In sanctioning the measure, I s inform the Governor
                     that, from whatever source public grants may continue to be made
                     to denominational schools, such Schools cannot receive any aid

                     under this Ordinance: and I s request to be furnished with a yearly
                     report upon the working of the measure, and its effects upon the
                     present denominational Schools. The amount of aid given to
                     Schools of both classes, and the conditions under which it is
                     given, should also be stated. It is to be hoped that suitable
                     arrangements will be made for ensuring, by a System of
                     Inspection, that the Public Grants will be given only to those
                     Schools in which satisfactory results are attained.
                     
 
                  
                  
                   
               
               
                  
                  
                     Lord Granville
                     This measure will do grievous injustice if it makes local
                     taxes for education compulsory on the one[s] who cannot
                     conscientiously send their children to schools supported by
                     them. It would be in that case establishing a system in 
British
                        Columbia which has been tried, found wanting,

 & condemned in
                     Trinidad. This system, as 
M Keenan has shewn, is not the
                     system of the Irish National Board.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     I cannot agree with 
Sir F. Sandford that the experiment whether
                     these s[t]ate supported schools will not necessarily kill out
                     the schools which being voluntary, are certainly such as the
                     parents wish for, will be interesting to watch—

& I think it
                     probable that the parents who, conscientiously objecting to this
                     system, will still have to pay for it will agree with my view.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     I think it would be wise to ask the Governor to consider 
M
                        Creases despatch saying, that upon the understanding that an
                     ordinance

 will be passed bringing the present one into harmony
                     with the principles there laid down it will be sanctioned.
                     
 
                  
                  
                   
               
               
                  
                  
                  
                  
                     2. As I read the Ordinance, the intention at all events, if not
                     the effect of it, is to allow (as 
M Forster's Bill allows),
                     
any school, denominational or other, to receive a grant of public
                     money as a "common school," at the discretion of the Governor in
                     Council. The previous Ordinance of 
1865, requiring the Common
                     Schools to be strictly non-sectarian, is repealed; but the 
Gov
                     in Council may require the text-books used in schools under the
                     new Ordinance to be non-sectarian, and the provision enabling
                     the minister of any denomination to teach religion to the
                     children of his persuasion at convenient hours is retained.
                     There is, however, no "conscience clause" exempting scholars,
                     whose parents so desire, from attending such religious
                     instruction as may be given in the school. Neither is
there
 there any
                     specific provision for ascertaining whether the existing school
                     of a district gives sufficient educational accommodation such as
                     every sect can avail itself of; nor for withdrawing aid from any
                     school which fails or ceases to comply with this requirement.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     3. The ordinance is in fact too rudimentary; leaving too much
                     to be filled in by the Governor in Council; and as the local
                     Board have the power of imposing an educational poll tax upon
                     all males over 20 years of age, it seems necessary that the
                     regulations should be clearly defined in the Ordinance; so as to
                     secure to the people of each denomination that their children
                     may be taught their own religion, and shall not,
                     except by consent, be taught any other religion, in the School.
                     
                  
                  
                     4. Such an arrangement 
w apparently be admissible under 
M
                        Forster's Bill, and resembles the Irish National System, to a
                     considerable extent.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     5. I am perfectly aware that the Roman
Catholic
 Catholic and Church of
                     England clergy will in many cases conscientiously resist this
                     system, saying that religion should be thoroughly intermixed
                     with education, & that they must have access to their School at
                     all hours. The state may however properly reply that these are
                     views which the denominations may carry out at their own cost,
                     but that only one sort of education can be paid for by public
                     money, that is, education which is non-sectarian when so
                     desired, but not consequently non-religious.
                     
 
                  
                  
                     6. I should be inclined to write to the 
Gov in terms of the
                     first three paragraphs of this minute (if they meet 
Lord
                        Granville's views) and to recommend the amendment of the
                     Ordinance by the introduction of a "conscience clause" similar
                     to Clause 7 of 
M Forster's Bill, thus leaving it permissible
                     for the School of any denomination to be a "Common School"
                     provided that it conforms to the regulations contained in that
                     Clause; and I should also suggest the adoption of the other
                     provisions, so far as they are applicable, (and
                     
mutatis mutandis)
                     
                     of that Bill, especially
the
 the Clauses from 82 to the end; because
                     they furnish a machinery useful for many purposes not provided
                     for in the Ordinance.
                     
                     
                     

                           Yes.
                           
                        
                      
                     
                      
                  
                  
                     The Ordinance so amended will apparently still be in accordance
                     with the present balance of opinion in the Colony out of which
                     this compromise has sprung. It will not perhaps be what any one
                     person would have desired; but in educational matters,
                     quot homines, tot sententia.