13 May 2022

Ellen Street Schools, Hove

Judy Middleton 2002 (revised 2016)

 copyright © Brighton & Hove City Libraries
Thomas Simpson (1825-1908) was a busy architect who designed no less than thirteen schools in Brighton and two in Hove at Ellen Street and Connaught Road. This photograph shows the handsome edifice of Ellen Street Schools.
 
Building the Schools

A competition was staged for the honour of designing the Ellen Street Schools and the winner’s plan was published in Building News (7 December 1877). Thomas Simpson of 16 Ship Street, Brighton and Frederick W. Roper of 9 Adelphi Street, London were the successful architects. An additional note appears on the side of the plan ‘it is possible that in order to comply with requirements of the Local Government Board as to heights of buildings in new streets, the rooms may have to be reduced to 15 feet and 16 feet in height respectively instead of 16 feet and 17 feet as figured.’

The design was in grand Queen Anne style and the long building was enhanced by four gable-surmounted projections containing two windows; at either end there was a more elaborately decorated projection over arched doorways. There was a cupola in the centre, tall chimneys and decorative ridge tiles.

The walls were constructed of picked stock brick, red brick was used for gables and groins and moulded red brick was used for cornices, string-courses and panels. There were brown tiles on the roof and the turret of oak was covered with lead. The building was set back ten feet from the street line and there were wrought iron railings along the frontage. Hook & Oldrey were the builders.

The lavatories were situated outdoors in three separate blocks for boys, girls and infants and each block was reached through a covered way.

Ellen Street Schools were designed to accommodate 400 infants, 250 girls and 150 boys. The site cost £1,560 and construction and fitting-up costs came to between £6,000 and £8,000

Schools Opened

Ellen Street Schools opened their doors on 12 October 1879. It was the first school to be erected under the auspices of the Hove School Board, which was formed in 1877.

At this juncture education was not free and parents had to fork out three pence a week for boys or girls and two pence a week for an infant. Although this sounds a paltry sum, many men were earning very little and every penny counted in the household budget.

In 1880 Her Majesty’s Inspector for Schools pronounced the new building to be excellent.

Girls’ School

When the Girls’ School opened the staff were as follows:

Mrs Maria Callingham Cathrick, head
Sarah Wilmer, first assistant
Julia McGregor Blunt, second assistant
Agnes Maria Cathrick, fifth year pupil teacher
Alice Hollamby, second year pupil teacher
Mary C. Wilkes, third year candidate

Miss Blunt left to join the infants’ department in the same year

The school photographer called remarkably early, his first visit being recorded on 12 July 1881.

The school was closed for four weeks in September 1881 because of an outbreak of smallpox and there was a second outbreak in November of the same year.

On 22 September 1884 two girls were sent home; one was suffering from ringworm while the other had ‘a loathsome eruption almost covering the face’.

In October 1890 only 150 girls out of 240 on the books were present at school because of the prevalence of measles and whooping cough.

In October 1885 some 69 girls were absent from class and enquiries were put in hand to ascertain the reason. It was found that some families had moved away without informing the authorities while other girls were required to help out at home; one girl was found to be serving in a shop and two girls were just playing in the street because their mothers were out. The remainder were suffering from ringworm, scurvy, mumps, measles, ophthalmia and colds.

The school was closed from 9 July to 25 September 1898 because of diphtheria and there was a further closure from 1 July to 3 September 1899 because of scarlet fever.

Of course it was always an occupational hazard that a teacher might become infected by one of these diseases and in 1905 Miss Hannah, who became head in 1894, became such a victim. She was carted off to the sanatorium with scarlet fever and was absent from school for six weeks

Other Reasons for Absence

In 1886 it was recorded that some girls were away for five weeks to go hop picking. But sometimes the head sanctioned closure because of outside events. These included the following:

21 July 1881 – School closed for the afternoon because the Prince and Princess of Wales were visiting Hove.
4 September 1881 – School attendance affected by Hove Regatta.
1884- School closed because of Hove Regatta,
3 November 1882 – School closed because ‘Egyptian troops’ were parading at Brighton.
12 April 1883 – School attendance was poor due to the presence of the Salvation Army in the neighbourhood. (In those days the Salvation Army was a controversial organisation and opponents often caused riots. By 1889 several children at Ellen Street Schools were ‘soldiers’).
13 September 1883 – School attendance low because a travelling circus was camped in a field close at hand.

Sad Circumstances

The Log Book contains some sad details about some of the girls. For example, on 29 May 1904 there was concern for Lily Austen and Elsie Owen:

‘The former has been looking very ill again lately. She was re-admitted here after her discharge from the Consumptive Hospital at Hampstead in October 1902. Knowing her to be a delicate child, special attention has been given to her, but I am doubtful of her fitness for school in her present state. The other child Elsie Owen is, according to her mother’s statement, suffering from consumption of the bone. Since hearing that, I have permitted her to lie flat on a form during oral lessons.’

