Fagging:
Fagging was a ritual form of hazing and initiation in English public schools, whereby younger pupils acted as servants to the older boys. Originally an emulation of domestic household task distribution and paternal authority, fagging formerly included harsh discipline and corporal punishment. Bullying and even sexual abuse were also sometimes associated with it. Facing public scrutiny, the practice of personal fagging faded away during the 1970s and 1980s, but in most schools it has been replaced by a system where junior boys are required to do tasks for the benefit of the general school community.
[edit] History
Fagging originated in British schools as a way of maintaining schoolyard order. Dr. Thomas Arnold, headmaster of Rugby from 1828 to 1841, defined fagging as the power given by the supreme authorities of the school to the Sixth Form, to be exercised by them over younger boys. Older pupils, in a sense trustees, would take responsibility for the behaviour of younger boys, thus helping the staff to avoid chaos. Fagging was a fully established system at Eton and Winchester in the 16th century, and is probably a good deal older. During the 19th century, almost all English public schools adopted a fagging system. The right to fag carried with it certain well-defined duties. The senior, called fag-master, also known as the protector of his fags, was responsible for their happiness and good conduct. In cases of bullying or injustice, their appeal was to him, not to the form-master, or house master, and, except in the gravest cases, all incidents were dealt with by the fag-master on his own responsibility and without report to the master.
The duties undertaken by fags, the time taken, and their general treatment, varied widely. Each school had its own tradition. Until circa 1900 a fag's duties included such humble tasks as blacking boots, brushing clothes and cooking breakfasts, and there was no limit as to hours. Almost all the fag's spare time could be so monopolized. Later, fagging was restricted to such light tasks as running errands, bringing tea to the masters' study and fagging at cricket or football. At many schools, fag-masters were expected to reward their fags for their efforts at the end of term by giving a monetary 'fag tip'. The 1911 Britannica details an evolution of the role at Eton college. Roald Dahl relates in his autobiography being told, as a fag, to warm toilet seats for older boys at Repton. Stephen Fry describes a practice similar to fagging used as punishment. Examples of fagging feature in Julian Mitchell's play Another Country (1981), C. S. Lewis's book Surprised by Joy, and Lindsay Anderson's film If.... (1968).
During the late 20th century, fagging fell out of use, as attitudes to education and child development changed. During the 1970s and 1980s fagging was abolished at most major public schools and school-sanctioned fagging was very rare by the turn of the millennium. Nevertheless, unofficial relics of fagging are still quite common in some of the leading British public schools[citation needed]. At The Leys School, Cambridge, fagging had ceased completely by 1966. The practice has survived as a colonial legacy in some parts of South Asia and Southern Africa, in combination with or shortened in time to harsh hazing (as a rite of passage), under the name of ragging.
Fagging was abolished at Malvern College in 1965. Prior to that the system worked as follows.
All boys in their first two years at the school were fags. These were differentiated into two types, special fags and running fags.
A special fag was a boy who would be chosen by a prefect of their house to be his fag. The special fag would in effect be the prefect's valet making sure that the prefect's trousers were pressed, his jacket brushed, his shoes polished and that he was turned out immaculately; this also included the prefect's Combined Cadet Force uniform. The special fag would also run errands for his prefect and cook his toast in front of the prefects' fire on a toasting fork. However being a special fag exempted the boy from being a running fag. At the end of each term the prefect would usually give his fag a tip or a present for his work and being a special fag was considered to be preferable to being a running fag.
A running fag was one of all the other fags. They were required to run to the prefects' study when any prefect shouted his study number. The prefect would then pick out (usually the last to arrive) one or more boys to carry out some job or errand for him.
Boys who were in their O Level year were exempt from all fagging.
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