

The former Charter School at Ray, County Donegal. In brief, Charter Schools (so-called because they were established by royal charter in 1733) were part of a scheme by the Church of Ireland episcopacy to set up a Protestant education system throughout the country: the idea was that boys would learn a useful trade and girls be trained in domestic skills (while also becoming loyal members of the Established Church). Run by The Incorporated Society in Dublin for Promoting English Protestant Schools in Ireland, the project never achieved great success and proved subject to much abuse (many children being treated as unpaid servants and farmhands, or worse) but more than 40 schools were constructed, such as this one which dates from 1740 and was intended to house 27 pupils. At the time, Nicholas Forster, Bishop of Raphoe provided £50 towards the cost of construction, as well as supplying the original furniture and providing for four debentures of £100 for the ‘maintaining of the children’. William Forward of nearby Castleforward (since demolished) donated a further £20 while one John Leslie bequeathed two acres of land in perpetuity to the school, and another ‘twenty acres for use for the period of three lives at £6 per annum.’ It became a boys’ only school by 1794 and boarding was phased out after 1810. The building thereafter served as a day school for Protestant pupils until 1895, when it became part of the National School system. This remained the case until 2001 when a new school building opened close by: the old charter school has since lain empty and falling into its present state of dereliction.