In 1906 Lily was absent from school for nine months.

Then there were Dorothy and Doris Cullen who were absent from school because of dirty heads in 1904. The NSPCC asked Miss Hannah to give evidence in court because their mother was being summoned for neglect.

In 1907 Agnes Ellen Greenland Newman, aged 12, became a pupil at the school. According to her foster mother Agnes had a growth on her brain and was the last survivor of her family who had all died from consumption or epilepsy.

These examples were by no means the only delicate girls at school but by 1908 proper medical attention identified such cases earlier on. It is sobering to note that out of fifteen infants examined in May 1908, thirteen were found to be in need of medical attention. In June 1908 the doctor ordered nineteen children to do special breathing exercises, which they performed daily in the playground under the supervision of the head.

Fortunately, there were some robust children too. In 1901 Lily Maynard received a prize for full school attendance for six years in succession.

Discipline

Strict discipline was enforced by liberal use of the cane and recorded as follows:

18 November 1881 Ellen Hunt received three or four light strokes on the hand for disobedience and insolence.
16 March 1882 – Jane Green received one stroke on each hand for damaging school furniture.
Emily Lenton was caned five times between 1882 and 1883.
17 December 1882 Margaret Redman received one slap and one stroke for trying to argue rather than obey. She ran home to tell her mother and Mrs Redman came storming up and ‘disturbed the whole School with her noisy, foul language’.

Court Cases

On 9 March 1893 Miss Hannah had to punish Mabel Smith for rudeness and obstinacy. Mabel was supposed to receive two strokes on her hand but she displayed such defiance that Miss Hannah felt obliged to cane her arms, reasoning with the girl as she did so. Her outraged mother then had a summons issued against the headmistress who had to appear before Hove Magistrates. But the summons was dismissed and the magistrates expressed complete confidence in Miss Hannah’s ability.
illustration from the Brighton Season Magazine of 1907
Baron de Worms
It seems Miss Hannah had not learnt her lesson because another summons was issued two years later. Another teacher had asked her to cane Clarissa Comber for idleness, disobedience and rebellious conduct on 28 November 1895. When Clarissa refused to extend her hand when asked, Miss Hannah rapped her four or five times on the upper arm instead. Clarissa eventually put out her hand and Miss Hannah gave her one rap too.

Clarissa’s mother lost no time in showing her daughter’s injuries to a policeman. Baron de Worms also saw the marks and considered the punishment was excessive. When Miss Hannah appeared before Hove Magistrates it was Baron de Worms who presided over the court and this time she was convicted of assault and fined £1. This conviction was despite the evidence of two teachers who were present in the room at the time of the caning and the medical evidence was that the caning was moderate.

Miss Hannah was so shocked at the outcome that she went home sick. On 11 December 1895 she wrote in the Log Book ‘I resumed duty yesterday after a week’s prostration at the extraordinary result of the summons.’ Other teachers in the district were sympathetic towards her ordeal and rallied around to pay her expenses.

Happier Events

copyright © Brighton & Hove City Libraries
This nostalgic photograph shows the staff at Ellen Street Girls’ School c. 1900. Alice Botton, pupil teacher, stand in the middle of the back row.

Miss Hannah had a gentler side to her character too. In 1893 she encouraged girls to join the Children’s National Guild of Courtesy whose rules were read out to members every week. In 1893 some 63 girls joined, by 1895 there were 206 members and the number had risen to 252 by 1900. There was a monthly magazine costing a halfpenny. Three girls appointed as officers were given a medal to wear around their necks; after one year the medal became their own property.

May Day was celebrated at Ellen Street Schools. In 1904 Rose Norris was elected as May Queen and Queen of Courtesy for a year. She received a silver medal and was crowned with roses. Classrooms were decorated with numerous garlands, daisy and bluebell chains and branches. Miss Hannah recited from Tennyson’s May Queen. In 1908 the celebrations were somewhat marred by a scarcity of flowers caused by a bad weather. In 1914 it was recorded that the school received a quantity of cowslips from school children in Somerset.

Food

There was a great deal of poverty around Ellen Street and in November 1884 experimental penny dinners were introduced. Around twelve of the older girls came to school before 9 a.m. to prepare the ingredients for Irish stew and later in the month some 62 dinners were served, consisting of pea soup and suet pudding with treacle.

By December 1884 some 121 dinners were sold, mostly plum puddings but soup too. Hove School Board agreed to sanction the penny dinners three times a week and the experiment continued the following year bolstered with cash donations from sympathetic ladies.

By November 1885 Mrs Watts was responsible for cooking the dinners of soup and pudding – in that month boiled current pudding was on offer. 

