The Laindon School (formerly Laindon High Road County
Senior) was opened on Monday, May 7th, 1928.
The school, originally opened as Laindon High Road
Council School, initially provided education for mixed children of school age before becoming
solely secondary in 1933 when Markhams Chase Council School (now Janet Duke Primary) opened. The
schools' name then became Laindon High Road Senior School through to the 1950s.
Amongst the new admissions at the time of opening were 70 children transferred from Laindon Council
School. At the time of the transfer of Janet Duke Primary to the Markhams Chase site a further 50+
children below senior school age were transferred to Laindon Council School (now Laindon Park).
The schools' first Headmaster was Mr. George Radford, who remained in charge until
his retirement in December 1949. His assistant from February 1933 was Janet Duke who taught at the school and who had
charge of the Junior and Infants prior to the opening of Markhams Chase school later that
year. The schools other Headmasters were: Mr. Jack H.J. Woodward (1949 - 1962), who later took charge
at Woodlands Boys' School, Mr. W. Day (1963 - 1966), Mr. Arthur H.J. Chadband (1967 - c.1988), Mr.
Newton (1980s - 1990s), Mr. Brian Gillman (1990s - 1996) and Mr. Michael (Mike) Feehan (January
1997 - August 1998), the schools' last Headmaster (Acting), though by then the post had become Head Teacher. In
1966, following the departure of Mr. Day, Mrs D. Clark was appointed Acting Head.
Sometime around the 1950s the school dropped the "Senior" to became Laindon High Road County Secondary. The education standard at this
time for the majority of mainstream secondary schools
other than Grammar was Secondary Modern. The reorganisation of local education in Basildon from
September 1968 introduced Comprehensive education for all schools in the new town.
Over the years the school has
seen various building additions; the most recent in the late sixties with each department being known as a block. These were:
S block (Science), M block (Music and Drama), C block (art and crafts) and the original school became L block. T. block
(temporary) with demountable classrooms was added in the seventies and dismantled when the land
was later sold for a private housing development. In 1931 local landowner and coal merchant Mr.
William Gibbons gave permission to the school for the use of his field for football. Early on
the school also housed the areas library until it relocated sometime in the 1940s to an empty
shop at the southern end of the High Road.
A pupil House Championship was held each year
which from at least 1934 - and possibly from the time the school turned senior, used the names and associated colours Hillsmen (yellow), Plainsmen (blue),
Shoresmen (green) and Townsmen (red). This would later change sometime after July 1968 to include the following:
Fry (Elizabeth Fry), Elgar (Edward William Elgar), Slessor (Mary Slessor), Penn (William Penn), Austen (Jane Austen) and Curie (Marie Curie).
Two later name changes occurred. The first, around the mid 1960s, when the "High Road" wording was removed, and the second in the 1980s when the
word 'The' was added, which it remained until closure. In fact the school's red coloured nameboard at closure simply read
'The Laindon School'.
The schools' motto during the final years was 'Positive attitudes create excellence'.
From
the mid 1970s onwards a number of Basildon infant and junior schools began experiencing a fall in pupil numbers. Several schools
like Bryn, Dunton, Nevendon, Springfield and Chowdhary did close and this reduced the numbers applying for places at the
town's secondary schools. In Laindon both Nicholas and Laindon had seen pupil numbers drop causing concern at Essex
County Council who proposed an amalgamation of the two schools which resulted in the creation of The James Hornsby High
School, (named after the last schoolmaster to teach in the St. Nicholas Church annexe).
The Nicholas site was considered the best location for the new school which meant the closure of the Laindon school in July
1998.
From September 1998 the school became a temporary home for the James Hornsby High School while the former
Nicholas site in Leinster Road underwent an extensive refurbishment over a two year period. The last day of education, this was
brought forward to allow more time to transfer to the Leinster Road site, was Friday 7th July, after which the school closed for
good.
The swimming pool, opened in April 1960, was for many years 'open-air', finally receiving a roof in 1972.
The
former sixth form block would later be used by the "Schools Out" after school club and "First Steps Day Nursery"*.
The future of the school buildings and playing fields appeared undecided for many years with much of it boarded up. That was
until May 2007 when the bulldozers moved in to begin demolition of the site, including the 1970s built caretakers house, in
preparation for a new housing development to bear the name Radford Park.
The original school building facing the High
Road was of pre-new town vintage, and joins a long list of notable demolitions to have taken place since the towns
inception.
Building work on the new Radford Park housing development began soon after the schools demolition. This
was by property builders Bellway Homes, who acquired the site from Essex County Council. The former Archer Road school
playing field was also lost to the eventual development.
Notes of interest:
1) In 1926 the County Education Authority acquired a site at Laindon along the west side of High Road towards its northern
end for a new School. Billericay Urban District Council's Dr. Joseph Douglas Wells, O.B.E., M.B., B.Ch., Medical Officer of Health,
stated in his annual report: "The site chosen is not the best one which was available. It is on a main road which gets a very great
deal of motor traffic up and down it, and this constitutes a danger to the children running out from the School. The site
is low-lying, and in the winter very wet indeed. A good bridge is required to make entrances and exits across the wide ditch
in the roadside, thus adding to the expense of the School." (Source: Annual Report of the Medical Officer of Health,
B.R.D.C., 1926.) - (Billericay Rural District Council) 2) First Steps day nursery would relocate to Durham Road to the site previously
occupied by Rawley plant hire. 3) The Radford Park housing development took its name from the first headmaster of Laindon
High Road, George Radford. |
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