EDUCATION.
A schoolhouse repaired in
1642-3 and 1663-4 probably was also used for
vestry meetings, since it was to make way for a
new vestry room by the church gate in 1691. (fn. 51)
Presumably it had no successor until a charity
school, also near the church, was founded in
1707. (fn. 52) Aided by legacies, (fn. 53) the school expanded
until in 1813 (fn. 54) the boys were rehoused at
Turnham Green and in 1819, when it was a
National school, the vicar claimed that Chiswick
offered sufficient education for the poor. (fn. 55)
Dissenters' schools, of which there were two by
1833, (fn. 56) proved short lived but perhaps prompted
the foundation and enlargement of National
schools for Turnham Green and Strand-on-theGreen, as did the opening of Turnham Green
Roman Catholic school c. 1848. (fn. 57) From 1857 all
three of the parish's main settlements were
served by National schools, which in the late
1860s catered for c. 1,000 children. (fn. 58)
A school board was elected in 1872, when,
being predominantly Anglican, (fn. 59) it took over all
the National schools with very little opposition.
Although there was then no shortage of places,
the spread of housing had led to overcrowding by
1876. Provision for the most populous areas
started with the lease in 1874 of part of the new
Glebe estate, where a school was opened in 1877,
and continued at Turnham Green and Chiswick
until a new school was opened in Hogarth Road
in 1884. Overcrowding recurred in the 1890s at
Strand-on-the-Green, where attendance was
poor and where the school was enlarged, and
Turnham Green, but the board's standards were
generally held to be high. (fn. 60) From 1893 the
endowments of Chiswick National school
formed an educational charity, a branch of the
parochial charities, to support a Sunday school. (fn. 61)
Chiswick U.D. became an autonomous part
III authority, responsible for elementary education, under the Education Act of 1902. The
school board accordingly was replaced in 1903 by
the U.D.C.'s education committee, which was
rebuked by the Board of Education for the lack of
places. (fn. 62) Alleviation started with the opening of
Belmont school in 1905 and was such that there
was little overcrowding in the period between the
World Wars, except briefly at the new Hogarth
and Beverley Road infants' schools in the 1920s,
before their extension. Between 1921 and 1931
the committee (from 1927 for Brentford and
Chiswick) reorganized the boys' and girls' departments at Belmont, Hogarth, and Strand-onthe-Green schools into senior and junior mixed
schools, on the lines of the Hadow Report. The
area's first county secondary school was opened
in 1916 and followed by Brentford and Chiswick's
own central schools, in Staveley Road, in 1927. (fn. 63)
Under the Act of 1944 Brentford and Chiswick
became an 'excepted district', responsible for
both primary and secondary education. After
primary schools for new estates had been opened
in 1952, the Chiswick part of the borough in 1957
contained 10 primary schools: 2 junior mixed
schools (Belmont and Strand-on-the-Green), 1
junior boys' and 1 junior girls' school (Hogarth),
2 junior mixed and infants' (the new Grove Park
and Cavendish), and 4 infants' (Belmont,
Beverley Road, Hogarth, and Strand-on-theGreen). There were also 5 secondary schools: a
mixed secondary modern (Hogarth), boys' and
girls' secondary moderns (Staveley Road), and
boys' and girls' grammar schools (Chiswick
County). (fn. 64) By 1964 Hogarth junior schools had
been united, Hogarth senior school had closed,
and the transfer of St. Mary's R.C. school from
Acton had brought Chiswick its sole voluntary
aided school, although there were four such
schools in Brentford. (fn. 65)
Hounslow L.B. succeeded as the education
authority in 1965 and adopted a comprehensive
scheme which in 1968 led to the amalgamation of
the secondary modern and grammar schools. (fn. 66) In
1979, in addition to the comprehensive Chiswick
school, there were 8 primary schools, 4 of them
for juniors and infants, 2 for juniors alone, and 2
for infants alone. (fn. 67)
Public schools. (fn. 68)
The general sources are those
indicated above, p. 44, and the same abbreviations are used.
