Ragged School
LIMEHOUSE, LONDON
The Ragged School Museum is housed in a group of three canal-side buildings which once formed the largest “ragged”, or free school in London.
When Thomas Barnardo came to London from his home city of Dublin in 1866, he gave up his medical training to pursue his local missionary works
and in 1867 opened his first "ragged school" where children could gain a free basic education. Ten years later, Barnardo’s Copperfield Road School
opened its doors to children and for the next thirty-one years educated tens of thousands of children. It closed in 1908 by which time enough
government schools had opened in the area to serve the needs of local families. The buildings, originally warehouses for goods transported along
the Regent’s Canal, then went through a variety of industrial uses until, in the early 1980’s, they were threatened with demolition. It was then
that a group of local people joined together to save them and reclaim their unique heritage. The Ragged School Museum Trust was set up and the
museum opened in 1990. The museum was founded to make the history of the Ragged Schools and the broader social history of the East End accessible
to all. Within the original buildings, an authentic Victorian classroom has been set up where each year some 14,000 children experience a school
lesson as it would have been taught more than 100 years ago. The museum boasts a recreation of an East End kitchen and a Victorian classroom
amongst many other displays and exhibitions. The hauntings of the building are many and varied. Recent investigations have discovered that the
boys school side of the building has a great deal of activity at times including that of phantom footsteps that have no earthly body.
It has also been reported that a Roman soldier has also been seen. Other unexplained noises have been heard and a previous investigation also
captured on film a chair moving on its own.
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