Category: | Ad hoc single purpose |
School board district | |
Territory: | England and Wales |
Current Number: | 2,500 |
Number Date: | 1902 |
Legislation Begin: | Elementary Education Act 1870 |
Legislation End: | Education Act 1902 |
Start Date: | 1870 |
End Date: | 1902 (1904 in London) |
Government: | School board |
Subdivision: | Divisions (London only) |
School boards were ad hoc public bodies in England and Wales between 1870 and 1902, which established and administered elementary schools.
The Elementary Education Act 1870 (33 & 34 Vict. c. 75) permitted the creation of school boards in areas where they were needed. The legislation followed campaigning by George Dixon, Joseph Chamberlain and the National Education League for elementary education free from Anglican doctrine. Education was still not free of fees.
The first schedule of the 1870 act permitted school boards for:
Around 2,500 school boards were created between 1870 and 1896.[1]
Each board could:
Members were directly elected, not appointed by borough councils or parish vestries.
Unusually for the time, women were eligible to win election to school boards. When the first elections were held, in 1870, nine women were elected across the country: Elizabeth Garrett Anderson and Emily Davies in London, Anne Ashworth and Caroline Shum in Bath, Catherine Ricketts in Brighton, Lydia Becker in Manchester, Marian Huth in Huddersfield, Eleanor Smith in Oxford, and Jennetta Temple in Exeter.[2]
School boards were abolished by the Education Act 1902, which replaced them with local education authorities, which were the councils of counties and county boroughs in 1902. The London School Board was replaced by the London County Council in 1904.