286 BOARD OF EDUCATION
Mr. Charles Trevelyan as Chairman, inquired into
endowments in rural areas, the application of which
presents ‘special difficulties.* It endeavoured to
devise means of relieving the Board of work the
results of which, under the existing law, were not
proportionate to the time and labour expended, to
provide a legislative remedy for the general failure
of Educational Trusts resulting from the operation
of the Education Acts, and to bring Local Education
Authorities into closer connection with the endow-
ments for elementary education. Educational en-
dowments, generally speaking, were intended to
provide advantages or facilities for particular areas
or classes of persons which they would not otherwise
enjoy. The continuous extension of the public
system of education has provided those advantages
and facilities out of public moneys, and the applica-
tion of endowments to their original purposes has
operated in an increasing degree for the benefit
not of the beneficiaries but of the ratepayers—a
result obnoxious to a fundamental rule of Charity
Law. Much ingenuity has been exercised from
time to time in finding new objects analogous to
the old objects and supplementary to those ordinarily
provided for out of public funds, but in each genera-
tion many of the new and special objects have in
their turn become customary objects of public
provision, and the process of devising new objects
has had to be renewed. The Committee’s list of
thirteen special purposes to which endowments
might be applied is still a useful one, but some items
of it are already out of date for the reason above
* Report of 1911, Cd. 5662