Clifton House School | |
Motto: | Esse quam videri |
Motto Translation: | to be, rather than to seem |
Location: | Harrogate, North Riding of Yorkshire |
Country: | England |
Former Name: | Clifton College (later known as Clifton House Preparatory School) |
Type: | Private preparatory school and boarding school |
Religious Affiliation: | Anglican |
Established: | 1899 |
Founder: | James Walter Nuttall |
Closed: | 1968 |
Gender: | boys' school |
Age Range: | 5 – 14 years |
Enrollment: | Up to 100+ |
Colors: | Red, yellow and black |
Publication: | Aquila magazine |
Clifton House School was a private boys' preparatory school which flourished in Harrogate, North Riding of Yorkshire, England, between 1899 and 1968. It was founded in Clifton House in Queens Parade just as George Mearns Savery's Harrogate College for boys in Bilton was closing, thus acquiring the name of Clifton College, then Clifton House School. It kept that name until its last years when it became Clifton House Preparatory School. In 1909 the school established the first scout pack in Harrogate.
During its time, the school had some notable staff and pupils, including former pupils Jack Ogden the jewellery historian, and Major General Michael Walsh, who was awarded the Distinguished Service Order in the year in which the school closed. In its heyday the school was in a prime position, facing Harrogate's Stray; its place is now taken by a block of flats.
Clifton House School was created by James Walter Nuttall in 1899, possibly benefiting from the closure of George Mearns Savery's Harrogate College for boys at Strathmore on Ripon Road, although the existence of the two schools overlapped a little in that year.[1] [2] It was located at Clifton House, 6 Queen Parade, Harrogate. That house had previously been used by Alfred Lord Tennyson when visiting Harrogate.[3] [4] In 1899 the school was at first called Clifton College, then for many years it was Clifton House School. In its latter years it was known as Clifton House Preparatory School. In 1900, while still at Queen Parade, the school's pupils included "Indian and Colonial boys", i.e. "boys of families in Indian and Colonial service".[5]
From 1903 or 1906, and still headed by Nuttall, it was relocated at a property built by developer Isaac Pickard in Stray Road in the same town. The school magazine was named, Aquila. In 1899 the school's advertisement declared a healthy situation, a "resident foreign master", and preparation for examinations.[6] The school motto was: Esse quam videri (to be, rather than to seem). In the 1950s the school uniform was "grey shorts, grey or white shirt, blazer, tie and cap which were red, yellow and black", although a few years later the blazer was red, gold and green.
The school took part in inter-school cricket tournaments.[7]
In 1909 the 10th Harrogate Clifton House Scout Pack was formed at the school. On 9 July 1921 Lord Baden Powell, in the presence of division commissioner of the Girl Guides, Laura Veale, presented the pack with Peter's Pole. The pack received the honour because it had "won the award of best pack in the United Kingdom [having gained] most marks for efficiency".[8] In 1945 the scoutmaster was Mr A. Hill. That year, the scouts had attended a summer camp at Arnside, and the next planned summer camp was to be held in North Wales.[9]
The scout pack continued to exist after 1968 when Clifton House School closed. In 1978 the scout pack transferred to St Wilfrid's Church,[10] where in due course the 90-year anniversary of its 1909 foundation was celebrated. It was attended by Clifton House School old boy and former 10th Harrogate scout Michael Walsh, who was by that time Chief Scout (retired).[11]
The school closed in 1968, and was demolished in 1970.[12] In 1969 the school's former sports field was leased to Harrogate Cricket Club, for the use of its junior section.[13] In 1989 there was an old boys' reunion, and future reunions were planned.[14]
At the school during 1914 and 1915, two young pupils Norman Clay and Geoffrey Alfred James Clay wrote letters home. War-related selections from the letters are copied here verbatim:
The artillery are coming soon because we saw some soldiers measuring the length of the stray I do not know why they should do that I hope it is for firing it would be lovely to see them firing the guns, we will have every thing here when the Artillery comes ... There is about 20 old boys joined us to go to the front. We have just seen an old boy in his uniform he did look nice ... We have just been out to see such a lot of Soldiers some were Cavalry and some were Infantry the Cavalry were Yorkshire Hussars and some were Dragoons they each had a band they did sound lovely ... Mr Scott came last Monday night and in the morning he showed us a GERMAN HELMET it is such a funny thing all the helmets in the German army have had the spikes taken off Mr Scott said that it was because they wanted them to make into ammunition because they were getting short and because to that they could seen quite easily ... Lots of the boys have soldiers and we have fights in the gym I wish we had that big gun of ours it would blow the enemie’s lines to pieces.
