• Reference
    X271
  • Title
    Records of Bedfordshire Middle Class Public School (1869-75); Bedford County School (1875-1907) Elstow School (1907-1916), Ampthill Road, Kempston.
  • Date free text
    1874 - 1963
  • Production date
    From: 1874 To: 1963
  • Admin/biog history
    The Bedfordshire Middle Class Public School Company Limited was created in 1867 with the express purpose of building a school in the county. Two years later that school opened, in Ampthill Road, Kempston. The principal subscribers were: the Duke of Bedford subscribed £10,000, Samuel Whitbread (Liberal MP for Bedford 1852-1895) £2,000 and Earl Cowper (who was Lord Lieutenant), Colonel Higgins of Turvey and Charles Magniac (who would be Liberal MP for Bedford 1880-1885) £1,000 each. The site was 22 acres and 2 perches of which 19 acres 3 roods 27 perches had been purchased from the Duke for £3,000 and 2 acres and 15 perches from the Midland Railway Company for £418/15/-. The design for the school was the subject of a public competition, won by Frederick Peel of London and it was built by William Huddleston of Lincoln. The building was of red brick and stood three storeys high, the front was about 300 feet long; over 300 boys were eventually accommodated in the seven dormitories. The total cost was £27,500. The school opened with 70 boys a total which had risen to 105 two months later, of these 60 were farmers' sons the rest being sons of tradesmen and other businessmen; ages ranged from 9 to 18 and only 39 of the boys came from Bedfordshire. The Harpur Trust saw the school as direct competition and in 1873 met the challenge by admitting children from anywhere rather than just from Bedford as had been the case hitherto. The high point of 315 boys in 1870 was too many and conditions became very cramped and around 200 was later considered to be the most desirable number. In 1875 the school changed its name to Bedford County School because, as the Bedfordshire Times reported: "The word Class grows more and more odious and its disappearance from the name of a public institution must have an advantageous effect". The school had been left with a mortgage debt when the cost of building it exceeded estimates. In 1898 this debt was £3,000 and in that year Bedford County School Limited (the renamed Bedfordshire Middle Class Public School Company Limited) was wound up and the buildings, furniture and good will conveyed to Rev. Farrar for £10,000. Farrar introduced electric light into the school as well as hot water for the dormitories. He also built a new library and cricket pavilion and improved the sanatorium and chapel. Perhaps as a response to the Boer War he set up a School Corps in 1900, which became part of the Officer Training Corps in 1907. It was in this year that the school underwent its third and last name change to Elstow School - presumably Kempston School did not sound so grand; the new name is misleading as the whole site is well within the boundary of the parish of Kempston. The school was, like most public schools, very keen on sport. Cricket in particular was taken very seriously and the averages are included in the Wisden Cricketers Almanacs of the period. The school closed in 1916, partly due to the Great War - the buildings had been requisitioned for use as a military college and the numbers of boys had fallen greatly because many attended the school from overseas. The other main reason for closure was the age and ill health of the headmaster. Farrar sold the buildings in 1920 to the Cosmic Crayon Company and in 1922 they were being leased, in part at least, by Taylor's the box makers. The buildings were demolished as late as 1964. The school's war memorial was transferred to Elstow Abbey along with the communion table from the chapel. The headmasters of the school were as follows: Rev. William Groome: 1869-1871 (previously headmaster of Rossall School in Lancashire, he died in 1871; Edward E. Morris: 1871-1874 (he left to become Headmaster of Melbourne Grammar School in Australia); Charles William Bourne: 1874-1881 (formerly of Marlborough College and later Headmaster of King's College School, London); Thomas Henderson: 1881-1893; Rev. Charles Frederick Farrar: 1893-1916 (grandson of Bedford engineer John Howard and formerly of Manchester Grammar School)
  • 2525, 2785, 2881, 4294.
  • Scope and Content
    Papers, correspondence and publications [for Deeds of School, see X204] [for photograph of cricket team, 1894, see Z845/1]
  • Archival history
    Deposited by the Elstonian Association in 1959, 1964, 1966, and finally by Mr W Lewis in 1977; Mr Lewis was the son in law of Mr R Callaghan, last president of the Old Elstonian Association. The different times of deposit presumably explains the duplication in copies of The Elstonian (X271/12/1-10 and X271/14-21.
  • Level of description
    fonds