Proposals and reports etc., 1819-1928 (1 bundle) [SS 10]; Reports, 1834-1871/2 (15 items, with gaps) [F 22; PA 58]; School list (2 vols., chronological 1832-1921&alphabetical) [SS 15-16]; Regulations, 1858 [LL 91]; Plans of school, 1897-1919 (30 items) [DD 17]; Photographic records of the school, c.1882-1905&no date [SS 11 & 13]; Photographic and personal album of Harold Todd, 1899-1902 [SS 12]; Jubilee visitors' book, 1882-1905 [SS 14]
Records of Rawdon School of the Society of Friends
This material is held atUniversity of Leeds Special Collections
- Reference
- GB 206 MS Dep. 1979/1 (Carlton Hill archive) Rawdon School
- Dates of Creation
- 1819-1928
- Name of Creator
- Language of Material
- English
- Physical Description
- 53 items
Scope and Content
Administrative / Biographical History
In 1828 Yorkshire Quarterly Meeting set up a committee to consider the educational needs of poor children who attended Quaker worship, but whose parents were not members. These were mainly the children of those disowned for 'marrying out'. An appeal for funds followed in 1829; this gathered almost 3000 in capital, as well as annual subscriptions to run the school. Premises in Rawdon were purchased in 1831 and the school opened the following year. Its first successive superintendents were James Bolton, Henry Hawley and William Rothery. Samuel Tuke, William Alexander and Joseph Rowntree served on the management committee. Initially 48 boys between eight and fourteen years of age were admitted. By 1835 girls were also admitted. The school struggled financially and received a severe setback in 1876 when a fire destroyed much of the premises. Despite special appeals and a generous legacy from Edward Burtt Woodhead in 1911, the school became too expensive to run and was closed in 1920. Some 34 pupils, the head and one of the teachers transferred to the Friends School at Great Ayton.
Arrangement
The records are numbered and arranged according to the system used when they were in Carlton Hill Meeting House
Access Information
The conditions of deposit include a clause requiring written prior permission from a Friend Custodian for access to consult current legal documents and any material less than fifty years old
Acquisition Information
The collection of archives of the Society of Friends formerly held at the Friends Meeting House at Carlton Hill, Leeds
Note
In English
Other Finding Aids
Contents listed in Handlist 99, "Inventory of the records of Brighouse, Knaresborough, Leeds, and Settle Monthly Meetings of the Society of Friends formerly preserved at the Friends Meeting house, Carlton Hill, Leeds", 2nd edition, 1997
Conditions Governing Use
As with access, the photocopying of current legal documents and any material less than fifty years old requires the permission of a Friend Custodian
Bibliography
W. Pearson Thistlethwaite, Yorkshire Quarterly Meeting of the Society of Friends 1665-1966 (author, 1979), pp. 202-205
Additional Information
The records are deposited and remain the property of the Society of Friends