On this day … 10 June 1765

The town council appointed Mr Ellis Henry as headmaster of the grammar school, drawing a line under a long-running dispute with the former headmaster, the Rev Robert Oliver.

The Tory councillors had had it in for Oliver, a supporter of the rival Whigs, for some time. He was appointed in 1737 and eleven years later councillors decided:

‘That the said Mr. Oliver has been for some time past greatly remiss and negligent in the performance of his duty of a School Master in the said school, so that the same is greatly decayed, and has lost the reputation it formerly bore, and many Gentlemen, Tradesmen, principal Inhabitants, and Burgesses of this Town have sent their sons abroad to other Townes and schools for Education.

โ€˜It is therefore the Opinion of this Council that the said Mr. Oliver is very unfit to be Longer continued head master of the said School, and that he ought to be removed and a new one Chosen in his place of head master that will better discharge the duty of the said School, And it is accordingly agreed and so ordered that the Order of the Election of the said Mr. Oliver to be head master of the said School be and is hereby Vacated and Repealed.’

Councillors possibly felt that he wasnโ€™t devoting all his attention to his pupils because he was too busy with his other responsibilities: he was also rector of Warton-in-Lonsdale and curate of St Georgeโ€™s Chapel in Preston.

In his defence, Oliver denied he had neglected his duties and accused the Tory councillors of wanting to get rid of him for political reasons, so that they could replace him with a headmaster more in line with their sympathies. He clearly overcame their opposition, for he stayed in post for another seventeen years.

When he gave up the headship he added to his church livings, becoming the vicar of St Michaelโ€™s-on-Wyre shortly after his resignation, and later adding the rectorship of Whittington-in-Lonsdale to his quiver of clerical appointments.

Ellis Henry, his successor as grammar school headmaster, possibly didnโ€™t suit the councillors either, for he left after just over a year in post. Perhaps he lacked Oliverโ€™s staying power. He certainly lacked his experience for he was still in his early twenties and only recently graduated from Oxford when he was appointed.

Arkwright House, Preston: 'From a painting by J Ferguson c1850. A rare view of the property showing the enclosed front garden'. It was the home of the Preston grammar school headmaster from 1728. It was across the road from the school.
Arkwright House: ‘From a painting by J Ferguson c1850. A rare view of the property showing the enclosed front garden’. It was the home of the Preston grammar school headmaster from 1728. It was across the road from the school. https://www.flickr.com/photos/rpsmithbarney/5193156133/

Sources
Clemesha’s History of Preston
Fishwick’s History of Preston


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