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Old Warwickians

Warwick School in the 19th century

Slides from a talk given by Warwick School Archivist Gervald Frykman on 25 September 2021.

  • 1792 Advertisement

    Boys under 12 only – Innes was making a fresh start after the disasters of the 18th century. One or two day boys and no boarders at the start. “Writing, French, Dancing, Drawing and Musick” were all offered – but were they actually taught? Innes himself taught Classics.

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    1792 Advertisement
    Boys under 12 only – Innes was making a fresh start after the disasters of the 18th century. One or two day boys and no boarders at the start. “Writing, French, Dancing, Drawing and Musick” were all offered – but were they actually taught? Innes himself taught Classics.
  • George Innes

    Headmaster 1792-1842.

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    George Innes
    Headmaster 1792-1842.
  • 1807 College Bill

    The only archive which has survived from Innes's time.

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    1807 College Bill
    The only archive which has survived from Innes's time.
  • 1807 Appeal for Attendance

    A series of inquisitions was held in 1833 into the state of education, and local charities in Warwick, which eventually brought about whole-scale change – but not before Innes died, in office, at the age of 82. He didn’t come out particularly well from the 1833 inquisition, but his was a royal appointment, and he was untouchable.

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    1807 Appeal for Attendance
    A series of inquisitions was held in 1833 into the state of education, and local charities in Warwick, which eventually brought about whole-scale change – but not before Innes died, in office, at the age of 82. He didn’t come out particularly well from the 1833 inquisition, but his was a royal appointment, and he was untouchable.
  • Drawing of the College

    The College was east of St Mary’s Church, in the mediaeval College of the Vicars Choral. It was totally unsuitable for a school!

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    Drawing of the College
    The College was east of St Mary’s Church, in the mediaeval College of the Vicars Choral. It was totally unsuitable for a school!
  • 1835 Drawing of the College

    The gateway and steps on the left are all that survive.

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    1835 Drawing of the College
    The gateway and steps on the left are all that survive.
  • George Innes' Grave

    The school closed for a year in 1842, for essential work on the buildings, and in 1843 re-started under Rev Herbert Hill.

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    George Innes' Grave
    The school closed for a year in 1842, for essential work on the buildings, and in 1843 re-started under Rev Herbert Hill.
  • Rev Herbert Hill

    He was the first to have a board of governors. His salary was £200 pa. He had also taught at Rugby School before coming to Warwick.

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    Rev Herbert Hill
    He was the first to have a board of governors. His salary was £200 pa. He had also taught at Rugby School before coming to Warwick.
  • Plan of the College 1851

    Hill “used to keep a list of boys admitted”, but later confessed to having lost it. Present pupil admission records date from 1871, and full teaching staff records from 1906.

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    Plan of the College 1851
    Hill “used to keep a list of boys admitted”, but later confessed to having lost it. Present pupil admission records date from 1871, and full teaching staff records from 1906.
  • Plan of the College (detail)

    The school room and the privies are clearly visible. Hill was “little given to punishment”. He was also chaplain Warwick Castle. On retirement he became Master of the Lord Leycester Hospital.

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    Plan of the College (detail)
    The school room and the privies are clearly visible. Hill was “little given to punishment”. He was also chaplain Warwick Castle. On retirement he became Master of the Lord Leycester Hospital.
  • School-room 1870

    Pupil numbers were down to 28 at this time, mostly between the ages of 11 and 14. There were two other members of the teaching staff.

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    School-room 1870
    Pupil numbers were down to 28 at this time, mostly between the ages of 11 and 14. There were two other members of the teaching staff.
  • Great Seal 1842

    The appointment was by Queen Victoria, since the school was a royal foundation dating from 1545. This seal and parchment, in a very fragile state, is in Warwickshire County Records Office, and was discovered, from the catalogue, with great glee about 18 years ago by some U5th boys who were helping me at the time.

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    Great Seal 1842
    The appointment was by Queen Victoria, since the school was a royal foundation dating from 1545. This seal and parchment, in a very fragile state, is in Warwickshire County Records Office, and was discovered, from the catalogue, with great glee about 18 years ago by some U5th boys who were helping me at the time.
  • W. F. MacMichael

    He came from Cheltenham College to Warwick in 1876. He was extremely high church, and in constant conflict with the governors about religion and corporal punishment. He oversaw the move of the school from St Mary’s to its present site in 1879, but resigned in 1880 and eventually became a vicar in Devon. We do not have his portrait hanging in the Pyne Room.

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    W. F. MacMichael
    He came from Cheltenham College to Warwick in 1876. He was extremely high church, and in constant conflict with the governors about religion and corporal punishment. He oversaw the move of the school from St Mary’s to its present site in 1879, but resigned in 1880 and eventually became a vicar in Devon. We do not have his portrait hanging in the Pyne Room.
  • 15. Graffiti in St Mary’s Churchyard

    Leach, the first historian of the school, described these carvings as “disappearing” in 1906 – but they are still there, and some may be very ancient. Presumably carved by the boys who were assumed to be doing their lessons at home?!

