Tales of the Urban Explorer: The Dudley Ryder School

“Oh shit…, not another”

It seemed like it. Once again we were too late and something that was once very explorable had been resigned to a bloody building site.

26_IMG_6257_26.jpg

Why can't these old buildings, some of which are pre-Victorian be left alone?

The Dudley Ryder School is older than it appears to be. Built in 1825, and created to house 'rich kids' whose parents were forced to pay for their offspring's education, this was the answer.

Two classrooms existed, one for each gender housing a maximum of 100 of the little monsters. Classes were of a similar length to modern-day ones, but the kids were made to attend Sunday school and all that delicious mandatory religion bullshit.

The School was closed in 1981 but was inhabited for other uses for an unknown amount of time, before being boarded up and sealed for years.

Then we arrived, and the builders had beaten us to it. Due to our weekend trip, they were not present, and no doubt down at the pub getting pissed.

25_IMG_6255_25.jpg

Regardless, we were going to have a snoop around, and after struggling to park we snuck past the anti-climbing fencing and descended into the grounds.

24_IMG_6254_24.jpg

Could it be that the external ugly scaffolding had been erected and the internals of his ancient dwelling be untouched?

If this was not the case, we would be leaving. There's little point it snapping brand-new woodwork, new beams, new doors, and windows.

27_IMG_6259_27.jpg

We are not 'Renovation Explorers'. That sounds intensely boring.

The absent builders has done little to stop unwanted guests and we simply walked through a door and sighed with some relief seeing no new décor.

1_IMG_6230_1.jpg

Private schools from 1825 were a little strange, with vintage ovens in the public areas.

2_IMG_6231_2.jpg

3_IMG_6232_3.jpg

The taller style doors which fold inwards very much reminded me of my primary school which I guess was also of Victorian origins. It's been demolished for years, having been deemed unsafe, left for a decade or so, and then flattened.

4_IMG_6233_4.jpg

While the insides of 'The Dudley Ryder School' were untouched, they were also quite bare. I had to look for things of interest.

5_IMG_6234_5.jpg

This Antique fair of 1992 was not hosted here, but somewhere else, a pity.

6_IMG_6235_6.jpg

Those big green doors again, that maybe segregated the boys from the girls. What's the fun in that?

7_IMG_6236_7.jpg

Those paranormal wackos had also been here, no doubt proclaiming it was haunted and bewitched.

8_IMG_6237_8.jpg

9_IMG_6238_9.jpg

We climbed the stairs, having been disappointed so far with the lack of eye candy. It was not going to improve much.

10_IMG_6239_10.jpg

A fancy toilet lid, one more step and you could have viewed the contents. I spared you the sights.

11_IMG_6240_11.jpg

12_IMG_6242_12.jpg

A strange-looking arch and those old wooden doors that can often be found in the Midlands. People in those days were shorter than today's average and you often find yourself ducking to pass through.

14_IMG_6244_14.jpg

Not all the upper rooms had survived unscathed, but the room surprisingly lacked water damage. Maybe it doesn't rain in this part of the country? Fat chance of that, this is still England.

15_IMG_6245_15.jpg

A swathe of cobwebs. Some of the spiders that created all that could be older than me.

16_IMG_6246_16.jpg

It does look like someone tried to paper over the holes in the roof. It's a bad solution all around.

17_IMG_6247_17.jpg

Joiners had no style sense whatsoever in the 19th century and designed doors to look as ugly and unaccommodating as possible.

18_IMG_6248_18.jpg

It could have been a cloakroom, but there was little evidence to suggest it.

19_IMG_6249_19.jpg

Trying to keep awake, we trundled down the dirty wallpapered stairs in search of more. Being bare is worse than it threatening to fall on your head.

The kitchen while being overwhelmingly the most exciting room so far, contained little to drool over.

20_IMG_6250_20.jpg

The water bottle has likely been ditched by those lunatic ghost chasers and was hardly of vintage stock.


'a vintage plastic bottle of water, there is no such item. We all downed tap water then and had huge natural immunities'…

Exiting through the back door, we started to circle the old school thinking that even two years ago it wouldn't have been any better than today.

We spotted a window at the far end, leading into a different section of the property. After the distinct lack of excitement, @anidiotexplores was climbing through and vanishing on me, again.

22_IMG_6252_22.jpg

It looked like a stand-up classroom with what looked like a very rusty old storage heater and a whiteboard at one end.

21_IMG_6251_21.jpg

Let me tell you, it was all blackboards in those old days with chalk and those white variants arrived much later. If you misbehaved the chalk would come flying your way, and crack you in the teeth if you were unlucky.

23_IMG_6253_23.jpg

The whiteboard was not cool, as it states.