Belmont Primary, Belmont Rd. Opened 1905
as council schs. for BGI to replace Turnham
Green Nat. 1919 accn. 354 B, 354 G, 396 I, a.a.
327 B, 325 G, 322 I. Also served as central sch.
bef. opening of Staveley Rd. (q.v.) 1927. Reorg.
1931 for SM, JM, I. 1938 accn. 320 SM, 394 JM,
350 I, a.a. 159 SM, 245 JM, 183 I. SB, SG moved
1948 to Staveley Rd. JM and I amalg. 1969. Roll
1979: 159 and nursery class.
Beverley Rd. I. Opened 1926 on site of All
Saints' ch. (fn. 69) as council sch. for 400 I. 1938 accn.
450, a.a. 262. Amalg. 1978 with Hogarth I (q.v.).
Cavendish Primary, Edensor Rd. Opened
1952 for JMI. Roll 1979: 190.
Chiswick British, Chiswick Lane. Opened
by ? 1833 as Lancasterian sch. with 155 BG. (fn. 70)
New bldg. 1836, blt. with parl. grant and vol.
contributions, financed 1845 by vol. contributions and school pence (2d.). (fn. 71) Closed between
1852 and 1862.
Chiswick County, Burlington Lane. Opened
as county grammar schs. 1916 SG, 1926 SB. Coed. grammar sch. 1966. Amalg. 1968 with
Staveley Rd. schs. as Chiswick sch. (q.v.).
Chiswick Nat. Opened 1707 (fn. 72) in churchyard
as charity sch. for 25 B and 10 (later 25) G. (fn. 73)
Trustees, first headed by Sir Stephen Fox and
Sir John Chardin, (fn. 74) from 1717 inc. all subscribers of 40s. or more a year. (fn. 75) Financed by
subscriptions, inc. from dukes of Devonshire
from 1762, (fn. 76) sermons, and legacies: rent charge
of £37 10s. in 1819 under will (pr. 1721) of
Dorothy, Lady Capel, sums left by various donors
recorded in 1785 but not thereafter, and interest
on £100 from Robert Horley by will dated 1800
and £100 from Mrs. Elizabeth Blackshaw by will
dated 1805. B in vestry room 1795 and G in
schoolroom blt. c. 1792. (fn. 77) B moved to new
schoolroom with master's ho. at Turnham Green
on land given by duke of Devonshire 1813, when
sch. of industry and Sunday sch. attached and G
sch. repaired. (fn. 78) Union with Nat. Soc. (fn. 79) and Dr.
Bell's system adopted by 1819: 130 B, inc. 25
clothed; 90 G, inc. 35 clothed. (fn. 80) Sch. for I
established bef. 1848 by J. C. Sharpe. (fn. 81) B sch.
enlarged 1836, G sch. rebuilt 1838. (fn. 82) Further
bequests 1826, 1849; parl. grant for G 1857, (fn. 83) for
B 1860. (fn. 84) a.a. 1866: 276 BGI. Called Chiswick
Nat. char. schs. to 1852, (fn. 85) bd. sch. from 1872; GI
replaced by (Chiswick) Glebe 1877, B by Hogarth
J 1884. (fn. 86) Bldg. in churchyard repaired c. 1923,
demol. 1951. (fn. 87)
Chiswick Sch., Burlington Lane. Opened
1968 as SM comprehensive formed by amalg. of
Chiswick County (see above) with Staveley Rd.
sec. mod. (q.v.). 1979 lower sch. in Staveley Rd.,
upper sch. in Burlington Lane. Roll 1979:
1,650 BG.
Glebe, Glebe Street. Opened 1877 as Chiswick
Glebe bd. sch. for 625 GI. G moved 1884 to
Hogarth Rd. (fn. 88) By 1898 accn. 702, a.a. 620; 1919
accn. 651, a.a. 505. Closed 1926.
Grove Park Primary, Nightingale Close.
Opened 1952 for JMI. Roll 1979: 210.
