Photographs
1903
 
Mowing the tennis courts

This rare photograph - the front of a Bamforth postcard - shows an unidentified bearded gardener mowing the school tennis courts in 1903. The familiar buildings in the background were all relatively new. The laboratory block on the left was only three years old, built for a total cost including fitments of some £842. Fenay Quad, to its right, was formed as part of the school extensions that took place between 1880 and 1883 at a further cost of over £2,000.

Robert Crump was headmaster at this time, having been appointed in succession to Leonard Griffiths at the end of 1900. In the middle distance, behind the gardener, are Crump ’s two children Robert (‘Robbie’) aged 8 and Marion (11).

The other side of the postcard contains a message written on 9th January 2004 from Mrs Crump to a friend from their Bath days, Mabel Bird, presumably written during a Christmas family visit to her parents in nearby Paragon, near the centre of the city.




The card reads:

Dear Mabel,

Robbie and Marion will be delighted to come to you on Monday. I shall have to send for them to return at 6.30 as I have an engagement at 7.30 and must put them to bed first. Many thanks.

These were happy days for the Crump family. Robert, formerly Assistant Master at Bath Grammar School, had made an excellent start at King James ’s, boosting the number of pupils on the register from 24 to 44 in his first three years. By 1908, the number had risen to over 100. But little did Mrs Crump know that in due course it would all start to go wrong. A combination of the notorious 1905 Sadler Report (which proposed that the school should become Huddersfield ’s principal secondary school, provoking fury from Huddersfield educationalists and others with vested interests) and other educational changes in Huddersfield caused numbers to fall again. In 1912, Crump - a sensitive man with a love for the open air - lost confidence and abandoned his school, his wife and family in an unsuccessful attempt to become a fruit farmer in British Colombia.
1910

The school and pupils

This early photograph shows the School at the time of Robert Simpson Crump. There were only 24 pupils on the register when Crump took over from the unfortunate Leonard Griffiths in 1901 and by 1908 he managed to get the number up to around 100. Numbers then started to fall and were down to 56 when he retired in 1912.
1910 

The school and pupils

Five pupils, one with bicycle, pose in front of the School as it was nearly 100 years ago. This was a somewhat anxious time for the Headmaster, Robert Crump: the number of pupils attending the School (around 100 in 1908) was falling and were down to 56 by the end of 1912 when he resigned and went off to British Colombia to try his hand at fruit farming.
1910 

The kitchen entrance

Robert Simpson Crump was Headmaster when this photograph was taken in 1910. Comparison with the scene today reveals that very little has changed, although the centre stone pillar has been removed in order to widen the entrance, and the gates have long since disappeared.
1910

Headmaster’s living room

When Robert Simpson Crump and his wife moved into the cheerless Schoolhouse, it required all Mrs Crump's practical skills to turn it into a comfortable home, complete with new fireplace, welsh dresser and antique furniture.