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Where does this saying originate from?
Thanks

2007-02-07 03:46:45 · 3 answers · asked by echo 4 in Education & Reference Trivia

3 answers

George Edward Lynch Cotton, English clergyman and educator, assistant master at Rugby 1837-1852, the "young master" in Thomas Hughes's "Tom Brown's School Days". Bishop of Calcutta, 1858 where he did missionary work and established schools for Eurasian children. In requests to England he asked for donations of clothing, often emphasizing "warm socks" for the children. In fact he seems to have held the simplistic view that if the children had warm socks many of their problems, mal-nutrition, disease, racial prejudice etc. could be easily solved. Little old maiden ladies all over England spent their time knitting socks for Bishop Cotton and sending them off to India. He blessed all items used in his schools, and many shipments would arrive labeled " Socks for Cotton's blessing" and reportedly even "Cotton's socks for blessing". Cotton's socks easily became corrupted to cotton socks,

2007-02-07 03:58:40 · answer #1 · answered by Quickthinking 2 · 1 0

knitting factory

2007-02-07 12:49:29 · answer #2 · answered by rjhamuk 2 · 0 0

brit

2007-02-07 12:11:00 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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