SCHOOLS
The Free School was founded with a bequest of
£600 to the rector and churchwardens as trustees
from Walter Dyer, of Chancery Lane, London, by
his will dated 1706. A schoolmaster, chosen by the
rector and churchwardens and approved by the
Bishop of Salisbury, was to be paid £20 a year to
teach reading, writing, arithmetic and Anglican
doctrine to twenty poor boys of the parish between
the ages of eight and fourteen. Richard Uphill, of
Wilton, bequeathed a further £1,000 to the school
by his will dated 1716. Rules made in 1731 laid down
that a schoolhouse in East (now North) Street,
already purchased with part of Dyer's money, was
to be held by the schoolmaster rent free and kept in
repair by the trustees; an allowance of £4 a year
was to be made for stationery and firing, with another
£25 a year for clothing the boys at Easter, and £20
a year for placing four boys at £5 each to handicraft
trades or husbandry; surplus income was to be saved
for repairs and allowances. The governors of the
school, as distinct from the trustees, were to consist
of the mayor and burgesses or aldermen who resided
in the borough and parish, together with the rector
and churchwardens. They nominated boys and
master when need arose, subject in the case of the
master to the approval of the bishop. (fn. 1)
Robert Sumption, by his will dated 1775, gave
£1,000 to this charity to increase the salary of the
schoolmaster, and for the better clothing, education
and apprenticing of the boys. Henry Ford, of
Burdens Ball Farm, who had been educated in the
school, left £100 to it in his will, dated 1831. The
school endowments were further augmented by
the legacies of £25 from William Seagrim (1840),
£100 from John Harris Flooks (1841), and £800
from Sarah Lampard (1849). (fn. 2)
The school and dwelling houses were said to be
in good repair in 1833; nineteen boys attended at the
time, and the religious and educational requirements
of the foundation were being fulfilled. Teaching
was given free, but the boys paid for school and
ciphering books. About three boys a year were
apprenticed to handicrafts, but none had entered
husbandry; a premium of £8 10s. was paid for each
boy. (fn. 3)
Under the charter of 1885 the functions of the
governors were vested in six town councillors acting
with the rector and churchwardens; a new body of
governors was chosen in 1893 to elect a new schoolmaster, and in 1894 they made a number of changes.
The more important of these increased the salary
of the schoolmaster and also the stationery allowance, but decreased the clothing allowance, and
limited the number of apprenticeships granted in
any one year to four. New rules for the future
management of the school were laid down; the
number of foundationers, which had recently
increased to 24, was reduced to 20, and admissions
were limited to boys who had passed the fourth
standard of examination in a national school; no boy
might leave before he was fourteen, or stay on after
he was fifteen. The curriculum was extended to
include the subjects normally taught in the higher
division of a good elementary school. The yearly
clothing allowance was fixed at £40 and the apprenticeship grants at £34. Classrooms, lighting, and
ventilation were improved by alteration and
re-building.
By 1903 the school had a playground and carpenter's shop and the use of playing fields. In
addition to the head master and assistant master, a
woman teacher taught junior elementary subjects,
and French, German, music, drill and carpentry
were taught by visiting masters and mistresses. The
greatly extended curriculum included elementary
science, but there was no laboratory. Besides the
foundation boys, who received free education, there
were paying boarders, weekly boarders and day
pupils; the foundationers were no longer taught in
separate classrooms, although their separate dress
was retained. In 1902 there were 22 fee-paying day
boys and six fee-paying boarders.
