Full Report for Listed Buildings


Summary Description of a Listed Buildings


Reference Number
86965
Building Number
 
Grade
II  
Status
Designated  
Date of Designation
18/11/2005  
Date of Amendment
18/11/2005  
Name of Property
Madras Voluntary Aided School  
Address
 

Location


Unitary Authority
Wrexham  
Community
Maelor South  
Town
 
Locality
Penley  
Easting
341227  
Northing
340025  
Street Side
SW  
Location
At the NW end of the village, 100m SW of the parish church.  

Description


Broad Class
 
Period
 

History
Founded in 1811 by the second Lord Kenyon (date on building). It was the first purpose-built 'monitorial' school in Wales, named after the school in Madras, India, where Andrew Bell, a friend of Lord Kenyon, pioneered the monitorial system of education. The 1873 and 1900 Ordnance Surveys show the building divided into 2 units but without the present porch, which was a later addition. The roof structure is late C19, and therefore it is not certain whether the building originally had a thatch roof. The broad window openings also appear to be late C19. The school was extended at the rear in 1905, again in 1966-7 by Sir Percy Thomas & Sons, architects of Cardiff, and in 1999.  

Exterior
Cottage orne style single-storey school of roughcast walls painted cream, wide small-pane windows and steep hipped thatch roof on wide boarded eaves. The symmetrical front has a central lower half-hipped porch. This has a 2-light small-pane window to the front, above which is a stone tablet with raised letters: 'Madras School founded by George 2nd Lord Kenyon 1811'. Replacement boarded doors are in the porch side walls. To the L and R each side has a 4-light and a 6-light window. In the rear, the R side has a later small-pane window carried above the eaves under a gable. The R-hand side has a similar but smaller window replaced in an earlier opening, and gable. In the centre is another gable, but its opening is obscured by the early C20 wing. This is roughcast painted cream, with tile roof and brick stack. Openings are all altered. Behind it is a 1960s extension in pale brick with flat roof, mostly now enveloped by a later and less sympathetic red-brick extension of 1999.  

Interior
Now divided into 2 rooms, but probably originally a single room. Each side has 2 late C19 king-post trusses with raking struts, bolted rather than pegged, and boxed on the L-hand side. The underside of the roof is boarded.  

Reason for designation
Listed for its special historical interest as an early estate school, the first in Wales to practise Andrew Bell's monitorial system, and for its architectural interest as a striking building of distinctive picturesque character that retains one of the few surviving thatch roofs in the district.  

Cadw : Full Report for Listed Buildings [ Records 1 of 1 ]





Export