At its quietest time, the school regrettably housed only two pupils.
Today, the school still has far fewer pupils than originally intended. With the passage of time, we now have a very different village, environment and lifestyle. Despite all of these changes, we are one of the very few remote villages to have kept our school.
References to the hay harvest were common within the school log, and it seems that term dates revolved around the agricultural cycle with parents often withdrawing their eldest children to work on local farms.
Kielder School was shut for a whole month due to illness in 1929. In 1917 Kielder School cancelled Easter Holidays to catch up on lost time due to extremely bad weather earlier that year.
In the early years of Kielder School, winter holidays started on December 26th with lessons on Christmas Day.
One of the pupils in the winter of 1917-18 was released for a week to act as the village temporary postman.
A new wooden building was built in 1940, to accommodate the expected influx of wartime 'evacuees'.
In 1945, during a particularly bad winter, the headmistress wrote to the Director of Education explaining:
"...all ink frozen solid in the inkwells ...milk and sandwiches frozen solid ...the temperature is lower than the thermometer can measure ...the toilet is frozen solid ...the wind blows directly to the underside of the floor and pupils regularly have to exercise and warm their feet during lessons and 50% of the pupils are off ill with colds or bronchitis."
This has been a brief snapshot into the journey Kielder School has travelled.
Further information is available from other web pages and literature.
Anyone who can add any links, information, stories or literature would be greatly appreciated.
Thank you