Oldham House and Prospect Place Hydro (or Poplar/Prospect Cottage)
The story of this building begins with Thomas Davis. Thomas had worked
a framework knitter before hydropathy became such a runaway success
in Matlock and his daughter Rachel[1],
who was also important in the history of Oldham House, was employed
as a cotton winder when she was young (see both 1841
census and 1851 census transcripts
on this website).
By 1861 Thomas was one of several of the Davis brothers practising
hydropathy, or hydrotherapy, in Matlock[2].
Thomas, Horatio, Ralph, Phineas and George[3] were all sons of William Davis and Hannah (née Botham)[4].
Not all the Davis boys became hydropathists, but several were key
to the success of the industry and they ran establishments that were
amongst the largest in the town.
Rachel Wildgoose (née Davis) took over the running of Oldham
House and Prospect Place, probably after her father's death in July
1891. In 1895 she advertised the hydropathic establishment in Kelly's
Directory as having comfortable apartments and experienced bathmen.
She and John were still there is 1901[5].
Rachel died in 1909, aged 72. By 1925 Oldham & Prospect Hydro
Company Limited offered "tennis, bowls &c; evening entertainments
& dancing ; electric light throughout" (Kelly's Directory,
1925). Lubin George Wildgoose was by then the Manager. He was the
son of Rachel and her husband John Wildgoose, a stone merchant, and
had begun his working life as a Joiner's Apprentice[6].
The postcard above shows the building when it was possibly in its
heyday as a hydro. Oldham House ceased to be a hydropathic establishment
very abruptly one weekend when the Second World War began. After the
War its role changed yet again and it went from accommodating paying
guests to serving the needs of children, whose parents paid for their
education.
References and more information (this section)
[1] Rachel's
birth and baptism are in the parish register. She was one of twins.
[2] See
the 1861 census
[3] In St.
Giles' parish registers George is given as the child of William
and Sarah, which is clearly an error. He was living with his parents
in both 1841 and 1851.
[4] William
Davis married Hannah Botham in 1803
[5] See
the entry for Oldham House in 1901
[6] See
the 1891 census entry
Woodlands School.
The following information has been supplied by Colin Goodwyn, to whom
I am very grateful.
Woodlands School opened in 1925 or 1926 with three pupils. Miss Winifred
White, the Headmistress, told Colin that she had taught for a short
period in a state school and gave him the impression that she had
worked in private schools in the South of England prior to returning
to Matlock in 1923 to look after a relative - probably her father,
Charles White M.P.
The post-First World War hydropathic trade provided a continued demand
for local private education for the children of long-term visitors'
and, following the death of her father in December 1923, Miss White
decided that there was sufficient potential for another small school
in Matlock. The family home on Bakewell Road, known as "The Woodlands",
provided sufficient space for a few pupils and Miss White's original
intention was not to exceed a maximum of twelve. However, over the
next few years the numbers increased steadily to forty girls and boys
aged from five years upwards supervised by up to four teachers.
The Second World War had little effect upon "The Woodlands"
other than causing the cellar to be strengthened with railway sleepers
for use as an air raid shelter. During the conflict the Government
gave considerable thought to the future educational picture. The new
all-embracing approach to nationalised education in fact increased
demand from parents for private schools to assist their children in
passing the selection test (Eleven-Plus) and also for those who failed
the test but required something approaching a Grammar school-like
education. The day of the dame school, too, was now past due to the
requirements for improved standards and equipment and, for Woodlands,
this meant larger premises were needed[7].
The need for change coincided with the death of Miss White's brother-in-law,
Alderman William Hyde, in Oxford in 1945, and with the return to Matlock
of his widow, Mrs A G R Hyde. The two sisters appear to have then
pooled their resources and, when the RAF gave up its occupation of
Oldham House & Prospect Place Hydro, which had been used for hospital
and recuperative accommodation, purchased it. Woodlands School (still
known as Miss White's although she was married in 1938) moved up to
Wellington Street in January 1946. Within this new building there
was space to accommodate boarders.
Soon, the school choir was established and, from 1947, swimming lessons
commenced at Matlock Lido[8].
Woodlands School Choir became quite renowned and subsequently made
many recordings and broadcast on radio.
Although the post-1947 establishment was usually described as a girls'
school and a preparatory school for boys, Miss White claimed that
its principal concern was coaching for the Common Entrance exams,
but considerable attention was paid to Eleven-Plus cramming, and pupils
who were over CE age were accepted to take GCEs.
Administratively, the classes were divided into groups of Junior,
Middle and Senior Schools and the pupils were said to be separated
by ability rather than age. No class ever exceeded twenty five despite
the school once reaching a high point of 260 pupils. For competitive
purposes the pupils were allocated to Houses named Hyde (probably
after Miss White's sister Mrs Hyde or her late husband), Charlesworth
(Miss White's mother's maiden name), Nightingale (after the local
heroine[9,10]) and Bright (reason
unknown, though Bright is a local surname); their colours being green,
blue, purple and yellow respectively.
The uniform was blue (with yellow blouses for girls) but changed to
the fairly commonplace grey and yellow sometime after 1947. The school
badge comprised a yellow tree between the letters W and S on a grey
shield. The school had its own troops of Girl Guides, Boy Scouts,
Brownies and Cubs.
Mrs Hyde (Annie G R) and Mrs White (Winifred Alice) were the eldest
and next youngest respectively of five sisters and a brother who were
all born at Bonsall, Derbyshire, between 1884 and 1899 to Charles
Frederick White, a boot and shoe maker from Tetbury, Gloucester, and
his wife Alice[11]. In
1918 Charles successfully stood as the local Liberal parliamentary
candidate. His son, also named Charles (and Miss White's brother),
became the Independent Labour MP for West Derbyshire in 1944 and,
two years later, Chairman of Derbyshire County Council. Although she
retained her single title Miss White was the wife of Bert (Herbert
John) Dimmock who had been born in Oxfordshire and died in October
1964, not long after which she suffered a partial stroke.
It was doubtless the combination of her poor health, the age of the
senior staff and the pressing need for improved standards in equipment
and curriculum which ultimately forced Miss White to close her school.
An undated letter announcing the closure was sent to all pupils' parents
who received it on 23 January 1965 - the day after the subject was
published in the local paper. The last day of the last term occurred
on 14 July 1965. Miss White died on 16 July 1974, aged 80.
More information (this section)
[7] Schools There's a section that discusses a few key milestones in the development of English State Education, as well as short descriptions of Matlock Schools
[8] A magazine article about Matlock
Lido is elsewhere on this website
[9] Florence Nightingale was the
local heroine. There's a photograph of
her her on-site and a great deal of other information.
[10] There's also a brief
biography of Florence Nightingale.
[11] Charles White Snr advertised
in Kelly's 1891 Directory of
Bonsall
|