Maidwell Hall is a Grade II listed building in Maidwell, West Northamptonshire, England. The mostly 18th-century house was extensively damaged in a fire and remodelled in 1902. It is now Maidwell Hall School, a coeducational preparatory school for boarding and day pupils aged 4–13 which since 2022 has been an affiliate of Uppingham School.
Maidwell Hall dates to 1637.[1] was extensively remodelled in the 18th century and again in 1885 by J.A. Gotch.[2][3] A fire in 1895 largely destroyed the interior and is commemorated by stained glass windows donated to St Mary's church by the lord of the manor, Sir Reginald Loder.[4] The interior was rebuilt in 1902.[2] It was remodelled to house the school in about 1930 and was extended in the 20th century.[3] It became a Grade II listed building on 18 July 1985.[3]
The house is on an H-plan, with square corner towers. It has two storeys and an attic with dormers; the central two-storey porch with balcony and the shaped gable behind it survive from the 17th-century house, as does one wing.[2][3]
Maidwell Hall School was founded as a boys' preparatory school in 1911.[5] It moved to Maidwell Hall in 1933 and became co-educational in 2010.[6][7][8] In 2022, the school merged with Uppingham School in Rutland.[9][10]
Oliver E.P. Wyatt (1898 – 1973), the long-time headmaster, served as chair of the Incorporated Association of Preparatory Schools in 1944 and 1948, contributed evidence to the Fleming Report on public school and general education prepared by David Fleming in 1944, and co-authored a book on preparatory schools published in 1951.[11] He was also a prominent horticulturalist.[12][13] In 1963 he was succeeded as headmaster by John Porch (d. 2022), who retired in 1978.[14][15] Anthony Rendall became headmaster in 2022.[9]
Memoirs published in the 21st century by two former boarders have described harsh corporal punishment at the school: by Andrew Motion in 2006, about the Wyatt era[16][17] and by Charles Spencer, 9th Earl Spencer in 2024, about the Porch era.[14] Spencer also wrote of having been sexually abused by a female staff member at Maidwell.[18] In response to Spencer's book, the school issued a statement of apology for "practices which were, sadly, sometimes believed to be normal and acceptable at that time" and noting that wideranging changes made to life at the school had as their primary purpose "the safeguarding of children and promotion of their welfare."[7] The spokesman also said that the school had reported the allegations to the local authority for investigation.[7][19] Northamptonshire Police announced in June 2024 that they had begun an investigation.[20][21]