28_IMG_6261_28.jpg

Lovely old property, with loads of character, but a boring, dull exploration. That is my synopsis of 'The Dudley Ryder School'.

RedLine.png

Do you like posting your Urbex content and photography for FREE on Facebook and YouTube? I like to get some form of reward for my work and every time I create I do just that. Take a look at The Urbex Community on HIVE.

If you want to keep creating for FREE then ignore what you are reading. If you want to be like me and gain something other than BUGGER ALL for your work then click here and learn about posting on the HIVE blockchain.

RedLine.png

TalesLogo.JPG

RedLine.png


CurieCurator.jpg

RedLine.png

Drooling Maniac.JPG

If you found this article so invigorating that you are now a positively googly-eyed, drooling lunatic with dripping saliva or even if you liked it just a bit, then please upvote, comment, rehive, engage me or all of these things.



0
0
0.000
25 comments
avatar

Wow, looks like a lovely building and a great renovation project for someone with loafs of cash, I don't think much of the bathroom though lol

0
0
0.000
avatar

I have seen toilets a lot worse than that, you could even piss in it, but beware the splashes. It's far too big to be a house, unless you have 10 kids or so.

0
0
0.000
avatar

Congratulations, your post has been added to Pinmapple! 🎉🥳🍍

Did you know you have your own profile map?
And every post has their own map too!

Want to have your post on the map too?

  • Go to Pinmapple
  • Click the get code button
  • Click on the map where your post should be (zoom in if needed)
  • Copy and paste the generated code in your post (Hive only)
  • Congrats, your post is now on the map!

0
0
0.000
avatar

Looks like they're getting to restoration before it all falls down... Cool old place, not quite as interesting as some of your other urban spelunking. I thought papering over the holes in the roof was an interesting concept, like it's going to stop the rain. I guess some people just aren't too bright...

0
0
0.000
avatar

I thought papering over the holes in the roof was an interesting concept, like it's going to stop the rain. I guess some people just aren't too bright...

😄..., could be those builders have done a little sticky taping prior to the real work.

0
0
0.000
avatar

Glad to see a place not entirely ravaged by piss-poor graffiti, but damn, I could only imagine some of the head wounds i would have incurred crawling through a few of those doorways.

0
0
0.000
avatar

I could only imagine some of the head wounds i would have incurred crawling through a few of those doorways.

I have come across these type of low-arches before. Some worse than this. People were seriously short 150 years ago.

0
0
0.000
avatar

Hiya, @choogirl here, just swinging by to let you know that this post made it into our Honourable Mentions in Daily Travel Digest #1974.

Your post has been manually curated by the @pinmapple team. If you like what we're doing, please drop by to check out all the rest of today's great posts and consider supporting other authors like yourself and us so we can keep the project going!

Become part of our travel community:

0
0
0.000
avatar

Why don't they leave them alone? Because when they do, people fire bomb them! That toilet seat is something else. Reminds me of the poofy ones my grandparents used to have. That wall decor is out of control. So many patterns and colors!

0
0
0.000
avatar

Because when they do, people fire bomb them!

@bozz, this was another middle of nowhere place. The rich in the 1820's were likely landowners but how they got their kids to school by 9.30am each morning would be interesting. Horses and Carts would be clogging the local roads!

0
0
0.000
avatar

Haha, you mean they didn't walk uphill both ways to get to school back then? I thought that was the story...

0
0
0.000
avatar

Oh my God!
It is obvious that they want to renovatr the old buildings but old buildings are always beautiful and lovely. I wonder why they won't leave them alone.
They always look amazing

0
0
0.000
avatar

Old structure, looks renovating, but the interiors are ancients even the outside building

0
0
0.000
avatar

The toilet seat is really fancy. The doors really look short for real.

0
0
0.000
avatar

That toilet seat looks freshly painted - but why 🤣? The rest of it sure shows its age!

It does look like someone tried to paper over the holes in the roof.

That's one repair method that's new to me!

This post has been manually curated by the VYB curation project

0
0
0.000
avatar

I hope the construction work is for the restoration and preservation of this house. Would be nice to see a “time machine” give us a glimpse how it looked like back then.

0
0
0.000
avatar

Glad to see that such a nice building is being saved, even if it was a dull explore. Atleast you got in before the builders had really started. I loved that old fireplace - cool to see !

0
0
0.000
avatar
(Edited)

Grand old building outside, folding doors inside quite a feature, old school cupboards for suitcases exactly the same we had our schools nowhere that old either.

Different type of an explore, cannot imagine so many children crammed in there daily.

!BEER

0
0
0.000
avatar

Explicit photos, all very interesting, I loved to see them and immerse myself in a past that was presumably much better. Thanks for sharing, greetings!

0
0
0.000