedicated improver of minds. In attempting to carry out the full requirements    of the New System, he was backed by school commissioners who similarly valued    the educational improvement of all races and classes in Colesberg. Judged by    the numbers in his school and the respect he earned, Rait achieved periods of    success in this socially fluid setting. The strain, however, placed by his duties    and financial insecurity on his emotions and physique demonstrate a feminisation    of a manly middle class married man. At the same time the affordance of the    New System in this small town was a liberal education for a young woman. The    illness, death and dismissal of her male superiors and the general shortage    of qualified teachers in the Cape Colony provided a contingent opportunity for    her to step into the bounded world of first-class school teaching. But despite    her academic and moral credentials, the dominant discourses of quality education    did not allow a woman to head a school with boys in it - in other words to do    permanently what she was permitted to do periodically. Eliza Arnot's teaching    career appears to have then ended but it had nevertheless presaged the move    from one-man schools to those which catered for children of all ages and genders    in a more complex establishment.</font></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><a name="back"></a><a href="#top">*</a>    Helen Ludlow is head of History and of the Division of Social and Economic Sciences    at the Wits School of Education, University of the Witwatersrand. Her research    has focused on the nineteenth-century Cape Colony, including missions, slave    emancipation, and teacher identity.    <br>   <a name="back1"></a><a href="#top1">1</a>. "The Karoo College", <i>The Midland    Province Banner,</i> Graaff-Reinet, 18 August 1858.    <br>   <a name="back2"></a><a href="#top2">2</a>. The first "New System" government    teachers took up their posts in 1840, and the last resigned in 1874. Cape Archives    (hereafter CA): Superintendent-General of Education (hereafter SGE), 13/1, General    Register of Schools, 1838-1875; SGE 17/2, Schedule of the Establishment in the    Department of the SGE, 1863-1875.    <br>   <a name="back3"></a><a href="#top3">3</a>. The first engagement of the British    state with direct provision of education was in Ireland but was limited before    the New System was introduced at the Cape. See J. Coolahan, <i>Irish Education:    Its History and Structure</i> (Institute of Public Administration, Dublin, 1981),    pp 3-5.    <br>   <a name="back4"></a><a href="#top4">4</a>. CA: SGE 1/4, Letters received by    the Superintendent-General of Education, 1851-1859, from Humansdorp, Uitenhage,    Port Elizabeth, Bathurst, Grahamstown, Cradock, Graaff-Reinet, Colesberg, etc.;    J. Rait "Report of the School established by Government at Colesberg for the    Quarter ending 30th September 1851".    <br>   <a name="back5"></a><a href="#top5">5</a>. For an overview of earlier education    provision, see G.24-'63, CGH, <i>Report of a Commission of Inquiry, in Accordance    with Addresses of the Legislative Council and House of Assembly, to Inquire    into the Government Educational System</i> (hereafter <i>Report of Watermeyer    Commission</i>), 1861, pp xi-xxviii.    <br>   <a name="back6"></a><a href="#top6">6</a>. E.H. Ludlow, "State Schooling and    the Cultural Construction of Teacher Identity in the Cape Colony, 1839-1865",    PhD thesis, University of Cape Town, 2011, chapter 2.    ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<br>   <a name="back7"></a><a href="#top7">7</a>. CGH, J. Fairbairn, A1SC-1857, <i>Report    of the Select Committee Appointed to Consider the Subject of Education,</i>    p v. There were eventually 21 government schools, of which 17 were first-class    i.e. provided for the education of secondary as well as elementary pupils.    <br>   <a name="back8"></a><a href="#top8">8</a>. <i>Report of Watermeyer Commission,</i>    1861, pp xxxii-xi; E.G. Malherbe, <i>Education in South Africa, Volume 1: 1652-1922</i>    (Juta, Cape Town and Johannesburg, 1925), pp 86-87.    <br>   <a name="back9"></a><a href="#top9">9</a>. J. Herschel, "Memorandum", 17 February    1838, in W.T. Ferguson and R.F.M. Immelman (comps), <i>Sir John Herschel and    Education at the Cape, 1834-1840</i> (Oxford University Press, Cape Town, 1961),    pp 14-25.    <br>   <a name="back10"></a><a href="#top10">10</a>. CA: Colonial Office (hereafter    CO) 695, Memorial of J. McNaughton, 31 August 1857.    <br>   <a name="back11"></a><a href="#top11">11</a>. For example, CA: CO 499, Innes    - Acting Colonial Secretary, 9 August 1841.    <br>   <a name="back12"></a><a href="#top12">12</a>. The Khoisan (Nama) name for the    river was the Gariep, and the area to its north became known as the Transgariep.    Going "across the river" seems to have become shorthand for Colesbergers visiting    anywhere in the Transgariep. The end of 1853, for exmple, found the teacher    James Rait "over the river" because it was the holidays. CA: SGE 1/4, Rait -    Innes, 1 February 1854.    <br>   <a name="back13"></a><a href="#top13">13</a>. H. Fransen, <i>Old Towns and Villages    of the Cape: A Survey of the Origin and Development of Towns, Villages and Hamlets    of the Cape of Good Hope</i> (Jonathan Ball, Jeppestown, 2006), p 298    <br>   <a name="back14"></a><a href="#top14">14</a>. CA: 1/Colesberg (hereafter CBG),    Inventory of the Archive of the Magistrate of Colesberg, "Introduction", pp    1, 4.    <br>   <a name="back15"></a><a href="#top15">15</a>. Governor Sir Harry Smith's precipitous    extension of the colonial boundaries within months of his appointment in 1847    incorporated the Colesberg Division in a colony which doubled in size. Thousands    of acres of crown land were added as the boundaries of the colony were extended    to the full length of the Orange River in 1848, marking a closure of the political    frontier. See H. Giliomee and B. Mbenga (eds), <i>New History of South Africa</i>    (Tafelberg, Cape Town, 2007), p 144.    <br>   <a name="back16"></a><a href="#top16">16</a>. T. Gutsche, <i>The Microcosm</i>    (Howard Timmins, Cape Town, 1968), pp 85-90 and 101-105, for example.    ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<br>   <a name="back17"></a><a href="#top17">17</a>. Gutsche's <i>Microcosm</i> is    the only detailed, though unreferenced, history of Colesberg. For many examples    of gunpowder licences granted, see CA: 1/CBG/4/2/4, 5, 6, Letters received by    the Resident Magistrate, Colesberg, December 1850-December 1853.    <br>   <a name="back18"></a><a href="#top18">18</a>. M. Legassick and R. Ross, "From    Slave Economy to Settler Capitalism: The Cape Colony and its Extensions, 1800-1854",    in C. Hamilton, B. Mbenga and R. Ross (eds), <i>Cambridge History of South Africa,    Volume 1</i> (Cambridge University Press, New York, 2010), p 316.    <br>   <a name="back19"></a><a href="#top19">19</a>. Giliomee and Mbenga (eds), <i>New    History of South Africa,</i> p 145.    <br>   <a name="back20"></a><a href="#top20">20</a>. Gutsche, <i>Microcosm,</i> p 84.    <br>   <a name="back21"></a><a href="#top21">21</a>. "Return of the Extent, Population,    and Stock, of the Colony of the Cape of Good Hope for the year 1841", cited    in W.L. Nell, "James Rose Innes as Educationist at the Cape, 1822-1884", DEd    thesis, University of Stellenbosch, 1973, p 497.    <br>   <a name="back22"></a><a href="#top22">22</a>. CA: CO 518, Revd T. Reid - Innes,    25 November 1843. Unusually for this time, the local DRC congregation played    a limited role in the town's education because it was riven by schism during    much of the 1840s and 1850s; Gutsche, <i>Microcosm,</i> p 100.    <br>   <a name="back23"></a><a href="#top23">23</a>. Rait, "Report of the School",    30 September 1851, notes pupils withdrawn to attend a "Female School".    <br>   <a name="back24"></a><a href="#top24">24</a>. Gutsche, <i>Microcosm,</i> p 117;    CA: SGE 1/4, A. Noble - Innes, 24 June 1858.    <br>   <a name="back25"></a><a href="#top25">25</a>. Cape of Good Hope (hereafter CGH),    "Answer from H. Green Esq., Colesberg", 31 December 1861; <i>Report of Watermeyer    Commission,</i> 1861, Appendix 1, p 39.    <br>   <a name="back26"></a><a href="#top26">26</a>. CA: SGE 1/4, Rait - President    of School Commission, 12 March 1852; Rait - Innes, 21 April 1853.    ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<br>   <a name="back27"></a><a href="#top27">27</a>. The higher branches were subjects    like the classics and mathematics studied by secondary-level pupils. See for    example, Eliza Arnot's curriculum below.    <br>   <a name="back28"></a><a href="#top28">28</a>. CA: SGE 1/4, Rait - President    of School Commission, 1 August 1854.    <br>   <a name="back29"></a><a href="#top29">29</a>. CA: SGE 1/9, Miscellaneous letters    received by the SGE, 1861 (all districts), J.B. Tennant - Dale, 23 and 27 March    1861.    <br>   <a name="back30"></a><a href="#top30">30</a>. J.S. Marais, The <i>Cape Coloured    People, 1652-1937</i> (Wits University Press, Johannesburg, 1957), pp 20-22;    M. Legassick, "The Northern Frontier to c. 1840: The Rise and Decline of the    Griqua People", in R. Elphick and H. Gilliomee (eds), <i>The Shaping of South    African Society</i> (Maskew Miller Longman, Cape Town, 1989), pp 361-363.    <br>   <a name="back31"></a><a href="#top31">31</a>. J.M. Orpen, <i>Reminiscences of    Life in South Africa from 1846 to the Present Day, Volume 1</i> (P. Davis, Durban,    1908; Struik reprint, Cape Town, 1964), p 39.    <br>   <a name="back32"></a><a href="#top32">32</a>. CA: G.16-'57, CGH, <i>Report on    Public Education for 1855 and First Half of 1856,</i> p 30.    <br>   <a name="back33"></a><a href="#top33">33</a>. CA: CO 594, Rait - President of    School Commission, 16 August 1850.    <br>   <a name="back34"></a><a href="#top34">34</a>. CA: SGE 1/4, Deacons of Union    Chapel - Innes, 22 February 1856.    <br>   <a name="back35"></a><a href="#top35">35</a>. CA: G.24-'63, <i>Report of Watermeyer    Commission,</i> p 124; Innes for Commissioners, 4 December 1861.    <br>   <a name="back36"></a><a href="#top36">36</a>. CA: G.24-'63, <i>Report of Watermeyer    Commission,</i> p 125; Revd W. Thompson, 4 December 1861.    ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<br>   <a name="back37"></a><a href="#top37">37</a>. J.A. Heese and R.J.J. Lombard,    <i>South African Genealogies, Volume 1</i> (HSRC, Pretoria, 1986), p 84.    <br>   <a name="back38"></a><a href="#top38">38</a>. Gutsche, <i>Microcosm,</i> p70.    <br>   <a name="back39"></a><a href="#top39">39</a>. Orpen, <i>Reminiscences,</i> p    2.    <br>   <a name="back40"></a><a href="#top40">40</a>. 'C.E.H. Orpen', <i>Dictionary    of South African Biography, Volume 4</i> (HSRC, Pretoria, 1981), p 437. Local    school commissions had powers to inspect and report but not to regulate the    teacher or manage financial matters.    <br>   <a name="back41"></a><a href="#top41">41</a>. CA: SGE 1/4, C. Orpen - Rawstorne,    12 November 1853.    <br>   <a name="back42"></a><a href="#top42">42</a>. A. Vihao, applying Foucault's    three functions of work to a school, "History of Education", in T.S. Popkewitz,    B.M. Franklin and M.A. Pereyra (eds), <i>Cultural History and Education: Critical    Essays on Knowing and Schooling</i> (Routledge and Falmer, London and New York,    2001), p 132.    <br>   <a name="back43"></a><a href="#top43">43</a>. CA: CO 594, Rait - Colesberg School    Commission, 16 April 1850 , 16 August 1850; President of School Board - Col    Sec., 21 August 1850.    <br>   <a name="back44"></a><a href="#top44">44</a>. CA: CO 676, Innes - Col Sec.,    7 March 1856; G.15-'60, CGH, <i>Report on Public Education for the Year 1859,</i>    Table 1, p 11. The linear measurement presumably refers to feet. A foot is equivalent    to 30.48 cm.    <br>   <a name="back45"></a><a href="#top45">45</a>. D. Tyack and W. Tobin, "The 'Grammar'    of Schooling: Why has it been so Hard to Change?" <i>American Educational Research    Journal,</i> 31, 3, 1994, p 458.    <br>   <a name="back46"></a><a href="#top46">46</a>. CA: SGE 1/4. See layout of "Report    of the School established by Government at Colesberg for the Quarter ending    30 September 1851."    ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<br>   <a name="back47"></a><a href="#top47">47</a>. I. Hunter, <i>Rethinking the School:    Subjectivity, Bureaucracy, Criticism</i> (Allen &amp; Unwin, St Leonards, 1994),    p 73.    <br>   <a name="back48"></a><a href="#top48">48</a>. CA: SGE 1/4, CC Rawstorne - Innes,    16 April 1856.    <br>   <a name="back49"></a><a href="#top49">49</a>. CA: SGE 1/4, Rait - Innes, 1 February    1856.    <br>   <a name="back50"></a><a href="#top50">50</a>. CA: SGE 1/4, Rait - Innes, 1 February    1856.    <br>   <a name="back51"></a><a href="#top51">51</a>. CA: G.16-'57, <i>Report on Public    Education for 1855 and the First Haf of 1856,</i> p xxii.    <br>   <a name="back52"></a><a href="#top52">52</a>. B. Waggoner, "Robert Chambers    (1802-1871)" (University of Berkeley Palaeontology Museum) at <u><a href="http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/history/chambers.html" target="_blank">http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/history/chambers.html</a></u>,    accessed 15 December 2010.    <br>   <a name="back53"></a><a href="#top53">53</a>. S.M. Cooney, "Publishers for the    People: W. and R. Chambers: The Early Years, 1832-1850", PhD thesis, Ohio State    University, 1970, pp 153 ff.    <br>   <a name="back54"></a><a href="#top54">54</a>. Cooney, "Publishers for the People",    pp 153 ff.    <br>   <a name="back55"></a><a href="#top55">55</a>. Cooney, "Publishers for the People",    p 162.    <br>   <a name="back56"></a><a href="#top56">56</a>.<i>&nbsp;</i> Cooney, "Publishers    for the People", pp 172 and 208.    ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<br>   <a name="back57"></a><a href="#top57">57</a>. T.S. Popkewitz, "The Production    of Reason and Power", in T.S. Popkewitz et al (eds), <i>Cultural History and    Education,</i> pp 152-164.    <br>   <a name="back58"></a><a href="#top58">58</a>. W. Chambers and R. Chambers (eds),    Preface to <i>First Book of Reading</i> (William &amp; Robert Chambers, Edinburgh,    1845).    <br>   <a name="back59"></a><a href="#top59">59</a>. W. Chambers and R. Chambers, Preface    to <i>Simple Lessons in Reading</i> (William &amp; Robert Chambers, Edinburgh,    1845).    <br>   <a name="back60"></a><a href="#top60">60</a>. Chambers and Chambers, Preface    to <i>Simple Lessons in Reading.</i>    <br>   <a name="back61"></a><a href="#top61">61</a>. Chambers and Chambers, Preface    to <i>Simple Lessons in Reading</i> p 38.    <br>   <a name="back62"></a><a href="#top62">62</a>. W. Chambers and R. Chambers, <i>Rudiments    of Knowledge</i> (William &amp; Robert Chambers, Edinburgh, 1848), p 14.    <br>   <a name="back63"></a><a href="#top63">63</a>. Chambers and Chambers, <i>Rudiments    of Knowledge,</i> pp 73-74.    <br>   <a name="back64"></a><a href="#top64">64</a>. W. Chambers and R. Chambers, <i>Introduction    to Arithmetic</i> (William &amp; Robert Chambers, Edinburgh, 1843).    <br>   <a name="back65"></a><a href="#top65">65</a>. W. Chambers and R. Chambers, Preface    to <i>Introduction to the Sciences</i> (William &amp; Robert Chambers, Edinburgh,    1843). Cooney identifies Robert Chambers as the author of this book, as well    as <i>The History of the British Empire.</i> See Cooney, "Publishers for the    People", p 201.    <br>   <a name="back66"></a><a href="#top66">66</a>. Cuvier was a pre-Darwinian animal    anatomist and palaeontologist whose work on classification was current at the    time Chambers wrote the textbook. He challenged Lamark's work on gradual evolution    but believed hard evidence to show that extinctions had occurred. This was a    challenge to those who felt that God had made everything perfect and if a species    no longer existed in Europe it must exist elsewhere. See B. Waggoner, "Georges    Cuvier (1789-1832)", at <a href="http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/history/cuvier.html" target="_blank">http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/history/cuvier.html</a>    accessed 1 May 2010.    ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<br>   <a name="back67"></a><a href="#top67">67</a>. R. Chambers, <i>Vestiges of the    Natural History of Creation</i> (1844; Reprinted by J. Secord (ed.), University    of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1994).    <br>   <a name="back68"></a><a href="#top68">68</a>. Chambers and Chambers, <i>Introduction    to Sciences,</i> p 97.    <br>   <a name="back69"></a><a href="#top69">69</a>. CA: SGE 1/4, Orpen - Rawstorne,    12 November 1853.    <br>   <a name="back70"></a><a href="#top70">70</a>. Chambers and Chambers, <i>Introduction    to Sciences,</i> pp 117-118.    <br>   <a name="back71"></a><a href="#top71">71</a>. Published in 1847.    <br>   <a name="back72"></a><a href="#top72">72</a>. R. Chambers, <i>History and Present    State of the British Empire</i> (William &amp; Robert Chambers, Edinburgh, 1874),    p 246.    <br>   <a name="back73"></a><a href="#top73">73</a>. Chambers, <i>History of the British    Empire,</i> pp 77-78.    <br>   <a name="back74"></a><a href="#top74">74</a>. Chambers, <i>History of the British    Empire,</i> pp 256 and 263.    <br>   <a name="back75"></a><a href="#top75">75</a>. CA: CO 594, Rait - President and    members of the Local School Commission, Colesberg, 12 March 1852.    <br>   <a name="back76"></a><a href="#top76">76</a>. Rait was citing the "Memorandum"    dated 17 February 1838, in Ferguson and Immelman (comps), <i>Sir John Herschel,</i>    pp 14-25.    ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<br>   <a name="back77"></a><a href="#top77">77</a>. CA: CO 594, President of School    Commission - Col Sec., 1 April 1852.    <br>   <a name="back78"></a><a href="#top78">78</a>. CA: CO 594, Innes's "Report" on    President of School Commission - Col Sec., 1 April 1852.    <br>   <a name="back79"></a><a href="#top79">79</a>. CA: CO 695, Innes - Col Sec.,    19 March 1857, attached Dr James Abercrombie, 19 March 1857; John Laing, Surgeon,    19 March 1857.    <br>   <a name="back80"></a><a href="#top80">80</a>. CA: SGE 1/4, Rait - President    of the Local School Commission, Colesberg, 1 August 1854.    <br>   <a name="back81"></a><a href="#top81">81</a>. A1SC-1857, <i>Report on Subject    of Education,</i> p 34; Innes - Select Committee, 12 May 1857; CA: CO 695, Innes    - Col Sec., 29 August, 1857.    <br>   <a name="back82"></a><a href="#top82">82</a>. CA: SGE 1/4, Rait - Colesberg    School Commission, 1 August 1854.    <br>   <a name="back83"></a><a href="#top83">83</a>. A1SC-1857, CGH, <i>Appendix to    the Report of the Select Committee on Education, November 1857,</i> pp 7-8;    Rait, "Report of Colesberg School", September 1851.    <br>   <a name="back84"></a><a href="#top84">84</a>. CA: SGE 1/4, Rait - Innes, 21    April 1853.    <br>   <a name="back85"></a><a href="#top85">85</a>. CA: SGE 1/4, President of School    Commission, Colesberg - Innes, 10 May 1853.    <br>   <a name="back86"></a><a href="#top86">86</a>. Irritability was expressed, for    example, with Innes's rather surprised clerk, a Mr Jarvis, for sending a request    for information in a way that Rait interpreted as uncivil and abrupt. CA: SGE    1/4, Rait - Clerk to the SGE, 7 December 1853.    ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<br>   <a name="back87"></a><a href="#top87">87</a>. CA: SGE 1/4, Rait - Innes, 18    April 1855.    <br>   <a name="back88"></a><a href="#top88">88</a>. CA: SGE 1/4, Rait - Innes, 18    April 1855. Attached copy.    <br>   <a name="back89"></a><a href="#top89">89</a>. C.E. Forth, <i>Masculinity in    the Modern West: Gender, Civilization and the Body</i> (Palgrave Macmillan,    Basingstoke and New York, 2008), pp 72-73.    <br>   <a name="back90"></a><a href="#top90">90</a>. Forth, <i>Masculinity in the Modern    West,</i> p 81.    <br>   <a name="back91"></a><a href="#top91">91</a>. Fairbairn, <i>"Report of Select    Committee on Education, 1857",</i> 12 May 1857, pp 33-34.    <br>   <a name="back92"></a><a href="#top92">92</a>. E.M. Collingham, <i>Imperial Bodies:    The Physical Experience of the Raj, c. 1800-1947</i> (Polity, Cambridge, 2001),    p 3.    <br>   <a name="back93"></a><a href="#top93">93</a>. Collingham, <i>Imperial Bodies,</i>    p 2.    <br>   <a name="back94"></a><a href="#top94">94</a>. Collingham, <i>Imperial Bodies,</i>    pp 124 and 142.    <br>   <a name="back95"></a><a href="#top95">95</a>. CA: SGE 1/4, Rait - Innes, 1 December    1856; Rawstorne - Innes, 10 November 1857.    <br>   <a name="back96"></a><a href="#top96">96</a>. Rait married Julia-Anne Nelson    in 1851.    ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<br>   <a name="back97"></a><a href="#top97">97</a>. CA: SGE 1/4, Rait - Innes, 15    May 1857.    <br>   <a name="back98"></a><a href="#top98">98</a>. CA: CO 676, Innes - Col Sec.,    23 April 1856.    <br>   <a name="back99"></a><a href="#top99">99</a>. M. Theobald, <i>Knowing Women:    Origins of Women's Education in Nineteenth-century Australia</i> (Cambridge,    Cambridge University Press, 1996), pp 2-3.    <br>   <a name="back100"></a><a href="#top100">100</a>. Theobald, <i>Knowing Women,</i>    p 4.    <br>   <a name="back101"></a><a href="#top101">101</a>. CA: SGE 1/4, Rait, "Report    of Colesberg School", September 1851.    <br>   <a name="back102"></a><a href="#top102">102</a>. He was an affluent general    agent, keeper of the town's gunpowder store, sometime school commissioner, J.P.,    musician, collector of botanical specimens, and eventually father of twelve.    See Gutsche, <i>Microcosm,</i> pp 85, 91, 95, 117-119, 137-138; CA: 1/CBG/4/2/6,    Letters Received by Resident Magistrate of Colesberg, 1854, David Arnot - Clerk    to Resident Magistrate, 15 November 1854.    <br>   <a name="back103"></a><a href="#top103">103</a>. CA: SGE 1/4, Rait - Innes,    1 February 1856.    <br>   <a name="back104"></a><a href="#top104">104</a>. CA: CO 676, Innes - Col Sec.,    23 April 1856; G.16-1857.<i>Report on Public Education for 1855 and First Half    of 1856,</i> p xxii.    <br>   <a name="back105"></a><a href="#top105">105</a>. Theobald, <i>Knowing Women,</i>    pp 15-16. Helen (also called Ellen) was born in 1848 and so eight years younger    than Eliza. Granddaughter of Kaatje van der Jeugd of Bethelsdorp, she was sent    at the age of five to Miss Wilmot's Select Academy for Young Ladies in Wynberg.    She returned to Colesberg as a fine musician and eventually married the effete    grandson of Lord Charles Somerset, sealing her status as a lady. See Gutsche,    <i>Miscrocosm,</i> p 147.    <br>   <a name="back106"></a><a href="#top106">106</a>. CA: SGE 1/4, Innes - Rait,    4 February 1856.    ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<br>   <a name="back107"></a><a href="#top107">107</a>. When it was suggested that    "the most advanced pupil" at the Beaufort West Government School, Margaret McNaughton,    be employed as a pupil-teacher, Lieut-Governor Darling vetoed the idea on the    grounds of her gender. See CA: CO 622, Margin note, CAD, on Office of SGE -    Acting Sec. to Gov., 19 March 1853.    <br>   <a name="back108"></a><a href="#top108">108</a>. Theobald, <i>Knowing Women,</i>    pp 19-20.    <br>   <a name="back109"></a><a href="#top109">109</a>. Theobald, <i>Knowing Women,</i>    p 26.    <br>   <a name="back110"></a><a href="#top110">110</a>. CA: CO 676, Innes - Col Sec.,    11 September 1856.    <br>   <a name="back111"></a><a href="#top111">111</a>. CA: A1SC-1857; CGH, <i>Report    of the Select Committee Appointed to Consider the Subject of Education,</i>    June 1857, p 30; Innes - Select Committee, 12 May 1857; G.15-'60. <i>Report    on Education for 1860.</i>    <br>   <a name="back112"></a><a href="#top112">112</a>. D. Jones, "The Genealogy of    the Urban Schoolteacher", in S. Ball (ed.), <i>Foucault and Education: Disciplines    and Knowledge</i> (Routledge, London, 1990), p 65 ff.    <br>   <a name="back113"></a><a href="#top113">113</a>. CA: SGE 1/4, Rait - Innes,    1 December 1856; Secretary to Divisional Council to Office of SGE, 15 April    1857; Rait - Innes, 15 May 1857.    <br>   <a name="back114"></a><a href="#top114">114</a>. CA: CO 775, Dale - Acting Col    Sec., 12 October 1861.    <br>   <a name="back115"></a><a href="#top115">115</a>. CA: CO 791, Office of SGE -    Col Sec., 23 August, 17 October 1862.    <br>   <a name="back116"></a><a href="#top116">116</a>. CA: CO 853, Office of SGE -    Col Sec., 10 April 1866.    ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<br>   <a name="back117"></a><a href="#top117">117</a>. CA: CO 870, Office of SGE -    Col Sec., 30 November 1867. From 1 October 1871, an additional schoolroom was    erected and a female teacher employed to teach the girls. The "Girls School"    was awarded a grant of &pound;50 per annum. The headmaster of the Boys School    was (remained?) Dr John Shaw. See CA: CO 944, Office of SGE - Col Sec., 5 December    1871.    <br>   <a name="back118"></a><a href="#top118">118</a>. CA: SGE 13/1.    <br>   <a name="back119"></a><a href="#top119">119</a>. N. da Silva, SA Genealogical    Society, personal communication. By contrast the profile of her more famous    half-brother, David, was to be raised in the context of the early stages of    the southern African mineral revolution. This was as a legal agent successfully    defending the claims of the Griqua of Nicolaas Waterboer to the newly found    diamond fields.</font></p>      ]]></body>
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