Tunstall School Treated Boys Like Little Soldiers

High Street School in Tunstall was demolished in 1994.

About two years later, Robert Turner, a teacher at the school from 1953 to 1963, was interviewed by Tunstall History Society.

Robert, who taught Art, Physical Education and Games, said:

It was a small school facing High Street, nestling between factories and rows of small, terraced houses. Tunstall reminded me of a T. S. Lowry painting, with small figures moving about.

The building housed two schools: a co-educational infants’ school and a boys’ secondary modern school. The infants’ school was on the ground floor, and the boys’ school was on the first floor. There were about 200 boys in the secondary modern. They were treated like little soldiers. Order and discipline prevailed. Every teacher kept a cane in their classroom. They used it when boys talked in class or ran along the corridor.

The boys were marched in lines two abreast to the swimming pool in Greengates Street or along Pickle Onion Entry to the park, where they played football and cricket.

At the start of school, a teacher blew a whistle. The boys stood still in the playground. The teacher blew his whistle again, and they walked to their designated lines, waiting silently for the whistle to blow a third time. When it blew, the boys marched into school, supervised by prefects

The school hall had a flat roof, which was used for physical training and by boys who were members of the art club. The roof gave them a wonderful pictorial vantage point, enabling them to paint and sketch views of Tunstall’s pottery factories with their bottle ovens and kilns, churches, shops and terraced houses. 

Members of the art club won many prizes for their paintings. In 1962, they starred in a BBC film. It was shown in the United Kingdom and throughout Europe by Eurovision.

If you were a pupil at High Street School, please visit Share Your Story: Who Was Your Favourite Teacher? and tell us about your school days there.   

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Historic Tunstall: Absalom Read Wood (1851-1922)

Absalom Reade Wood was one of North Staffordshire’s leading Architects. He created Tunstall’s unique Victorian Civic Centre.

When Absalom Reade Wood died in 1922, North Staffordshire lost one of its leading architects. During his long life, Absalom had created numerous churches and chapels, houses and factories, schools and civic buildings throughout the district.

He was born at Burslem in 1851, and attended the town’s Wesleyan Day School. When he left school, Absalom was articled to Shelton architect Robert Scrivener.

Absalom was a small man, with ‘a comfortable, neat figure and a short beard’ and a warm, friendly personality that gave him an optimistic outlook on life. He was a keen sportsman who enjoyed cycling, swimming, and playing cricket, tennis, and golf.

He became an architect during the early 1870s and established his own practice in Tunstall in 1874.

A year later, Absalom became the town’s part-time surveyor, a position he held until the creation of the County Borough of Stoke-on-Trent in 1910. Working closely with John Nash Peake and the town clerk, Arthur Llewellyn, he modernised Tunstall’s market hall. He created the town’s unique late Victorian Civic Centre containing his piece de resistance the town hall, which opened in 1875.

Other civic buildings Absalom designed included Kidsgrove’s town hall and Longton’s Sutherland Institute. Burslem School Board employed him to build Jackfield, Park Road and Longport Schools.

Absalom married Mary Holdcroft, the daughter of pottery manufacturer William Holdcroft. The couple had five children – two boys and three girls. The Wood family were Methodist. They worshipped at Hill Top Methodist Church in Burslem. In 1889, Absalom was employed to enlarge and modernise the church.

Absalom’s best-known building in Burslem is the Art School in Queen Street. Situated on land opposite the Wedgwood Institute, which was given by Thomas Hulme, the school cost £8,500. The school opened in 1907, and one of its most famous alumni was pottery designer Clarice Cliff.

Clarice was born in Meir Street, Tunstall, on 20 January 1899. Before going to Burslem Art School, she attended High Street School, Tunstall, Summerbank Road School, Tunstall and Tunstall Art School, which was housed in the Jubilee Buildings in Station Road (now The Boulevard). High Street and Summerbank Road Schools were designed by Absalom, as were the Jubilee Buildings.

Absalom died at his home Hillcrest, Woodland Avenue, Wolstanton on 21 December 1922.

Absalom Reade Wood (1851-1922) is one of a series of articles about North Staffordshire’s history written by Betty Martin before her death. Other articles from the series will be posted from time to time.