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List of English and Welsh endowed schools (19th century)

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This is a list of some of the endowed schools in England and Wales existing in the early part of the 19th century. It is based on the antiquarian Nicholas Carlisle's survey of "Endowed Grammar Schools" published in 1818[1] with descriptions of 475 schools[2] but the comments are referenced also to the work of the Endowed Schools Commission half a century later. Most English and Welsh endowed schools were at the time described as grammar schools, but by the eighteenth century there were three groups: older prestigious schools becoming known as "public schools"; schools in manufacturing towns that innovated to some extent in syllabus; and more traditional grammar schools in market towns and rural areas.[3]

A medieval grammar school was one which taught Latin, and this remained an important subject in all the schools, which generally followed the traditions of the universities of Oxford and Cambridge, from which almost all of their graduate schoolmasters came. Some of the schools listed by Carlisle had long been fee-paying public schools, although in most cases (as at Eton and Winchester) retaining some provision for the teaching of "scholars" who paid reduced or no fees.

An endowment for educational purpose was intended by the founder or founders to be legally binding in perpetuity. However the object of such endowments was not always fully honoured by those controlling the schools.

Carlisle compiled his list by means of a questionnaire, which was not always answered. The Commission's report built on his research, while not accepting all his claims on the continuity of certain schools from monastic and chantry foundations, which affected the dating of schools. The chronological list in the report has numerous further details of endowments.

There is little consistency in the actual names of grammar schools from this period. Many were called "free schools". Carlisle used some unorthodox spellings, and he listed Hampshire under its alternative historical name of Southamptonshire.

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Bedfordshire

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Berkshire

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For Eton College see Buckinghamshire.

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Buckinghamshire

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Cambridgeshire

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Cheshire

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Cornwall

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Cumberland

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Derbyshire

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Devon

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Dorset

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Durham

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Essex

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Gloucestershire

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Hampshire

For Hampshire see County of Southampton.

Herefordshire

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Hertfordshire

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Huntingdonshire

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Kent

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Lancashire

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Leicestershire

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Lincolnshire

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London

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Middlesex

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Monmouthshire

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Norfolk

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Northamptonshire

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Northumberland

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Nottinghamshire

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Oxfordshire

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Rutland

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Shropshire

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Somerset

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County of Southampton

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Carlisle referred to Hampshire as Southampton.

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Staffordshire

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Suffolk

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Surrey

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Sussex

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Warwickshire

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Westmorland

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Wiltshire

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Worcestershire

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Yorkshire

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North Wales

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South Wales

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Monmouthshire is listed separately.

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See also

Notes

  1. translation: "[we] have in mind that the college now founded will endure for centuries"
  2. sometimes written as Danvers in modern times, but not in the text. Danvers was associated with Devonshire and Derbyshire.
  3. bequeathed means he left the property in his will; "so bequeathed it" means he left the land to St Bees Grammar School
  4. There were a number of Latin grammars published by various teachers through Oxford and Cambridge Universities. Some were more popular than others.
  5. These were Long Burgh, Moorhouse and Burgh-by-Sands. A distinction was made between the deserving poor and the non-deserving, who received alms for begging.
  6. old English pounds
  7. the grammar school at Wolsingham, if it existed, was not recorded in Carlisle's Concise Description of 1818.
  8. Otium literally means "hatred"[citation needed] Otium is Latin for leisure, idleness etc, but Play Days were interpreted as a sin and could be propitiated by work. Accordingly institutions encouraged variously hard work and fasting before Feast Days, Festivals and leave from school.
  9. an apputenance to the Royal Demesne. The King was the Tenant-in-Chief meaning he had total feudal authority over his personal demesne.
  10. Radley College maintains a tradition of black gowns to this day.
  11. Most early grammar schools used either Eton grammars to study both Greek and Latin. Other school systems were used including Westminster grammar, published by Westminster School in the vicinity of parliament, in London. Ward's grammar and Valpy grammar were also used by less well-endowed local free or grammar schools.
  12. gratis - full citation "summa non gratis" meant for amount not free. ie. fees to be paid.
  13. originally in Latin Scholares, they became after the Reformation, known as Scholastici emphasizing the move away from monastic boys in cells, towards the dynamics of studying. The 40 are named in Wheeler (1987), p.21.
  14. according to Leach pp.14-5, the puritans burnt the original records of the Trinity Guild in Elizabethan times. Modern interpretation puts the date a year later.
  15. Chantry schools were founded in the Chapel in Edward III's day, but although dissolved, had nothing to do with the grammar schools had noting to do with the grammar schools. F.V.Follet, A History of the Worcester Royal Grammar School (1951), pp.14-5. For a summary A.R. Wheeler, Royal Grammar School, Worcester (1990), p.13
  16. early 16th century Halgate's name was post-medieval etymology, but by Elizabethan period the surname had evolved into a modern form of Holgate
  17. During the Counter-reformation an appeal could be made to parliament against a decision, by customary law this was achieved on petition. The reprieve refers to the fact that the vast majority of religious houses were dissolved and broken up during the 1530s and 1540s. A reprieve to allow an institution to continue was relatively unusual. The Act of Supremacy 1534 gave the King ultimate power over the Church in England and Wales. However Parliament could make an amendment to an act on certain specified institutions.
  18. translation: In 1818, for real value of £160

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