At the commencement of the 1900s the master of Doagh National School was R. B. Robson. He was originally from near Greyabbey, and in 1882 had spent six weeks as a substitute teacher at this school.58 Three years later Robson returned to take up a permanent position at Doagh.
During Robson’s tenure the number of boys attending the school increased to the point where additional accommodation was needed. A public meeting was held with the proprietor of the local spinning mill in the chair and the response was such that the sum of £75 was promised by those in attendance.
The process of having a new school built proved to be, in Robson’s own words, ‘a long and tedious affair’. The schoolmaster even enlisted the support of the MP for East Antrim, Colonel McCalmont to raise the matter in the House of Commons. The new school, which was built to accommodate 130 pupils, was opened in 1909. Robson retired in 1926. A new school, standing on the site of its predecessor, was built in 1959.
There were several other schools in the Doagh area in the early twentieth century. The nearest was Cogry Mills National School which was in existence from at least as far back as 1850. By the beginning of the twentieth century, this school had its own library.
According to the teacher, as reported in the Appendix to the 69th Report of the Commissioners for National Education in Ireland … 1902, ‘the general knowledge of the pupils is increased and their vocabulary is enlarged’ as a result of the library. Furthermore, the benefits of the library went beyond simply the pupils at the school to their parents as well.
This school was replaced by the Cogry Mills Memorial School which was built in the aftermath of the First World War and named in memory of those men from the area who had died in that conflict. In 1937 a new school was built on the Moyra Road – Kilbride Central – which replaced the pre-existing schools at Kilbride and Cogry.