| 16 | Inns of Court and Chancery, for education in the law. |
| 5 | Colleges, viz., Zion College, Gresham, Physicians, DoctorsCommons, and Herald’s College. |
| 62 | Schools or public Seminaries, such as Westminster, the BlueCoat, St. Paul’s, Merchant Taylors, Charterhouse, &c., educatingsome 5,000 children. |
| 237 | Schools, belonging to the different parishes, educating some9000. |
| 3,730 | Private Schools. |
| ——— | |
| 4,050 | Total Seminaries of Education. |
| ════ |
This does not include nearly twenty educational establishments such as the Orphan Working School, the Marine Society, Freemasons School, &c.
And there were about the same number of Religious and Moral Societies, such as the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts, Religious Tract Society, Missionary Societies, &c.; besides a number of Sunday Schools—so that we see education, and philanthropy, were hard at work in the Dawn of the Nineteenth Century.
THE END.
INDEX.
Abbot, Rt. Hon. Chas., elected Speaker, [47].
Abbot’s, Mr., M. P., plan for census, [29].
Abolition of Slave Trade, [132].