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Trinity/Add.Ms.b/71 contains:
<-- See earlier
50/4-6 MS notes by J. Peile on HS' r�le in the attempts to reorganise academic teaching in Cambridge. Refers to the difficulty which he experienced 'in his attempts to put into shape the control which the Statutes of 1882 expected the General Board of Studies to exercise through the Special Boards on the teaching of the University....'
50/2-3 MS notes [in NS' hand] on HS' attempt to effect 'the better organisation of academic teaching' in Cambridge
51/3 Florence G. [F.G.] Keynes to Nora Sidgwick
51/1 F.G. Keynes [of the Cambridge Charity Organisation Society] to NS.
51/2 F.G. Keynes [of the Cambridge Charity Organisation Society] to NS.
51/4-9 MS notes [in NS' hand] taken from a minute book beginning in 1856 and ending in 1883 of the Mendicity Society/Charity Organisation Society
52/1 Henry Jackson to Leslie Stephen.
52/2-13 Typewritten copy of notes and 'rough memoranda', with one MS sheet, by Henry Jackson on HS' university career and his role in Trinity College and Cambridge University business.
52/14 Henry Jackson to Nora Sidgwick
52/15 MS table [in NS' hand] of names of Henry Sidgwick's contemporaries.
52/16 MS notes [in NS' hand] entitled 'Trinity Fellows meetings' [based on Henry Jackson's notes]
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Additional Manuscripts b

Title MS notes [in NS' hand] taken from a minute book beginning in 1856 and ending in 1883 of the Mendicity Society/Charity Organisation Society
Reference 71/51/4-9
Covering Dates 1856–1883
Extent and Medium 1 doc
Content and context

. Refers to meetings that Henry Sidgwick attended, and to his contributions to discussions, e.g., his suggestion that the society might do without its house[s] and subrent from 'respectable lodging houses to which tickets might be given by subscribers....' Refers also to a speech he gave to the council meeting of the Mendicity Society on 19 November 1872, in which he states that there were 'many cases in which it seemed almost impossible to discover the right [mean] between weak yielding to benevolent impulse on the one hand, and a pedantic adherence to the maxims of abstract political economy on the other.'

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