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 townโ€™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:โ€” โ€œ22 v1 841Lower … Continue reading When Tulketh Hall was a Quaker boarding school

Adult education in 19th-centuryย Preston

I recently came across a dissertation on the Preston Institution for the Diffusion of Knowledge that traces its history from its formation in 1828. The institution, established to provide adult education and a library in the town, became the Harris Institute in 1882. It passed through several stages to emerge as todayโ€™s University of Lancashire. … Continue reading Adult education in 19th-centuryย Preston

Speaking up for Alice Stoneman

Earlier posts about the memories of pre-war pupils of the Park School portrayed a very unpleasant institution, particularly for working-class girls. And according to the girls, the person most to blame for that unhappy environment would seem to have been the schoolโ€™s first headmistress, Alice Stoneman. And yet a totally different impression of the school … Continue reading Speaking up for Alice Stoneman

A final slice of pre-war Preston schooldays

In this final post from the recorded recollections of pre-war Preston schoolchildren, the recollections touch on subjects that were routinely shrouded in silence or, if mentioned at all, treated as shameful. Again, the extracts from the article, titled โ€˜An oral history of schooling in Lancashire 1900-1950: gender, class and educationโ€™, are given verbatim Lucy Nickson … Continue reading A final slice of pre-war Preston schooldays

More on school life in pre-war Preston

The alarming accounts given in the last post about the schooldays of Preston children continues here, beginning with life at Lark Hill Convent. Again, the extracts from the article, titled โ€˜An oral history of schooling in Lancashire 1900-1950: gender, class and educationโ€™, are given verbatim Barbara and Kathleen, sisters who attended Lark Hill House Convent … Continue reading More on school life in pre-war Preston

Is this what school was like in pre-war Preston?

A member of the Preston History Facebook group pointed a new member who was looking for information on a Preston school to an article in an academic journal that included revealing interviews with Preston pupils who were at school between 1900 to 1950. The interviews were revealing in that they recalled schooldays that were far … Continue reading Is this what school was like in pre-war Preston?

On this day … 29 November 1856

The Preston Guardian carried a report on the discoveries made by archaeologists at Castle Hill, Penwortham. The discoveries are given a lengthy treatment in Charles Hardwickโ€™s History of Preston, not surprisingly since he was the person directing the amateur archaeologists who carried out the dig. The suggestions they proposed for the origin of the site, … Continue reading On this day … 29 November 1856

On this day … 25 November 1876

The Preston Chronicle published its response to the new Elementary Education Act which introduced compulsory education. In Preston, a school attendance committee was appointed to make sure parents complied. The Chronicle welcomed the act because: โ€˜There are thousands of children in the town totally neglected, living like little savages, so far as education is concerned. … Continue reading On this day … 25 November 1876