In 1886 the penny dinners were abandoned for a while because it was felt that distress in the area had eased but by November 1887 brown bread and lentil soup was on offer.

While on the subject of food, it is fascinating to note names of some of the dishes created during cookery classes in the school kitchen during 1891 and 1892 but unfortunately no recipes were recorded. The names were as follows:

Poor Man’s Goose
Wakefield Pudding
Velvet Soup
Aunt Sarah’s Pudding
Rizine Pudding
Homing Pudding
Wyvern Pudding
Steamed Canary Pudding with Lemon Sauce

On 8 December 1886 cookery lessons were cancelled for the day because the kitchen had to be used to dry off boots and aprons after girls were caught in a storm of wind and rain on their way to school.

Poverty

On 21 September 1885 the head remarked on the destitute condition of two girls, Louise and Mary Maddocks, while in April 1887 Eliza Sharpe was noted as being weak through under-feeding and wretched home conditions.

In April 1888 Minnie Reynolds could not come to school because she had no boots to wear. Colonel Baines, who was a member of Hove School Board and a Special Visitor, authorised Miss Hannah to buy the girl a new pair of boots.

In February 1889 Fanny Loughton returned to school after eight weeks of illness and she was allowed to sit near the fire because the toes were out of her boots. Colonel Baines at once provided the 3/6d needed to buy her a new pair and she walked home in them. Naturally enough, the school felt deep regret when Colonel Baines died in March 1889.

By January 1889 new boots were being awarded for good conduct.

Some unfortunate girls were in and out of the Workhouse, which meant that their families were truly destitute. In December 1887 Louisa and Kate Garbutt left the Workhouse for the second time, while in September 1888 Kate Jasper was living inside the Workhouse.

In March 1887 several girls were unable to attend to their needlework because of painful chilblains on their hands.

Treats

In the midst of all this poverty there were a few bright spots. Mrs Henriques, her daughter, some teachers and other concerned ladies provided treats for the girls. In December 1884 they provided a well-decorated Christmas tree besides distributing oranges, cakes and bonbons.

In December 1885 Mrs Henriques and her daughter helped to distribute gifts from the Christmas tree to the girls. This was no mean task because there were 190 girls on the books.

In December 1886 parents were invited to come inside and admire the Christmas tree.

Other Schools

In 1884 the head was disappointed when 53 girls left to attend the new school in Connaught Road. Some of them were amongst the best in work and attendance.

In September 1889 several girls left to attend the Roman Catholic School in Haddington Street. Finance might have had something to do with it because the fee at Haddington Street was only one penny whereas at Ellen Street it was two pence. In 1891 school fees were abolished.

In 1893 around 100 girls were transferred to the new school in Holland Road (later known as Davigdor Road School). But this was to do with catchment areas rather than the girls deserting en masse.

Education

copyright © Robert Jeeves / Step Back in Time.
In this photograph of Ellen Street the charming cupola on top of Ellen Street Schools can be seen.

In 1886 Her Majesty’s Inspector for Schools commented that while Miss Hannah had worked diligently, he was of the opinion that considering the class of children attending Ellen Street, it would be better to concentrate on core subjects rather than attempt too wide a curriculum. She took his advice and the following year he reported a great improvement throughout the whole school.

In April 1891 Miss Hannah visited some schools in London where the ‘phonic system of teaching reading is practised’. In July 1891 the Jackson system of teaching writing was introduced at Ellen Street.

On 2 May 1891 children from Ellen Street took part in the grand procession to mark the opening of Hove Recreation Ground. They were accompanied by their teachers: Miss Hannah, Mrs Redish, Mrs Gibbins, Miss Wilmer, Miss Cracklow and Mrs Moore.

In 1900 the school was functioning with some difficulty because a new central hall was being built. There was scaffolding about, planks and piles of rubbish at the school while clouds of dust invaded the classrooms. It was all too much for Miss Hannah who went off sick with nervous exhaustion. 

In 1904 the HMI reported on the Girls’ School ‘Routine work of the classes is most efficiently controlled and directed by Miss Hannah. Discipline is excellent and instruction quite satisfactory.’

In 1905 the HMI noted that the Girls’ School had suffered a great deal from staff changes and ‘at present their mental alertness is not very conspicuous’ – presumably he meant the children.

In November 1909 a circular was despatched to every head teacher of Hove schools requesting that the School Medical Officer should be informed if any of the children appeared to be underfed. As a result of this directive around 30 children from the Ellen Street Girls’ School and Infants’ School were found to be suffering from malnutrition.

Boys’ School

The Hove Gazette (7 May 1898) recorded that some time ago the teachers at the Ellen Street Boys’ School had clubbed together to buy several pairs if football boots for the boys and now they had been rewarded by the school team winning the cup from St Paul’s School, Brighton.