Hogarth J, Duke Rd. Opened 1884 as
Hogarth Rd. bd. schs. to replace Chiswick B Nat.
and take G from Glebe. (fn. 89) By 1898 accn. 824 B,
a.a. 843; 948 G, a.a. 639. Called Hogarth schs. by
1919. Reorg. for SB, JB 1921, SG, JG 1927/32.
1927 accn. 872 B, a.a. 740; 948 G, a.a. 748; 1938
accn. 776 B, a.a. 447; 800 G, a.a. 425. Reorg. as
JM in new bldg. next to Hogarth I sch. 1958, old
blgs. becoming a youth centre and St. Mary's
R.C. sch. Roll 1979: 213 JM.
Hogarth I, Devonshire Street. Opened 1920
in Hogarth Lane. 1927 accn. 200, a.a. 194; 1938
accn. 250, a.a. 164. New bldg. 1956, old one
being demol. for rd. widening. Amalg. with
Beverley Rd. I 1978. Roll 1979: 196 I and nursery
class.
St. Mary Magdalene Nat. Established by
deed 1859. Nothing further known. (fn. 90)
St. Mary's R.C. primary, Duke Rd. JI moved
1964 from Acton Lane (Acton) (fn. 91) to former
Hogarth J sch. Roll 1979: 275.
Staveley Rd. Opened 1927 as central schs. (fn. 92)
1938 accn. 320 SB, 320 SG, a.a. 146 SB, 183 SG.
Later sec. mod. schs. for 400 SB, 400 SG. Amalg.
1968 with Chiswick County grammar sch. as
Chiswick sch. (q.v.). (fn. 93)
Strand-On-The-Green British. Opened
? 1829, with 80 BG 1833. (fn. 94) New bldg. 1833, used
also as Cong. chapel 1851. (fn. 95) Closed by ? 1857,
bldg. thereafter housing Strand-on-the-Green
(Nat.) J and I (q.v.).
Strand-On-The-Green J and I, Thames Rd.
Opened 1857 in yard of Ship inn as Nat. sch. for
GI. (fn. 96) Bd. sch.; also B, from 1872. Moved 1874.
1880 accn. 211, a.a. 100; 1894 accn. 447, a.a. 278;
1906 accn. 629, a.a. 671. New bldg. for B 1912. (fn. 97)
1919 accn. 420 B, 396 G, 357 I, a.a. 348 B, 317 G,
281 I. Reorg. 1930 for SM, JM, I. 1938 accn. 280
SM, 350 JM, 338 I, a.a. 131 SM, 274 JM, 230 I.
SM moved to Staveley Rd. 1946, 1947. (fn. 98) Rolls
1979: 165 J; 160 I and nursery class.
Turnham Green Nat. Opened before 1845 by
Fred. Gibson (fn. 99) for 100 I in hired bldg. New
schoolroom and ho. 1848 on waste land north side
Chiswick High Rd. erected with parl. grant and
financed by subscriptions, sermons, and school
pence. (fn. 1) B and I schs. by 1860. 1866 a.a. 57 B, 105
I. Sch. for G south side Chiswick High Rd. by
1867. (fn. 2) Bd. schs. from 1872. 1880 accn. 125 B, 375
GI, a.a. 92B, 148 GI; 1894 accn. 125 B, 522 GI,
a.a. 102 B, 520 GI. B closed 1897, GI c. 1905.
Turnham Green R.C., Windmill Place.
Opened by 1848, (fn. 3) reopened 1853 for BGI in
bldg. of 1850 with 3 schoolrooms and ho. for
teacher. Managed by priest of Turnham Green
R.C. mission. Financed 1864 by vol. contributions and school pence, (fn. 4) by 1866 parl. grant. 1866
a.a. 105. 1882 accn. 328, a.a. 127. Closed by 1894.
Adult and technical education.
Evening classes
were held at Chiswick National school in 1869. (fn. 5)
They apparently ceased on the establishment of a
school board but were resumed in 1891 and were
attended by 79 in 1892. Under the Technical
Instruction Act, 1889, day and evening classes
within a scheme drawn up by Middlesex C.C.
were offered in 1895 at Chiswick School of Art,
which had opened in Bath Road, Bedford Park, in
1881, in a building designed by Maurice B.
