EDUCATION.
A school board was formed for
Hornchurch in 1889. It took over 4 existing schools
and built 2 more. Essex county council built 6 primary and 5 secondary schools between 1929 and
1939. A Roman Catholic primary school was founded
in 1933. Under the Education Act, 1944, Hornchurch U.D. was entitled to become an Excepted
District, but it waived its right, and remained directly under the county council. (fn. 1) Between 1945 and
1965 the county built 3 more primary schools, 4
secondary schools, and a college of further education.
A Roman Catholic boys grammar school was opened
in 1962. In 1955 many of the schools were renamed,
usually with local manor or estate names to replace
those of streets. (fn. 2) Between 1965 and 1974 the London borough of Havering opened 5 more primary
schools in Hornchurch, including 3 previously
planned by Essex. By September 1973 all the secondary schools had been reorganized as comprehensive.
In the following accounts of individual schools,
information, unless otherwise stated, was provided
by the Education Department of Essex or that of
Havering.
Elementary schools founded before 1889.
In
1548 poor children in Hornchurch were taught by a
priest appointed by Trinity Guild. (fn. 3) In the period
1620–2 boys were taught grammar by a curate in the
church. (fn. 4) The Romford charity school, founded in
1711, was open to Hornchurch children. (fn. 5)
Aylett's school was founded in 1731 by the will of
Alice Aylett, who gave land in trust to pay £10 yearly
to a schoolmaster, appointed by the parish, to teach 10
poor boys. The first schoolmaster, appointed in 1746,
was to teach in the church vestry. (fn. 6) In 1813 William
Jacobs left £200 in trust to Aylett's school. In 1837
ten poor boys were being taught reading, writing,
and arithmetic along with several paying pupils in
the master's house. (fn. 7) Aylett's school never owned a
building. It seems to have been amalgamated with
the National boys school in 1856. (fn. 8) When the
National school was taken over by the school board
in 1890 a Charity Commission scheme required the
income from Aylett's and Jacobs's charities to be used
for prizes for Hornchurch children. (fn. 9) The rentcharge for Aylett's charity was redeemed in 1904. (fn. 10)
Nonconformists founded a small day- and boarding-school in 1830. It still existed in 1833, when
there was another nonconformist day-school with 14
children, but both schools had closed by 1839. (fn. 11)
Langton's (formerly Village) junior and infants
school, Westland Avenue. In 1844 a National school
was built next to the Chaplaincy. A new school for
girls and infants, with a teacher's house, was built in
1855 in North Street on land given by New College,
Oxford. (fn. 12) In 1874 the boys moved to a new school
for 117 next to the teacher's house, and the infants
were transferred to the old building, next to the
Chaplaincy. (fn. 13) The National school received annual
government grants from 1871. (fn. 14) The school board
took it over in 1889, (fn. 15) and in 1902 built a new school
for 400 boys and girls in Westland Avenue. The
1855 buildings were used by infants until 1926, when
new classrooms were built. (fn. 16) The school was enlarged in 1932 and was reorganized in 1935 for
juniors and infants. The junior departments were
amalgamated in 1951. (fn. 17)
Mrs. Skeale's Church infants school, South End
Road, South Hornchurch. This school was built in
1864 on Skeale's charity land at West field, apparently
with the income of Skeale's charity, savings from
the National school funds, and subscriptions. (fn. 18) In
1871 sixty-three children were being taught there. (fn. 19)
The school received annual government grants from
1885. (fn. 20) It was taken over in 1890 by the school board,
and was replaced by South Hornchurch board
school in 1899. (fn. 21)
Harold Wood junior and infants school, Recreation Avenue. A National school was opened at Harold
Wood in 1882, with the help of John Compton, the
main landowner. (fn. 22) A permanent building, with 80
places, was opened in 1886 in Gubbins Lane. (fn. 23) It had
been taken over by the school board by 1890. (fn. 24) It was
enlarged in 1902 for 207 mixed and infant children (fn. 25)
and in 1933 was reorganized for juniors and infants.
