Elizabeth Gilbert and Her Work for the Blind - LightNovelsOnl.com
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By the close of 1856 she had drawn up a set of rules to be submitted to the Committee. One of the most important of these was that a Sub-Committee should be appointed, whose duty it was to select the blind persons to be employed. She would not hear of giving votes to subscribers and enabling them to force upon the inst.i.tution worthless and incompetent persons. Careful selection was essential to her scheme, and was one of the chief causes of its early success.
Another matter which she deemed of importance was a stipulation that the "present superintendent, William Hanks Levy, is to be continued in his office until he shall withdraw, or be removed by the General Committee."
The rules recapitulate the object and set forth the work of the a.s.sociation. They were submitted to a general meeting of the subscribers, held on the 19th December 1856.
The meeting having first resolved itself into the a.s.sociation for Promoting the General Welfare of the Blind, unanimously approved of the rules, and adopted them as the laws of the a.s.sociation. They are interesting as the outcome of Bessie's endeavours to ameliorate the condition of the blind, and are therefore given at the end of the chapter.
A Committee was appointed on the 1st of January 1857, and in May of the same year a report was issued, with a balance-sheet, showing subscriptions and donations to the amount of 435, 75 of which had been contributed by Bessie herself. Interesting tables were appended, giving the age, address, cause of blindness, family, income, to what amount employed by the inst.i.tution, and nature of trade of all men working for the Euston Road shop, together with similar lists of men and women desiring employment, of applicants at the inst.i.tution, and of members of the circulating library.
The three months' report was a preliminary to a meeting held in Willis's Rooms on the 26th of May 1857. The Bishop of London was in the chair, the Bishop of Oxford spoke, and afterwards wrote to Mrs. Gilbert:
LAVINGTON HOUSE, PETWORTH, _30th May 1857_.
MY DEAR MRS. GILBERT--I must tell you with many thanks what pleasure your kind letter gave me, and how glad I was to be able to take part in _that_ meeting. I did not at all please myself in what I said, _because_ I wanted to show in the instance of your own daughter how G.o.d brought good out of such suffering; how the inward character, intensifying and become sanctified by grace, made the sufferers as an angel in the house, do what otherwise they never would have done, by the example of her becoming the foundress of this inst.i.tution--but she was present, and I could not trust myself to say all I felt. May G.o.d's blessing rest abundantly on this good work.--I am ever, most sincerely yours, S. OXON.
Mrs. Gilbert.
We have now the result of Bessie's three years of arduous labour. Her inst.i.tution was fairly afloat. The Bishop of London had consented to act as president, and the Rev. Thomas Dale, Canon of St. Paul's, was the vice-president. Notices of the meeting appeared in the London papers, and were copied in provincial papers. Donations, inquiries, and orders increased, and so did applications for employment from blind men and women. The Bishop of Chichester had written a prayer to be read before Committee meetings, and this prayer was used by Bessie until the last day of her life. She looked upon it as a solemn sign of her father's approval, and as sanctifying all her efforts on behalf of the blind.[6]
No period of her life was so rich and full as the few years that followed the first development of her scheme. She was surrounded by friends who were enthusiastic in the cause, ready to serve her, and willing that she should guide and control the work which she had initiated. Some of those who gathered round her in 1857 are still working for the inst.i.tution. Captain, afterwards Colonel Fyers, who for a time filled the part of honorary secretary, was a faithful and generous friend to the blind from 1857 until his death in July 1886. Mr.
Summers still sits on the Committee.
One of the first things done by the Committee was to take a lease of the house occupied by Levy, then known as 21 South Row, and subsequently as 127 Euston Road. It was prepared as a factory for the blind. Rooms were set apart for the various trades, and the requisite fittings and tools were supplied. A large front room on the first floor was a.s.signed to women.
Many informalities and irregularities which had sprung up insensibly whilst the undertaking was small and private had now to be abolished.
The Committee directed that subscriptions and donations should no longer pa.s.s through the trade cash book, and we may a.s.sume that a strict method of book-keeping was adopted.
An initial difficulty there was, and always will be, in the management, by amateurs, of business which involves the purchase of material from foreign markets. Prices rise and fall, quality is open to deception, wages have also to be adjusted, and manufactured goods must be sold wholesale as well as retail. This is taken in hand by a Committee consisting of ladies and gentlemen, many of whom could probably not dispose of a basket of oranges on advantageous terms.
Bessie herself by this time had acquired considerable information in matters of business, and she knew the difficulties that surrounded her.
Practical knowledge of this kind would have justly given her a prominent place on any Committee. Her own Committee placed her without hesitation in a position from which she was never deposed. They looked upon themselves as elected to carry out her aims and objects for the blind, and they believed her to be the best guide they could have. She on her side gave her whole time and attention to the mastery of all the intricacies of trade and mysteries of book-keeping. She was soon familiar with stock-book, ledger, cash-book, and banker's accounts. When she discovered that her wish would be law, she became doubly anxious and scrupulous. She had always treated every one around her with courtesy and generous consideration, and now to the grace of nature was added a strong sense of the duty she owed to those who trusted her and relied upon her. She was careful to ascertain the wishes of her Committee upon every subject to be presented to them, and she never urged her own views until she saw that her friends were ready to receive them.
One further development of her work was of doubtful utility. Schools to teach reading to the blind were formed in different parts of London.
