The Liverpool Institute High School for Boys was an all-boys grammar school in the English port city of Liverpool. The school had its origins in 1825 but occupied different premises while the money was found to build a dedicated building on Mount Street. The Institute was first known as the Liverpool Mechanics' School of Arts. In 1832 the name was shortened to the Liverpool Mechanics' Institution. The facade of the listed building, the entrance hall and modified school hall remain after substantial internal reconstruction was completed in the early 1990s. School history in briefIts initial primary purpose as a Mechanics' Institute (one of many established about this time throughout the country) was to provide educational opportunities, mainly through evening classes, for working men. Lectures for the general public were also provided of wide interest covering topics ranging from Arctic exploration to Shakespeare and philosophy. Luminaries like Charles Dickens, Anthony Trollope and Ralph Waldo Emerson delivered talks and readings in the main lecture hall (now the architecturally restructured Sir Paul McCartney Auditorium of LIPA). By 1840 the Institution offered evening classes, lectures, a library and a boys' lower and upper school. By the 1850s a formal art school was evolving from the evening classes and in 1856 this diversity was recognised by another name change – The Liverpool Institute and School of Arts. A girl's school was founded & opened in 1844 under the name Liverpool Institute High School for Girls. It was housed in a merchant's mansion across the street from the boys' school in Blackburne House provided by the generosity of Mr. George Holt and which was later (1872) donated to the school by his family in his memory. The school was one of the first which was open to the public in the country established exclusively for the education of girls. In 1905 the Liverpool City Council took over the management of the secondary schools when the LI Board of Governors presented the school and assets to the City. From then until its closure in 1985, the school was formally known as The Liverpool Institute High School for Boys or more familiarly as The Institute or the The Inny to its pupils. It was an English grammar school for boys ages 11 to 18 with an excellent academic reputation built up over more than a century. Its list of scholarships and places at Oxford University and Cambridge University runs to some 300 names – in addition to distinctions gained at Liverpool University and at many other prominent British universities. The school was a true measure of Liverpool's intellectual capital and its old boys could and can be found in later life in many fields of professional distinction including: law, the Church, armed forces, politics, academia, government and colonial administration as well as in trade & commerce[1]. Closure of the schoolIn 1985 the school was closed by Liverpool Council after two decades of contention, political dispute and very little upkeep of the building fabric. The Labour Party in Liverpool and nationally (Anthony Crosland's Circular of Sept. 1965 requiring that Local Authorities bring forward schemes for comprehensive secondary education) was opposed to selective schools. As grammar school pupils were selected by examination at age 11, there was a long standing push towards 'comprehensive schools' (as non-selective schools were known) from that party when it took majority control of the Council in 1983. Demand for secondary school places in the City had also dropped precipitously and there was a huge oversupply of schools space as Liverpool's population contracted during the severe economic recession of the early 1980s. Ironically perhaps, the Deputy Leader of the Labour (Militant) Group on Council at the time was a former LI schoolboy Derek Hatton who had left without academic distinction in 1964 and with strong feelings of dislike towards the school[2]. However the man who was Chair of the Educational Committee at the time of the decision to close the school was Dominic Brady, a 24 year old former school caretaker. After closure of the Liverpool Institute for Boys, the building stood empty and negected, the roof leaking and the walls crumbling. In 1987 it was announced that the LI Trust (under control of Liverpool Council's Education Department) would grant use of the building and site to a new educational establishment. Paul McCartney had returned to his old school when with Wings he had played a concert there in 1979. After the school's closure in 1985 McCartney determined to save the building and replace the school with another type of educational institute - a 'fame school' - to assist students of the dramatic arts. Liverpool Council, which remains the controller of the Liverpool Institute Trust established in 1905, agreed to allow LIPA use of the building under a lease which continues to preserve its future for educational purposes. Under McCartney's sponsorship and financial assistance, the building was rebuilt entirely behind its old facade, preserving only the entrance corridor and school hall, and re-opened in 1996 under the name of its new occupants, the Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts (LIPA). This all-new institute is currently affiliated with LJMU and is no longer a Liverpool secondary school. Art schoolThe city's Art College had its origins as part of the Liverpool Institute. In 1883 a new building housing the School of Art was opened around the corner on Hope Street, adjacent to the principal building housing the High School on Mount Street. The Art College by which it was later known, took in talented students often without formal academic credentials (e.g. John Lennon) and the College eventually became one of the four constituent parts of the Liverpool Polytechnic in 1970 and later in 1992 Liverpool John Moores