The first part of a new school in Recreation Avenue
was opened in 1960. (fn. 26) The Gubbins Lane buildings
were still in use in 1975.
Elementary schools founded between 1889 and 1903.
Whybridge (formerly South Hornchurch)
primary school, Blacksmith's and Ford Lanes, was
opened in 1890 as a board school in the building
lately used by Mrs. Skeale's school, which it replaced. (fn. 27) A new school was built in 1899 in Blacksmith's Lane for 150, and was enlarged in 1912 and
1929. (fn. 28) It was reorganized for juniors and infants in
1934, and by 1937 had been enlarged for 450. (fn. 29) In
1943 it had 750 children. It was enlarged in 1947
and again in 1964, when a new infants school was
built in Ford Lane, and the Blacksmith's Lane buildings became the junior school. (fn. 30)
Edwin Lambert (fn. 31) junior and infants school, Park
Lane. Park Lane board school, opened in 1893, was
the first built by the school board. It was enlarged
in 1907 for 575. (fn. 32) The girls and infants departments
were amalgamated in 1926. The school was reorganized in 1930 for juniors and infants, and in
1935 was enlarged for 500. (fn. 33)
Elementary schools built between 1903 and 1945.
The schools in this and the following sections,
unless otherwise stated, were all opened by Essex
county council.
Harold Court junior mixed and infants school,
Church Road. Harold Court mixed council school
was opened in 1929 for 300. It was reorganized in
1934 for juniors and infants. In 1937 it had 400
children, including 128 from the Straight Road area
of Romford. (fn. 34) It was damaged by bombs in 1940. (fn. 35)
Wykeham (formerly Rainsford Way) junior and
infants school, was opened in 1932 as a junior council school. (fn. 36) It was reorganized in 1933 for juniors
and infants.
St. Mary's Roman Catholic junior and infants
school, Hornchurch Road, was opened in 1933 for
300. (fn. 37) By 1947 it had over 400 children. Temporary
accommodation was provided in 1947 at Elm Park
chapel and in 1954 at the hall and presbytery of St.
Joseph's church, Upminister. (fn. 38) The school was
granted Aided status in 1951. (fn. 39)
Suttons junior and infants school, Suttons Lane.
Suttons Lane junior council school was opened in
1933 in temporary buildings for 450. It was closed
in 1940. In 1947 it was reopened with an infants
department in buildings which had previously belonged to Suttons Institution. (fn. 40) It was enlarged in
1949.
Ardleigh Green junior and infants school, Ardleigh Green Road, was opened as a council school in
1933–4. (fn. 41) Its senior department was closed in 1938
on the opening of Redden Court school.
Benhurst (formerly Elm Park) junior and infants
school, Benhurst Avenue, was opened in 1936 as a
council school for juniors and infants. (fn. 42)
Ayloff junior and infants school, South End Road,
Elm Park, was opened in 1938 for 500. It was closed
in 1940 and reopened in 1942. (fn. 43)
Senior and secondary schools founded before 1945. (fn. 44)
Harrow Lodge school, Hyland Way
and Malvern Road, was formed in 1973 by the amalgamation of Hylands and Bush Elms secondary
schools. Hylands senior mixed council school, Malvern Road, was opened in 1930 for 400. It was enlarged and reorganized in 1935 for 560 senior boys. (fn. 45)
Bush Elms senior mixed council school, Hyland
Way, was opened in 1933 for 450. (fn. 46) It was enlarged in
1963. (fn. 47) Redden Court school, Cotswold Road, Harold
Wood, originated in 1934 when a senior department
was opened at Ardleigh Green school. In 1937 400
seniors were at Ardleigh Green school and in the
practical instruction block at Redden Court, where
new buildings were completed in 1939 for 480. (fn. 48)
The school was enlarged in 1974. (fn. 49)
Dury Falls school, Wingletye Lane, was opened
in 1935 as a senior mixed council school for 500.
