Town educational philanthropist honoured
A legacy inspired by the need for schooling for the children of farmers, fishermen and labourers lives on today.
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Hide AdAnd now thanks to the determination of community historians, a commemorative stone has been unveiled on the traffic island at Oxford Square in Marton.
It celebrates a man who recognised the injustice of education being unaffordable for lower class families.
More than £2,000 was raised towards the stone after a campaign was launched last year by Marton Heritage Group.
The plaque was unveiled on Monday by Glenis Taylor, a trustee of Baines Charity and a retired headteacher of the Marton school.
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Hide AdBlackpool Mayor Coun Kath Rowson also attended the ceremony along with more than 50 people from the local community.
Children from Baines Marton also buried a time capsule filled with artefacts including a school polo shirt, photographs, a current class timetable and a coin specially produced to mark the tricentenary.
Yvonne Fielding, spokeswoman for Marton Heritage Group, said: “The site for the stone was chosen because that is the approximate position of the first Baines School.
“It was a very emotional occasion and you could see people filling up.
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Hide Ad“I went to Baines at Marton, and my son and brother also went there, so I have quite an affinity towards the school.
“At the unveiling ceremony, a lady came up to me and said she had been my best friend at Baines.
“We hadn’t seen each other for about 55 years, and she had travelled all the way from Derby to be there.
“So it certainly meant something to people.”
Philip Walsh, chairman of Marton Heritage Group, added: “It was a very historic occasion.
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Hide Ad“We felt proud to celebrate the tricentenary of a gentleman who did a lot of good and whose memory lives on in the legacy he gave.
“There are still Baines Charities which raise money for projects at the schools.”
The ceremony was held 300 years to the day after James Baines died on January 9 1717.
He was a Poulton woollen-draper, believed to have been born in Goosnargh, and was also a money-lender.
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Hide AdHe saw the need for free schools in the parish of Poulton, of which Marton was then part, and bought land to build three schools.
Today these are still flourishing - Baines School on Higcross Avenue in Poulton, Baines Endowed Primary School on Station Road in Thornton, and Baines Endowed Primary School on Penrose Avenue in Marton.