Charles
Henry Corbett, the son
of Charles Joseph Corbett (1823-1882), a successful property developer
in London, was born in 1853. Charles was
educated at Marlborough and Oxford University,
where he took a degree in history. Charles married Marie
Gray in 1880 and after his father's death in 1882, the couple
moved to an 840-acre estate at Woodgate in the village of Danehill
in Sussex.
The couple believed they had a responsibility to help the less fortunate
members of the community and for many years the couple provided free
legal advice for people living in the area. Charles and Marie
Corbett were both active members of the Liberal
Party. Corbett was the unsuccessful Liberal candidate in East
Grinstead in the 1895 and 1900
general elections.
For many years Charles and Marie Corbett
and their two daughters, Margery Corbett Ashby
and Cicely Corbett-Fisher, made public speeches
on the subject of women's rights in East Grinstead High Street. East
Grinstead was a safe Conservative
seat and the crowds were usually very hostile. A survey carried out
in 1911 suggested that less than 20% of the women in East Grinstead
supported women having the vote in parliamentary elections.
Charles Corbett
became much more popular when he led the campaign in East Grinstead
against the 1902 Education Act. Only
a minority of the people living in East Grinstead were Anglicans.
A survey at the beginning of the century showed that 450 of the 800
children in the town had Nonconformist
parents. The local School Board represented the different religious
views of the people living in the town. A headmaster, William Hosken,
was appointed who, according to one School Board member, agreed that
the government "should look after the ordinary school education
- reading, writing and arithmetic - and leave the religious teaching
to the various religious bodies."
As a result of the 1902
Education Act, East Grinstead School was run by the Education
Committee of the County Council based in Lewes. Five of the six members
of the committee were Anglicans and the
chairman, Robert Whitehead, a leading member of the Conservative
Party in East Grinstead, had a reputation as someone who was hostile
to Nonconformity.
On 24th May, 1904, John Clifford the
leader of National Passive Resistance Committee was invited to speak
in the town. As a result a large number of Nonconformists
in East Grinstead refused to pay their education rates. Their property
was seized by the courts but one man, Edward
Steer, who transferred all his wealth over to his wife, was imprisoned.
In East Grinstead the 1902 Education
Act was the main issue in the 1906 General
Election. Corbett, who promised the electorate that a Liberal
Government would repeal the act, won a seat that had always been
under the control of the Conservative
Party. All told, 181 Nonconformists
(173 Liberal and 8 Labour)
were elected to the House of Commons in
1906.
In the House of Commons Corbett was one
of the few politicians who was willing to argue for women's suffrage.
He also did what he could to persuade the Liberal
Government to repeal the 1902 Education
Act. His campaign was unsuccessful and was a major factor in his
defeat in the 1910 General Election.
In March
1913 Charles Corbett joined with Rev. G. Riddell and the Rev. Rupert
Strong to form an East Grinstead branch of the Men's
League for Women's Suffrage. He remained active in the organisation
until it was disbanded on the outbreak of the First
World War. Charles Corbett died in 1935.
(1)
Margery Corbett Ashby wrote about her parents
in the 1970s. Her account was included in her Memoirs published
after her death in 1997.
No
one can have had a happier childhood than myself, brought up, with
a younger brother and sister, in a large, old-fashioned, country house.
In my youth I shared every advantage with my brother equally - from
love and affection to the best possible education and opportunities,
and the critical but unstinted encouragement which to the young is
like sunshine to a plant.
We were educated
at home. Lessons were divided. Mother took scripture and music
My father taught us history, geography, mathematics and Latin. From
the age of four I read everything I could lay my hands on. I remember
lying on the floor reading contemporary accounts of the Indian Mutiny
and the Crimean War in my grandfather's library, where there was a
complete set of Illustrated London News. He had bookshelves
to the ceiling
In my father's library the big bookcases also
went up to the ceiling.
My parents were Liberals
at that period as much hated and distrusted
by the gentry as Communists are today, and regarded as traitors to
their class. In consequence they boycotted them
I suspect this
boycott threw my energetic mother even more fervently into good works
amongst the villagers, where, in the days before the welfare state,
poverty was widespread.
(2)
Charles Corbett, speaking at an open-air meeting in the High Street,
East Grinstead (19th September, 1903)
The Education Act had fallen very heavily on East Grinstead. We had
a very efficient School Board in the town which was elected. This
Board of Management has been taken away and replaced by a committee.
Two-thirds of this committee are men who were certainly not elected
by reason of their educational knowledge. People want to return to
School Boards and have the appointment of teachers in their own hands.
I do not think the state should teach religion at all. It would be
better if the teaching of religion was left to the State Church and
the Nonconformist churches.
(3)
East Grinstead Observer (22nd August, 1903)
The Liberals in the East Grinstead Division at Danehill, the residence
of Charles Corbett, on Wednesday, and fortunately the weather turned
out fine for the occasion. Between 300 and 400 people people were
present, a party of nearly a hundred coming down from East Grinstead
by brakes and cycles. Charles Corbett was received with enthusiastic
applause, said: "It was quite certain that no Liberal Government
that was worthy of its name would remain in office if it could not
alter or get rid of this Education Act. The present Act was one of
the clumsiest and most unworkable that a Government had ever brought
in. Education was a national concern and should be managed by the
Government and paid for out of taxes. He believed religious education
should be by all means be taught in school, but each denomination
should be at liberty to enter a school and teach its own form of religion."
(4)
Margery Corbett described the 1906
General Election campaign in her book Memoirs (1996)
Political tyranny was accepted as a fact of life, and you voted as
your landlord or employer did. As voting papers have to have a number,
it was assumed that someone could find out how you voted. Farmers
would take their men to the polls in carts decorated with Tory colours,
and canvassers would give pictures of the Tory candidate for tenant
cottage windows.
East Grinstead was considered a safe Conservative seat in the 1906
election. The family supported my father to an amazing extent. Working
actively for him were his wife, myself and my brother Adrian. By day
the family were taken in the dogcart and dumped in one or two villages
in which meetings were to be held that evening. Adrian and I would
call at every house in the village, leaving a little leaflet. If no
local man dared to take the chair. Adrian or I would do so, or a friend
from London. The meetings were crowded, but very irresponsive, because
the leading Conservative landlord would sit in the front row to intimidate
his tenants.
On election day we all visited as many of the polling stations as
possible. It was very cold that evening when we drove the eight miles
to East Grinstead. Father was sitting peacefully with a pipe in the
back room when the returning officers declared, "Corbett in".
I almost fell down the stairs calling to Daddy, "You're in! You're
in!", to be received by a very cross voice saying "Nonsense,
child!".
The defeated candidate's waggonette, decorated in anticipation of
an assured success, was taken home as quietly as possible, but the
Conservative party was never caught napping again, and the growth
of Labour divided the progressive vote, so East Grinstead has never
had another Liberal or any Labour MP.
(5)
The East Grinstead Observer was owned an edited by Wallace
Hills, the Conservative Party agent. Hills was shocked by the
1906 General Election result (Corbett: 4,794;
E.M. Crookshank: 4,531). In his editorial on 3rd February, 1906, he
tried to explain what had happened.
Mr.
Corbett won his victory solely because his party pitched on a popular
cry and because insufficient time had been given to the people to
fully comprehend the meaning of the proposals of the Conservative
Party. The electors have been temporarily swept away by the popular
cry for change and when they settle down again and can fully comprehend
the misrepresentations which have for once masked them they will return
to their old allegiances, to the cause which means, unity of the empire,
freedom under our flag, safety at home and prosperity all round.
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