It was enlarged in 1963–4 and again in 1974. (fn. 50)
Sanders Draper (fn. 51) (formerly Suttons secondary
modern) school, Suttons Lane, was opened in
1937 for 1,100 seniors in two departments which
became separate schools for boys and girls in 1945. (fn. 52)
They were amalgamated in 1953. The school was
enlarged and renamed in 1973. (fn. 53) A unit for deaf
seniors was opened in 1974. (fn. 54)
Emerson Park (formerly Hornchurch Grammar)
school, Wych Elm Road, originated in 1943 when
Hornchurch county (mixed) high school was opened
in temporary premises at Cedar Avenue (later
Branfil) school, Upminster. (fn. 55) Permanent buildings
were completed in 1954 in Wych Elm Road, (fn. 56) and
the school was renamed Hornchurch Grammar
school. It was enlarged and renamed again in 1973. (fn. 57)
Primary schools founded after 1945.
Hacton
(formerly Hacton Lane) junior and infants school,
Chepstow Avenue, was opened in 1948. (fn. 58) A unit
for deaf children was opened there in 1969. (fn. 59)
Dunningford junior and infants school, Upper
Rainham Road, Elm Park, was opened in 1955. (fn. 60)
Scargill (fn. 61) junior and infants schools, Mungo Park
Road, were opened in 1957 and enlarged in 1962,
1970, and 1973. The 1962 extension was gutted by
fire in 1973 and was rebuilt in 1975. (fn. 62) Nelmes junior
and infants school, Wingletye Lane, was opened in
1966. (fn. 63)
The following primary schools were built by the
London borough of Havering. Towers infants
school, Osborne Road, was opened in 1967, and
Towers junior school, Windsor Road, in 1969. (fn. 64)
Newtons infants school, Lowen Road, was opened in
1968, and Newtons junior school, Lowen Road, in
1970. Mitchell (fn. 65) junior and infants school, Tangmere Crescent, was opened in 1971. Scotts junior
and infants school, Maybank Avenue, was completed
before the building of the housing estate it was
planned to serve. It was opened in 1974 for children
from the burnt-out building at Scargill school.
St. Albans Roman Catholic junior and infants
school, Heron Flight Avenue, was opened in 1971.
Secondary schools founded after 1945.
Brittons school, Ford Lane, south Hornchurch, was
opened as a mixed secondary (modern) school in
1952. It was enlarged in 1964. (fn. 66) Abbs Cross
school, Abbs Cross Lane, was opened in 1958 as a
mixed secondary (technical) school. It was enlarged
in 1973. (fn. 67) Maylands school, Broadstone Road, was
opened in 1962 as a secondary (modern) school for
girls. Campion Roman Catholic secondary (Aided,
grammar) school for boys, Wingletye Lane, was
opened in 1962. (fn. 68)
Further education.
Havering technical college,
Ardleigh Green Road, developed from the further
education centre which was opened in 1947 at
Ardleigh House to replace Harold Wood evening
institute. A new centre was built in 1958–9 in the
grounds of the house. In 1963 it was enlarged and
became Hornchurch college of further education. (fn. 69)
It was enlarged again in 1971. (fn. 70) South Havering
college of adult education, Wingletye Lane,
developed from the Hornchurch evening institute
opened at Dury Falls school in the 1930s. The
institute's membership greatly increased after the
war, and in 1966 it became South Havering college.
It was enlarged in 1970. (fn. 71)
Private schools.
Between 1584 and 1590 John
Leche was keeping a school at Hornchurch. (fn. 72) In
1590 the Privy Council entrusted to him the education of a boy whose father had unlawfully tried to
send him to a Roman Catholic school abroad. (fn. 73) In
the period 1620–2 a school kept by Joseph Robson
was said to hinder the curate's school. (fn. 74) A boarding
school for girls, started in 1826 and surviving in
1833, (fn. 75) had been closed by 1848. Of the two private
schools listed in 1848, one may have been conducted
by the master of Aylett's school. (fn. 76) A girls private
school existed 1890. (fn. 77) Between 1906 and 1937 ten
private schools were listed in directories. (fn. 78) Most
of them were short-lived but there was a preparatory school at Frome House, Athelstan Road,
Harold Wood, for at least 27 years, from c. 1906.
