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England (Counties as in 1851-1901) => England => Yorkshire (West Riding) => Topic started by: BumbleB on Sunday 14 April 13 16:09 BST (UK)

Title: The Orphanage - Halifax
Post by: BumbleB on Sunday 14 April 13 16:09 BST (UK)
I wonder what other criteria there might be for a "Resident Scholar" at The Orphanage in Halifax, apart from the obvious of being an orphan.  :-\

I ask because in the 1901 census there is a young lad - Hermann Naylor aged 11 - who is a Resident Scholar.  I naturally assumed that his parents were dead, but now find that his mother, Alice, was certainly alive - she is resident at 13 Lytham Street, Halifax with elder brother Willie aged 16.  And in 1911 Alice is living, as head of household, with Hermann, and still in Halifax.

Any thoughts?
Title: Re: The Orphanage - Halifax
Post by: chenet on Sunday 14 April 13 16:45 BST (UK)
Maybe they took paying "scholars" as well as orphans?  Some charitable institutions got extra money that way.
Title: Re: The Orphanage - Halifax
Post by: BumbleB on Sunday 14 April 13 16:58 BST (UK)
Could be  :-\  Although his mother was a widow, but then he did have siblings.
Title: Re: The Orphanage - Halifax
Post by: chenet on Sunday 14 April 13 17:07 BST (UK)
Sometimes a local bigwig would be a "patron" and pay for bright boys to be educated.
Title: Re: The Orphanage - Halifax
Post by: BumbleB on Sunday 14 April 13 17:11 BST (UK)
Again, many thanks for the thoughts.  It is most intriguing  :)
Title: Re: The Orphanage - Halifax
Post by: chenet on Sunday 14 April 13 17:14 BST (UK)
How many of the other boys have that description?     If it is all of them then that is one theory that does not work.  If it is only a few it might be OK.
Title: Re: The Orphanage - Halifax
Post by: BumbleB on Sunday 14 April 13 17:25 BST (UK)
Within the District - The Orphanage - there are 13 pages.  "Resident Scholars" start on page 3, with the boys and then progress to the girls.  All have a designated place of birth, some being in Halifax and others - Lancashire, Cumberland, Kent, Flintshire, London, or in one case I've just spotted - Christchurch, New Zealand  :o  They are all designated as "Resident Scholar" and "worker".  Really weird  :-X

Title: Re: The Orphanage - Halifax
Post by: ..claire.. on Sunday 14 April 13 17:26 BST (UK)
Hi

Have looked at the census records of four of the other boys, picked at random and by the 1911 census most are back home, and each one I've checked are with a widowed mother.

claire

Title: Re: The Orphanage - Halifax
Post by: ..claire.. on Sunday 14 April 13 17:30 BST (UK)
Crossley and Porter School

In 1857 Frank and John Crossley, of Dean Clough Mills, founded the orphanage with a capital of £56,000  and a further endowment of £50,000. In 1887, after a gift of £50,000 from Thomas Porter, a Manchester  merchant, the orphanage was extended to include schooling. Over time, the need for an orphanage decreased and the school became a grammar school. 
   At the time of the 1881 census, Head master William Cambridge Barber, assisted by a Matron, Head mistress, and 8 assistant masters and mistresses, presided over a population of 216 "scholar orphans." They included 84 girls and 132 boys, ranging in age from 7 to 16.
  A Royal Charter of 31 January 1887, named the institution The Crossley and Porter Orphan Home and School. In 1919 the school was given royal permission to admit day pupils.

claire
Title: Re: The Orphanage - Halifax
Post by: BumbleB on Sunday 14 April 13 17:41 BST (UK)
How strange - I was just finding the second brain cell, and consulting the fount of all knowledge on Halifax - Malcolm Bull's Calderdale Companion - and was coming to the same conclusion.  I was just about the re-check the address given for The Orphanage!!!  ;)  which I have now done.  And Savile Park, would just about clinch it, I think!!  Thanks   :)