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The parish was compelled to form a school board to replace their inadequate school and this came into being on 11th April 1876. A new school and schoolhouse opened in 1878, replacing the earlier Parochial School. The school was built to accommodate 106 pupils and by the 1890s the average attendance was over 70 children. The school was sited at the end of Havering Lane, with the school teacher's house attached.
Object lessons in 1894-1895 were wide and varied. They included an owl, an eagle, a clock, butchers shop, cork, wool and tea.
In the late 19th and early 20th century in particular, attendance fluctuated greatly, and was often dependent on the illnesses that were being spread around the parish. An outbreak of measles in January and February of 1926 shut down the school for two weeks, whooping cough was common in the late 1920s and diphtheria killed a five year old boy, Albert Tassy, in 1929.
Attendance also fluctuated because children were needed to work in the fields or support their parents in other ways. In July 1905 Mr Lane said: 'The hay making epidemic is still with us and playing havoc with attendance. A great many older boys and girls have been absent all week either assisting in the hay fields or minding the baby.' School hours were often put back so that children could take tea out to their parents during harvest season.