Hornchurch high school, Walden Road, founded
c. 1937, seems to have survived as Goodrington
school in 1975. In 1966 there were 7 private schools,
including 4 nursery schools and a commercial
college. (fn. 79) Only two private schools appear to have
survived in 1972.
CHARITIES FOR THE POOR. (fn. 80)
Unless otherwise stated the charities treated in this section are
thought to have been restricted to the area governed
for civil purposes by Hornchurch parish vestry, i.e.
the town, North End, and South End wards. In
1837 the poor of Hornchurch were benefiting from
8 bread charities worth £18 a year, and other
charitable income of £33, as well as Appleton's
alms-houses in Hornchurch, and Reede's in
Romford. Bread was distributed indiscriminately
on St. Thomas's day and at Christmas; and small
doles on Lady Day and at Michaelmas. By 1862
bread and doles were being given only to the
settled poor and to a few large families living outside the parish. A Charity Commission Scheme of
1878 provided that the charities of Webster,
Armstead, Rickett, Higgs for bread, H. and J.
Richardson, and Page should be administered as
the Consolidated bread and poor's gifts. (fn. 81) After
payments for the repair of Page's tomb, £1 was to
be given to the vicar for a sermon on St. Thomas's
day, and the remainder in 5s. and 6s. doles to the
Hornchurch poor not receiving parish relief,
preferably those whose children attended school
most regularly. A Scheme of 1912, varied by Schemes
of 1927 and 1939, combined the charities of Appleton, Pennant, Ram, Bourne, Oakley, and Mashiter
with the Consolidated bread and poor's gifts as the
Consolidated charities. After payment of £1 for
the sermon the income was to be used to pay
pensions to the alms-people and for the general
benefit of the poor in Hornchurch. In 1971 a new
Scheme combined the Consolidated charities
with the charities of Skeale, Higgs for loans, and
Wright, as Hornchurch United charities.
In 1975 the trustees of the United charities built
30 alms-houses, named Skeale's Court, in Abbs
Cross Lane. For this they used the proceeds of the
sale of property of Appleton's, Pennant's, and
Skeale's charities. They also borrowed the capital of
the bread and loan charities. In 1976 the income of
the United charities, apart from contributions paid
by the alms-people, was c. £1,600, mainly from
ground rents of Oakley's and Ram's charities.
United charities.
Appleton's alms-houses. In
1586 Jane Ayloffe, widow, bought a house on the
south side of High Street for conversion into 3
alms-houses. By indenture of 1587 she and her
second husband, Henry Appleton, gave the almshouses in trust for the aged poor who had lived in
Hornchurch for at least 7 years. After her death the
3 alms-people were to pay yearly 1s. each to the
churchwardens for the upkeep of the houses, and
2d. each for quit-rent to the lord of the manor. In
1721, after the building of the parish workhouse,
Appleton's alms-houses were let on a 61-year
lease. (fn. 82) By 1837 they were being let to 3 poor
families not receiving constant parish relief. They
were rebuilt in 1838 (fn. 83) and continued to be occupied
by 3 poor families who paid 1s. 2d. yearly to the
repair fund. In 1967 they were sold and demolished.
Pennant's alms-houses. John Pennant of London,
by will proved 1598, gave 4 cottages at the corner
of High Street and Billet Lane in trust as free
dwellings for Hornchurch poor. He also gave £10
for the upkeep of the cottages. (fn. 84) In 1721 a parish
workhouse was built on the site of Pennant's almshouses. In 1837 Thomas Mashiter converted the
building, no longer needed as a workhouse, into 4
alms-houses to be let rent-free, and 2 other tenements to be let to provide a maintenance fund.
By 1910 the alms-houses had been divided to
provide individual rooms for 9 old people. The
property, nos. 85–91, High Street and no. 2, Billet
Lane, was sold c. 1939.
