Sunday Lecture Society

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The Sunday Lecture Society was a British-based society that gave a number of influential lectures on Sundays. The first incarnation of the society met at St. George's Hall, Langham Place for members to hear lectures on arts, history, science and literature. It was formed in November 1869 by solicitor William Henry Domville. The society came about because during November 1865, the National Sunday League (NSL) held a series of lectures for the general public entitled "Sunday Evenings for the People". This was fiercely opposed by the Lord's Day Observance Society (LDOS), which had the lectures cancelled after only four had been given. This was done by threatening the management of St Martin's Hall with legal action, as lectures on a Sunday were forbidden under the Sunday Observance Act 1780. In the aftermath, it was sometime later that the Sunday Lecture Society was formed, replacing the NSL.

The vice presidents included Thomas Henry Huxley, Herbert Spencer, William Spottiswoode, John Tyndall, and Charles Darwin.{{Cite book|last1=Parsons|first1=Gerald|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VMTQGgBLxLMC&q=religion+in+victorian+britain|title=Religion in Victorian Britain: Sources|last2=Moore|first2=James Richard|date=1988|publisher=Manchester University Press|isbn=978-0-7190-2944-8|language=en}} Gerald Parsons notes that "Huxley also presided over the organisational meeting, although he declined to serve as president in 1884 while holding the same office in the Royal Society."

The Sunday Lecture Society soon branched out to Tynedale, and established itself in Leeds where it held meetings at the Coliseum Theatre, situated at Cookridge Street. In 1894 the LDOS forced the prosecution of the Leeds branch of the Sunday Lecture Society under the Sunday Observance Act, leading to the fining of two members of the Society, Alderman Ward and Mr. Gavazzi King, as well as the proprietor of the Coliseum, a Mr. Wilson. The Sunday Lecture Society later had this verdict overturned on appeal, and the actions of the LDOS were dismissed with costs. John Wigley, writing about this in his book The rise and fall of the Victorian Sunday, says he considers this to have been a "tactical blunder" because after the prosecution another group, the Sunday Society, formed a National Association of Sunday Societies in order to better defend themselves. Furthermore, the prosecution galvanised one of the Sunday Lecture Society's members, Lord Hobhouse, to put forward a Sunday Bill to the House of Lords, where on its second reading it was put to committee. Wigley says that the Sabbatarians did not "make a good impression, rather letting down their side". Nonetheless the bill was not enacted, and a second Sunday Bill introduced by Hobhouse in 1897 also failed.Wigley, p.157

Lecturers

References

{{reflist|refs=

{{cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/risefallofvictor0000wigl|url-access=registration|title=The rise and fall of the Victorian Sunday|first=John|last=Wigley|year=1980|publisher=Manchester University Press|isbn=9780719007941|page=146}}

{{citation|chapter-url={{Google books|JRtcAAAAQAAJ|plainurl=yes}}|page=244|title=Reports from Select Committees of the House of Lords and Evidence|volume=6|chapter=Appendix C. (9)|year=1895|publisher=Great Britain. Parliament. House of Lords}}

{{cite book|url={{Google books|LnaFDwAAQBAJ|plainurl=yes}}|title=A Chronology of the Life of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle|page=27|edition=Revised 2018|first=Brian W.|last=Pugh|isbn=978-1780922850|publisher=MX Publishing|year=2018}}

{{cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/dickenscharity00pope|url-access=registration|title=Dickens and Charity|first=Norris|last=Pope|year=1979|isbn=1349034363|oclc=1033650826|page=91|publisher=Palgrave Macmillan}}

{{citation|surname=Moore|first=James|url=https://www.asa3.org/ASA/PSCF/1993/PSCF6-93Moore.html|publisher=American Scientific Affiliation|year=1993|title=Speaking Of Science and Religion Then and Now}}, citing:

  • T. Huxley to F. D. Dyster, 10 October 1854 L. Huxley, Life and Letters (ref. 7), i, 113
  • "Sunday Lecture Society Proceedings from 1869 to 1889," British Library, Department of Printed Books, 4355.d.f.17
  • C. J. Ellicott, "Explanatory Paper," in [William Thomson], Lord Archbishop of York, et al,.
  • Modern Scepticism: A Course of Lectures Delivered at the Request of the Christian Evidence Society (London, 1871), 505-27.

