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St BUDEAUX FOUNDATION  JUNIOR SCHOOL

The St Budeaux Foundation Junior School is located at Priestly Avenue, St Budeaux, Plymouth.  It is voluntary aided.

The Old School

The School was founded in 1717 by the wealthy gentlemen and farmers of the parish, such as the Stucleys and the Trelawneys, who gave £100 each, a Miss Darracott who gave £50, and Mr Nicholas Docton gave £10.  It was for the benefit of just six boys and six girls.  Soon after, in 1725, Mr John Harris of Pennycross Barton endowed it with £1 every year for ever, out of the income of his estate.  Mrs Christianna Gennys of Whitleigh Hall, also gave financial support and was appointed as Trustee along with the Reverend Thomas Alcock, vicar of St Budeaux Church.

There were other benefactors.  In 1767 it was endowed with £300 plus £100 of bank stock by Mr Peter Madock Docton, of Whitleigh Hall, to add to the annuity of £10 left by his father.  That stock was had accumulated to be worth £700 and was sold in 1770 in order to purchase 21 acres of land at Pennycross, from which an income of £71 per annum was at first derived.  One of the fields that was purchased was called Beacon Down and was where Plymouth Albion had their rugby ground until just recently.  In 1771 Mrs Joanna Knighton included St Budeaux in her charitable gifts with a donation of £1 per year for ever.  And in addition to all that, there was still £375 in 3% Consols earning an income.  The total income to the School was stated to be £84 5s per year. 

It would seem that in 1783 the Reverend Alcock, as Trustee, agreed to appoint a mistress to teach twelve poor girls reading, knitting and sewing and also to provide them with a pair of shoes and stockings twice a year.  The mistress was paid only £9 per year, half that of the schoolmaster.

Until that year the schoolmaster had been paid £18 per year but on January 27th 1785 the Reverend Alcock ordered that his salary be raised to £20 per annum, the same as in the surrounding parishes.  There was a condition, however: the schoolmaster had to teach reading, writing and 'vulgar arithmetic' free to all the children of the parish , although 'the better sort shall give only what they please unless the Trustees order otherwise'.  There was no mention of an increase for the mistress.

Another member of the Doctor family, Elizabeth Mary Docton (1721-1801), a spinster so presumably Peter's sister, left £100 to the parish in her will dated July 29th 1787.  This was for the provision of a poor house.  Apparently, following her death in 1801 the trustees of her estate were granted the Church Green poor house for use as a charity school for 12 poor boys and 12 poor girls.  Was this the date of the establishment of the school on the village green?

In 1834 the School was taken over by the National Society.  The pupils were then required to attend Church of England services every Sunday.  Drawings of the building in April 1836 show that it was built on sloping land, with the main entrance from the Green being through two doors side by side.  On was presumably for the boys and the other for the girls.  Inside were two schoolrooms, each just over 16 feet in length and 6 feet wide.  Each had stairs to the lower and upper floors.  No plans exist of the upper floor, although the elevation drawing suggests this was simply the loft.  The lower floor was divided (as in the ground floor) into two apartments for the master and mistress, each with a kitchen, bedroom and pantry, and an outside toilet in a small courtyard.

Meanwhile, the older building was replaced by a new school building and master's residence in 1863.  When in April 1877 a new school was opened in the adjacent parish of Tamerton Foliot, several pupils transferred there but many apparently soon transferred back again.  Likewise, there had been a school within the Ordnance Depot at Bull Point but when that was closed in 1901, pupils transferred to St Budeaux Foundation School and later to the Victoria Road Board School.   Some further transfers took place in 1903 when the St Budeaux School Board opened their new schools at Crownhill.

Following the adoption of the Education Act 1902 on June 1st 1903, the School became a "Non-provided" School under the Devonport Local Education Authority.

The Present School

At that time the only ways of crossing the river Tamar to Saltash were by means of the ferry or the train service across the Royal Albert Bridge.   But in 1962 both were supplanted by the Tamar Road Bridge.  In due course it was decided to improve the approach roads to the Bridge and St Budeaux Foundation School found that it was in the way of progress. 

The foundation stone of a the new building in Priestley Avenue was laid on July 12th 1979 by the Bishop of Plymouth, the Right Reverend Richard Cartwright.  After checking with a spirit-level that the stone was laid true, he tapped it in place with a suitably inscribed maul made from Afrormosia, which he returned to the School for safe keeping.  Also attending the ceremony were the three surviving head teachers: Mr Auberry Pryor, Mr Gwilym Davies and Mr Robert North.  Mr Pryor's brother, Ewart, and their great-grandfather had also been head teachers during the long history of the School.  Three former acting head teachers were also present: Miss Maura Parker, Mrs Isabel Barnes and Miss Phoebe Bosworthick. 

It was anticipated that the new school would cost £466,450 and would accommodate 280 pupils in eight class-rooms.  In addition there would be an assembly hall, practical areas, visual aids rooms, resource areas, a swimming pool and kitchen.  Alongside would be a caretaker's house and a new football pitch, which would be shared with Plaistow Hill Infant School.

On March 6th 1981 a special service was held in the old school and the following week the pupils transferred to the new building, which was officially opened on June 12th 1981 by the Lord Mayor of Plymouth, Councillor R V Morrell, and dedicated by the Lord Bishop of Exeter, the Reverend Eric Mercer.

 

Additional material for this section has been kindly supplied by Mrs Deborah Watson

Copyright: Brian Moseley, Plymouth, UK

Page updated:  3 December 2007

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