Anthony Ram, a London goldsmith, by will
proved 1616, gave his father Francis (d. 1618) £40
in trust for the poor. In 1618 Samuel Ram, Francis's
executor, agreed to give a house to the parish instead
of the £40. The rent was to be used to employ the
poor. In 1621 a deed of settlement confirmed the
gift of Poynters (Painters) in High Street to Hornchurch poor. The house was let on lease from
c. 1623. (fn. 85) By 1837 it had been replaced by two
cottages, the rent from which was used to maintain
charity houses in the parish. In 1862 it was said
that the rents had been used to employ the poor on
the parish roads, and to provide coal for the poor in
the hard winter of 1860. In 1968 the site was let on
a 75-year building lease, and in 1971 the annual
income was £1,575.
William Armstead, by will proved 1657, left a
rent-charge from a farm at Hay Street and other land
in Hornchurch, Havering, and Upminster to pay £5
to the poor of Hornchurch, and £1 to the vicar for
two annual sermons. By 1830 rent was being
received only from the farm at Hay Street. In 1837
the income, after payment for the two sermons, was
distributed in small doles twice a year.
Sibell Skeale, by will proved 1679, left £20 to
the poor, in trust to be paid from part of the sale
of Damons, later Ford Houses, and 2 a. land in
West field. In 1682 the parish bought the whole
property for £70, with a rebate of £20. (fn. 86) In the
period 1821–37 the house, then divided into two, and
the land, were being let, producing a yearly rent of
£17 6s. (fn. 87) By 1846 the house had been rebuilt as
three cottages. (fn. 88) After payment of £1 a year to the
poor of South End, the income was saved towards
the building, in 1864, of a school in West field.
Under a Charity Commission Scheme of 1890 the
income, then £19 15s., was used to provide pensions
for poor people, not receiving poor-relief, who had
lived in Hornchurch not less than three years. A
Scheme of 1927 reduced the pensioners' qualifying
period of residence to two years. The cottages were
demolished in 1964, and in 1967 the site was sold to
Havering council for £11,250. West field was
compulsorily purchased by Havering council in
1973.
By indenture dated 1693, William Oakley, whose
cottage on Butts Green had been rebuilt by charitable contributions after a fire, gave the reversion of
the cottage, in default of male heirs, to the poor as a
parish house. Oakley's last male heir died in 1821.
By an indenture of that year Thomas Oakley,
unable to prove his lawful succession, quitclaimed
to trustees for the poor. From 1823 the house was
let, and its rent was used until at least 1910 to
maintain the parish's charity houses. It never seems
to have housed the poor. Part of the land was let on a
building lease c. 1911, and in 1971 the annual
income was £16 from 6 shops in Butts Green Road.
Thomas Clarke, by will dated 1738, gave an
annual rent-charge of £1 to buy bread for the poor
on St. Thomas's day. In 1837 the rent was charged
on Ford Lodge. David Rickett, by will dated 1787,
gave £100 in trust to buy bread for the poor. John
Richardson, by will dated 1797, and Hannah
Richardson, by deed of gift 1811, each gave £100 in
trust for the same purpose.
John Massu, by will dated 1807, left £1,000
stock, in reversion after the death of his wife, in
trust to pay doles to 10 poor men nominated by the
vicar and churchwardens. The charity came into
effect in 1850. (fn. 89) In 1912 the annual income was £50.
William Higgs, by will proved 1811, gave £100 in
trust to buy bread for the poor, and £100 in trust to
provide four interest-free loans to poor tradesmen
or small farmers for terms of three years. In 1829
part of the capital of the loan charity was lost
through a churchwarden's bankruptcy. The 3-year
term was not always applied and it seems that the
loan charity was ineffective for many years. The
vestry in 1906 and the parish council in 1910
suggested alternative uses, but a Scheme of 1912
confirmed its application separately from the Consolidated charities, and in accordance with the will.
