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The earliest reference to education in the village is an advert in the Salisbury Journal for a private school in 1781. The poor children were provided with a basic education by dame schools that operated in the early 19th century, although there is no evidence to confirm their existence here. The chantry chapel at the east end of the church, now the vestry, was also used as a schoolroom. In 1818 Fovant had both a Sunday and day school, each with about 30 pupils. By 1846 attendance at the Sunday school had risen to over 60 children who were taught by a master paid £4.4s.0d a year.
An elementary school was built in 1847 for 100 children, the money being provided by a Treasury building grant of £105. The school room measured 33' by 18' 6' and the children were taught by a mistress who was assisted by a pupil teacher and monitors. The first surviving report on this school is from a school census that was taken in 1858. it says that '50 to 60 mixed scholars, under a mistress, an ex-pupil teacher from Devizes National School, are taught in a good school-room, with a boarded floor and parallel desks; the mistress is neither certificated nor registered, but appears to be a superior person. The discipline is fair, and the instruction, though elementary in character, is not unsatisfactory.'