On this day … 18 June 1842

The Preston Chronicle reported that the new grammar school in Cross Street had opened for business. That business being the examination of the pupils by the vicar of Preston. The builders were still in, so the school had to wait to make full use of the building.

Witnessing the pupils’ ordeal were ‘the Mayor and several members of the Corporate, Magisterial and Clerical bodies’. The reporter also noted that there ‘were several ladies present’.

The pupils were tested in a range of subjects including Greek, Latin, French, history, geography and philosophy. No mention was made of any science subjects.

While the builders were putting the finishing touches to the new school, the vicar looked round and ‘hoped it might add as much to the good of Preston, morally and mentally as it did materially’.

The school replaced the old one at the bottom of Stoneygate, built in 1666, although there had been a school in the town from at least the fourteenth century. One of the reasons for the move to new premises was that while:

‘At one time this locality was deemed very respectable: there were gentlemen’s private residences on the eastern side. It is now one of the very lowest parts of the town.’

One of the residences on the eastern side was the home of the headmaster, the building now known as Arkwright House. Presumably, the headmaster in 1842, George Nun Smith, also found accommodation in a more respectable neighbourhood.

A few years after the move to Cross Street, where ‘the fees, though not excessive, were yet beyond the means of many parents’, there seems to have been problems with the management of the school. In 1860 the corporation bought the school for £1,527 10s. and set up a management committee to run it.

Of course, council management is no guarantee of success of a project, and the school was again in difficulties at the end of the century, when the headmaster was the Rev Alfred Beaven Beaven.

Beaven had been appointed in 1874. He was known for his savage beatings and his bad debts. Such things could be overlooked, but not empty desks. The number of pupils fell from 137 in 1882 to 32 in 1898. Edmund Harris, Preston’s principal benefactor, had not long before left £3,000 in his will for scholarships at the school. Quite how they were shared out when there were only 32 pupils is unknown.

The corporation gave Beaven a year to improve numbers, and when he was unable to do so, he resigned before he could be sacked. He pleaded poverty, so presumably he was still being chased by creditors. Beaven bounced back from his difficulties, moving to Leamington Spa to open a preparatory school, remaining headmaster there until his death in 1924 at the age of 77.

The headmaster's study at Preston grammar school c.1900
Headmaster Harry Brooks in the headmaster’s study: https://www.flickr.com/photos/rpsmithbarney/8667224748/

And the grammar school’s fortunes would seem to have been restored after his departure, for when he left the corporation took over the Literary and Philosophical Society’s building next door to the school on the corner of Cross Street and Winckley Square, merging the buildings to form a much larger school. They appointed Harry Cribb Brooks (pictured) as headmaster.

The school moved to Moor Park Avenue in 1913 and the old school was demolished in 1957.

Pupils outside Preston grammar school - undated postcard
Pupils outside the school. Undated postcard: https://www.flickr.com/photos/rpsmithbarney/16389098812/
Old Preston grammar school building - c 1950
The old grammar school buildings shortly before their demolition: https://www.flickr.com/photos/rpsmithbarney/28676663656/

Sources
Hewitson’s History of Preston
Clemesha’s History of Preston


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