Robert William Dale
Robert William Dale (1 December 1829 – 13 March 1895) was an English Congregationalist
(Nonconformist) church leader.
Life
Dale was born in London and educated at Spring Hill College, Birmingham, for the
Congregational ministry. In 1853 he was invited to Carr's Lane Chapel,
Birmingham, as co-pastor with John Angell James, on whose death in 1859 he
became sole pastor for the rest of his life. In the University of London M.A.
examination (1853), he came first in philosophy and won the gold medal. The
degree of LL.D. was conferred upon him in 1883 by the University of Glasgow
during the lord rectorship of John Bright. Yale University gave him its D.D.
degree, although he never used it. He served as Chairman of Chairman of the
Congregational Union of England and Wales in 1868 and President of the
International Congregational Council in 1891 (Dale et al., 1899).
Views & Publications
He normally read his sermons, because 'if I spoke extemporaneously I should
never sit down again' (Dale et al., 1899, p. 198). He did not use the title
'Reverend'. He was a strong advocate of the disestablishment of the Church of
England, holding that the Christian church was essentially a spiritual
brotherhood, and that any vestige of political authority impaired its spiritual
work. In church government he believed strongly that congregationalism was the
most fitting environment for Christianity. He published lectures such as the
Atonement (which is still in print), sermons, the 'Manual of Congregational
Principles' (also still in print), and, at his death, he left an unfinished
history of Congregationalism (Dale et al., 1899), revised by his son, A. W. W.
Dale.
'The Civic Gospel'
Dale's integrity, intelligence, moral passion and oratory soon made him a
national figure in an age when the strength of non-conformity was at its highest
(Briggs, 1955). He welcomed social improvement and was an advocate, with George
Dawson of what became known in Birmingham as the 'civic gospel' (Hunt, 2004:
Briggs, 1963). The health, housing, sanitation and living conditions in
Birmingham had suffered from its rapid population expansion in the previous
thirty years (Mayne, 1993: Briggs, 1963). Dale argued 'the public duty of the
state is the private duty of every citizen': service on the town council to
improve the wellbeing of Birmingham was advocated by Dale as having moral and
religious worth (Dale et al., 1899, p. 125). He was an advocate of free public
education, social improvement, the extension of the franchise, the recognition
of trades unions, and understanding the links between poverty and crime.
Politics
Although Dr Dale did not preach politics, he was a keen Liberal and worked with
other Birmingham reformers and radicals including Joseph Chamberlain, Kendrick,
Jesse Collings, George Dixon and John Bright. In 1886 he opposed Irish Home Rule
along with Joseph Chamberlain, but this did not seem to make him less
influential with other Liberals and Nonconformists who took the opposite
standpoint. He played a major part in opposing the religious elements of the
Forster Education Act of 1870 (see below).
Work in Education
When Forster's Elementary Education Bill appeared, Dale attacked it. He argued
that the resulting schools would often be purely denominational institutions and
the Bill's 'conscience clause' gave inadequate protection to Nonconformists.
Dale criticised the way school boards would be empowered to make grants out of
the rates to maintain sectarian schools. He was himself in favour of secular
education, claiming that it was the only logical solution and was consistent
with Nonconformist principles. In Birmingham this controversy was ended in 1879
by a compromise.
His interest in educational affairs had led him to accept a seat on the
Birmingham school board. He was appointed a governor of Foundation of the
Schools of King Edward VI in Birmingham and served on the Royal Commission of
Education. Dale took a great interest in Spring Hill Congregational College,
Moseley (where he had previously studied). Largely due to his initiative, Spring
Hill College, renamed Mansfield College after its founders, was moved to Oxford
in 1886 and he became chairman of the council of what is now Mansfield College,
Oxford.
Iconography
Blue
plaque on Carrs Lane Church, Birmingham. The statue of R.W Dale sculpted by
Edward Onslow Ford in 1898, was rediscovered in 1995 and is now on loan from
Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery,in Carr's Lane Church Centre (his old
church)(http://www.carrslane.co.uk/index.php/DaleToday). The National Portrait
Gallery holds two pictures of him http://www.npg.org.uk/live/search/person.asp?search=ss&sText=Robert+William+Dale&LinkID=mp55892)
There is a blue plaque commemorating him on Carrs Lane Church, Carrs Lane,
Central Birmingham [1]. The street 'Dale End' in central Birmingham was named
after Dr R.W.Dale.