Listed Building: GROVE COUNTY PRIMARY SCHOOL WITH REAR BOUNDARY WALL (381958)

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Grade II*
Authority
Volume/Map/Item 969-1/1/137
Date assigned 21 September 1978
Date last amended

Description

PORTLAND SY67SE GROVE ROAD, Grove 969-1/1/137 (North East side) 21/09/78 Grove County Primary School with rear boundary wall (Formerly Listed as: GROVE ROAD, Grove (North East side) Grove County Infant School) GV II* School. Opened September 2nd 1872. Probably from the office of Capt. Edmund du Cane, RE, designer of St. Peter's Church (qv). Portland ashlar, slate roofs. A richly detailed and confidently handled Romanesque Revival building with a cruciform plan. Lofty 2-storey gabled units to N,E and W, and a lower single-storey hall unit to the S (right). A boys' entrance to the left and girls' to the right gave access to a long, narrow, full-depth hall on two floors, with the infants' hall to the right. In the re-entrant angles are single-storey units, with a further extension of 1898 to the left, partly rebuilt in the late C20. Exterior has round-arched windows set to single or paired shafts and responds; in the high gables are paired lights under an oculus with a sunk panel within the containing arch. Steeply-pitched roofs have coped gables, and small-scale Lombard bands at the eaves, concealing ventilation openings to the halls. One large and 2 smaller heavily modelled eaves stacks. A complex fenestration includes groups of 3 lights to an outer shafted screen under the 3 main gables, and 3 paired lights similarly to the lower hall. The lean-to entrance lobby has 4 simpler arched windows. Deep glacis-like sloping cills, various string and lintel bands. To the left of main gable to street is a plank door in arched entry; the corresponding entry to the right is now (1991) blocked. Interior: a stone open-well cantilevered stair in the left-hand lobby gives access to the boys' hall at first floor; simply detailed, with iron handrail and alternate twisted iron balusters. Upper hall has a 5-bay arch-braced roof, lower hall has moulded cornice. Off the left-hand side of each hall is a large classroom in the N wing, and to the right at ground floor the long former infants' hall. This has a series of sealed ventilators at eaves level each side, and a large classroom opens off to the left. Subsidiary Features: a lofty stone wall divides the playground at the rear of the building, and there are substantial remains of the former privy blocks set back against the outer boundary wall. The boundary walls to The Grove (qv) are also important to the setting of the School. The School log books and punishment book are retained, also an architect's development drawing (unsigned) in pencil, dated 22/06/63. This is a precious document, which shows an earlier version of the building with 3 lofty dormers to the infants' wing. The log book records for September 2nd 1872 include: "This day we opened the new School, 71 in attendance. Addresses were made ..... Rev. G. Taylor exhorting the boys to perseverance, diligence, and to careful attention to the School's ordinary work ....." Edward W. Moore was at that time the Master. The building is a very lively and carefully articulated design, little altered within, and, with the supporting documents, an important survival of C19 social history. It forms part of a major group of buildings - developed as a result of the establishment of the prison here (established 1848) - comprising Church, Vicarage, School House, School, and Alma Terrace (qqv). Listing NGR: SY6995472555

Map

Location

Grid reference SY 6995 7255 (point)
Borough (historic) Weymouth and Portland

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Record last edited

Aug 19 2014 2:33PM