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The Scottish religious identity in the Atlantic world 1880–1914
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 March 2016
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In the generation before the first world war, Scottish national identity was found not in the church, established or free, but in the town hall; in an ethical Christian community faith rather than ‘churchianity’. For Scotland was a working model of the civic church of W. T. Stead. In particular in Glasgow, that faith of the ‘new’ professional layman proved itself flexible, responsive to urban social problems and readily exportable. Civic patriotism was at once national and international.
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References
1 Compare Drummond, Henry, ‘The City in many of its functions is a greater church than the church.’ The City Without a Church (New York 1893)Google Scholar quoted in Boyer, Paul, Urban Masses and Moral Order in America, 1820-1920 (Cambridge, Mass., 1978) p 253 Google Scholar. Also see Gladden, Washington, The Church and the Kingdom (London 1894) pp 5–6, 14Google Scholar. Gladden, was a great admirer of Glasgow see his Social Facts and Forces (London 1902)Google Scholar. Rev. John Hunter, congregational minister of the influential Trinity Church, Glasgow spent part of a summer in Columbus, Ohio in 1910. He had also visited Jane Addams at Hull House, Chicago in 1907.
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3 Rev. Josiah Strong, author of Our Country, 1885, wrote to R. T. Ely, 22 February 1896, ‘What we especially need now is a city well organised which will serve as a practical demonstration of the practicability and value of the work. Such a city would be of inestimable value’. Ely Papers, Wisconsin Historical Society, Madison, Wisconsin, U.S.A. Also see Aspinwall, [B.], ‘Glasgow Trams and American Politics, 1894-1914’ ScHR, 56 (1977) pp 64–84 Google Scholar.
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19 Ibid p 315 The full programme is in the September 1893 issue pp 316-19.
20 Houghton Library, Harvard University, Robert A. Woods Papers, R. A. Woods to Rev. Mr. Wragge, 22 June 1891. Wood’s articles appeared in the Modern Church, 9 April, 2 May, 16 July, 10 September, 19 November 1891 and 3 March 1892. Other regular contributors included R. M. Wenley. A reverend G. B. Stafford was a regular American contributor.
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28 New York Public Library, Albert Shaw Papers, W. J. Ashley to A. Shaw, 11 January 1895.
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30 Shaw, A., Municipal Government in Great Britain (New York 1895)Google Scholar; E. R. L. Gould, 1860-1915 published widely on housing, temperance and civic reform, see necrology in The Johns Hopkins Alumni Magazine November 1915 pp 82-4. I am indebted to Dr T. J. Jacklin for this reference; Howe, [F.C.], [European Cities at Work] (London 1913)Google Scholar.
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36 Bruce, A.B., The Providential Order of the World (London 1897) p 293 Google Scholar. Also see his The Moral Order of the World (London 1898). Bruce was a professor in the free church college in Glasgow. On the tradition and background see Tuveson.
37 Among the now massive literature see for example Thernstrom, Stephan, The Other Bostonians, 1880-1970 (Cambridge, Mass., 1973)Google Scholar and Chudacoff, Howard P., Mobile Americans: Residential and Social in Omaha, 1880-1920 (New York 1972)Google Scholar. Recent writers have challenged these views. For example, Briggs, John W., An Italian Passage: Immigrants in Three American Cities, 1890-1930 (New Haven 1978)Google Scholar.
38 Lasch, Christopher, The New Radicalism in America, 1889-1963: The Intellectual as a Social Type (London 1966)Google Scholar and Bledstein, B.J., The Culture of Professionalism: The Middle Class and the Development of Higher Education in America (New York 1976)Google Scholar.
39 Quoted in Louise C. Wade, Graham Taylor, p 126.
40 Patten, [Simon N.], The Theory of Prosperity (New York 1902) p 208 Google Scholar. See also pp 206-23.
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