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    15. Graffiti in St Mary’s Churchyard
    Leach, the first historian of the school, described these carvings as “disappearing” in 1906 – but they are still there, and some may be very ancient. Presumably carved by the boys who were assumed to be doing their lessons at home?!
  • 16. New Grammar School 1879

    The Henry VIII Charity was ordered to supply the land on the Myton Road for the new school, designed by John Cundall. It opened in 1879 with about 50 boys and possibly 3 or 4 staff.

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    16. New Grammar School 1879
    The Henry VIII Charity was ordered to supply the land on the Myton Road for the new school, designed by John Cundall. It opened in 1879 with about 50 boys and possibly 3 or 4 staff.
  • Rev W Grundy

    He came to Warwick, aged 31, in January 1881. He was highly energetic, and was “a merciless flogger of boys.” He instituted school sports, a magazine, debating, a tuck shop, the Rifle Corps, science teaching – and school rules. He had a teaching staff of three, plus he himself who taught Classics, and two drawing masters and an organist from Leamington. There were 30 or 40 boys in the school.

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    Rev W Grundy
    He came to Warwick, aged 31, in January 1881. He was highly energetic, and was “a merciless flogger of boys.” He instituted school sports, a magazine, debating, a tuck shop, the Rifle Corps, science teaching – and school rules. He had a teaching staff of three, plus he himself who taught Classics, and two drawing masters and an organist from Leamington. There were 30 or 40 boys in the school.
  • School List 1881

    This is the oldest surviving Form Order – every boy in the school arranged in descending order of academic achievement. Gibson (2nd on the list) was 14, but already in the sixth form.

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    School List 1881
    This is the oldest surviving Form Order – every boy in the school arranged in descending order of academic achievement. Gibson (2nd on the list) was 14, but already in the sixth form.
  • School Rules 1884

    What to wear?

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    School Rules 1884
    What to wear?
  • First two school rules

    The extraordinary “pistols and cannons” rule – a response to an actual incident? The Victorian pupils’ weapon of choice was the catapult. There were 135 boys in the school by 1885, with 6 staff.

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    First two school rules
    The extraordinary “pistols and cannons” rule – a response to an actual incident? The Victorian pupils’ weapon of choice was the catapult. There were 135 boys in the school by 1885, with 6 staff.
  • 1886 Map

    This clearly shows the main school buildings, the Sanatorium and Bridge House.

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    1886 Map
    This clearly shows the main school buildings, the Sanatorium and Bridge House.
  • Rev J. P. Way

    Unquestionably the school’s best 19th century headmaster. Re-named the school “Warwick School” – blatantly illegally. Tried to draw up a school crest, but failed. He did, however, come up with “Altiora Peto”.

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    Rev J. P. Way
    Unquestionably the school’s best 19th century headmaster. Re-named the school “Warwick School” – blatantly illegally. Tried to draw up a school crest, but failed. He did, however, come up with “Altiora Peto”.
  • First use of the name Warwick School

    There were six forms in J. P. Way’s time, and promotion was based solely on academic performance, and not age. So there were slow 17-year-olds in junior forms, and bright 13-year-olds in the sixth form.

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    First use of the name Warwick School
    There were six forms in J. P. Way’s time, and promotion was based solely on academic performance, and not age. So there were slow 17-year-olds in junior forms, and bright 13-year-olds in the sixth form.
  • Earl of Warwick’s Plan, 1885

    He planned to surround the school with a Victorian suburb, thus halting any further expansion of the school.

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    Earl of Warwick’s Plan, 1885
    He planned to surround the school with a Victorian suburb, thus halting any further expansion of the school.
  • Schools in Warwick 1886

    This map clearly shows the new King’s Middle School and King’s High School, and the site of the old grammar school on the other side of The Butts.

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    Schools in Warwick 1886
    This map clearly shows the new King’s Middle School and King’s High School, and the site of the old grammar school on the other side of The Butts.
  • Communion Ware 1893

    J. P. Way presented silver gilt communion ware to the school in 1893, and it is still in use.

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    Communion Ware 1893
    J. P. Way presented silver gilt communion ware to the school in 1893, and it is still in use.
  • Rear of the school 1897

    The fields were mown by a horse-drawn mower until a tractor was purchased in 1937. The dormitory windows were described as “prison-like” in the 1920s.

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    Rear of the school 1897
    The fields were mown by a horse-drawn mower until a tractor was purchased in 1937. The dormitory windows were described as “prison-like” in the 1920s.
  • Junior House 1889

    J. P. Way was frustrated by the refusal of the governors to expand the school, so he paid for this house himself. When he left the school in 1896, he sold it back to the governors at a very good profit. It is now called Way House.

