Wornington Road School
Wornington Road School refers to buildings that have been used for a variety of purposes since 1874 in North Kensington, London.
History
The first recorded school on Wornington Road was known as the Wornington Road Board School established in March 1874. The building was divided into a Boys, a Girls and an Infants school. A little later a school for the blind was added. The Infants’ School was the largest in London finding places for 813 children in ten classrooms.The building was an imposing one, reflecting the new emphasis on education, but its location adjacent to the railway with steam trains thundering past every few minutes was a hindrance. A reference in Sentimental Education: Schooling, Popular Culture and the Regulation of Liberty by James Donald, '... in the board school Robson designed in Wornington Rd 1874'. Edward Robert Robson architect and author of the highly influential ‘School Architecture’ in 1876. He then became architect at the LCC.
The building was demolished in 1936 by The London County Council to be replaced by Wornington Road Elementary School with better facilities including a library and a gymnasium with changing rooms and showers. During WWII the school buildings became an emergency centre for the Auxiliary Fire Service. Classrooms were turned into dormitories for the firefighters and the school medical room became a Watch Room from which emergency calls were taken and fire engines dispatched to deal with the effects of the blitz in the nearby streets. Smaller school house on south corner of the site also rebuilt around 1936, LCC Architects' Department. Signed off by G.P. Wheeler.
After the war The Florence Gladstone School, which educated girls between 11 and 15, used the Wornington Road building from 1951. Then from 1958 it was the turn of the Isaac Newton Boys’ Upper School. The Wornington Road Infants’ School was still in the premises in the 1950s. When it closed the Ainsworth Nursery moved in but moved again in 1977 to the ground floor of Trellick Tower. The Isaac Newton boys moved out when their school joined with Holland Park Comprehensive in 1983.
Alan Johnson the MP has written extensively about his life in the area and attending the school.