Thomas Page, by will proved 1815, gave £100
stock in trust to repair his tomb, the remainder to be
given to poor widows on St. Thomas's day. By 1820
small doles were distributed yearly according to the
will. (fn. 90)
John Bourne, by will of 1821, gave £20 in trust to
the poor on condition that 2s. 6d. from the income
was used to maintain his grave. In 1822 the trustees
received £18 from his executor which, until 1837 or
later, was applied to the grave and to provide bread
for the poor on St. Thomas's day. By 1894 it was
being distributed in cash. (fn. 91)
Thomas Mashiter, by will proved 1863, apparently
gave £225 stock to Hornchurch poor. There is no
early record of the distribution of this charity. In
1912 the income was £5 12s. 4d.
Wright's alms-houses. In 1932 Misses E. A. and
L. K. Wright conveyed to trustees land in Hacton
Lane where 8 alms-houses were built soon after. The
houses were damaged by bombs in 1940. (fn. 92) In 1969–70 they were converted into 5 flats.
Other charities.
Mary Hide, by will proved
1717, gave £200 to buy land producing an annual
income of £12 to pay the apprenticeship premiums
of two boys from Hornchurch and one from Romford. By indenture of 1722 Mary's brother William
Hide retained the £200 and gave in exchange a £10
annual rent-charge from 9 a. near the Gores at the
west end of Romford town to apprentice three boys
from the Romford charity school according to Mary's
will. In 1837 it was reported that the rent-charge
was received regularly but that few payments had
been made for many years, and that until recently
boys had not been chosen from the charity school.
About 1835 the premiums were increased to £10. In
the 1860s the trustees had difficulty in finding suitable masters for that sum. (fn. 93) The income accumulated, and in 1898 four boys were apprenticed. (fn. 94) A
Board of Education Scheme of 1929 regulated the
appointment of trustees and the use of £50 income
from stock and the rent-charge from Holm Lodge,
London Road, Romford. After an annual payment of
£10 for religious instruction the remainder was to be
used for apprenticeship and other educational purposes, two thirds being apportioned to Hornchurch
and one third to Romford. In 1958 it was said that no
applications had been received for some time. (fn. 95) Payments were made in 1968, 1969, and 1972. In 1976
Havering education department was considering the
future application of this charity. (fn. 96)
Burchett Whennell (d. 1780), gave an annual rentcharge of £1 from Albyns farm, Hornchurch, to be
distributed in bread to the poor on St. Thomas's
day. (fn. 97) The rent-charge was paid regularly until
1828, when the owner of the farm claimed that the
gift was void by the statute of mortmain. It was
reported in 1837 that the rent-charge was not being
paid, but in 1859 interest of £5 on Whennell's fund
was paid to the Sunday school. (fn. 98) In 1917 it was said
to be combined with Bearblock's charity, (fn. 99) the income from stock being used by the vicar to buy
prizes, books, and furniture for the Sunday school.
Under the Havering Inclosure Act, 1811, small
allotments of land were made in 1814 to the churchwardens and overseers of Hornchurch for rights of
common attached to houses and land belonging
to the parish charities. (fn. 100) By 1837 the annual income
of £1 from 4 r. of land at Noak Hill, Romford, was
being paid to the parish houses maintenance fund,
and 10s. from 1 r. at Harold Wood was being distributed in bread on St. Thomas's day. In 1919 the
land at Noak Hill was let for £1 a year.
Lost Charities.
Ralph Watson, bricklayer of
Hornchurch, by will dated 1594, directed that after
his wife's death £20 should be given in trust to provide annual doles for the poor. There is no evidence
that the legacy was paid. Mrs. Blackstone, by will
dated 1647, apparently gave £40 to the poor. The
churchwardens received £20 in 1655, and interest on
the remaining £20 in 1659. No more is known of the
charity. (fn. 101) Samuel Ballard of Orsett, by will dated
1691, gave marsh lands in trust for the repair of his
tomb and for the relief of Hornchurch poor. In 1690
the charity was said to be 'not well employed'. (fn. 102) The
land is thought to have been lost when Dagenham
Breach was flooded in 1707. (fn. 103)
Shipman's, later Gogney's charity, originally for
the poor, but later appropriated for church use, is
treated elsewhere. (fn. 104)