EDUCATION (fn. 1)
By will proved 1661 Joan Smith, widow of a prosperous
Hailey farmer, (fn. 2) left £40 for educating poor children,
which, with another £10 left for an annual sermon in
Witney church, was used to buy some 1½ a. of meadow
in Hailey. (fn. 3) A schoolmistress received £2 a year from the
endowment in the 1760s, rising to £14 by the 1820s,
when the land was administered with Joan Smith's charities for the poor. In 1824 the Charity Commission ruled
that the schoolmistress should receive half the combined
income, with 10s. deducted for the Witney sermon. (fn. 4)
Eighteen pupils were educated in the charity school in
1802, 28 (14 boys and 14 girls) in 1815, and 30 in 1835,
though by the 1820s the endowment supported only 8
boys and 8 girls, the other pupils being paid for by their
parents. (fn. 5) Two short-lived dame schools taught another
15–17 children between them in 1808, and three in 1833
taught 13 boys and 43 girls, several other children
attending Witney National school. All the schools in
1808, evidently including the charity school, taught
chiefly reading 'as far as to the Bible and Testament,
with, in some, a little writing'. In 1815 the charity school
hoped to adopt the National Plan as soon as a teacher
could be found. (fn. 6)
In 1847 the charity school, with 45 pupils, was housed
in a dilapidated, untenanted cottage in Hailey village.
Land opposite, adjoining the Lamb and Flag inn, was
given by the Witney banker and brewer John Williams
Clinch (d. 1871) and a new stone-built National school
was built there in 1848, designed by the incumbent's
brother-in-law William Wilkinson. A government grant
met a quarter of the cost. (fn. 7) Accommodation, originally
for 79, was increased to 108 before 1880, but attendance
rose steadily from 73 in 1876 to 107 in 1889, (fn. 8) and in
1892 a new infant room, long demanded by inspectors,
was built to the design of the incumbent's son Clapton
Crabb Rolfe, the cost met by a voluntary parish rate. (fn. 9)
The school's parliamentary grant then exceeded £90 a
year, supplemented by Smith's charity (£21), school
pence, and subscriptions. (fn. 10) Reports were generally satisfactory, apart from minor scandals involving teachers in
1904 and 1909. (fn. 11)
Responsibility passed to Oxfordshire County Council
in 1903, and in 1930 the school became a junior school,
seniors being transferred to the newly opened Witney
Central school. The school was renamed Hailey CE
Voluntary Controlled School in 1978. Average attendance in 1939 was 39, and the roll was 105 in 1970, 65 in
1983, and 71 in 1994. (fn. 12) Under a Scheme of 1906 half the
combined Smith charities became the Joan Smith
Educational Fund, which helped to provide a new playground in 1942 and still paid accumulated funds to the
school around 1950. A Scheme of 1977 allowed the
charity to support broadly educational activities for
recipients under the age of 25. The deduction for the
Witney sermon was abolished in 1976. (fn. 13)
An evening school for former National school pupils
was 'well attended and successful' in 1872. (fn. 14) A weekly
night school was held during winter months in the late
1870s. (fn. 15) and in 1900 there were plans for adult evening
classes in Hailey school in conjunction with Oxfordshire
County Council. (fn. 16)
Charities For The Poor
By a lifetime gift John Smith (d. 1646), a prosperous
Hailey farmer, gave 4 a. in Hailey from after his wife's
death, half the rent to benefit widows and orphans in
Hailey. His widow Joan (d. 1661) gave half a yardland
(probably 10–15 a.) also by a lifetime settlement, the
rent to be used for apprenticing, and either gave or
confirmed a 10s. rent-charge to benefit the poor. (fn. 17) In the
mid 18th century the apprenticing charity produced
£5–£7 a year, said to be properly applied, though only
32s. was distributed annually in alms. (fn. 18) William Wright
of Over Norton, presumably related to the Wrights of
Middlefield Farm in Hailey, left £100 to be invested for
Hailey's poor by will proved 1786; by the 1820s the
income was combined with the 10s. rent-charge and
with the rent (then £3) from the 4 a., the whole of it
distributed annually in bread. (fn. 19) Joan Smith's charities
were by then administered with her separate educational
endowment, the trustees buying an additional acre in
1806 and receiving 22 a. at inclosure in 1824; the same
year the Charity Commission ruled that half the
combined income should be spent on apprenticing, and
half on the school. (fn. 20)
Hailey also received a share of Elijah Waring's Witney
bread charity, established by will proved 1815, which in
1909 distributed loaves to 408 Hailey inhabitants. (fn. 21)
Hailey's share of George Thompson's charity and a
bread charity under the will of James Leverett (d. 1785)
seem not to have been received. (fn. 22)
In the 1940s half the combined Joan Smith charities
were still used for apprenticing under a Scheme of 1906,
though no applicants were found between 1947 and
1962. Total income in 1975 was over £200, with nearly
£700 on deposit. A Scheme of 1977 regulated the 10s.
rent-charge and the John Smith, Wright, and Waring
charities, which together had £147 on deposit, the
proceeds to benefit those in need within the ancient
parish.
Labourers' allotments vested in the parish officers at
inclosure in 1853 were ruled in 1975 to be also charitable, any surplus income to benefit the poor. (fn. 23)