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Historical School Profile

Roding Junior School, Dagenham: A Look Back at a Lost Community Primary

Exploring the history, closure, and lasting legacy of Roding Junior School on Hewett Road, plus what parents should know about the local schools that replaced it.


Published: May 2026 · Research from DfE records and local school dashboards

School Type

Community School

Closed

Age Range

7 – 11 years (Junior)

Mixed Gender

Location

Hewett Road, Dagenham

RM8 2XS

Who Was Roding Junior School?

Roding Junior School was a small, mixed-gender community primary school that served families in the Mayesbrook area of Dagenham. Located on Hewett Road, it catered exclusively to children aged 7 to 11 — the standard junior years at the time. The school was maintained by the local authority, Barking and Dagenham, and operated as a non-selective, neighbourhood school.

According to Department for Education records, Roding Junior School had no religious character and did not offer boarding or sixth form provision. This was a straightforward, local junior school rooted in the community — the kind of place where generations of local children learned to read, write, and grow up together.

School Profile at a Glance

Detail Information
URN (Unique Reference Number)126713
Full NameRoding Junior School
AddressHewett Road, Dagenham, Essex, RM8 2XS
Local AuthorityBarking and Dagenham
RegionLondon
Parliamentary ConstituencyBarking
Electoral WardMayesbrook
School PhasePrimary
Age Range7 to 11
GenderMixed
Religious CharacterNone (Does not apply)
Admissions PolicyNon-selective
Boarding ProvisionNo boarders
Sixth FormNot applicable
Trust / Academy StatusNot applicable (Community school)
StatusClosed
Closure Date31 August 1992
Ofsted RatingNone available
Last Data Snapshot14 July 2025

What Happened to Roding Junior School?

Roding Junior School closed on 31 August 1992 — over three decades ago. While the specific reasons for its closure are not publicly documented in the DfE record, the early 1990s saw a wave of school reorganisations across London boroughs. Several factors may have contributed:

  • Falling pupil rolls — Many inner and outer London areas experienced demographic shifts in the late 1980s and early 1990s, leading to surplus places in primary schools.
  • Local authority reorganisation — Barking and Dagenham may have merged or consolidated several smaller schools into larger, more viable primary schools nearby.
  • Building condition — Older school buildings sometimes became too costly to maintain, prompting closure and relocation of provision.
  • Shift to all-through primaries — Some areas moved away from separate infant and junior schools towards all-through primary schools, which cover ages 3–11 or 5–11.

Whatever the precise reason, the closure marked the end of an era for the Hewett Road site and the families who had once walked through its gates.

Where Do Local Children Go Now? Nearby Primary Schools

Families living near the old Roding Junior School site today are served by a rich network of primary schools within walking distance or a short drive. Based on data from the SchoolDash dashboard, here are the ten nearest primary schools (measured from the RM8 2XS postcode):

Closest 5 Schools
  • Roding Primary School0.0 km
  • The St Teresa Catholic Primary School0.2 km
  • Southwood Primary School0.5 km
  • Dorothy Barley Infants' School0.7 km
  • Dorothy Barley Junior Academy0.9 km
Next 5 Nearest Schools
  • Becontree Primary School0.9 km
  • Valence Primary School1.1 km
  • Manor Primary School1.1 km
  • St Vincent's Catholic Primary School1.2 km
  • St Joseph's Catholic Primary School1.2 km

The Dagenham Educational Landscape Today

The area around the former Roding Junior School is now densely served by schools. According to local dashboards, within a 3 km radius there are well over 50 primary and secondary schools, including community schools, Catholic primaries, academies, and independent settings.

For the ten nearest schools, the average percentage of pupils eligible for free school meals (FSM) is around 24.8%, closely mirroring the local child deprivation rate of 23.2%. This suggests that the area remains a mixed, working-class community where schools play a vital role in supporting children's welfare and learning.

Ethnic diversity in the immediate vicinity is high, with 81.4% of pupils in the ten nearest schools coming from ethnic minority backgrounds. This reflects the vibrant, multicultural character of modern Dagenham and the broader Barking area — a significant demographic change since Roding Junior School closed in 1992.

Remembering Community Schools

"Community schools like Roding Junior were the backbone of post-war British education — owned and run by the local council, open to all, and deeply woven into the fabric of their neighbourhoods."

Today, the school system looks very different. Academy trusts, free schools, and multi-academy trusts have transformed the landscape. But for families who remember Roding Junior School, it remains a cherished part of Dagenham's educational heritage. The fact that its URN (126713) still exists in national databases, decades after closure, shows that every school leaves a permanent mark on the record of public education in England.

Frequently Asked Questions

No. Roding Junior School closed permanently on 31 August 1992. It no longer operates as a school, and no pupils are enrolled there. Its URN remains on the DfE record for historical reference only.

It was a community school — meaning it was fully maintained by the local authority (Barking and Dagenham Council). It was a primary-phase junior school for mixed-gender pupils aged 7 to 11, with no religious character and a non-selective admissions policy.

The precise reason is not publicly documented, but closures in the early 1990s often resulted from falling pupil numbers, local authority reorganisations, or the merging of separate infant and junior schools into all-through primaries. Roding Primary School, which now exists at the same location, is the likely successor.

Roding Primary School is recorded at the same distance (0.0 km) from the postcode, suggesting it occupies the same or an adjacent site. The St Teresa Catholic Primary School is just 0.2 km away, and Southwood Primary School is 0.5 km away.

No. There are no Ofsted inspection reports available for this school. Ofsted inspections became systematic in the mid-1990s, after Roding Junior School had already closed, so no rating was ever assigned.

You could try contacting Barking and Dagenham Council's archives or local history library. Former pupils and staff sometimes share memories on local Facebook groups or community history websites. The DfE's Get Information About Schools (GIAS) portal also retains the formal record under URN 126713.

This information is not available through school dashboards. Given that Roding Primary School exists at the same location, the original building may have been replaced, refurbished, or incorporated into the newer school. A site visit or local council planning records would provide a definite answer.

Data Sources & References

  • SchoolScope
  • SchoolDash
  • DfE GIAS Register

This article uses publicly available data snapshots from 2025–2026. All school listings and distances are indicative and should be verified with the local authority for admissions purposes. StreetScan data was unavailable for this profile at the time of writing.

Features & Amenities

Historical community school (closed 1992)
Mixed-gender primary
Ages 7-11
Non-selective admissions
No religious character
Maintained by local authority
No current amenities

Location

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Contact Information

Timings Not applicable (school closed in 1992)

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