Lewes Priory School

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Priory School Logo
Priory School Logo

Lewes Priory School is a British co-educational school for 11 to 16 year-olds located on Mountfield Road in the Sussex town of Lewes.

The Priory School was originally formed in 1969 when the Lewes County Grammar School for Girls, the Lewes County Grammar School for Boys and the Lewes Secondary Modern School were amalgamated to form a comprehesive school called Priory School. Later, in the early 1990s, this was split into a Sixth Form College (16-19) and the separate Priory School (11-16) on the Mountfield Road site.

The Priory School then became centered on the site of the former Secondary Modern School and new building have since been added. The adjacent buildings formerly used by the County Grammar School for Boys and by the Sixth Form College have become part of the Sussex Downs College (Higher Education). The Chapel of the former Boys Grammar School was retained by the Priory School.

In 1991, the new revised version of Priory School opened boasting a new wing — "South Block" — and a heavily refurbished main building. The latter was the home of Lewes Secondary Modern School until 1969, sporting a distinctive copper plated clock tower. The main building included new science labs, a library and design technology rooms, built in anticipation of design technology being in the National Curriculum.

Priory School has a strong tradition of amateur drama that it inherited from the Grammar Schools. Members of the teaching staff wrote an entire musical about the life of local WWI soldier, Private Rupert Freeman, called "In the Pink". The pupils are divided into four "houses" named Fire, Earth, Water and Air. Each pupil is allocated to a house and the houses compete collectively in sport and other activities.

[edit] Chapel

The school has a chapel that was built in the 1950s to honour the boys from the Lewes County Grammar School for Boys who died in World War II. Their names grace the walls of the vestibule to this day. The latin "Dare Nec Computare" above the door translates to "To give and not to count the cost".

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