When Tulketh Hall was a Quaker boarding school

I found the following in an account of the history of Preston Quakers that a member of one the town’s oldest Quaker families wrote in 1931 (Dilworth Abbatt: ‘Quaker Annals of Preston and the Fylde 1653-1900’):


Tulketh Hall Academy, Preston

From an advertisement in the Irish Friend, 1st of 6th mo. 1841:—

“22 v1 841
Lower Bank Academy near Blackburn

George Edmondson has the pleasure of informing his friends, that, at the close of the present half year, it is his intention to remove from his present residence to Tulketh Hall in the neighbourhood of Preston, where he proposes, after the approaching vacation to Re-open his school, for the accommodation of Boarders only.

Tulketh Hall is delightfully situated at a short distance from the town, yet is so secluded as to have all the advantages of the country. Surrounded by extensive walks, which form part of its grounds, having a view of the beautiful scenery on the banks of the Ribble, and being within the influences of the exhilarating sea breeze, it possesses—combined with the advantages which a town residence affords—facilities for a School of no ordinary character.

Hoping that he will have contributed by this change to the increased comfort and welfare of his pupils, G.E. confidently solicits the continued support of Friends.

Terms

Board, Washing, Instruction in the English, Latin, Greek and French languages and Mechanical, Architectural and Landscape Drawing, including Books, and all other stationery, and the use of Philosophical and Mathematical Apparatus, £40 per annum.

Pupils under ten years of age £35.

Each pupil to bring 4 towels. An Annual Examination is held on the day preceding the Quarterly Meeting at Preston.

The pupils at Tulketh Hall published and printed a News Sheet, called the Tulketh Hall Mercury: it was issued monthly and consisted of six pages small octavo. On the front page, a wood engraving shows Tulketh Hall as a castellated building with a dense background of lofty trees. In an issue of the magazine dated “Aug. 15th, 1844, N° 1, Vol. 2” a list of the pupils who had the conduct of the Mercury is given, the date of their election being given as the “22nd of August 1844”— their names were :—

“Editor, E. D. Burrowes; sub-Editor, J. Edmondson; Compositors, J. Booth, A. Buchan, A. Eccles, W. Johnson, R. Thompson, W. Williamson; Printer, W. F. A. Shearson; sub-Printer, L. Hindle.”

One of the “ushers,” as the Junior Masters were called, was Mr. John Isherwood, who, with his son, acquired in the sixties and seventies a high reputation in the scholastic profession in Preston. The well-known Professor Tyndall was for a short while a Master at Tulketh Hall and afterwards was with George Edmondson at Queenwood College, Stockbridge, Hants.


For more on Tulketh Hall: Tulketh Hall history


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