Under a Board of Education scheme of 1914 the
existing governors and trustees were replaced by a
body consisting of the mayor and aldermen, the
rector and churchwardens and the senior town
councillors. In 1923 the school was discontinued
under a new scheme made by the Board of Education. The net income of the charity was to be applied
to certain specified objects: in the first place money
was to be paid for the maintenance and improvement of any public elementary school, whose
religious instruction was in accordance with
Anglican principles, but excluding the schools of
the Local Education Authority; financial support
was also to be given to a Sunday school on the same
principles. The residue of the income was to provide
for special educational facilities in addition to those
provided by the Local Education Authority, as for
example the practical and technical instruction of
boys, and the provision of buildings, tools, seeds and
other apparatus. The remainder of the income might
be used to provide exhibitions to secondary and
technical schools, training colleges and universities,
for boys of the borough, who had attended a public
elementary school for not less than two years. The
governors might still receive additional endowments
for the general purposes of the foundation. (fn. 4) The
former school house in East (now North) Street,
called in 1961 the Moat House, is a two-storied
building of colour-washed brick. Its front dates
from the 18th century, but there may be remains of
an earlier house within. Classrooms were built
adjoining the house.
In the early 19th century the only other schools
for poor children were three Sunday schools. One
was attached to the parish church and in 1819 had
40 boys, 25 girls and another 27 children who went
to learn to write. There was also a Congregational
and a Methodist Sunday School. (fn. 5) By 1835 there
were 100 children at the parochial school, and 156
at the Congregational school, but the Methodist
school was closed. (fn. 6) At this date there were also
five fee-paying daily schools with a total of 87
children, and two boarding schools with 18 children.
The parochial school became a daily school in
1842 but was not united with the National Society
until 1902. (fn. 7) The school was in West Street in the
premises of a former cloth mill, and had accommodation for 310 children; it received a Board of
Education grant towards teachers' salaries and the
training of apprentices. (fn. 8) In 1858 70 to 80 boys were
taught by a certificated master and two pupil
teachers, and 180 to 190 infants were taught by an
assistant mistress. (fn. 9) Later in the century girls were
admitted, and in 1919 there were 102 boys, 110
girls, and 118 infants on the register. (fn. 10) In 1935 the
school was reorganized into the Wilton Church of
England Junior School, which a year later had 170
junior mixed children, and 92 infants, and the
Wilton Church of England Senior School for 200
mixed children. (fn. 11) These schools became controlled
schools under the 1944 Education Act. The Junior
School remained in West Street but the Senior
School was moved to a new building at the Hollows
to the north-west of the town.
The Congregationalists' school also became a
daily school and was affiliated to the Union of
British Schools. In 1858 between 150 and 170
children were taught and the school was praised for
its teaching and good equipment. (fn. 12) The school was
still working in 1871, (fn. 13) but later in the century it
was closed.
Two dame schools were together teaching 50
children in cottages in 1858, but they were apparently closed by 1871. (fn. 14) Mrs. Sidney Herbert's
Church of England School for Girls (later known
as Wilton Park School) had a longer life. It was
opened in 1838 in buildings inside Wilton Park and
in 1858 between 30 and 40 girls were being taught
by a certificated mistress. (fn. 15) In 1906 it had accommodation for 41 girls and it continued in existence
until 1920. (fn. 16)
CHARITIES
William Hews of East Knoyle by his will dated
1700 gave £5 to the poor of Wilton and the interest
on this, amounting to 10s. in 1708, was distributed
by the mayor and corporation. The interest was
subsequently allowed to accumulate so that by 1820
a sum of £13 was distributed at the rate of 2s. 6d.
to each poor person. After this the interest was again
allowed to accumulate for distribution in seasons of
special distress. (fn. 17) Hews's charity became one of the
Wilton Municipal Charities in 1885 (see below).
The benefaction of Robert Sumption of the parish
of St. Clement Dane's, London, was, by contrast, a
very considerable one: by his will dated 1775
Sumption left a sum sufficient to yield £126 a year,
which was to be applied to various Wilton charities.
