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Sheffield Sunday School Union formed.
Springing from the recognition of an urgent need to provide for the
religious education of the youth of Sheffield and with a view to assisting
those who gave themselves to the work, Mr. George Bennett suggested to a
meeting held on 19th June 1812, "that a good understanding and exchange of
ideas among all engaged in the Sunday Schools of Sheffield might be of very
blessed and beneficial results."
At the first meeting held on 12th June 1812, one of the friends suggested
"that it would be a delightful thing for all those who are engaged in the
blessed work of Sunday Schools in this town to meet together once a year for
a mutual communication and encouragement."
Within 3 months the Sheffield Sunday School Union was formed and Rules for
the Union were formulated and adopted. The objectives of the Union were as
follows:
To stimulate and encourage each other in the education and religious
instruction of the young and by mutual communication to improve the methods
of instruction as far as may be done without interfering with the rules
deemed essential by each member.
To begin with there were 7 schools in membership, but they contained 400
teachers and 3000 scholars. It is interesting to note that when the Union
was formed, Sunday Schools were teaching both adults and children to read,
thus providing education which was otherwise only available to children of
the upper classes.
In the first ten years, membership increased to 50, and included schools
from as far away as Mexborough, Swinton and Thurgoland.
Today some 140 Churches are in membership from an area of 150 square miles.
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