Adams. (fn. 6) Subjects included laundry work,
carpentry, and plumbing in 1897, when there was
a Chiswick technical committee, presumably
appointed by the U.D.C. (fn. 7)
Acton and Chiswick Polytechnic was formed
in 1899, when Middlesex C.C. took over the
school of art. After more rooms had been added
in 1908 it was the largest polytechnic in Middlesex, supported also by the two U.D.C.s and
attended in 1909 by 2,282 students, including
571 at branch classes in Acton and Chiswick. (fn. 8)
The buildings were further extended in 1953-4
and formed part of Hounslow Borough College
from 1965. Some 300 full-time and 150 part-time
students attended in 1979. (fn. 9)
Private schools. (fn. 10)
Several large houses served in
the 18th and 19th centuries as private schools,
where c. 450-500 were educated in 1819. (fn. 11) There
were 22 fee-paying boarding schools in 1835 (fn. 12)
and roughly the same number of private schools
throughout the century, although by 1890 many
were for day pupils.
An expensive boarding academy was that of
Maurice Margarot, which c. 1780 contained a
French chapel and where young nobles and
gentlemen were taught French, classics, and
geography, with Portuguese and several fashionable accomplishments as extra subjects. Described as at Turnham Green, 'near Lord
Egmont's', (fn. 13) it may possibly have been a forerunner of Afton college, said to have been
founded in 1748 and with 75 boys in 1872, when
its previous history was not recorded. (fn. 14)
Dr. William Rose (1719-86), translator of
Sallust, kept a successful academy at Chiswick
from 1758 until his death. A friend of Dr.
Johnson, who disapproved of his leniency, Rose
was assisted in his last years by his son-in-law Dr.
Charles Burney (1757-1817), the classical critic,
who moved to Hammersmith in 1786. Rose's
pupils included his son Samuel (1767-1804), the
friend of Cowper, Irwin Eyles (1751 ?-1817),
oriental traveller, Henry Angelo (1760-1839?),
fencing master, and probably Samuel Shepherd
(1760-1840), lawyer, and Sir Richard Phillips
(1767-1840), author and publisher. (fn. 15) Rose's
academy was probably the later Bradmore House
in Chiswick Lane, still a school under Edmund
Brasier in 1832 and 1851 (fn. 16) and under William
John Stafford in 1890 but demolished by 1904. (fn. 17)
At Manor Farm House in Chiswick Lane a
boarding academy was kept from c. 1786 by the
Revd. Thomas Horne (1737-1824), (fn. 18) who taught
82 boys in 1801. (fn. 19) Pupils included his son William
(1774-1860), later Sir William, the attorneygeneral, John Copley (1772-1863), later Lord
Chancellor as Lord Lyndhurst, who thought
Horne a good classical scholar, and the philanthropist Anthony Ashley Cooper (1801-85), later
earl of Shaftesbury, (fn. 20) who remembered a large
and brutal school which had given him an early
horror of oppression. (fn. 21) Horne's son Thomas was
master from 1824 until 1835 but by 1845 the
school had been turned into an asylum. (fn. 22)
College House, no longer used by Westminster
school, was a boarding school under Mary
Solieux, with 56 inmates in 1801, before its
acquisition for the Chiswick Press. (fn. 23) At Walpole
House, also in Chiswick Mall, a school was kept
by the Revd. John Turner and attended by his
wife's great nephew William Makepeace
Thackeray (1811-63) from 1818. (fn. 24) It was probably the original of Miss Pinkerton's academy in
Vanity Fair, which Thackeray placed in
Chiswick Mall, although his illustration, (fn. 25) showing massive gate piers and another house opposite, gave some support to a claim that he had
been describing Boston House. (fn. 26)
Sutton Court, advertised as in 9 a. and convenient for London, (fn. 27) was a boarding school
under Frederick Tappenden by 1845. It had a
resident French teacher and 17 boys in 1851, (fn. 28)
apparently had expanded by 1872, when younger
boys were prepared for public school and elder
