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A Short History of the School
St Eanswythe’s Church of England Primary school is named after
Folkestone’s very own Saxon saint. The young princess
turned nun is buried in the Parish Church on the opposite side of
the street.
St Eanswythe was an Anglo-Saxon saint who first established the
Christian church in Folkestone and whose name is given to the parish
church. Born circa 614 Eanswythe was a Saxon princess. Her parents
Eadbald King of Kent and Emma daughter of the King of the Franks. Eanswythe's grandparents were King
Ethelbert of Kent and Queen Bertha who both welcomed St Augustine
when he arrived in Kent in 597AD.
Circa 630 AD Eadbald built a chapel for Eanswythe in his castle
somewhere in The Bayle, east of the present church in
Folkestone. This chapel was dedicated to St Peter & St Paul. Here Eanswythe settled with a community of nuns as Abbess and Founder of
the first religious Community for women in England. The date of
Eanswythe's death is usually given as 640AD. The monastery did not
survive her, being either ruined by marauders or victim of coastal
erosion or perhaps both. It was later replaced by a Priory which
remained until the Dissolution by Henry VIII.
Several legends are told about St Eanswythe. Her story is that she
chose not to marry and refused a Northumbrian prince as suitor.
St Eanswythe's Day is on 12th September. This is the date when
her relics were translated to the new church in 1138. These relics
were rediscovered in a small leaden Saxon casket in the north wall
of the High Alter Sanctuary in 1885, when work on the present
alabaster arcading of the chancel was being undertaken. In 1980 the
bones were examined and catalogued by an expert. The conclusion was
that they came from one human skeleton, a young female adult aged
between 18 & 25 years about 5'4"up inches in height. This is
consistent with Eanswythe's life story.
The foundation stone in the school’s wall gives the date for the
setting up of the Woodward Institute and School at the turn of the
previous century.
At various times it has been just for boys or purely a junior
school. During World War II many people from Folkestone were
evacuated, as were most schools.
The school was noted for swimming, at the seawater baths behind
Marine Crescent, cricket, played on Radnor Park with a hard ball and
singing, providing members of several church choirs.
Parents of some of the present children remember being taught by
Peggy Jameson in the infant department, David Bence for the juniors
and Harold Jameson, the head, in the top class. As a linguist the
Head encouraged French, with trips abroad. He could be found outside
the archway’s forbidding gates seeing the children out every
evening. Like the "Windmill Theatre" he claimed never to close, the
hardest winter finding Rob Moody’s class lighting the playground
with candles in ice lanterns.
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