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Aldwark, Cuthbert Morrell House
Consists of three, mainly
late 19th –early 20th century, grade 2 Listed, two
and three storey brick-built ranges forming three sides
of a courtyard with the fourth side being formed by the grade
1 Listed St. Anthony’s Hall on the corner of Aldwark
and Peasholme Green. They were built to house the
expanding Blue Coat School which was founded in the Hall
in 1705. Grounds consisting of gardens and former play
areas are on the east side extending back from Peasholme
Green to the city walls
The two-storey Hall dates from the 15th century and was
built for the Guild of St Anthony, with a banqueting hall
over a chapel and hospital. After the Guild was dissolved
in 1627 the hall served as a meeting place for those guilds
of York which had no guild hall of their own and later as
a venue for the performance of mystery plays, archery practice,
a munitions store, house of correction and a military hospital
(after the Battle of Marston Moor in 1644).
The Blue Coat School was founded by the City Corporation
in 1705 to provide tuition, clothing and lodging for orphans
and children of the poor. It was supported by regular
subscriptions by the clergy, gentry and well-to-do citizens
of York as a form of benevolence and in the belief that it
would instil discipline and religion into the children of
the impoverished and keep them away from the vices of sloth,
beggary and debauchery. Lessons were given in the main
hall. Meals were taken and sleeping accommodation provided
in the side aisles. Kitchen and washing facilities, administration
etc. were on the ground floor.
Initially for boys only, starting with 40 in 1705 and peaking
at 84 in 1872, it provided schooling in religion and the
3 R’s and taught skills such as weaving and spinning
and training for apprenticeships at sea and for domestic
service. Girls were provided for at its sister establishment,
the Grey Coat School, first in Marygate and later in Monkgate
and 1924 lessons for both sexes were provided at St Anthony’s
Hall although the girls continued to live in Monkgate.
Outgrowing the confines of St Anthony’s Hall the school
expanded into the series of buildings surrounding the courtyard
which were constructed towards the end of the 19th century. The
first, the east wing, is of red brick with a slate roof.
It is of two storeys, with segmental arched windows openings
fitted with vertical sliding sash windows and two prominent
chimney stacks on the courtyard elevation. It was designed
by JB and W Atkinson around 1870, originally with classrooms
at ground level with a dormitory above. A single storey section
at the north end contained privies.
The second, west range, extending along Aldwark from the
corner of the Hall was designed by Demaine and Brierley in
1887 and incorporated sections of an 18th century house.
Some of its bricked up openings are still visible on the
courtyard side. It contained a ground floor drying
room and larder with two floors of dormitories above. It
is built of red brick with a slate roof and exhibits various
brick bonding patterns, including English Garden Wall, Flemish
and English Cross Bond. It has casement windows with small
panes, moulded brick features and pedimented gables. The
narrow carriage arch which provides access from Aldwark was
widened by York Conservation Trust in 2006 reusing
the original moulded hood bricks, bullnose brick jambs and
stone hinge blocks and with replica timber gates on the original
forged hinges.
This range was extended in similar style by the same architects
in 1901, also over three storeys, with a workshop at ground
level and more dormitories above. The corner staircase
and the two-,storey flat roofed, north wing were constructed
at the same time. This wing contained a bakehouse,
brushing shed (for boots?) and a coke store with a dormitory
over, later used as a chemistry laboratory.
The pupils wore characteristic uniforms (blue coats, yellow
breeches and round hats) based on the those of Christ’s
Hospital in London at all times, when out in the town and
when attending church services and civic events to maintain
a public profile which encouraged new subscriptions and reminded
the populace of their benevolence.
The school closed in 1947 after 240 years and the buildings
including St Anthony’s Hall were sold back to the City
Council for the sum of £9,000.
From the early 1950’s until it moved to purpose-built
accommodation at the University of York campus at Heslington
in 2005 the buildings were occupied by the Borthwick Institute
for Historical Research.
The buildings were purchased by the York Conservation Trust
from the City Council in 2006. Extensive renovations
and alterations by the Trust have given the three ranges around
the courtyard a new lease of life as the headquarters of the
York Archaeological Trust.
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