Doug Glading. Last update 12/2/2024
2. Blenheim House / Brodrick House / Stranraer School
Location: unknown
Some earnings numbers for that era. Wages Per Year: in the 1700's
· Agricultural Labourers: £17, 15s., 7d. average yearly nominal income, 1710.
· General Labourers: £19, 4s., 5d. average yearly nominal income, 1710
· Head housemaid, 5 Pounds (per year) – 1761
· Skilled men such as bricklayers and masons 33 shillings (per week) –
see advert thought to be c. 1864. Principal Mr H J Atkins
The house next to Heathfield Farm, on Catisfield Road near the Avenue/Peak Lane junction, which was called Blenheim House is the likely location (NB doesn’t appear on pre-1900 maps)
Note that fields 859 & 857 appear to have been owned by a Mr W D Lowe (see below for him)
From (I think) ‘’The Book of Fareham’ by Brian Musselwhite, Lesley Burton
There seem to have been no adverts for this school. The location is not certain - but because later maps show the Blenheim House building was divided into two, and these were called Broderick Lodge and Stranraer, it's likely it was here. .
The dates need investigating. . However Stranraer School was definitely here in 1901 yet the article above says Broderick House closed in 1916
NB. There was also a "Broderick House" school in Alverstoke c. 1907
A 1960 map
A 1960 map
This school was also for young gentlemen. It was run by
Walter
Bezant Lowe (1854-1928)
He went to Rugby it is said (becoming head boy?)
and S. John's College, Cambridge, where he graduated in 1877 with a First
(1876) in science, chiefly chemistry. From 1877 till 1879 he was on the
Britannia as one of the tutors of the future king George V and his elder
brother.
In 1888 he ran Stranraer School Bournemouth.
In the 1891 Census he lived at Mayles Farm House, Wickham. Had a small (boarding) school there.
In the 1901 census STRANRAER school is definitely in Catisfield Road. opposite Catisfield Villa (aka Heathfield Cottage). Living there are Walter Bezant-Lowe, wife Florence, Daughter Hilda, 2 assistant teachers, 11 pupils age 8 to 17, 4 servants. There seem to have been no general press adverts for this school.
The school there till at least 1906.
Portsmouth News reports of 1897, 1899, 1901 show several boys from Stranraer gaining Certs
In 1904the school was advertising for football matches wanted
The Barney family owned Lysses House in Fareham High Street until 1946 when it was sold at auction for approximately £3000 to a schoolmaster, Mr Godefroy, who transformed the building into a boys’ private day school.
The school ran very successfully for about 10 years, in conjunction with an offshoot at Heathfield House, Catisfield, on the corner of the Avenue and Peak Lane
This used to be the Senior boys and boarding part of Lysees school, the junior part of being in High Street. The boarders were mainly from wealthy families living abroad.
After this time, Mr Godefroy
moved the school to Rhinefield in the New Forest.
With the road widening in the 60s, parts of the building were demolished and it became the Heathfield Manor Hotel, nowadays the Oast and Squire.
In September 1965 Catisfield House became Meon Cross Boys
School
Under the Headship of Mr Meredith, in the school moved to a permanent site in Catisfield with numbers rising to 170 boys. It gained a reputation for preparing the boys well for the Common Entrance into public schools and local day schools including PGS, Christ’s Hospital and Churcher’s College amongst other academic institutions.
In 1969 in response to parents who could find no comparable school for their daughters, Mr Meredith and Mr Timberlake purchased Burnt House and opened the doors to girls.
In1973 in response to the changing face of education Meoncross became a senior school, thereby offering education up to GCSE. Ten years later and the whole school relocated to Burnt House and an extensive building programme began to provide modern classrooms, a technical block, language and science laboratories.
17/3/1967 Deed of partition of the Catisfield House
land to give Harvester Drive – divided into plots 2/3/4; 5/6/7; 8/9; 10/11; 12
(12 is the site on Catisfield Lane, where ‘Harmony’ was built next to
Catisfield House)
8/83 Planning application to convert house into 7 flats and the two
outbuildings also to 7 flats. (ref FBC 5530/38 for 14 flats - 9 2-bed, 5 1-bed,
/39 for just 7 in the house) (nb there was coverage in the Portsmouth News 19/8
and 24/8)
12/83 Conversion started
The original Sunday School met in a hut built by the Matthias family on Catisfield Lodge land roughly where Highlands Road crossed to the A27 in l966.
It moved to the Church and the Memorial Hall after 1948. Mrs Young, Mrs Lawrence and Mrs Highland were the principal leaders, helped by many others including Justina Gardner, a member of the St. Columba choir, Mr & Mrs Hackett. Phyllis Mortimer, daughter of Mr & Mrs Reginald Samuel Mortimer of The Limes was also a Sunday School teacher.
Mr.W. Smith was an enthusiastic and zealous worker with the Church of St. Columba. Catisfield, and was the Sunday School Superintendent there for over ten years.
Sunday Schools were by the late 1950s held in Fareham Park School and the WI Hut in Oak Road as well as the new St Columba Church on Hillson Drive.
NB The growing congregation of St Columba was notably augmented by the "mustard" or "Custard" tops of Lysses House boarding School. The boys walked in crocodile from the School (now the Heathfield / Oast&Squire) for morning service.
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