The HMI report for 1904 had this to say about the Boys’ School. ‘The work of the classes is going on quite efficiently and discipline is very good; but a numerical strengthening of the staff is expedient, so that the headmaster may have more freedom for general supervision of class work throughout the whole school.’

But he did notice the walls were very dirty and the same with the Girls’ School while the central hall was inefficiently heated and he had found that at 10.15 a.m. the temperature was only 46 degrees Fahrenheit.

In 1904 the average attendance in the Boys’ and Girls’ schools was 499 whereas there was only supposed to be enough space for 479 pupils.

In 1905 the HMI was more guarded in his praises. He considered that although elementary subjects were well taught, teaching in other subjects failed to hold the attention of the scholars.

Great War

In January 1915 instructions were issued on air raid precautions. The most important point was ‘to remove children from the neighbourhood of windows’. In the event of damage to the building, the children would be marched outside in the same way as for a fire drill. Should a bombardment from the sea occur, the children must lie flat on the ground.

In April 1915 the Army took over Portland Road Schools and turned the buildings into a military hospital. The result was that the schoolchildren were displaced and had to attend Ellen Street Schools instead. To cope with the rise in numbers, a double shift system was put into operation resulting in the Ellen Street children receiving lessons in the morning and the Portland Road children being taught in the afternoon. To ensure fairness the system was alternated every four weeks or so.

Changes

On 1 April 1927 the separate departments of the schools amalgamated and the establishment became Ellen Street Mixed School.

In September 1929 the boys and girls were again separated to become East Hove Junior School for Girls and East Hove Junior School for Boys.

In 1931 Sydney Smith became assistant head and head three years later. On 3 September 1934 the separate schools were again amalgamated and became East Hove Junior Mixed School. Sydney remained head until 1957 when he retired; he died the following year.

Second World War

In the Spring of 1943 there was a daylight raid with no alert beforehand. When the children heard the noise of aircraft and bombs falling, they had to dive under their desks. The bomb fell on 6 Goldstone Street, which fortunately was empty at the time. But the blast caused plaster from the ceilings at Ellen Street to fall on the children.

Last Days

In 1952 the school was ready to be condemned and by 1953 conditions were described as appalling. By 1958 the school had been re-named Goldstone Junior School and in the 1960s there were over 500 pupils.

By 1964 people were becoming frustrated at the delay in knocking down the old building and erecting a new one. Apparently, a site had been available since 1953 but each year the Minister of Education had deleted the re-building scheme from his estimates and for years the Government had concentrated on secondary schools.

In June 1964 Robert Gunnell, chairman of Goldstone Junior School, led a deputation to lobby Hove’s MP Anthony Marlowe. In 1965 Hove Education Committee requested East Sussex County Council Education Committee to treat plans for a new school building as a top priority. Meanwhile, all around the school, houses were being demolished as part of the Conway Street re-development plan. The 1960s was the heyday in the belief that the way forward lay in high-rise blocks of flats rather than in modest terraced housing. Many years later it was realised that such ideas were a big mistake and many Victorian houses were perfectly sound and just needed updating.

Some of the demolition work was done during August 1964 in order not to disrupt lessons. But sometimes events did go as planned. In July 1965 parents waiting to collect their children were suddenly showered with dust when workmen demolished a wall opposite the school half an hour too early.

Finally, in January 1972 plans were released and the old Ellen Street premises finally closed in July 1974. The closure meant that the children were split up because some went to the new Goldstone Junior School and others to Somerhill Junior School, both officially opened in 1975.

Heads – Boys

1879 – Peter Anscombe
1919 – R. Redish
1927 – W. Hayward

Heads – Girls

1879 – Miss Maria Callingham Cathrick
1894 – Miss Sarah J. Hannah
1919 – Miss Pullings
1927 – Miss A.E. Demberling
1932 – Miss M.H. Atkinson

Heads – Infants

1897 – Miss Hammond
1904 – Miss Scivyer
1927 – Miss Dovey

Heads – East Hove Junior Mixed

1934-1957 – Sydney Smith
1958 – H. W. Mugridge

Sources

Encyclopaedia of Hove and Portslade

The Keep

R/E5/1/25 – Ellen Street Schools 1877 article in Building News
R/E5/1/26 – Ellen Street Schools 1877-1895, six plans
ESC 102/1/1 – Ellen Street Girls’ School Log Book October 1879 to November 1907
ESC 102/1/2 – Ellen Street Girls’ School Log Book 1907 to 1929

Thanks are due to Robert Jeeves of Step Back in Time, 36 Queen’s Road, Brighton for allowing the reproduction of one of his photographs.

Copyright © J.Middleton 2016
Page layout by D. Sharp