Great to see a new blog, Kidbrooke Kite, giving due coverage to that corner of South East London.
As a little welcome present, here's a very topical tale. In 1953, London County Council announced that a new school in Kidbrooke would be London's first comprehensive school:
'Mr J. Brown, education officer of the London County Council, said tonight that the council felt that as people had to live and work together in a community there was no reason why they should not be brought up in a school community. He was addressing a meeting of parents at Eltham, S.E., at which he explained the council's proposal to merge six south-east London schools, including Eltham Hill girls' grammar school, into Kidbrooke Comprehensive School, for 2,000 people.
The new school, which would be the first of its kind in London, would be completed in 18 months time. The staff would be drawn from the existing schools and would number 100. Mr Brown admitted that the principal would not know her pupils as intimately as did head mistresses of smaller schools, but each teacher would be expected to get to know 30 girls well and to follow their scholastic careers closely. The comprehensive school would cost £75,000. Every consideration would be given to meetings girls' educational requirements for whatever occupation they wished to take up' (Times, 3 March 1953).
The following year, the Conservative Minster of Education over-ruled the LCC, agreeing for Kidbrooke to go ahead but stopping the closure of Eltham Hill grammar school(March 3 1954). This was a very contentious issue - there had been a petition against the closure of Eltham, but other schools felt that allowing Eltham to opt out threatened the viability of the new school: 'The staff and head mistress of Charlton Secondary School for Girls yesterday sent a telegram to the Minster of Education stating that they deplored her decision to "interfere" with the plans of the LCC to set up a comprehensive at Kidbrooke and protested at the exclusion of Eltham Hill Secondary School from the scheme' (March 4 1954).
The matter was discussed in Parliament, with Herbert Morrison (Labour MP for Lewisham South) accusing the Minister of party political bias, asking 'Did she or did she not encourage the London Conservative Party organization to involve themselves in this matter and give them some impression that she would support their efforts to oppose it?' (Times, 14 May 1954).
The Bus Strike
The school did open in September 1954, but transport arrangements for it prompted a bus workers' strike. Drivers at the New cross garage walk out against the introduction of a new schedule for the route 70 bus, brought in by London Transport 'to cope with additional traffic caused by children going to the new comprehensive school at Kidbrooke' (Times, 15 Sept 1954).
The strike affected buses across South East London: ''Six hundred drivers and conductors at the New Cross garage of London Transport, who began an unofficial strike on Wednesday, voted last night to continue the stoppage which now affects nine routes.' The Transport and General Workers Union called 'a delegate conference of busmen from every London garage' to discuss the dispute (17 Sept 1954).
After three days on strike, the bus workers decided in a meeting in Deptford to return to work - management agreed to 're-examine the complaints of the bus crews' (Times 18 September 1954).
By 1959, when a delegation of Japanese women trade unionists visited the UK, Kidbrooke Comprehensive School was sufficiently established to be included in their 'tour of British institutions' (Times, January 16 1959).
The history of post-Second World War education could be written through the lens of Kidbrooke school. Its early years show that the comprehensive experiment was undermined from the start in areas like South East London where grammar schools were allowed to continue to exist on the outer edges. Furthermore the actual implementation of comprehensive schools embodied two potentially contradictory impulses - on the one hand a socialist desire for a classless quality education, on the other hand an economic imperative to create larger institutions so that the new system did not extend the level of resources, staffing and support offered by the older grammar schools to the masses, but instead created huge, impersonal education factories.
As Michael Gove and co. set about trying to dismantle comprehensive education the question is not whether it has 'failed', but whether it has really ever been tried.
This is very good - a few years ago I did a bit of research on the school because someone had published a story that the hall roof used beams from the Dome of Discovery. The school has a huge archive of press cuttings about its early days which I would very much recommend.
ReplyDeleteI am happy to send my article on the roof to anyone interested. It turns out that the roof was designed by a Mr. Chaterjee - who I could find nothing more about. It actually pre-dates the Dome of Discovery - and I then found that the engineer on the Dome of Discovery was someone I knew and that he had some of the sections on his cellar.
It was the brave new world then... and an achievement which needs to be noted.
Thanks for the welcome Transpontine and very interesting piece.
ReplyDeleteMary - I'd be very happy to have a look at anything you have on this for the site.
Hi, I am trying to track down the rare film (if it still exists) of the concert, There's Nothing Like a Dame performed at the school in 1972. The show was to bid farewell to Dame Mary Green, who was retiring as head mistress. If you could sign post me to any archives from that period, or persons who might know what happened to the film or the special school magazine, I would be grateful. The head drama teacher was Mrs Page.
ReplyDeleteKind Regards,
Jeannie Askew (I was known as Jeannette Langley)
I was in that 😊
DeleteOops, I forgot to tick the email follow up comments.
ReplyDeleteI have an original pamphlet that was produced to celebrate the retirement of Dame Mary Green in 1972, if any one is interested. I would love to find the film of the show put on for her honour, 'There's Nothing Like a Dame'
ReplyDeleteRegards,
Jeannie Askew
I also have an original pamphlet for Dame Mary Greeen, kept by my late Father Patrick Hayes BEM School keeper 1962 until his death in 1986 and then by my mother until her passing earlier this year. My Dad was passionate about Kidbrooke, often found shouting at the girls to STOP RUNNING! along his corridors. Always took the greatest of pride when re-sealing the hall floor during the summer holidays. Always present, never not in control, don't recall one day illness until two day before his death. My father lived ate and breathed Kidbrooke, it was not just a job, but a way of life and we all shared his love.
ReplyDeleteHi Wendi, I knew your brother Peter. I was Deputy School Secretary at Sarah Siddons School in Paddington. I remember Peter when he was appointed our schoolkeeper. How is he? Regards Michael Pauling
DeleteMy husband worked with your dad Wendi. Pat Hayes had my husbands respect and admiration. He was a huge influence to him during the early 70's inspiring my husband to take on a school of his own. I attended Kidbrooke during the 60's leaving in 1969. So as you can see the school was a big part of our lives. I remember Miss Green who was to become Dame Mary. I remember how smart the school always looked. It was always clean and in good repair so you can understand my shock and dismay when I visited the school in the early 90's for a prospective parents evening to find it so sadly different, your father would have been destroyed to see just how much the building and upkeep had been let go with so much destruction all around. I sent my daughters to another school feeling sadly let down by what once had been so perfect.
ReplyDeleteI would also like to see 'There's nothing like a Dame' if anyone has a video of it. I was 13 in 1972 and in form 2BH (Miss Bhaloo from Nairobi was our form teacher).
ReplyDeleteI attended Kidbrooke in 1970, terrified at first but it became one of the best experiences of my life. Fantastic school, but unfortunately my parents moved us away and I lost all interest in school. I remember meeting Dame Mary when we were queuing in the corridor near her office for our vaccinations, she was a kind and gentle lady to us pupils
ReplyDeleteJulia Hughes - nee Steer