Fairfield Methodist Primary School
Encyclopedia
Fairfield Methodist School (Primary) (abbreviation
Abbreviation
An abbreviation is a shortened form of a word or phrase. Usually, but not always, it consists of a letter or group of letters taken from the word or phrase...

: FMS(P); ) is a government-aided primary school in Dover Road
Dover, Singapore
Dover is a relatively small neighbourhood of Singapore, located in Queenstown. It is south of Ghim Moh and north of Kent Ridge. It is often a noted location due to the sheer number of educational facilities it holds, while lying in a zone between Singapore's central business district in the Central...

, western Singapore
Singapore
Singapore , officially the Republic of Singapore, is a Southeast Asian city-state off the southern tip of the Malay Peninsula, north of the equator. An island country made up of 63 islands, it is separated from Malaysia by the Straits of Johor to its north and from Indonesia's Riau Islands by the...

.

It is affiliated with Fairfield Methodist School (Secondary).

Early years

Fairfield was founded in August 1888 by Miss Sophia Blackmore, a 31-year-old missionary from the Methodist Mission. Her mandate in 1888 was to start a girls' school in Singapore in an enclave called Telok Ayer
Telok Ayer
Telok Ayer is a historic district located in Singapore's Chinatown within the Central Business District, straddling the Outram Planning Area and the Downtown Core under the Urban Redevelopment Authority's urban planning zones.-Etymology:...

. She started a class for eight Nonya girls in a little room at Cross Street. At that time, education for girls was not favoured by the early traditional Chinese immigrants or even the liberal Baba merchants. Miss Blackmore then persuaded families to enroll their girls at her school. However, they suspected her of being a government spy sent to catch them secretly gambling at cards, or more commonly known to the people as the 'mata-mata' agents who were helping the British government enforce its new law against gambling. Miss Blackmore's habit of asking for the women's names and writing them down in her notebook as a record of whom she had visited made parents suspicious of her.

Over time, they became more receptive to the idea that it would be good for their daughters to be educated. In June 1888, Miss Blackmore managed to get her first pupil. She recalls,

" How pleased we were when one little girl, hearing of the school, clapped her hands and begged her mother to let her attend. She had been nicknamed 'Gondol', which means bald, because her head had been shaved during sickness. Not much knowledge entered that little bald head, but her own willingness to come to school helped others to decide."


After Gondol's mother agreed to send her daughter to school, a few other mothers followed her lead. Altogether, seven more pupils were signed on. Blackmore rented out the front room of Nonya Boon, a rich widow's house. She named the school 'The Telok Ayer Girls' School'.

1888 onwards

In 1893, the principal, Emma Ferris, found that the furniture had been removed because the landlady had decided to rent the room out to someone else to be used as a shop. Ferris found a new site for the school in a corner house at Telok Ayer. By 1894, the school had 30 students but some parents took their daughters out of the school when they were 12.

In 1902, when Edith Anna Hemingway was principal, the school moved into a big and airy house on Neil Road. However, it was told to move out a year later. The school now had problems accommodating its 93 students.

In 1905, the school moved from the corner house at Telok Ayer into a larger house at Neil Road. In 1907, after Luella Anderson's tenure as principal ended, the school appointed Mary Olson as principal. She had come to Singapore to head the Methodist Girls' School
Methodist Girls' School
Methodist Girls' School is a girls' independent school, consisting of two sections - the Primary School and Secondary School, located in Bukit Timah, Singapore. It is affiliated to the Anglo-Chinese School family and the Methodist Church in Singapore...

. Despite this, she took charge of the Telok Ayer School as well. In 1910, Miss Olson was appointed principal of Telok Ayer Girls' School only. The school was promoted to a 'first-rate school' by the government.

Miss Olson realised that she required more space in the building and tried to raise funds for a new building. The biggest pledge (USD 5,000) came from a Mr Fairfield from New England
New England
New England is a region in the northeastern corner of the United States consisting of the six states of Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut...

. The school was renamed Fairfield Girls' School.

In 1917, congestion had forced a hundred Fairfeld girls to study in a dark shophouse. In 1924, a new block of the building was completed, consisting of six classrooms and a chapel hall.