Each scholar was paid threepence for his or her attendance, and guides were also paid for. It was found some years later that cla.s.ses for the blind, under similar conditions, were rather extensively carried on, were indeed a favourite form of private benevolence, and that there were blind men and women who earned a living by going about as pupils.
RULES FOR GENERAL MANAGEMENT.
_t.i.tle._
1. That this Society be denominated THE BRITISH a.s.sOCIATION FOR PROMOTING THE GENERAL WELFARE OF THE BLIND.
_Objects._
2. That the more immediate objects of this a.s.sociation shall be to afford employment to those blind persons who, for want of work, have been compelled to solicit alms, or who may be likely to be tempted to do so. To cause those unacquainted with a trade to be instructed in some industrial art, and to introduce trades. .h.i.therto unpractised by the blind. To support a Circulating Library consisting of books in various systems of relief printing, to the advantages of which the indigent blind shall be admitted free of charge, and others by paying the subscription required by the Committee. To collect and disseminate information relative to the physical, mental, moral, and religious conditions of the blind. To promote amongst the supporters of the various inst.i.tutions for their benefit, and among other friends of the blind, a reciprocal interchange of the results of their efforts for ameliorating their condition.
_Members._
3. That donors of 5:5s. at one time shall be life members of the a.s.sociation, and subscribers of half a guinea annually, members so long as they shall continue such subscriptions.
_Committee._
4. That the management of the affairs of the a.s.sociation be vested in a General Committee, to consist of the founder, Miss Gilbert, and two ladies chosen by her, a President, Vice-President, Treasurer, and seven gentlemen, to be chosen annually by the members from among themselves; which General Committee shall meet on the first Wednesday in February, May, August, and November, or oftener if necessary; three to be a quorum.
4b. That out of the fourteen elected members of the Committee, Miss Gilbert shall nominate one to be Vice-President, who, together with herself, the two ladies chosen by her, and two gentlemen, elected from among their own number by the President, Treasurer, and gentlemen of the General Committee, shall be a Sub-Committee, whose business it shall be to select the blind persons to be employed by the a.s.sociation, and to regulate the details, subject to the correction of the General Committee. This Sub-Committee to meet at least once a fortnight, and three to be a quorum.
4bb. The President or Treasurer shall be capable of being nominated Vice-President, and Miss Gilbert shall have the privilege of introducing at the meetings of either the Committee or Sub-Committee, her mother, or one of her sisters, who may take part in the proceedings, but not vote.
_Auditors._
5. That two subscribers be chosen annually, by the members of the a.s.sociation, to audit the accounts of the ensuing year.
_Treasurer._
6. The Treasurer shall be elected annually by the members of the a.s.sociation, and shall present his accounts to the members, and also to the auditors or the Committee whenever required. All drafts upon the Treasurer shall be signed by two members of the Committee.
_Annual Meeting of Members._
7. That a General Meeting of the members of the a.s.sociation be held annually on the second Wednesday in May, notice thereof to be sent to each subscriber on the first of that month, to receive from the Committee a report of their proceedings, and to appoint the officers for the ensuing year. But should any vacancy occur in the offices of President, Vice-President, Treasurer, Auditors, or gentlemen of the Committee or Sub-Committee, the vacancy shall be supplied by the Committee or by Miss Gilbert, as the case may be, until the next general meeting.
_Funded Property._
8. All monies directed by the Committee to be funded, shall be vested in the joint names of four Trustees, chosen by them, unless otherwise directed by the donors; the dividends arising therefrom shall be received by the Treasurer, and applied to the current expenditure of the a.s.sociation. As often as any vacancy shall occur among the Trustees, or change appear necessary, the same shall be supplied or effected by the Committee.
No general meeting shall have power to sell or appropriate any part of the capital funded property, until the order made by it for such purpose be confirmed by a subsequent annual or extraordinary general meeting, consisting of not less than twenty-four members of the a.s.sociation, of whom three-fourths at least shall vote for such confirmation.
_Auxiliaries._
9. The Committee shall be empowered to form or to receive into connection with the a.s.sociation, upon terms to be agreed upon, Auxiliaries in various parts of the kingdom, for the purposes of increasing the funds and extending the utility of the a.s.sociation.
_Special Cases._
10. The Sub-Committee may in a special case require the patrons or friends of any indigent blind person to pay a donation, or provide an annual subscription of such amount as they shall deem proper and suitable, before admitting the applicant to the benefits provided by the a.s.sociation.
_Secretary and Superintendent._
11. A Secretary, and likewise a Superintendent of the Repository, shall be appointed by the General Committee, each with a stipend, if necessary. These offices to be held together if the Committee shall so appoint. It shall be the Secretary's business to attend at every meeting of the Committee and Sub-Committee; register the proceedings, and keep the accounts of the a.s.sociation. He must always be ready to produce the books and accounts fairly written out, to any member of the Committee. On his appointment he shall give such security as shall be required by the Committee, for the performance of the duties of his office, and for the due accounting for such monies as may be paid him for the purposes of the a.s.sociation. The Superintendent of the Repository shall also give security in like manner as the Secretary, and conduct the business of the Repository with zeal and a.s.siduity. The present superintendent, William Hanks Levy, is to be continued in his office until he shall withdraw, or be removed by the General Committee. He must also be in attendance at each meeting of the Committee or Sub-Committee, and be ready to give information at other times also when required.
_Visitor._
12. That a subscriber who is not a member of Committee be appointed by the Committee to visit the persons employed at their own homes and the Repository, and other premises of the a.s.sociation, and present to them a quarterly report of the results of his observations.