This biography is republished from The London School of Economics and Political Science and was written by Hayley Reed, editor of the LSE History Blog. Shared by permission in line with Creative Commons ‘Attribution’ (CC BY) licencing.
Born: 22 January 1858, United Kingdom
Died: 30 April 1943
Country most active: United Kingdom
Also known as: Bee or Bo Potter, Beatrice Potter, Lady Passfield
Meet Beatrice Webb (1858-1943), one of the four founders of the London School of Economics and Political Science. Born 22 January 1858, Beatrice Webb (nee Potter) became a leading social reformer, Fabian Society member, co-founder of LSE and prolific diarist. Her diaries are available at the LSE Digital Library.
Early years
Beatrice’s accomplishments are a testament to her deep and active interest in the workings of society, which flourished through her early years. Beatrice received no formal education yet her father was keen for his daughters to read widely and travel with him, which Beatrice did, alongside taking over the management of the household following her mother’s death in 1882. Beatrice began working in social investigation in 1883, firstly for the Charity Organisation Society, and in 1886 was one of a team of researchers for Charles Booth’s famous Survey of London.
A lasting partnership
Beatrice met Sidney Webb in 1890 through the Fabian Society, and their courtship was conducted amidst her attendance at cooperative conferences and research into trade unions in Liverpool and Manchester. They married in 1892, spending a honeymoon researching Irish trade union records. Their 51 years of marriage included many joint ventures, including the creation of LSE.
Founding LSE
At LSE, Beatrice is largely known as one of our four co-founders (alongside her husband Sidney, Graham Wallas and George Bernard Shaw). In Beatrice Webb’s diary, held at LSE Digital Library, the events of 1877-1943 are seen through her eyes. She succinctly records the founding vision of the School, largely led by Sidney.
His vision is to found, slowly and quietly, a ‘London School of Economics and Political Science’ – a centre not only of lectures on special subjects, but an association of students who would be directed and supported in doing original work.
Teaching students
Women both studied and taught at LSE from its inception, and Beatrice taught at LSE in the School’s early years on trade unionism and on free competition in the labour market. Both courses were inspired by the Webbs’ research into the history of trade unionism and the text course books included their History of Trade Unionism and Industrial Democracy. Beatrice enjoyed teaching and wrote:
The weekly class brings us into close connection with the work of the School: I see some half dozen students every week and talk over their work with them.
The Minority Report
Outside LSE, Beatrice was equally active. In the early 1900s, Beatrice produced a Minority Report that was published alongside the Poor Law Commission of 1905-9. It emerged from a disagreement with the coordinator of the Commission on both the facts of and the solution to poverty. Beatrice’s Minority Report details the need for a coordinated national and local provision of welfare, taking in Education, healthcare, pensions and work. A young William Beveridge was a researcher on the report, which began his life-long association with the Webbs’. He famously produced his own report along similar lines in 1942, a year before Beatrice’s death.
In 1936, Beatrice remarked in her diary: “In old age it is one of the minor satisfactions of life to watch the success of your children, literal children or symbolic. The London School of Economics is undoubtedly our most famous one.”