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There was no school in the parish in 1818, but two schools by 1833. There may have been a school at Garsdon in the 1840s but by 1858 the Garsdon children attended the school at Lea. They had a total attendance of 22 children. The school at Lea was affiliated to the National School by 1846. This was originally a one room thatched building, with a stone floor, which became very overcrowded. The pupils were taught by a Master and a Mistress. There was also a small 'day and boarding' school in Lea which taught about 15 scholars. A new school was built in Lea in 1873 with a school house and this served Lea, Cleverton and Garsdon.
We do not hold the Victorian log books for the school but the following general points will give an idea of what school life was like at this time.
Fees were paid for each child until 1891, normally at the rate of one penny (0.4p) or twopence a week and the 'school pence' were collected by the schoolteacher. There would have been a schoolmaster, or schoolmistress, with assistant teachers, pupil teachers and monitors. The pupil teachers were taught by the head before lessons started, took exams, sometimes went to the Diocesan Training College and eventually became teachers themselves. They mainly taught the younger children. Monitors were also paid but tended to be younger and helped to look after the younger children or teach the infants.