Summaries

A schoolteacher becomes the mentor of a talented young miner and seeks to get him into a university.

Schoolteacher Lilly Moffat is dismayed by conditions in a Welsh mining town. She sets up a school to teach fundamental education to the villagers. Her housekeeper and daughter oppose the project, as does the local Squire who will not rent her space. Using part of her own home, she goes ahead with Miss Moffat's School. One of her students Morgan Evans turns from bully to brilliant student.—Ed Stephan <[email protected]>

1895. The residents of the rural coal mining village of Glansarno, Wales are surprised not only that the new resident from London, L.C. Moffatt, M.A., is not Lieutenant-Colonel Moffatt as they expected him to be, but rather independently-minded, financially self-sufficient and well-educated spinster Lilly Cristobel Moffatt, Master of Arts, such a woman who is extraordinary for the area. When Miss Moffatt learns that the majority of the children of the area are poor and illiterate - the boys being sent to work in the mines as early as age twelve to help provide for their families - she decides that she is going to use her money to open a school, she even willing to pay the families the money for the wages no longer earned by the boys. Despite their initial opposition in dealing with a woman like her, Miss Moffatt is able to co-opt the assistance of two somewhat educated locals, Mr. Jones and Miss Ronberry, to help her run the school, she sensing their own dissatisfaction with their current lot in life in Glansarno. What Miss Moffatt does not expect is the extent of the opposition to the school by the mine officials, led by Mr. Trevorby, a local squire with a vested interest in the mine operation, who believe that education is useless for the boys and the school is taking away their workforce. She considers throwing in the towel in her fight with the mine until she reads a short essay written by one of the older students, Morgan Evans, who, despite the technical problems with the piece, she sees as a boy who truly has deep thoughts and would truly benefit from an education. Morgan and Miss Moffatt's relationship is not always a smooth one, as Morgan sometimes has to reconcile this education against what he sees as his destiny of going back to the mines, while Miss Moffatt eventually sees higher education as his new destiny, something that would require him to obtain a scholarship. But the biggest threat to Morgan's future in academia and the existence of the school altogether is Bessie Watty, the opportunistic daughter of Miss Moffatt's Cockney housekeeper from London, reformed Mrs. Watty who even admits that she does not like her daughter despite her own criminal past.—Huggo

Details

Keywords
  • singing
  • spinster
  • coal miner
  • tea
  • horse and buggy
Genres
  • Drama
Release date Jul 13, 1945
Motion Picture Rating (MPA) Approved
Countries of origin United States
Language English Latin French Welsh
Filming locations Warner Brothers Burbank Studios - 4000 Warner Boulevard, Burbank, California, USA
Production companies Warner Bros.

Box office

Tech specs

Runtime 1h 55m
Color Black and White
Aspect ratio 1.37 : 1

Synopsis

In 1895, the inhabitants of Glansarno, a small village in the Welsh countryside, are taken aback when they learn that L. C. Moffat, their newest neighbor, is a forty-year-old English woman named Lily Cristobel, not a man as her Master of Arts degree had led them to expect. The other members of Moffat's household are her housekeeper, Mrs. Watty, a reformed thief, and Mrs. Watty's daughter Bessie. Despite the opposition of the village squire, Moffat intends to establish a school for the children who work in the nearby coal mines and drafts Miss Ronberry, a middle-aged woman, and Mr. Jones, a minister, to help her. She encounters stiff opposition to her plans, first from the mine owners, including the Squire, who refuse to release the boys from their long hours in the mines, and then from the owner of the barn she had planned to use for a schoolhouse. Discouraged, Moffat is about to give up her plans, when she reads an essay written by Morgan Evans, one of the boys, and is so moved by his rough poetry that she decides to hold classes in her house. Although many villagers attend the classes, Moffat focuses her efforts on Morgan. After a while, she believes that Morgan is smart enough to attend Oxford. Using flattery, she makes friends with the Squire and then asks him to vouch for Morgan to enable him to apply for a scholarship to the university. In the meantime, Morgan's friends make fun of his efforts to become educated. One day, feeling out of place, a drunken Morgan tells Moffat that he intends to return to the mines. She scolds him, but concedes that the decision to continue is his. Confused, Morgan leaves the house and outside, encounters Bessie. She flirts with him, taking his side against Moffat, and ends by seducing him. Morgan goes back to the mines, but eventually, decides to try for Oxford. Moffat coaches him steadily for the examination, but on the morning of the test, Bessie, who has been sent away into service, returns and tells Moffat that she is pregnant with Morgan's child. Moffat keeps this news a secret from Morgan. After the examination, Morgan tells Moffat how much he now wants to attend the university. While Morgan celebrates with Moffat, the Squire, Miss Ronberry, Mr. Jones and Mrs. Watty, Bessie arrives at the house. Mr. Jones spots her and, on a pretext, sends Morgan to the kitchen. Bessie then tells the assembled group about her pregnancy and Mr. Jones offers to marry her, but she laughs in his face, saying that she already has a man who will marry her, provided the child does not come with her. Mrs. Watty then persuades Moffat to adopt the child. When Morgan learns that he is to be a father, however, he insists on marrying Bessie, despite Moffat's attempts to dissuade him. After a telegram arrives, announcing that Morgan has won the scholarship, Moffat convinces him to attend the school and forbids him to see her again as she will be caring for his child. Morgan agrees to her terms and leaves her house for the last time to celebrate with the other villagers.

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