The Wilton Free School received £30, and £60 was
used to establish a charity for the clothing and
support of 5 poor men and 5 poor women, natives
of Wilton over 50 years old, who had resided there
continuously for 7 years and were receiving no other
parish alms. In 1781 it was agreed, however, that
the recipients of the charity might receive further
relief during sickness or other emergency, but in
1783 the charity was confined to people over 60
years old. Another £30 of the interest was allocated
for marriage portions, not exceeding £10, to poor
young women resident in Wilton. Individual portions never amounted to less than £6, and the sum
was equally divided between the applicants, but in
1827 it was decided that the number of recipients
in any one year should not exceed four and, if a
choice had to be made, it would fall on the most
deserving who were to marry persons not of the
parish of Wilton. Finally, the remaining interest
was to provide £4 for the Rector of Wilton to preach
an annual sermon in the parish church, and £2 for
the bell-ringers on that day. (fn. 18) In his will dated 1826
James Swayne of Wilton left £500 to augment
Sumption's charity for poor men and women. (fn. 19)
Further augmentation was made in the will of Sarah
Lampard, dated 1849. (fn. 20) Sumption's charity and
these later endowments were brought under control
of the trustees of the Wilton Municipal Charities in
1885 (see below).
The smaller benefactors of the 19th century
devoted their charities as a rule partly to a bread
dole, as a form of poor relief, and partly to the
support of the Wilton Sunday School. James Swayne
bequeathed £19 19s. to this school, and it also benefited by the interest on £20 left at an unknown date
by John Thomas, a clothier of Wilton, and a further
gift of James Swayne and Samuel Hawes. From
Mease's charity (see below) the Sunday school
received £10 a year, and £3 a year to buy two Bibles
as prizes, while Sarah Langstaff, by her will dated
1869, left £19 19s. to be used by the rector for the
school. The annual income of all these endowments,
amounting to £11 7s. 8d. in 1903, sufficed to clean
and warm the room of the Sunday school, and to
supply books for the 250 children attending it. (fn. 21)
Charities for the distribution of bread to the poor
were established by a bequest of £100 by John
Thomas, augmented by gifts from James Swayne
and Samuel Hawes: the bread was to be distributed
to the Protestant poor of the parish just before
Christmas every year. (fn. 22) A similar bequest of £200
in the will of William Seagrim, dated 1840, (fn. 23) and a
bequest of £500 in the will of John Harris Flooks,
dated 1841, the last applying to the parish of South
Newton, alternately with that of Wilton, increased the
bread charity. The charity was administered by the
relieving officer of the parish, and the receipt of
other poor relief did not disqualify. The distribution
of one loaf was made on New Year's day, and other
loaves were given away during the winter. (fn. 24)
The legacy of Thomas Mease in his will dated
1816 constituted as a whole the most considerable
of the 19th-century benefactions, but was in
practice subdivided into a number of smaller
charities. The interest at first amounted to £200,
but later fell to £171. In addition to the bequest to
the Sunday school mentioned above, there was one
to the three local friendly societies meeting at the
Bell and Greyhound Inns, Wilton, and at the Bell
Inn, Ditchampton: their most deserving members
were to receive £5, £2 and £2 respectively. The
report of the Charity Commissioners of 1903 showed
that to some extent this charity was out of date, for
most of the work hitherto done by the friendly
societies was by then being done by larger societies,
more especially the Oddfellows and the Free
Foresters. It was, however, generally agreed that the
society meeting at the Bell Inn, Ditchampton, was
still doing useful work. Mease's gift also included
an annual sum of £62 10s. to be paid in vouchers as
maternity benefits to 50 poor married women, whose
husbands had resided for the previous three years
in Wilton. A further £96 of interest was to be
applied to the clothing and support of 10 poor
widows, and 6 poor widowers over 50 years old,
who were natives or parishioners of Wilton, or had
resided there for 7 years, and had not received alms
from any parish. This was simply a dole and, if
outdoor relief had not been obtained as well, the
recipients would undoubtedly have had to go to the
workhouse. Mease's gift also provided an annual
payment of £6 (later reduced to £5 10s.) to the
governors of Salisbury Infirmary on condition that
the resident curate of Wilton should be allowed to
nominate patients; in 1903 the then curate was said
to have nominated 15 or 16 out-patients, and 5 in-patients. A gift was also made for furthering
instruction in the evening school. (fn. 25) It is clear that
the benefits of this large charity were scattered
rather too widely to be of great practical advantage
to those who received them. Its administration was
transferred to the trustees of the Wilton Municipal
Charities in 1885 (see below).
