
On the way to Lincoln on Thursday. I took this photo of Ely Cathedral, 'the Ship of the Fens.' The first Benedictine monks appeared in the area in the seventh century and founded Ely monastery in 673 AD. The whole region was made up of islands known as the Fenland islands. The area was not completely drained until the seventeenth century. Ely used to be known as the 'Isle of Ely.' Ely is from an old Saxon word for the natural breeding ground for eels.

Lincoln Cathedral is on a very high hill overlooking the current city of Lincoln. It is beautiful at night and also in the daylight. The statue is that of Tennyson, who was born in Lincolnshire. In 1072, William the Conqueror ordered that the cathedral be built. The cathedral holds one of the four remaining copies of the Magna Carta.

I spent most of Friday examining a little math book dated 1654.

I was trying to learn more about education in the seventeenth century and I came across this parish record which I found interesting and it confirmed Ecclesiastes 1:9b, "there is no new thing under the sun." It seems that the boys in the local grammar school had the habit of shutting the master out of the school. So the governors of the grammar school of Gainsborough ordered the following:
"That if any boy or boys shall offer to shut out the master he or they shall be publickely whipped by the mastor in the presence of the governors.”
Over the centuries, how many teachers had students who thought it would be funny to lock the teacher out of the classroom? While I was teaching at Unionville High School, I recall one period of time, when EVERYDAY SINGLE DAY when I returned from lunch someone had jammed chewing gum in the lock of the door. I quickly learned to carry tools and solvent with me to lunch so that I could clean the lock and open the door quickly. When the students learned that I was always prepared, they stopped and I never did learn who the culprit was.