{{Citation | first=Alan|last=Pert|title=Red cactus: the life of Anna Kingsford|year=2006| publisher=Books & Writers|location=Watson's Bay, New South Wales|isbn=978-1-74018-405-2|page=94}}

{{Citation | author1=Parsons, Gerald | editor-first=James R.|editor-last=Moore | url=https://archive.org/details/religioninvictor0000unse|url-access=registration|title=Religion in Victorian Britain | publication-date=1988 | publisher=Manchester University Press in association with the Open University |chapter=C. M. Davies on Professor Huxley's Sunday Lecture| year=1988|isbn=978-0-7190-2944-8|page=456}}

{{cite journal|url=https://journals.msvu.ca/index.php/atlantis/article/download/5125/4323/|title="Sound-Minded Women": Eliza Orme and the Study and Practice of Law in Late-Victorian England|surname=Howsam|first=Leslie|location=Toronto, Ontario|journal=Atlantis|volume=15|issue=1|date=Fall 1989|page=48}}

{{citation|url= https://wellcomecollection.org/works/hrkhgnkf|first=George|last=Wotherspoon|author-link=George Wotherspoon|title= Cremation, ancient and modern : the history of fire-funeral a lecture delivered before the Sunday Lecture Society, St. George's Hall, Langham Place, on Sunday afternoon, 14th March, 1886| date=14 March 1886|publisher=Sunday Lecture Society|via=Wellcome Collection}}

{{citation|url= https://wellcomecollection.org/works/fmhdta9w |first=William Benjamin|last=Carpenter|author-link=William Benjamin Carpenter|title= The doctrine of human automatism : a lecture (with additions) delivered before The Sunday Lecture Society, on Sunday afternoon, 7th March, 1875| date=7 March 1875|publisher=Sunday Lecture Society|location=London|via=Wellcome Collection}}

{{cite book|title=A Selection of Lectures Delivered Before the Sunday Lecture Society: Fourth Selection|publisher=Sunday Lecture Society|location=London|date=January 1876|url={{Google books| X3FEAQAAMAAJ|plainurl=yes}}}}

{{citation|url={{Google books|S9QiHQAACAAJ|plainurl=yes}}|title= Body and Mind: A Lecture Delivered Before the Sunday Lecture Society, on Sunday Afternoon, 1st November, 1874|date=1 November 1874|publisher=Sunday Lecture Society|first=William Kingdon|last=Clifford|author-link=William Kingdon Clifford|location=London}}

{{cite book|first=John|last=Wentworth|author-link=John Wentworth (Illinois politician)|title=Early Chicago: A Lecture Delivered Before the Sunday Lecture Society at McCormick Hall on Sunday Afternoon, May 7th, 1876|publisher= Fergus Printing Company|location=Chicago|year=1886|url={{Google books| PkOO0oiCr_sC|plainurl=yes}}}}

{{cite book|first=John Mackinnon|last=Robertson|author-link=John Mackinnon Robertson|title=Over-population: A Lecture Delivered for the Sunday Lecture Society, London, Oct. 27th, 1889, Under the Title "The Law of Population, Its Meaning and Menace" |year=1900|url={{Google books| lkc_AQAAMAAJ |plainurl=yes}}}}

{{cite book|first=Karl|last=Pearson|publisher=Sunday Lecture Society|location=London|author-link=Karl Pearson|title= Matter and Soul: A Lecture Delivered Before the Sunday Lecture Society, St. George's Hall, Langham Place, on 6th December, 1885|date=6 December 1885|url={{Google books| abrVZwEACAAJ|plainurl=yes}}}}

{{citation|first=John Addington|last=Symonds|author-link=John Addington Symonds|publisher=Sunday Lecture Society|location=London|title=Renaissance of Modern Europe: A Review of the Scientific, Artistic, Rationalistic, Revolutionary Revival, Dating from the 15th Century: Being a Lecture Delivered Before the Sunday Lecture Society, the 24th November, 1872|date=24 November 1872|url={{Google books|TkKTswEACAA|plainurl=yes}}}}

{{citation|first=Florence Fenwick|last=Miller|author-link=Florence Miller (writer)|publisher=Sunday Lecture Society|location=London|title=The Lessons of a Life, Harriet Martineau, a Lecture Delivered 11th March 1877|date=11 March 1877|url={{Google books|18CkVBQyxAcC|plainurl=yes}}}}

{{citation|first=Edward Bibbins|last=Aveling|author-link=Edward Aveling|publisher=Sunday Lecture Society|location=London|title=The Borderland Between Living and Non-living Things: A Lecture Delivered Before the Sunday Lecture Society, on Sunday Afternoon, November 5th, 1882|date=5 November 1882|url={{Google books|Yp6-twAACAAJ|plainurl=yes}}}}

{{Cite book|title=On the religion of health: a lecture delivered before the Sunday Lecture Society, February 19, 1871|last=Blackwell|first=Elizabeth|author-link=Elizabeth Blackwell|publisher=Office of "The Examiner"|year=1871|location=London|language=en|oclc=926090108}}

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