Lynn was the editor of the Northern Whig newspaper.[4][6] He was a leading contributor to educational debates in Northern Ireland though his impartiality is in question, especially following a comment in the Northern Irish House of Commons that Irish language instruction was not worth spending money on.[7] Lynn at first attacked the 1923 education bill for stripping Protestant schools of their denominational character.[8] However, Lord Londonderry—the Education Minister at the time—persuaded him to support the measure making the latter one of the few public proponents of what amounted to nondenominational schooling.[9]
In 1902, the Education Act had been withheld from Ireland at the insistence of Roman Catholic bishops, the result of which was that education reform in Northern Ireland lagged behind that of the rest of the country by 1920. Lynn was asked by the Northern Irish government to look into reforms in education in 1921 and he set up what became known as the Lynn Committee. However, Roman Catholics refused to serve on or cooperate with the committee. Much guidance was therefore required of Roman Catholic Unionist, A. N. Bonaparte Wyse (who later became Permanent Secretary to the Ministry of Education in Northern Ireland).[10]
While Roman Catholic representatives boycotted the committee, Lynn recommended government funding for a separate Roman Catholic education system in Northern Ireland. When the Lynn Committee published its report in 1923, its recommendations were adopted and made law by the Education Bill (NI) of 1923.
On the difficulties of their dealings with the Roman Catholic hierarchy, the Lynn Committee said this in their report:
"We hope that, notwithstanding the disadvantage at which we were placed by this action, it will be found that Roman Catholic interests have not suffered. We have throughout been careful to keep in mind and to make allowance for the particular points of view of Roman Catholics in regard to education so far as is known to us, and it has been our desire to refrain as far as we could from recommending any course which might be thought to be contrary to their wishes."
— Lynn Committee report, 1923
The Bill was bitterly assailed[11] by both Catholic and Protestant clerics and was subsequently amended so that its original intent disappeared.[12][13]
^ abLeigh Rayment. "Historical list of MPs: W, part 5". Leigh Rayment's Peerage pages. Archived from the original on 31 December 2010. Retrieved 26 December 2007.
^Craig, F. W. S. (1983) [1969]. British parliamentary election results 1918–1949 (3rd ed.). Chichester: Parliamentary Research Services. p. 654. ISBN0-900178-06-X.
^De Valera, Éamon; Maxwell, John Grenfell; Lynn, Robert John (18 October 2017), "History", Robert John Lynn writing to Maxwell, Éamon De Valera, Helen (Archivist) Hewson, Kate Manning, Deirdre McMahon, UCD Library, University College Dublin, doi:10.7925/drs1.ucdlib_54012
^Akenson, Donald (1973). Education and Enmity. Queen's University, Belfast: Institute of Irish Studies. p. 51.
^N.C. Fleming, 'The first government of Northern Ireland, education reform and the failure of anti-populist unionism, 1921–1925', Twentieth Century British History, vol. 18, no. 2 (2007), pp. 146–169