The school possessed a war memorial plaque dedicated to fifteen or sixteen of its former pupils who had died in service as a result of the First World War. After the school closed, the plaque was renovated by the Rev. St John Turner, vicar of St Mark's Church, Harrogate, who acquired a faculty from the Ripon diocese to hang the plaque in the church. The plaque was re-dedicated there on 12 June 1988, and former pupils of the school were invited to the dedication service. This event prompted further old boys' reunions from 1988 onwards.[15] As of 2024, the plaque was missing.[16]
A list of staff was given at Anthony Eden's 2007 website on the subject of Norwood School. The site has been archived.[17]
Savery was not on the staff of Clifton House School, but his pioneering development of Harrogate College for boys in Ripon Road forms the background for the development of Clifton House College in Queens Parade. His flourishing business closed just as the latter was founded by James Walter Nuttall, for whom the business did well from the start, possibly taking boys from the closed school. George Mearns Savery was born in Jamaica, the son of a Wesleyan minister. As a child he lived with his family in Vogue, Cornwall, surrounded by copper miners.[18] He received his Bachelor of Arts degree from Lincoln College, Oxford in 1876, and his Master of Arts in 1880,[19] [20] being president of the Oxford Union Society in 1876. Beginning while still an undergraduate, between at least 1871 and 1881 he was a classical tutor and housemaster at the Wesleyan College (now Queen's College, Taunton) in Somerset.[21] [22] [23] By 1891 he was headmaster of Ripon Road College, later called Harrogate College, at Bilton.[24] living in-house with staff and pupils. He was headmaster of that boys' school until it closed in 1899. He was noted for his "administrative capacity", and he was said by the Halifax Evening Courier to have had a "kindly disposition".[25]
In Harrogate Town Council he served as councillor for West Ward, and he served on Harrogate United District School Board. At one point he was chairman of Harrogate Literary Society.[26] He is remembered today for founding Harrogate Ladies' College in 1893.[27] [28] When this headmaster died at Grange-over-Sands after a long illness, he left £18,994 gross .[29] [30]
James Walter Nuttall was the son of the registrar of births and deaths Daniel Nuttall of Spotland, Rochdale, Greater Manchester, who had at least seven children.[31] At age 19 in 1881, Nuttall was a boarder at a Westminster training college.[32] By 1891 Nuttall was married and back in Spotland as a certified schoolmaster, with his wife and a 12-year-old servant.[33] By 1896 he was the principal of a "flourishing school" in Morecambe.[34]
Nuttall's school was established in Clifton House at 6 Queens Parade in 1899 and named Clifton House School, though known as Clifton College at first. As founding owner, headmaster and acting housemaster, James Walter Nuttall lived there,[35] from at least 1899 with his wife, children, and his father in law William Sutton, a retired Inland Revenue employee and Methodist preacher. Sutton continued to preach, but died in 1899 at the school.[36] [37] The 1901 census finds Nuttall still living at the school in Queen Parade.[38] Nuttall was still headmaster of the school in 1903 or 1906 when it was moved from 6 Queen Parade, Harrogate to Stray Road.[39] He retired as headmaster around 1924.[40] Nuttall died in 1928 and was buried at Harlow Hill Cemetery, and his monument is a carved Celtic cross.[41]
One of the teachers at the school was Gordon William George "Charlie" Cass, who was employed there from 1923. A veteran of the First World War, he had served in the Royal Air Force or Royal Flying Corps.[42] Cass left Clifton School in 1936 to found, and become headmaster of, Norwood College.[43] [44]
Harold Styan, O.B.E., was a physical training instructor during the First World War. By the age of 20 he was an army PT instructor and drill sergeant, training one battalion after another.[45] In 1921 he was running a school of gymnastics in the Harrogate area,[46] including classes for men and women at the Belvedere YMCA.[47] His name was given to the Harold Styan Charity for Youth, based in Harrogate,[48] and a youth club.[12] [49] He was awarded the Order of the British Empire in 1972 for services to youth.[50] He was a gym master at various schools including Clifton House School,[51] retiring from Grosvenor House School, Harrogate, in 1982 aged 87.[52]
