52°09′00″N 0°27′32″W / 52.150°N 0.459°W / 52.150; -0.459

Harpur Trust
Founded1566
FounderSir William Harpur
TypeCharitable trust
FocusEducation and Almshouses
Location
Websitehttps://www.harpurtrust.org.uk/

The Harpur Trust is a charity in Bedford, England. The stated aim of the charity is to help and support the people who live in and around Bedford, and to help them improve their lives by:

  • providing and promoting education
  • offering help and relief to anyone who is sick, in need, in hardship or distress
  • providing recreational facilities with a social welfare purpose for the people of Bedford and its surroundings.

Reorganised as a company limited by guarantee in 2012, it was previously called The Bedford Charity (The Harpur Trust) as its legal name, but was most often referred to as the Harpur Trust.[1]

The main activities of the charity are the operation of a number of independent schools and one academy in Bedford. The charity also operates a number of almshouses in the Bedford area. In addition, the charity supports the community by giving grants to local projects. In 2009/10 it donated over £1,900,000 in grants to projects based in and around Bedford. This money is intended to help local organisations and individuals to make a difference to their own lives or those of others.

History

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Harpur Trust Act 1764
Act of Parliament
 
Long titleAn Act for enlarging the charitable Uses, extending the Objects, and regulating the Application of the Rents and Profits, of the Estates given by Sir William Harpur Knight and Dame Alice his Wife, for the Benefit of the Poor, and other Objects of Charity, of the Town of Bedford.
Citation4 Geo. 3. c. 72
Dates
Royal assent19 April 1764
Other legislation
Repealed byBedford School Act 1826
Status: Repealed

The Harpur Trust was established by Sir William Harpur (c.1496–1574). Harpur was a merchant from Bedford who became Lord Mayor of London in 1561. He was knighted in the following year. Sir William and his wife, Dame Alice, gave an endowment which consisted of some property in Bedford and 13 acres (5.3 ha) of water-meadows which are now Holborn. It was to support free schooling, dowries for poor maidens and “poore chylders ther to be nurryshed and enformed”. In 1566, the Bedford Charity endowed Bedford School, which had been established in 1552, and founded "the Writing School" (later renamed Bedford Modern School) to teach copper plate handwriting. In 1764, the Harpur Trust was formally created by an act of Parliament, the Harpur Trust Act 1764 (4 Geo. 3. c. 72). It was not until 1882 that girls' education was endowed by the trust.[2]

Present day

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Schools

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Today the Harpur Trust runs a range of fee-charging private schools:

In March 2009, the charity confirmed it would enter the state education sector with the opening of a new academy in Bedford: Bedford Academy opened in September 2010, sponsored by the charity along with Bedford College.[3][4]

Other activities

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The Harpur Trust also owns almhouses in Bedford and the nearby village of Bromham.[5] The Charity's endowment was valued at £53.9 million in June 2010 and it employs over 1,200 people in Bedford. Its current Chief Executive is David Steadman.[6]

References

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  1. ^ "Bedford Charity". London Remembers. Retrieved 23 June 2020.
  2. ^ "UCL Bloomsbury Project". www.ucl.ac.uk. Retrieved 23 June 2020.
  3. ^ "Bunyan Academy set for next year". Bedfordshire on Sunday. 13 March 2009. Archived from the original on 23 July 2012. Retrieved 28 April 2009.
  4. ^ "Bedford Academy Becomes a Centre of Excellence". IQM. 25 September 2017. Retrieved 23 June 2020.
  5. ^ "£2 million investment in new Almshouse Accommodation". www.harpurtrust.org.uk. Retrieved 23 June 2020.
  6. ^ Hutchinson, Paul (18 February 2019). "David Steadman named as new CEO for Harpur Trust". Bedford Independent. Retrieved 23 June 2020.
  • De-la-Noy, Michael (1999). Bedford School: A History. Bedford School. ISBN 0-9536685-0-9.
  • Sargeaunt, John; Hockliffe, Ernest (1925). A History Of Bedford School. F.R.Hocliffe & T. Fisher Unwin Ltd. ISBN N/A.
  • Godber, Joyce (1973). The Harpur Trust 1552–1973. White Crescent Press Ltd. ISBN 0-9502917-0-6.
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