On to Dover

In 1983, the school moved its premises to its current Dover campus. At the same time, the school went co-educational and split into two separate schools, Fairfield Methodist Primary School and Fairfield Methodist Secondary School, each with its own administration but both under the Fairfield Methodist School Board of Management. Cheong Yuen Lin, an old girl of Fairfield, became the principal of FMPS. In the same year, the school also saw its first intake of boys.

In 1989, Dorothy Ho became the Principal of FMPS.

In 1998, FMPS embarked on a PRIME Building Project (1998–2002) to build a new extension block and upgrade the existing facilities to enable the school to go single session by 2005.

Dorothy Ho retired in December 2001 and was succeeded by Tan Shook Fund. Tan, however, passed away unexpectedly in 2003 in a drowning accident in Krabi
Krabi
Krabi is a town on the west coast of southern Thailand at the mouth of the Krabi River where it empties in Phangnga Bay. As of 2005 the town has a population of 24,986. The town is the capital of Krabi Province and Krabi district...

 off Southern Thailand
Thailand
Thailand , officially the Kingdom of Thailand , formerly known as Siam , is a country located at the centre of the Indochina peninsula and Southeast Asia. It is bordered to the north by Burma and Laos, to the east by Laos and Cambodia, to the south by the Gulf of Thailand and Malaysia, and to the...

.

The baton was passed on to Charles Tong, Fairfield's first male principal, in February 2004. The next year, the school became single-session.

With effect from January 2009, the name of the school was changed from Fairfield Methodist Primary School to Fairfield Methodist School (Primary).

Fairfield celebrated its 120th anniversary in August 2008. A commemorative plaque was erected on the site of the old Fairfield Methodist Girls' School at Neil Road. The school celebrated by breaking several national records, entering the Singapore Book of Records.

The school was formally turned over to Mrs Chaillan Mui Tuan by Charles Tong in December 2008. He had been principal for five years.

In September 2009, the school conducted an experiment in preparation for a change in the school's starting time. For four days, school started at 7:30 a.m. instead of the usual 7:10 a.m.

120th annivesary (2008)

In the countdown to its 120th anniversary, Fairfield Methodist Primary School joined Fairfield Methodist Secondary School in breaking the world record for the most number of people playing Uno simultaneously. The Fairfield Schools also entered the Singapore Book Of Records for having 5000 people (students, staff and parents) make a Fairfield Badge on the school field.

The primary school also broke the world record for forming the longest contra line of people dancing to the song New Age Girl
New Age Girl
"New Age Girl" is a song by alternative rock trio Deadeye Dick, from their debut album A Different Story and the soundtrack to the 1994 film Dumb and Dumber....

, and the record for the longest painting in Singapore on the same day.

Sports carnival

Annually, Fairfield holds a sports carnival, in which upper primary (Primary 4-6) pupils of the school houses compete against each other in sports such as Badminton
Badminton
Badminton is a racquet sport played by either two opposing players or two opposing pairs , who take positions on opposite halves of a rectangular court that is divided by a net. Players score points by striking a shuttlecock with their racquet so that it passes over the net and lands in their...

, Volleyball
Volleyball
Volleyball is a team sport in which two teams of six players are separated by a net. Each team tries to score points by grounding a ball on the other team's court under organized rules.The complete rules are extensive...

, Captain's Ball and Ultimate Frisbee. The Sports Carnival was started in 2001, with Blackmore House winning the first edition of the Carnival. Since then, Martin House has claimed the title every year, with the exception of 2008, when the school stopped the Carvival for a year due to its 120th anniversary celebrations.

Sports Day

Sports Day is similar to the sports carnival but is for lower primary pupils. The sports are less vigorous than the ones in the carnival.( Running, jumping, etc.)

See also

  • Fairfield Methodist School (Secondary)
  • Methodist Girls School
  • Miss Sophia Blackmore
    Miss Sophia Blackmore
    Miss Sofia Blackmore founded Fairfield Methodist School , Fairfield Methodist School and Methodist Girls' School in Singapore. Originally, the Fairfield Schools were once known as Telok Ayer Girls' School, which changed name for a few times and after a while, the school split into two....

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