Catalogue description SANDBACH SCHOOL

This record is held by Cheshire Archives and Local Studies

Details of SP 4
Reference: SP 4
Title: SANDBACH SCHOOL
Description:

GOVERNORS

 

Minutes 1759-1954

 

Accounts 1923-1947

 

Miscellanea 1763-1898

 

ENDOWMENTS

 

Regulations 1718, nd

 

Charities 1771-1890

 

Title deeds 1667-1938

 

Estate management 1785-1926

 

HEADTEACHER

 

Admission registers 1857-1924

 

Staff register 1898-1951

 

Common room books 1911-1936

 

Tuition fees 1929-1948

 

Punishment book 1898-1963

 

Praepositors' books 1898-1959

 

Inspector's reports 1902-1921

 

School magazine 1898-1994

 

Old Boys' magazine 1904-1908

 

Miscellanea 1871-1989

Date: 1667-1989
Held by: Cheshire Archives and Local Studies, not available at The National Archives
Language: English
Creator:

Sandbach School

Sandbach Grammar School

Physical description: 3 Sub-fonds
Access conditions:

Access restrictions apply

Immediate source of acquisition:

Acc 4734,4937,5098

Subjects:
  • Sandbach, Cheshire
Administrative / biographical background:

A school existed by 1578 when the York visitation returns refer to a schoolmaster at Sandbach. In 1606 the parish register mentions a schoolmaster in the town. The grammar school proper was founded in about 1677 when Richard Lea of Sandbach gave a piece of land for a schoolhouse. Francis Welles d1695 and others paid for a schoolhouse. In 1718 a deed drew up regulations for management of the school and appointment of governors and master. 20 poor boys of Sandbach were to be taught. The offices of parish curate and second master were usually combined.

 

By 1816, the school, with 60 pupils, was sited at Egerton Lodge, Middlewich Road. In 1848, a private act of parliament was passed to administrate better the school's land. £140 was to be paid annually to the head and £60 to the second master. The school's buildings were replaced on the basis of designs by Gilbert Scott, in the early English style, from 1849. By 1890, the school had a laboratory, gymnasium and swimming bath.

 

Eligibility for Board of Education grants was acquired in 1909. The government decided in 1945 that the school would not retain its right to direct grants and the governors chose independence rather than become a local education authority school. In 1957, to alleviate the shortage of grammar school places in south-east Cheshire, the governors agreed with the LEA to provide 60 places for boys. In 1976, these were increased to 180. Admission was by residence, not ability.

 

Property

 

The Sandbach Charities bought an estate near Burslem, Staffordshire in 1673 for £420 with an addition in 1682 for £80. Coal was eventually found under this land and mining commenced in 1814, much increasing the land's value.

 

In 1677 Sir John Crewe of Utkinton granted the school a rentcharge of land at Stych, Shropshire. At a date between 1718 and 1729, Charles Ward left £200 to the school. Three boys "Ward's Scholars" were to be taught to university entrance. £420 of the school's income was invested in land at Smallwood in 1731, paying for the master's salary. In 1827 an estate was acquired at Little Hassall for £8000.

 

Sources:

 

J P Earwaker "History of Sandbach" 1890

 

S W Finn "History of Sandbach School" nd

 

W H Semper "History of Sandbach School 1677-1977" 1977

 

The Records

 

It is not known whether any earlier records exist. The surviving records forming this collection are known to have been out of the school's custody for a period in the twentieth century and were identified in the 1980s in London and subsequently returned to the school

Link to NRA Record:

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