Warwick School

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The Myton Road frontage of Warwick School, dating from 1879
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The Myton Road frontage of Warwick School, dating from 1879

Warwick School is an independent school for boys in Warwick, England, and is reputed to be the third-oldest surviving school in the country after King's School, Canterbury and St Peter's School, York.

The Sixth Form Centre and Tuck Shop
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The Sixth Form Centre and Tuck Shop

Contents

[edit] Enrolment

As of January 2006 there were 1080 boys, aged from 7 to 18, at the school comprising:

The School List of January 2006 shows:

  • 844 boys in the Senior School (ages 11 - 18)
  • 236 boys in the Junior School (ages 7 - 11)
  • 95 members of staff in the Senior School and
  • 16 members of staff in the Junior School.

The headmaster of the Senior School is Mr Edward Halse BSc FRSA and the headmaster of the Junior School is Mr Guy Canning BA.

An aerial view of Warwick School taken in 2003
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An aerial view of Warwick School taken in 2003

[edit] History

The actual date of the school's founding is unknown, and the first documentary evidence for its existence dates back to 1123, according to Frykman and Hadley. Boehm, quoting Leach, states that the school was founded circa 914 and was later chartered by King Edward the Confessor (c.1004-1066), noting that the school moved to its current site on the banks of the River Avon in 1879. For many years, though, it was believed that the school dated back merely to its re-founding by King Henry VIII in 1545 as "The King's New School of Warwick". Several premises have been used over the years, including the Lord Leycester Hospital and St Peter's Chapel over the Eastgate. The destruction of records in various fires means that the location of the school for almost the whole of the 17th century is not known for certain. The truth, therefore, seems to be that the present Warwick School is the legitimate successor of a small-town grammar school which dates from before the Norman Conquest.

The main buildings of the school, including the chapel which was built between 1879 and 1893.
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The main buildings of the school, including the chapel which was built between 1879 and 1893.

The move in 1879 was spurred by the Warwick Educational Charities Scheme of 1875, where a schools' foundation was created that comprised the King's Grammar School, a Middle School for boys (up to 15), and a Girls' High School (opened in 1879). The Middle School was built in the Butts in the centre of Warwick, close to the site of where the old Grammar School had existed between c. 1697 and 1879, the former College of the Vicars Choral in St Mary's churchyard. In 1906, the Middle School and the Grammar School were united on Myton Road, the school's current premises, as Warwick School, with only the King's High School for Girls retaining the original royal name. The old Middle School buildings in the town centre were fully taken over by the King's High School in 1918. After a disastrous fire in 1970, however, the buildings, by now re-named St Mary's Hall, were demolished in 1981, and the site is being used for new buildings by King's High School in 2005-6. All that remains of the Middle School is its boundary wall along The Butts.

Four of the 1887 Lime Trees and the 1910 Engineering Block
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Four of the 1887 Lime Trees and the 1910 Engineering Block

The name Warwick School, rather than The King's School or The King's Grammar School, gradually crept into use in the 1880s, and this name was fairly well established by the time of the merger with The King's Middle School (which had been briefly re-named The King's County School) in 1906.

The Masefield Centre contains the school library and the ICT department.
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The Masefield Centre contains the school library and the ICT department.

Two histories of the school have been published. The first appeared in 1906 at the exact time that the existence of the original Grammar School was under threat, as unpublished accounts in the school archives show. The second was published in 2004; of the two co-authors, Gervald Frykman is the school's first Archivist, and used much recently-discovered material to bring the school's varied fortunes before World War II to life; while Eric Hadley, the editor of the school's yearly chronicle The Portcullis, portrays the school's continued rise in numbers, and its successes, since then.

There is a Junior School, next door to the main school, which was opened in 1889. It caters for approximately 230 boys from 7 to 11 years of age.

The Junior School
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The Junior School

[edit] Notable Alumni

[edit] Buildings

Although its 1879 buildings are still in use, there have been many additions since then, and most teaching now takes place in specialised departmental areas. The former Big School, though, has been re-named the Pyne Room in honour of a former headmaster, and the original 1879 oak-panelled dining room is still in use. Building work continues apace with a new Science Block, for example, being intended to be ready for occupation in 2007. Construction can be viewed 24 hours a day: Warwick School web-cam

[edit] Guy Nelson Hall

The main hall of the school was built, following an appeal, between 1969 and 1970. It has seating for about 600 people. Alderman Guy Nelson, after whom the hall is named, was a long-serving Chairman of Governors (1938 - 1963).

The Bridge House Theatre (on the left) and the Guy Nelson Hall.
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The Bridge House Theatre (on the left) and the Guy Nelson Hall.

[edit] Bridge House Theatre

The school has its own theatre, holding between 275 and 310 people, the Bridge House Theatre. It was opened on 1st May 2000 by Dame Judi Dench and was designed by Michael Reardon Associates. It was intended from the start to be used both by the school and by local organisations in the town. For information about forthcoming events taking place in the Bridge House Theatre: Bridge House Theatre

Warwick School's Bridge House Theatre
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Warwick School's Bridge House Theatre

[edit] References

The Limes were planted in 1887 to mark Queen Victoria's Golden Jubilee.
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The Limes were planted in 1887 to mark Queen Victoria's Golden Jubilee.

[edit] Further reading

[edit] External links