In 1953 Dennis Benjamin Curry, who was a master at the school, drew public attention by crashing his car through a concrete fence and overturning near to Harrogate gas works, at midnight on a Saturday. Those involved escaped unhurt, apart from cuts and bruises.[53]
Some original letters from Clifton House School old boys Norman Clay and Geoffrey Alfred James Clay are reproduced on Anthony Eden's website. They were written before and during the First World War.[54] Between 2005 and 2012, some old boys of the school mailed their memories of the school to Eden's website. That website is now archived. For example, Jack Ogden remembered "bad food, being caned, memorising Latin and a very pretty young matron who dabbed every inch of me with calamine lotion when I had chickenpox".[55]
One former pupil of the school was Brigadier Sir Arthur Maxwell "Max" Ramsden, C.B., O.B.E., C.D., D.L., who was knighted in 1954 for "political and public services to Yorkshire".[56] Following Clifton House, he attended Wakefield Grammar School, had a "distinguished military career",[57] and was a partner in the solicitors' firm Ramsden, Sykes and Ramsden, Huddersfield. In 1946 he was president of the City of Leeds Junior Conservative Association, and in 1951 president of Leeds Federation of Young Conservative Associations, later becoming a director of the Yorkshire Conservative Newspaper company. He also served amateur football clubs, boys' clubs and the YMCA. He received his O.B.E. in 1948, and his Order of the Bath in 1945, becoming aide-de-camp to George VI in 1940. He served on the council of Leeds University, and in 1949 was appointed Deputy Lieutenant of the West Riding of Yorkshire.[58] In 1957, at the age of 62, he fatally shot himself following a period of illness.[59] [60]
See main article: Michael Walsh (British Army officer). Another former pupil of the school was Major General Michael Walsh,[61] who was a member of the scout troop there, and "went on to attain the rare distinction of gaining the King's Scout Award with Gold Cords, which at that time was the movement's highest training award for proficiency and achievement". On his retirement from the army in 1981, he returned to North Yorkshire to become the county's Chief Scout, a position he held until 1988.[62] He was awarded the Distinguished Service Order in 1968.[63]
Lieutenant Graham Walter Scott of the Royal Navy was an alumnus of Harrogate House School. He was the second son of Herbert Scott, who owned a chain of grocery stores across Yorkshire, including a branch in Harrogate. He joined the navy in 1945, and served in the cruiser HMS Jamaica off Korea. When he completed his elementary flight training as a naval airman, he came top of his class in practical flying and theory. He was a rugby union player for the Harrogate club. While stationed at Air Station Culdrose, he was killed on 11 November 1952 when piloting a Gloster Meteor, which crashed at Carminawe Farm, Mawgan, near Helston, Cornwall.[64] [65] He had a younger brother, Peter Scott, director of the above grocery chain, who also attended Harrogate House School.[66]
Brigadier Malcolm Cubiss of the West Yorkshire Regiment was a pupil of Clifton House School and Bradford Grammar School.[67] He joined up in 1947, serving as an officer in the national service with the 1st Battalion in Austria. He served in the Korean War, in which he received the Military Cross for bravery.[68] During his career, he was adjutant of the 5th Battalion of the West Yorkshire Regiment (Territorial Army) York, commanding officer of the King's Division Depot at Strensall, and Deputy Commander, Western District, Shrewsbury.[69] Cubiss lost his right hand in Belfast in 1973. It was replaced with a hook, which he kept "as sharp as a razor".[67]
There are records of Clifton House School, relating to 1944 and 1956–1960, at the National Archives at Kew, ED 109/7202 and ED 172/263/10.[70] [71]