Julia Lloyd (kindergarten)
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Julia Lloyd (13 April 1867 – 7 April 1955) was a British philanthropist and educationalist. She was interested in the newly developed methods for teaching young children in
kindergartens Kindergarten is a preschool educational approach based on playing, singing, practical activities such as drawing, and social interaction as part of the transition from home to school. Such institutions were originally made in the late 18th cent ...
. She opened Birmingham's first nursery school based on Froebelian principles.


Life

Lloyd was born in
Wednesbury Wednesbury () is a market town in Sandwell in the county of West Midlands, England. It is located near the source of the River Tame. Historically part of Staffordshire in the Hundred of Offlow, at the 2011 Census the town had a population of ...
in 1867. She was the daughter of the
ironmaster An ironmaster is the manager, and usually owner, of a forge or blast furnace for the processing of iron. It is a term mainly associated with the period of the Industrial Revolution, especially in Great Britain. The ironmaster was usually a large ...
Samuel and Jane Eliza (née Janson) Lloyd and she went to school locally at the only school for girls,
Edgbaston High School for Girls Edgbaston High School for Girls is a private day school for girls aged to 18 in the Edgbaston area of Birmingham, England. History In 1846, Elizabeth Brady founded a school in Edgbaston for the daughters of Quakers in 1846 and this ran for 21 ...
, in 1881. In 1888 she studied under Caroline Bishop who had developed her own adapted ideas which she taught at the Froebel College in nearby Edgbaston. After this she worked in two different establishments.Ruth Watts, ‘Lloyd, Julia (1867–1955)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Sept 201
accessed 1 Aug 2015
/ref> Lloyd studied in Germany under Annette Hamminck-Schepel at the Pestalozzi-Fröbel-Haus in Berlin from 1895 to 1896 and she then returned to work with Caroline Bishop.The Beginnings of the Nursery School Movement in Birmingham
Julia Lloyd, p. 11. Retrieved 1 August 2015


Birmingham's first nursery school

The free Kindergarten in
Greet, Birmingham Greet () is a historical area in south Birmingham, England, around modern Sparkhill. Now a name obsolete in addresses, Greet, meaning "gravel" (grit)", was one of the medieval manors around Birmingham on the eastern gravelly slopes of the sandston ...
was in a room supplied by
Geraldine Cadbury Dame Geraldine Cadbury, DBE ( Southall; 29 June 186430 January 1941) was a British Quaker, author, social and penal reformer. Geraldine was one of the first women in Birmingham to become a magistrate. From 1923, she chaired the justices’ pan ...
and it opened in 1904 using staff from Bishop's college in Edgbaston.Jane Read, ‘Bishop, Caroline Garrison (1846–1929)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 200
accessed 31 July 2015
/ref> This was the first nursery school in Birmingham.Selly Oak Nursery History
Retrieved 1 August 2015
It was the initiative of Lloyd. She had been interested in getting Birmingham's School Board interested in Kindergartens, but she saw that they saw these ideas as a way to spice up conventional classes, whereas Lloyd wanted to see them as a basis for children's education. The children grew their own vegetables, visited farms and used their own hands to turn the fleece from their pet lamb into knitted garments for the dolls house. In response to the first world war the kindergarten was renamed a nursery school. In 1907 the praise that she received about the Greet Kindergarten enabled her to open a second kindergarten which was again in a poor area of Birmingham. A woman's centre was chosen in Summer Lane and Lloyd gave strong leadership but also allowed her staff the freedom to manage. Again the children visited farms and received stimulation whilst they played, and worked, at tasks around pets and horticulture. The Greet Kindergarten had received glowing reports from educators and inspectors who saw that the children co-operated whilst achieving Lloyd's objectives of not only improving intelligence but also curiosity, social skills, hygiene and order. The mothers of children who attended free kindergartens were not appreciated and the children were thought to be bribed by their parents, over indulged and allowed to stay up late. This lack of discipline was a problem that the Kindergarten tried to mitigate. The following year a third location was started. With three locations the Birmingham People's Kindergarten Association was created with Lloyd as the honorary secretary. This was to become the Birmingham Nursery Schools' Association in 1917. The following year the 1918 Education Act appeared to place nursery education as a statutory right. A recently opened fourth nursery was closed with the optimism the Local Education Authorities would now supply nursery education. The LEA's did supply money to Lloyd's free kindergartens and
Margaret McMillan Margaret McMillan (20 July 1860 – 27 March 1931) was a nursery school pioneer and lobbied for the 1906 Provision of School Meals Act. Working in deprived districts of London, notably Deptford, and Bradford, she agitated for reforms to ...
s nursery in Deptford was the first to receive LEA funding in 1917 but it was seen that the government was failing to heed "the message of the nineteenth century Froebelians. By 1923 it was realised that they had failed to take the lead and Lloyd was there when the Nursery Schools Association was formed in Manchester. Bishop died in
Exmouth Exmouth is a harbor, port town, civil parishes in England, civil parish and seaside resort, sited on the east bank of the mouth of the River Exe and southeast of Exeter. In 2011 it had a population of 34,432, making Exmouth the List of town ...
.


Legacy

The current Selly Oak Nursery School dates from the nursery school opened by Lloyd, Cadbury and Bishop in 1904. When Lloyd died the Selly Oak Committee commented on their "pride in their links with her pioneering work for the children of the City". Lloyd herself made a number of charitable bequests but the major part went to fund a readership at the
University of Birmingham , mottoeng = Through efforts to heights , established = 1825 – Birmingham School of Medicine and Surgery1836 – Birmingham Royal School of Medicine and Surgery1843 – Queen's College1875 – Mason Science College1898 – Mason Univers ...
in Social Philosophy.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Lloyd, Julia 1867 births 1955 deaths People from Wednesbury