Simon Somerville Laurie

Simon Somerville Laurie

Simon Sommerville Laurie by George Fiddes Watt
Born (1829-11-13)13 November 1829
Edinburgh
Died 2 March 1909(1909-03-02) (aged 79)
Edinburgh
Nationality Scottish
Occupation educator
Spouse(s) Catherine Ann Hibburd

Simon Somerville Laurie (1829–1909) was a Scottish educator. He became Bell Professor of Education at Edinburgh University in 1876. He campaigned energetically and successfully for better teacher training in Scotland.

Laurie also wrote extensively on philosophy, giving the Gifford Lectures in 1905–6.

Biography

Early life

Laurie was born on 13 November 1829 in Edinburgh, the oldest son of James Laurie and Jean Somerville.[1] His father was a Presbyterian minister and chaplain to the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh.[2] His mother was the daughter of a United Presbyterian church minister at Elgin, Simon Somerville.[3]

Laurie was educated at Edinburgh High School from 1839 to 1844.[2] To help pay his own school fees, he was already teaching at age 11.[3] He took an arts M.A. at the University of Edinburgh, where he graduated at the early age of 19 in 1849.[2] He then travelled for 5 years in England, Ireland and Europe, with private students.[3]

Career

Laurie's house at 22 George Square, Edinburgh

In 1855 he became secretary and visitor of schools for the Church of Scotland's education committee, which was then responsible for Scottish parish schools and for teacher training. Laurie held this role for 50 years, in which time he greatly improved the education of teachers in Scotland. He vigorously campaigned to have all teachers educated at university, with the teacher training colleges providing professional training only after that. It took until 1873 for the Scottish board of education to give the training colleges the right to send their best students, at least, to universities to gain full degrees. Laurie went further, campaigning to have day training colleges set up in England, and in 1890 he succeeded in this also, personally inaugurating the teacher training department of University College, Liverpool.[3]

In 1856 he became visitor and examiner for the Dick Bequest Trust. The trust distributed money to the best school teachers in northeast Scotland (Aberdeen, Banff, and Moray counties) according to Laurie's published reports.[3]

In 1868, the Merchant Company of Edinburgh and the Heriot Trust both invited Laurie to inspect their Edinburgh schools. The Merchant Company's schools were known as "hospitals" and were run in monastic style. His report was critical of these schools, observing that while a larger amount was spent on them than all the parish schools of Scotland, they were not providing adequate moral and intellectual education. Laurie recommended sending the boys to his alma mater, the Edinburgh High School, while a new high school should be opened for day girls. His recommendations were embodied in an 1869 Act of Parliament which abolished the monastic and alms-giving nature of the former "hospitals".[3]

In 1872, Laurie was appointed secretary to the royal commission on Scottish endowed schools. His reports for the commission led to the reorganisation of secondary schooling under Lord Moncrieff (1878) and Lord Balfour (1882–1889).[3]

In 1876, Laurie became the first Bell Professor of Education at the University of Edinburgh. In his first year there, he had 12 students; the number rose to 120 by the end of his tenure in 1903. He used the position to improve pedagogy in the whole of Britain, not only in Scotland.[3]

Also in 1876, he became honorary secretary of the Association for Promoting Secondary Education in Scotland, a voluntary campaigning organisation. It was dissolved in 1880 when it achieved its goal with the passing of the Endowed Institutions (Scotland) Act 1878.[3]

In 1891, as president of the Teachers' Guild of Great Britain and Ireland, Laurie gave evidence before a select parliamentary committee, arguing for the registration and organisation of all state school teachers to improve the quality of teaching. At the same time, he was strongly opposed to centralised bureaucratic control by the board of education, favouring freedom for local education authorities.[3]

Writings

He wrote widely on education and on philosophical topics. Josipa Petrunic describes his philosophical writings as "often nebulous and obscure", in contrast to his more practical work on education.[4]

Laurie resigned his chair in 1903, and retired from his work with the Dick Bequest in 1907.[4] In 1905–6, he gave the Gifford Lectures in natural theology, in Edinburgh. He wrote up the lectures in Synthetica (1905–06), which "gave Laurie high rank among speculative writers". The French philosopher Georges Remacle translated and commented on Synthetica.[3]

Awards and honours

On his retirement, Laurie's admirers presented him with the portrait oil painting by George Fiddes Watt (see illustration).[3] The painting is now in the University of Edinburgh Fine Art Collection.[5]

Laurie was given honorary LL.D. degrees by the University of St Andrews in 1887, the University of Edinburgh in 1903, and the University of Aberdeen in 1906.[3] He was a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh.[6]

Family

The grave of Simon Somerville Laurie, Grange Cemetery, Edinburgh

Laurie married Catherine Ann Hibburd in 1861; they had 4 children together,[4] including the chemist Arthur Pillans Laurie (1861–1949) and the zoologist Malcolm Laurie (1866–1932), both of whom also became fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh.[6]

Catherine died in 1895.[6] Laurie married Lucy Struthers, the daughter of Sir John Struthers, in 1901.[4]

He died on 2 March 1909 at his house 22 George Square, Edinburgh. He is buried in the Grange Cemetery in Edinburgh.[3] The grave lies in the western extension against the southern wall, close to the south-west corner.

Works

References

  1. Templeton, 2010.
  2. 1 2 3 Knox, 1962.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Watson, DNB supplement, 1912.
  4. 1 2 3 4 Petrunic, 2012.
  5. Watt, George Fiddes. "Simon Somerville Laurie (1829–1909)". BBC. Retrieved 7 October 2012.
  6. 1 2 3 "Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783–2002" (PDF). Biographical Index, Part Two. Royal Society of Edinburgh. July 2006. Retrieved 8 October 2012.

Bibliography

External links

This article incorporates edited text from the copyright-free 1912 Supplement to the Dictionary of National Biography, as referenced in the article.

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