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The first recorded education in Latton parish was in 1832, when a day school was run to teach the children of Latton and the children of Eysey, as the ecclesiastical parish had just been formed. The following year it was attended by between 50 and 60 children. The master received £20 a year in 1846 with the expenses being met through subscriptions. A house for the master was found near to the school. In 1850 the school was extended a little.
In 1858, there were 30 to 40 boys and girls in the school and Warburton's Census found they were 'Taught by a certificated master, in a very fair school-room (nave 19 x 14 [feet], and two transepts, each (8ft x 9ft. 9 inches), with board floor, and good desks. Mr Hughes reports favourably of the discipline, and of the instruction in most subjects.' The school was extended in 1873 to provide for at least 100 children. There were now two classrooms.
We do not have school log books for the Victorian period but the following will give an idea of what life was like in a village school at the time.