On this day … 6 July 1704

Edward Denham resigned as headmaster of Preston grammar school to become headmaster of the King’s School, Macclesfield, quitting that post when he was accused of murder.

A number of unsavoury characters have served as headmasters of Preston grammar school, possibly most disreputably the Rev Alfred Beven Beven, who during his tenure at the end of the nineteenth century was noted for bad debts and beating boys’ backsides. But Denham is the only one known to have been accused of murder.

The details of his background are somewhat sketchy. He was born in London, and went from Eton to King’s College, Cambridge, where he graduated in 1694 and gained his M.A. in 1697. Denham, a fellow of the King’s College, succeeded Thomas Lodge as Preston headmaster on 19 September, 1698.

The details of the murder of which he was accused are even sketchier. What there is has been preserved by the nineteenth-century antiquarian J. P. Earwaker who, in volume two of his ‘East Cheshire: past and present; or, A history of the hundred of Macclesfield, in the county palatine of Chester. From original records’, recorded that on 6 July 1704:

‘… Edward Denham MA, was elected Head Master in the place of Timothy Dobson, deceased … on Dec. 20, 1716, the following very ominous entry appears in the Governors’ Minute Book :–“It appearing that Edward Denham, Head Master of the school is now a prisoner in the Castle of Chester for the willful murder of one Thomas Davye, by means whereof he is under the present incapacity of exercising the office of schoolmaster”.

‘George Hammond BA was elected a coadjutator in the said school during Mr Denham’s incapacity, and in case Mr Denham was not restored, then Mr Hammond was to succeed him as Head Master.

‘Mr Denham unfortunately died in prison, probably before his trial, the Register of St Mary’s, Chester, having the following entry: “Edward Denham of Maxfield died in the Castle Gaol, buried 22 April, 1717”.’

Map showing Preston Grammar School in 1685
Map shows the location of grammar school in the 1680s, before Arkwright House was built as the headmaster’s residence, which was after Denham’s time as headmaster.
https://prestonhistory.com/maps-and-plans/preston-1684/church-street-upper/

Sources
Fishwick’s History of Preston
Earwaker’s History of Macclesfield: https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=yale.39002088543229&view=1up&seq=9

Image

Map shows the grammar school in the 1680s, before Arkwright House was built as the headmaster’s residence, which was after Denham’s time as headmaster.


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