Burnley Grammar School | |
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Address | |
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Byron Street , England | |
Coordinates | 53°47′42″N2°17′35″W / 53.795°N 2.293°W |
Information | |
Type | Grammar school |
Established | 1559 |
Closed | 1981 |
Local authority | Lancashire |
Gender | Male |
Age | 13to 18 |
Burnley Grammar School was latterly, a state-funded selective boys' grammar school, situated in Byron Street in Burnley, Lancashire. However, during its long history, it moved between a number of sites in the town.
In 1552, on the order of Edward VI of England, Chantries were dissolved, effectively closing the Chantry School in Burnley. The lands that had funded the chantry, were purchased by some of the wealthy men of the parish and granted to the former chantry priests for the rest of their lives. This enabled the chantry school to continue to operate for a few more years. [1]
By 1558 it had become obvious that the chantries would not be restored and the men urged the endowment of a Free Grammar School, with additional gifts of land and rents. February 1, 1559, the Habergham deed was sealed marking the beginning of the Burnley Grammar School. The Towneley family - along with the Haydock, Habergham, Woodruff and Whitacre - were the founders and governors of the school. [2]
Its first headmaster was a former chantry priest, Gilbert Fairbank, with lessons initially taught at his home next to St Peter's Church ( 53°47′31″N2°14′24″W / 53.792°N 2.240°W ). In 1602, one of the governors, John Towneley, paid for a new schoolhouse to be built in the churchyard. [3]
There was a dispute throughout the 1680s between the Catholic Towneleys and the school's Anglican governors over the choice of schoolmasters. This resulted in the building the construction of an Anglican schoolhouse ( 53°47′35″N2°14′24″W / 53.793°N 2.240°W ) in 1693. The school is situated across the River Brun in an area then known as Brown Hill. [1] In 1728 the Suffolk-based, Burnley born clergyman, Henry Halstead left a large collection of books to the School's library. [4]
The school seems to have been in decline in second half of the 19th century, even as the town rapidly expanded around it. An education commissioner's report from the late 1860s showed attendance to be low and the schoolhouse in a poor state. Wealthy families shunned the school in favour of distant boarding schools, and several attempts to raise funds for a new building failed. [5] During 1871 the Governors of the school agreed to allow representatives of the Town Council and School Board to join them, in return for financial aid. This resulted in the 1874 opening of new school buildings across Bank Parade ( 53°47′35″N2°14′28″W / 53.793°N 2.241°W ), [6] which can still be seen today. [7] Despite an agreement at this time to establish a girls department once funding could be established, no action was taken. By the late 1890s, it looked like the school board would create a rival higher grade school, [8] which would likely be disastrous for the grammar school. Some girls were allowed to attend from 1903 and it was taken over entirely by the council in 1904. It was decided that an equivalent girls' school should be created and Burnley High School for Girls opened in Ormerod Road in 1909 ( 53°47′35″N2°14′17″W / 53.793°N 2.238°W ). [9] It moved to a new building in the former grounds of Ivy Bank House in the 1951 ( 53°47′38″N2°17′17″W / 53.794°N 2.288°W ). [10] In 1959 the grammar school moved once again to larger premises on Byron Street ( 53°47′42″N2°17′35″W / 53.795°N 2.293°W ), next to the girls' school, [1] with Ivy Bank Secondary Modern School also constructed on the site in the 1960s.
The mixed comprehensive Habergham High School was formed in 1981, from the merger of two schools, with the girls' school becoming the sixth form centre.
Burnley Grammar School's last headteacher was Keith Panter. [11]
In 2006 Habergham merged with Ivy Bank to form Hameldon Community College, which in 2010 moved to a new building on Coal Clough Lane. In 2015 it was announced that the recently opened free school, Burnley High, will have a new building on the former Habergham site. [12]