ones for the professions, (fn. 29) and was an expensive
preparatory school by 1879. (fn. 30) Frederick
Tappenden had left Sutton Court by 1886 and
Charles Tappenden, probably his son, was
principal of the purpose-built Gunnersbury
college in 1890. (fn. 31)
Many well established boys' schools closed in
the 19th century. Belmont House, Turnham
Green, was kept in 1832 by the Revd. Thomas
Crabb, in 1845 by Benjamin Clements, and in
the 1870s by J. Russell Cloutte, who prepared
boys for the services and professions. Walpole
House, in 1872 under John Wilson Allen and in
1879 under Thomas Corfield Allen, was said to
have been founded in 1845, although J. W. Allen
had a school in Chiswick Mall by 1832. Bolton
House, in the high road under T. G. Dyne in
1845 and 1861, was still the name of a boys'
preparatory school, in Grove Park Terrace, in
1890. Chiswick Collegiate school, for boarders
and day boys like Walpole House, existed from
1847 until 1879 or later. (fn. 32) Ivy House, Turnham
Green, was kept in 1861 by the Revd. John
Bonus, a Roman Catholic, and advertised for
foreigners. Longer lived girls' schools included
Boston House, under Mrs. Nethercliff in 1845
and 1861 and offering a refined education to
university entrance for boarders and day pupils
in 1884. (fn. 33) St. Agnes's orphanage in 1878 briefly
opened a Church of England school for c. 60 girls
by renting the old charity school building in the
churchyard. (fn. 34)
There were still c. 20 private schools in 1908,
several of them founded for the new suburbs.
Grove Park in 1890 was served by a girls' school
in Spencer Road, perhaps one which survived
under Miss I. Eley in 1926, and by boys' and
kindergarten schools in Grove Park Terrace.
Bedford Park school, an early mixed school with
no religious instruction, and the more conventional Bedford Park high school both opened
in 1884. (fn. 35) In addition to professors of music and
languages, Bedford Park in 1890 had Chiswick
high school at Sydney House and Bedford Park
high school near by in Priory Road, Acton. The
first, a mixed secondary school under Miss Alice
Woods, (fn. 36) was presumably the former Bedford
Park school and unconnected with Chiswick high
school for girls or Chiswick girls' school, both of
which existed by 1926. It amalgamated in 1895
with Bedford Park high school to form Chiswick
and Bedford Park high school, (fn. 37) at no. 9 Queen
Anne's Gardens in 1908 and at Priory House,
Priory Avenue, in 1909. A girls' school at Priory
House, called Bedford Park college, was bought
c. 1932 by Mme Fellowes, who transferred pupils
there from Haslemere school in the Avenue. Her
new school, renamed Chiswick and Bedford Park
high, later preparatory, school, was managed by
her daughters in 1979, when it contained 200
boys and girls to the age of eleven. (fn. 38)
No other private schools survived in 1979.
A ladies' school under Miss M. C. Martin at no.
26 Oxford Road by 1890 may have been the later
Oxford college, at no. 367 High Road from 1916;
the school had 70-80 pupils aged 3 to 16 and was
said to be over 100 years old on its closure in
1973, which was followed by the building's
conversion into the headquarters of Brentford
and Isleworth Labour party. (fn. 39) Gunnersbury preparatory school for boys, in Burnaby Gardens by
1900, was later claimed to date from 1820 (fn. 40) and
survived c. 1952, when it was one of Chiswick's
three best known independent schools. The
others were St. Margaret's, opened in 1932 in
Sutton Court Road and in 1957 containing over
100 girls, many with well known parents, and the
adjoining Compton House, for boys. (fn. 41) Both
schools, in Sutton Court Road, closed in 1962. (fn. 42)
Arlington Park college, Sutton Lane, opened in
1890, prepared boys for university, and survived
until the Second World War, as did Sutton girls'
school, with a boys' preparatory department, in
Sutton Lane from 1903 and later in Marlborough
Road. (fn. 43)