Blewcoat School Explained

The Blewcoat
Building Type:School
Current Tenants:Ian Stuart
Location:City of Westminster
London, SW1
Location Country:United Kingdom

Blewcoat School is a building in Caxton Street, London, that was built in 1709 as a school for the poor (a Bluecoat school). It was used as a school until 1926. In 1954, it was purchased by the National Trust who used it as a gift shop and information centre. In 2013 the building was refurbished as The Blewcoat, a store for fashion designer Ian Stuart.

School

The school was founded in Duck Lane in about 1688 by voluntary subscription as a charity school for the education of poor boys to teach them reading, writing, religion, and trades. It moved to purpose-built premises in Caxton Street. From 1714 to about 1876, it also admitted girls. In 1899, it was agreed that the school should move to a site that had been owned by the Christ Church National Schools Trust, and the Caxton Street site was then used for an elementary school.[1] The school closed in 1926.[2]

Later uses

During World War II, the building was used by the American services as a store. Afterwards, the Girl Guides used it as a youth club. When the National Trust bought it in 1954, it was used as their membership and head office. Later, it was converted into a gift shop.[2] [3] June 2014 saw the opening of British designer Ian Stuart's boutique in the building, selling bridal gowns, special occasion wear and evening gown collections.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Cox . Montague H. . Blue Coat School . Survey of London: volume 10: St. Margaret, Westminster, part I: Queen Anne’s Gate area (1926), pp. 144-147. . British History Online . 1926 . 21 April 2011 .
  2. Web site: Provençal . Nina . Business of the Month: January and February 2011 - The National Trust Shop . Business of the Month . Victoria Business Improvement District . February 2011 . 21 April 2011 .
  3. Web site: Tye . Timothy . Blewcoat School, London . Historical Buildings in London . Timothy Tye . 21 April 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20111006030603/http://www.london-traveltips.com/blewcoat-school.htm . 6 October 2011 . dead .