THE COMMUNITY CENTRE NURSERY SCHOOL
A Community Centre was built on Dalgarno Way to provide activities for the local community. Included was a Nursery School, opened in 1936.
Sylvia Ellison, Superintendant of the Nursery School
After my aunt, Sylvia Ellison, left school in 1925, she went to Whitelands College, then in the King's Road, Chelsea, for teacher training (Whitelands Court is now on the site of this training College). The College is now in Roehampton alongside Digby Stewart and other Colleges built on land bought from the nuns of the Sacred Heart of St Charles Square of North Kensington. After several jobs and further training at the Rachel McMillan Nursery Training College in Deptford, she came to Dalgarno Way.
In February 1935 she received a letter from 'The Inspector of Infants' Methods, LCC, about the "new Community Centre in a North Kensington Housing Estate". She became Superintendent there in January 1936. The Centre was opened by the Viscountess Astor in May 1936.
The Kensington News at that time gave the following report: "A State that does not put humanity, and above all, children, before everything, is a blind State" said Lady Astor, MP, on Wednesday, when she formally opened the new Community Centre built by the Kensington Council of Social Service, in Dalgarno Way, North Kensington.
"The Centre has been built to serve the social needs of the five thousand people living on the housing estate of nine and a half acres in North Kensington. The Centre provides, among other things, a nursery school, an infant welfare centre, an LCC evening institute and clubs for boys and girls and men and women.
"Lady Astor was presented with a bouquet of roses by the May Queen, little Ivy Christopher, attended by her maids, Grace Motto, Violet Small, Flossie Powell, Doris Kitchen, Betty Rawlings and Lillian Lee and by her page, Peter Swan. Bertie Bennet, attended by his page, Eric Vince, then presented Lady Astor with a large golden key, and the Centre was formally declared to be open. Though it has, in fact, been operating for about six months.
"Lady Astor added that she was very pleased to see that the Centre had such a splendid nursery school. Nursery schools could do a great deal towards the improvement of the nation's health, which at the present time left much to be desired. Finally, she urged all those for whom the Centre had been built to make the fullest use of it and to value it as it deserved".
According to a Letter to the Times in July 1936 from H.B.Vaisey, Chairman of the North Kensington Community Centre Committee, "The centre contains 13 rooms and a small hall, and has already proved quite inadequate to meet the demands made upon it. During the day there is a nursery school for 60 children between the ages of two and five, and the Kensington Borough Council carry on their infant welfare centre in rooms equipped for the purpose in the building.........." The Letter ends with an appeal for funds, "The whole of the work is, however, severely handicapped by a debt on the building amounting to £1,200, and my committee is exceedingly anxious to clear this off. When this is done we shall be in a position to ask fulfilment of a generous promise of £1,000 from trustees of the City Parochial Foundation". .........Donations "will be gratefully received and acknowledged".
On 19 January 1937 the Community Centre was visited by the Duke of Kent. "At the community centre in Dalgarno Gardens, North Kensington, the Duke of Kent found 30 babies of between two and three years of age playing in a cheerfully decorated room open to the fresh air and sunshine. The Duke wanted to know how the nursery school was financed, how the children were cared for while their mothers were at work, and whether there was enough accommodation. Miss Sylvia Ellison, principal of the school, told him they had a long waiting list" (The Times, January 20, 1937).

Interestingly enough, the day the Duke visited the Community Centre, the Evening Standard published the first pictures of the baby daughter of the Duke and Duchess of Kent, who was born on Christmas Day (Evening Standard, Tuesday, January 19, 1937).
For August Bank Holiday 1938 the children from the Nursery School went to Oakwood, Burwash, Sussex, for the weekend.

From September 30 to October 4, 1938 (at the time of the Munich Crisis) the Nursery School was evacuated for a short time to Radnage Farm, Buckinghamshire.

On September 1,1939 the Nursery School was evacuated again to Penn and on September 15 it moved to Chesham Bois, Amersham. There is a report about this by Sylvia Ellison written in November 1939 (Guild of Friendship, The Friends' Log, Vol.VII, No 2, 1939).
As you know, the Nursery School was evacuated on September 1st. After a fortnight which we spent as the guests of a big L.C.C. Residential School, we moved to a large empty house near Amersham which had been allocated to our use - three `bus loads from London brought the children's beds, tables, chairs, blankets, and a few toys, crockery, pots and pans, etc. and after spending a day there to get ready (during which time we filled 52 mattresses with straw) the children moved in. It was really funny to see them arrive. Members of the local W.V.S. kindly drove them over in cars and as each party was unloaded, they marched in and literally took possession; "This is our new country ain't it, Miss Ellison" and "Isn't this a nice country" - True it is a very nice country and we consider that we are very fortunate to have such comfortable quarters.
Mary Lambert
Photos from the North Kensington Nursery School scrap book, compiled by Sylvia Ellison and now in the North Kensington Community Archive which is at the Local Studies Centre and RBKC Central Library.