University (LJMU). Liverpool Institute and Liverpool musicMusic and musical performances have been a constant theme throughout the life of the school and the Mount St. building. Annual school Speech Day concerts (held in the fine acoustics of Philharmonic Hall, Liverpool), choirs, the organ, piano, music classes and the singing of daily devotional hymns have echoed around its walls for 170 years and continue to do so at LIPA. The following list of musicians and their activities at the school and afterwards is currently under development. Charles Santley born on Church Alley, Liverpool and educated at the Liverpool Mechanics Institute. He was the greatest British baritone of his day, equally famous in opera and oratorio. He also composed some music of his own. In 1907, he was knighted after entertaining the public for fifty years. Stan Bootle attended the school, 1941 to 1947[3]. He was a mathematics scholar at Cambridge and one of the first in the country to specialise in computer science. He was also a folk singer and composer (under the stage name Stan Kelly & more recently Stan Kelly-Bootle). He is perhaps best remembered for writing the lyrics to Liverpool Lullaby (1960) & I Wish I Was Back in Liverpool (1961), as well as being a prolific author on matters computational. David Ellis, musician, composer & broadcaster attended the school 1944 to 1949. John McCabe, born 1939, attended the school, 1950 to 1957, prolific classical music composer. Liverpool Institute and MerseybeatFrom 1958 to about 1964, there were many music 'groups' of boys centred on school, home and local district. Some were composed of amalgams of junior school and neighbourhood friends as well as LI school mates. Skiffle and Lonnie Donegan in Liverpool as elsewhere were the inspirational trigger for home-made music, 45s and cheap record players allowed home listening to the flood of American imports. At end of school year relaxed times, boys at LI were allowed to bring in their instruments to play them at breaks, in the basement dinner room or informal class time. There were many such groups in the school but some went on to fame if not fortune. At age 11, J. Paul McCartney passed his '11-plus' examination (still then known colloquially in Liverpool as "the scholarship" - even after secondary school fee payment ended in 1944) and was eligible for a place at a grammar school. His parents had selected The Liverpool Institute as his first choice and he commenced classes there in September 1953. In 1957 he sat his Latin and Spanish 'O-levels' passing the latter. In 1958 he sat an additional six subjects and attained the five passes (including French and German) he needed to enter the Sixth Form. He took three subjects to A Level including: Art, English and Geography and in 1960 passed A level English. Deciding not to apply for teacher's training college, in July 1960 he left school for the Beatles' first stay in Hamburg. George Harrison passed his entry examination for The Inny and began school in September 1954 (a year later than Paul). He left without achieving any formal qualifications in July 1959 for a job as an assistant electrician at Blacklers department store in Liverpool and as a player in the occasional night-time gigs of The Quarrymen, who later became The Silver Beetles, and then The Beatles. Paul's brother, Mike McCartney (stage name Mike McGear in 'The Scaffold') 1955 to 1961. Neil Aspinall, 1953 to 1959 who became the Beatles' road manager in Feb. 1961 and in April 1968 MD of Apple Corp. He left Apple Corps in April 2007. Len Garry, 1954 to 1959, who was a member of 'The Quarrymen'. Ivan Vaughan, a classics sixth former, 1953 to 1960, who introduced Paul McCartney to John Lennon. Les Chadwick, 1954 to 1959, who later became a member of 'Gerry and the Pacemakers'. C.W. (Colin) Manley, 1953 to 1959 and D.M. (Don) Andrew, 1953 to 1959 both became part of The Remo Four, a group later managed by Brian Epstein. Alumni in the public eyeIn addition to those mentioned above there were several others who entered into arts, entertainment and politics in the twentieth century:
Other notable alumni (chronological)
Head masters - nineteenth century
Head masters - twentieth century
"Edwards assembled a staff as diverse as the pupils and for the most part they gave the impression of being equally in awe of him. They nevertheless managed to drive and cajole their pupils into distinguished School Certificate and GCE results along with six to ten open awards each year indeed there was one memorable year when ten of the eleven members of the upper mathematical sixth form won Oxford or Cambridge awards. The words 'public service' were never very far from Edwards' lips. For the staff this meant giving up evenings, weekends and time in the school holidays for coaching games, running the scout troop, singing, music, drama, debating, mountaineering and dozens of other activities; there was even a Transport Society, largely devoted to trams. For the pupils it meant long journeys home from the city centre in the evening hours after normal work had finished with no remission on homework, and for Edwards it meant attending many of these occasions himself. He was a Head who was respected rather than liked. He suffered from gout and that must have made life very hard at times. He knew his pupils and could write about them well but he could rarely unbend with them. He built a remarkable school that produced leaders in many professions from bishops to broadcasters to Beatles to barristers. It must have broken his heart in retirement to see his school torn apart and finally closed as a result of political doctrinaire antics on Liverpool City Council." Sir Ronald Oxburgh (1953) .
There were several temporary administrators who took the school into dissolution in its final years. References
See also
External links
| | |||||||||||||