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    Junior House 1889
    J. P. Way was frustrated by the refusal of the governors to expand the school, so he paid for this house himself. When he left the school in 1896, he sold it back to the governors at a very good profit. It is now called Way House.
  • Cadet Corps 1903

    The Corps (now called the CCF) was founded in 1884, and became attached to the 2nd Battalion of the Royal Warwickshire Regiment. In 1887 the uniform was scarlet, with blue facings. Most boys in the school joined the corps. In 1899 the rifles, or carbines, were hung on the wall of Big School (now the Pyne Room), until a fatal accident occurred on camp in 1897. The chapel altar is that boy’s memorial.

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    Cadet Corps 1903
    The Corps (now called the CCF) was founded in 1884, and became attached to the 2nd Battalion of the Royal Warwickshire Regiment. In 1887 the uniform was scarlet, with blue facings. Most boys in the school joined the corps. In 1899 the rifles, or carbines, were hung on the wall of Big School (now the Pyne Room), until a fatal accident occurred on camp in 1897. The chapel altar is that boy’s memorial.
  • Latin test 1891

    One way of putting all the boys in the school into descending academic order was to set the whole school the same test. This one is an extremely difficult one, translating English into Latin, and was set in the summer of 1891.

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    Latin test 1891
    One way of putting all the boys in the school into descending academic order was to set the whole school the same test. This one is an extremely difficult one, translating English into Latin, and was set in the summer of 1891.
  • John Masefield's mark

    John Masefield, later Poet Laureate, was an orphan when he attended Warwick School from 1888 to 1891, between the ages of 9 and 12. He sat the famous Latin test, and scored 9 marks out of 85 – approximately 10%. Perhaps it was this test which convinced him that the school was not the place for him – he ran away a few days later to Liverpool, to join the training ship Conway.

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    John Masefield's mark
    John Masefield, later Poet Laureate, was an orphan when he attended Warwick School from 1888 to 1891, between the ages of 9 and 12. He sat the famous Latin test, and scored 9 marks out of 85 – approximately 10%. Perhaps it was this test which convinced him that the school was not the place for him – he ran away a few days later to Liverpool, to join the training ship Conway.
  • R. Percival Brown

    This headmaster was a disaster, and was severely unpopular with parents. The ran down the number of boys in the school to a level from which it didn’t ever recover, and indirectly led to the merger with the King’s Middle School in 1906.

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    R. Percival Brown
    This headmaster was a disaster, and was severely unpopular with parents. The ran down the number of boys in the school to a level from which it didn’t ever recover, and indirectly led to the merger with the King’s Middle School in 1906.
  • Big School 1900

    This was the largest room in the school, and in 1900 it was set up for four classes to be held in there at the same time. In the 1970s it became the school library, and 30 years later the Pyne Room – an extension dining room.

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    Big School 1900
    This was the largest room in the school, and in 1900 it was set up for four classes to be held in there at the same time. In the 1970s it became the school library, and 30 years later the Pyne Room – an extension dining room.
  • The dining room 1901

    The tables in the old dining room (sometimes called the Panel Room), shown in this photograph brand new, were made in the school’s carpentry workshop in 1901, and are still in use 120 years later.

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    The dining room 1901
    The tables in the old dining room (sometimes called the Panel Room), shown in this photograph brand new, were made in the school’s carpentry workshop in 1901, and are still in use 120 years later.
  • Playing fields

    Left to right are the original pavilion, the main school buildings, the chapel without its vestry, the original gymnasium and the Junior School.

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    Playing fields
    Left to right are the original pavilion, the main school buildings, the chapel without its vestry, the original gymnasium and the Junior School.
  • Chapel 1903

    . The east window shows only Holliday’s central light. The original pipe organ is there (pumping it was a punishment), gas lighting, wrought iron-work (two small lecterns survive of this). Rigid seating plans were in place, which were used for registration of boys.

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    Chapel 1903
    . The east window shows only Holliday’s central light. The original pipe organ is there (pumping it was a punishment), gas lighting, wrought iron-work (two small lecterns survive of this). Rigid seating plans were in place, which were used for registration of boys.
  • Gymnasium 1903

    Visible are the dangerous boiler, Indian clubs, and the gallery, which was the changing room. Much later it became the sixth form centre, and now has been re-named the Gibson Building, for careers, a clothing shop, and so on.

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    Gymnasium 1903
    Visible are the dangerous boiler, Indian clubs, and the gallery, which was the changing room. Much later it became the sixth form centre, and now has been re-named the Gibson Building, for careers, a clothing shop, and so on.
  • View from the river

    To end with, a beautiful hand-tinted Edwardian postcard of the school, as it appeared from the River Avon.

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    View from the river
    To end with, a beautiful hand-tinted Edwardian postcard of the school, as it appeared from the River Avon.