‘Quaint custom of six of the best’
At least one quaint custom of
British education has not changed since Tom Brown's Schooldays: the tradition
of “six of the best” for misbehaving pupils. Although the cane and the strap
are still essential equipment for every self-respecting headmaster, public
indignation against corporal punishment is on the rise, and the Labor
government would like to abolish it for good, reported Time, the
America news magazine in 1967.
The outcry against caning
stems largely from two recent cases involving brutality in the application of
corporal punishment. In May, Headmaster William Michael Byrd of Britain’s
Cholderton College was sentenced to five years in prison for forcing schoolboys
to lie naked across a bed, then beating them brutally with a stick. Last month
Home Secretary Roy Jenkins ordered the closing of Court Lees in Surrey, a
so-called “approved school,” which handles potential juvenile delinquents,
after its headmaster and an assistant were accused of caning boys “with
excessive severity.” Recently, the Royal Navy abolished its traditional caning
of youthful sailors after a Parliamentary inquiry revealed that 69 under-18
tars had been beaten in a single year.
Ever alert to a lively
controversy, British newspapers have turned up several other cases in which the
rod was not spared. Two Southampton schoolboys were given 21 strokes because
they incorrectly spelled “meringue.” A teacher admitted beating a seven-year-old girl “red
and raw” because she was “work-resistant.” Three girls were caned because they
forgot to bring semolina to a cooking class.
Never Naked.
Although such clear cases of
excessive beatings may be rare, there is no doubt that caning in British
schools is almost as prevalent as it was during the 19th century. One survey by
a London School of Economics professor turned up more than 350 beatings in just
four schools last year; in one of them, the boys averaged two beatings each a
year. The approved schools in England and Wales listed 2,968 beatings last year.
Local education authorities have the legal right to inflict corporal punishment
in Britain, and the Home Office even provides some rules on how it should be
done. The cane must be a yard long and between 8 mm. and 10 mm. thick. A boy
cannot be beaten with his trousers off or with his shirt tail pulled up.
Despite a recommendation by a
national advisory council that corporal punishment be abolished in the state
primary schools, many British educators stoutly defend the practice as
essential to classroom decorum. Of 3,000 delegates at a National Head Teachers
Conference this spring, only two voted against caning; only one delegate did so
at a national conference of schoolmasters. And a Gallup poll showed that public
protesters are still outnumbered by those who favor the cane and strap. When
the new school term opens this fall, British buttocks again will burn.
As published in Time magazine (USA), 8 September 1967.
Picture credit: CP
Services, London.
Traditional School Discipline
Traditionalschooldiscipline@gmail.com
I received the cane and slipper at school in the 60s and it did sort me out for later life i had six of the best given to me it hurt like fuck the first time i thought my bum was on fire I had it three more times until leaving for college the six was only given by the head other teachers could give you up to two strokes of the cane but up to six with the slipper. The PE teachers. Gave the worst slipperings over tight thin shorts with no under pants underneath fuck I can still remember bending over for it we was given it in front of all the class. Happy painful days.
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