A very British culture war. Matt Cardy/Getty Images

It should have been a formality. The education committee for Somerset had already approved Day School Hymns for use by teachers in the county; now all that Bath Council had to do was nod the thing through for schools in their city. But that didnāt happen. Labour councillors raised objections to some of the material included in the collection, and the resulting dispute propelled Bath to the frontline of a culture war about censorship and the political indoctrination of children.
This was ā to avoid confusion ā exactly 100 years ago, in December 1923. But the essential features of the controversy feel very familiar today. There was a Gadarene rush of commentators staking out their positions, and the views being expressed were exactly as they would be now. The key difference, to which we shall return, was the tone.
The thing that so upset Bath councillors a century ago was one of the most popular and enduring of childrenās hymns, āAll Things Bright and Beautifulā, written by Cecil Frances Alexander ā also of āOnce in Royal Davidās Cityā fame. The hymn is an inclusive celebration of Godās Creation: not the most sophisticated theme, but not a particularly contentious one either. And then comes the third verse:
The rich man in his castle,
The poor man at his gate;
God made them high or lowly,
And ordered their estate.
āChrist never meant children to sing such a verse,ā protested one councillor: this was simply propaganda in support of the class system, the words clearly suggesting divine disapproval of socialism. They might have added that it was surely no coincidence that this reactionary attempt to shore up the status quo had first been published in 1848, the year revolutionary voices were being raised across Europe, as Marx and Engels were writing The Communist Manifesto. In case there was any doubt of where Alexanderās sympathies lay, exception was also taken to a verse in another of her hymns, āDay by Day the Little Daisyā:
God has given each his station;
Some have riches and high place,
Some have lowly homes and labour ā
All may have His precious grace.
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