Fowler Newsam Hall

Fowler Newsam Hall

The refurbished Bell Tower at Fowler Newsam Hall
Former names Hermitage school for boys, girls, and infants
Hermitage school for boys, girls
Saint Ann's Junior Mixed School
General information
Status Complete
Type Victorian School
Architectural style Victorian
Address 1a Avenue Road, London, N15
Coordinates 51°34′53″N 0°05′06″W / 51.581327°N 0.085082°W / 51.581327; -0.085082Coordinates: 51°34′53″N 0°05′06″W / 51.581327°N 0.085082°W / 51.581327; -0.085082
Renovated 1978/9
Renovation cost £528,000
Renovating team
Renovating firm Rackham Construction

Fowler Newsam Hall is a Grade II listed group of Victorian school buildings. Originally the Saint Ann's Junior Mixed School, they become dilapidated during the nineteen sixties. They were refurbished by Rackham Construction in 1978/9 using in part a grant of £345,000 from the Heritage Lottery Fund,[1] and reopened on 1 July 1979.[2] The charity set up in 1966 to raise funds for this purpose was closed in 2013.[3]

Fowler Newsam, a wealthy business man who lived near the site, was the primary benefactor of both St Ann's Church opposite the hall on Avenue Road and the school itself.[4]

Architecture

...a 19th brick building with three gables of varying width. A recessed entrance has a pointed arched doorway with a bell tower.
Edith's Streets.[5]

History

The school opened in 1858 as the Hermitage school for boys, girls, and infants.[6] Following the establishment of a new boys' school and then and infants' school this building became a girls' school in 1871.[6]

Current use

The hall is today used for a variety of community purposes including a school of dance[7] and the Fowler Newsham Hall Counselling Project.[8]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/21/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.