In 1887 James Rawlence, of Bulbridge, gave
£1,000 to the trustees of the Wilton Municipal
Charities to be invested for the maintenance of a
parish nurse for the sick poor. This gift was
increased by £400 from the children of James
Rawlence, and by £25 from the Wilton Charter
Celebration Committee, but the fund was still not
large enough to meet all expenses, and the difference
was made good by voluntary contributions, while a
rent-free house for the nurse was supplied by Lord
Pembroke. (fn. 26)
Wilton charities were thus quite numerous, although generally small in amount because so much
subdivided, and their administration presented
considerable problems. Under the Borough of
Wilton Scheme, 1885, all charity property vested
in or under the direction of the old corporation, was
henceforth vested in the Trustees of Municipal
Charities in the borough for its future administration. There was some doubt which charities were
concerned, but for the time being the new trustees
administered the Free School, (fn. 27) Sumption's charity,
with its subsidiary endowments, Hews's charity,
Mease's charity, with its subsidiary endowments,
and St. Giles's Hospital. (fn. 28) In 1894, however, the new
governors appointed for the Free School undertook
the administration also of Sumption's gifts according
to the original stipulation of the benefactor; while
the rector and the clerk to the trustees of the
Municipal Charities continued to administer Mease's
charity, so that only Hews's charity and the St.
Giles Hospital remained in the sole charge of the
trustees appointed in 1885. In 1896 the powers of
the parish council in respect of charities were delegated to the town council, (fn. 29) but these powers were
never acted upon because of the difficulty in distinguishing between parochial and ecclesiastical
charities. By 1901 most of the trustees originally
appointed in 1885 had died, but, with the exception
of the Free School and Sumption's charity, no new
appointments had been made, so that the burden
fell heavily upon the rector. In 1901 the town
council applied to the Charity Commissioners for
the appointment of the mayor and aldermen, and
the rector and churchwardens to administer in future
the whole of the Wilton charities, that is, the
charities of Mease, Sumption, James Swayne, John
Thomas, Hews, St. Giles and the Free School. The
Commissioners accordingly held an inquiry at
Wilton in 1902, the report on which was issued in
1903.
In 1907 a revised scheme for the administration
of Wilton charities was approved by the Charity
Commissioners. Under this scheme a body of 13
trustees was formed, who were empowered to make
regulations for the management of the whole of the
non-educational charities within the limits prescribed by the scheme. (fn. 30) In 1910 slight changes
were made within the scheme, and fixed yearly
payments were apportioned to Sumption's charity,
the non-educational charities of Mease and Lampard, and the charity of James Rawlence and others.
The residue of the income of the united charities
was to be applied to the general benefit of the poor
of the parish. In particular the funds were to be
applied in aid of four special kinds of charity: first,
to any dispensary, infirmary, hospital or convalescent home, and any provident club or society
for the supply of coal, clothes or other necessaries;
secondly, towards the provision of nurses and
midwives, and the travelling expenses of patients to
hospitals and infirmaries, and also towards the cost
of an outfit for persons under twenty-one entering
service or a trade or other occupation; thirdly, to
supply clothes, linen, bedding, fuel, medical and
other assistance in cases of sickness within an annual
limit of £20, or temporary relief in emergency,
within the same limit; and fourthly, to provide
pensions to poor persons of good character, who had
resided in the parish for two years, and who through
age, ill-health, infirmity or accident could not fully
maintain themselves, but who had not received poor
law relief other than sick relief. (fn. 31)
A second revision of the scheme in 1955 extended
the benefits of the charities to all the inhabitants of
the borough as enlarged since 1910, and added to
the list of objects for general aid the provision of
domestic help for the sick and aged, and payments
to homes for the aged. (fn. 32) Five years earlier, the total
income from the Wilton united charities, not
including Rawlence's nurse's charity, was £408, so
that after the fixed sums had been spent the amount
left to distribute in general aid was not great. (fn. 33)
Nevertheless, the Wilton united charities scheme of
1907, with the modifications of 1910 and 1955,
simplified the administration and concentrated the
resources of the widespread private benevolence of
the previous two centuries.