The school had been established by 1932, with Mrs Josephine Lewis as headmistress.[1] She was still in post in 1967.[2]
East Haddon Hall was also the home of Colonel (later Brigadier) and Mrs Scott Robson. Throughout the Second World War, from 1939 to 1945, East Haddon Hall was a maternity hospital. In 1945, it returned to being a school, with which the Scott Robsons were closely connected.[3]
Although it was a secondary school, in 1965 girls were taught only up to the age of seventeen.[4] In that year, there were sixty girls in the school.[5] The school closed at East Haddon Hall in 1967, with Mrs Lewis stating that it was moving to a new home at Ladbroke Hall, in Warwickshire.[2] The school was still there in 1970, with seventy girls and with Mrs Lewis still as headmistress, under the new name of Ladbroke Hall.[6]
The closure of the school was announced in June 1971, and the house itself was also put up for sale.[7] In July, a sale of the school's furniture and equipment was advertised, including sixty beds.[8]
^E. J. Burrow, ed., Schools of England, Wales, Scotland & Ireland with Tutors, Careers, and Continental Sections Vol. 54 (1965), p. 396
^The Education Committees' Year Book (1965), p. 483
^The Education Committees' Year Book 1970 (Association of Education Committees, 1970, p. 503: "Ladbroke Hall †, Southam, Warks (Girls') (70); Mrs E. J. Lewis, BA"
^"Costs force Ladbroke school to close", Coventry Evening Telegraph, Wednesday 30 June 1971, p. 11: "AFTER nearly four years as a girls' private school, Ladbroke Hall, near Southam, the former home of Lord Rootes, is up for sale, and the 60 or so pupils will have to continue their education elsewhere."
^"LADBROKE HALL, SOUTHAM", Coventry Evening Telegraph, Monday 26 July 1971, p. 31
^Olga Craig, Ben Leach, Roya Nikkhah, "Actress Susannah York has died, aged 72", The Daily Telegraph, 15 January 2011
^"Browning, Mary Helena" in Bernard Dolman, ed., Who's who in Art Vol. 33 (2008), p. 121
^Paul Oldfield, Victoria Crosses on the Western Front – Battles of the Hindenburg Line – Canal du Nord: September – October 1918 (Pen and Sword Military, 2023), p. 140