Mayfield College, Marlborough

Mayfield College, Marlborough
Date of image
c. 1950
Date uploaded
18 July 2012
Number of views
2511
Number of comments
0
Location of image
Wiltshire & Swindon History Centre
Notes

This was in existence by 1865 as a private school for girls at Mayfield Villa, 40 London Road, run by the Misses Smith. By 1897 it was being run by the Misses E.M. and R. Hugil, who continued until 1921. Between 1921 and 1945 it was still owned by the Hugils but was used as a girls'; boarding house by Marlborough Grammar School to accommodate pupils from rural areas. In 1945 it was sold to Mrs L. Wynburne who ran it as Mayfield College, a preparatory school for boys and girls. In the 1960s older pupils were taken but the school closed in 1968 and is now private housing.

Peter Beschorner writes, "The school was empty and up for sale in 1947. My father negotiated to rent and ran the school with his wife, as a day school for infants and a boarding school for European students wishing to learn English. My father, the principle of the school, was a survivor of Dachau concentration camp who came to Britain in March 1939. After marrying Joan Soan an English girl, he taught at various schools in Henley and Oxford. Mr & Mrs Beschorner occupied the school in the summer of 1947 and redecorated the entire large premises single handed. It opened as a school in the autumn that year. My mother, Joan Beschorner taught the infants who were all local Marborough children and my father and other teachers taught the students from Germany, France and other European countries. My father was a professor of languages in Germany and Poland. Due to the expansion of the school and its popularity two boarding houses were added to the school, firsly in 1949 ';Glebe House'; in Mildenhall, near Marlborough and later, ';St Catherines'; in Savernake Forest. In 1950 the school put on a production of ';Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs'; at the town hall. Mrs Beschorner, a keen artist exhibited in Marborough on several occasions. One of the students, who came from Ireland, was a keen boxer and sparred with other students at Marlborough College. So during this period, ';Mayfield College'; became a close part of community activities in the town. The lovely Victorian mansion was improved and a tarmac playground complete with parallel bars was added by Mr Beschorner. Sadly, due to a serious family problem, The Beschorner family had to leave the town in the spring of 1951 and the school was closed. This contribution to the history of ';Mayfield College'; has been made by Peter Hans Beschorner, a pupil at the school from 1947-49 and the son of the late Hans Beschorner."