Friars School, Bangor

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ysgol Friars
Motto Foedere Fraterno
Established 1557
Type Comprehensive
Headteacher Neil Foden
Founder Geoffrey Glyn
Location Lôn y Bryn
Bangor
Gwynedd
LL57 2LN
Wales Flag of Wales
LEA Gwynedd
Students 1200
Ages 11 to 18
Publication The Dominican
Website http://www.friars.gwynedd.sch.uk


Ysgol Friars is a Comprehensive school in Bangor, Gwynedd, and one of the oldest schools in Wales.

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] 1557 Establishment

The school was founded by Geoffrey Glyn, Doctor of Laws, who had been brought up in Anglesey and had followed a career in law in London.

Detail from John Speed map of 1610, the only surviving image of the original school building
Detail from John Speed map of 1610, the only surviving image of the original school building

A friary had been established in Bangor by the Dominican Order, or Black Friars, in the 13th Century. At the Dissolution of the Monasteries, the friary was wound up in 1538. Geoffrey Glyn bought the site with a view to establishing a Grammar School. In his will dated 8 July 1557, he left the property and endowments towards establishing the school.

Although a school had been meeting in the city before this date, the new school was only formally established when it received letters patent from Elizabeth I in 1561. The school was to be known as The free grammar school of Geoffrey Glyn, Doctor of Laws, but because of the connection with the Black Friars, quickly became known as "Friars School". The letters patent established the Dean and Chapter of Bangor Cathedral as the corporation to govern the school. In 1568, statutes were adopted to regulate the schools, based closely on the statutes of Bury St. Edmunds School in Suffolk, founded a few years earlier.

The school has been established to provide a free grammar school education for the boys of the poor. This comprised a classical education, in Latin and Greek only. The children who benefited were not the most poor, but the middle class preparing for a career in the ministry or the law like Geoffrey Glyn himself.

The school was maintained from income on the endowments left by Geoffrey Glyn and later benefactors, mainly rents on land in Southwark and Oswestry.

The school continued in the old friary, close to the banks of the River Adda for over two centuries.

[edit] The second building, 1789

Friars School building of 1789 to 1900
Friars School building of 1789 to 1900

Under the patronage of John Warren, Bishop of Bangor – a colourful and controversial character – the school was transferred to a better site, a little further from the river. This was financed partly by closing the school in 1786, an accumulating the money saved from the endowment for a building fund. The new school was built for £2,076 12s 5½d, and opened in 1789 on a site closer to the High Street and the present Glynne Road.

The curriculum slowly developed to include mathematics, writing and other subject more familiar to today’s school students.

The school’s fortunes were varied. The move boosted the school. But by the middle of the 19th century, under the headship of Totton, the schools’ reputation suffered, and ultimately lost so many pupils that it was forced to close in 1861. It re-opened in 1866 under a new headmaster, Lewis Lloyd, when a new secular governing body was introduced in place of the Dean and Chapter.

In 1881, an epidemic of typhoid in Bangor caused the school to move to Penmaenmawr to avoid the disease. The bottom of the valley, especially close to the river, was unhygienic, and this episode engendered consideration of moving away to a fresh site.

At this time, too, the Welsh Intermediate Education Act introduced a state system of secondary education in Wales. Some charity and private schools were exempted from its provisions and there had been advocates for Friars, too, to be exempted, but ultimately this brought Friars School into the state system, under Caernarfonshire County Council.

[edit] The third building, 1900

Friars School Ffriddoedd building, site of the school 1900-1999
Friars School Ffriddoedd building, site of the school 1900-1999

With contributions from Caernarfonshire County Council, the proceeds of selling the old site, together with a public appeal for funds, a new school was built on Ffriddoedd Road for a cost of £11,600. The architects was John Douglas of Douglas & Minishull, and builders Messrs. James Hamilton & son of Altrincham. A foundation stone was laid by Watkin Herbert Williams, Bishop of Bangor on 12 April 1899, and the building was opened in December 1900.

In moving to the Ffriddoedd site, the intention had been to move out to the countryside. After the typhoid outbreak, and with the unsanitary condition of the lower Adda valley, Ffriddoedd was seen as a healthy rural alternative. However, the development of the city was to catch up. In order to preserve a little of that rural idyll as the area developed, Dr. R. L. Archer, a former Chairman of the Governors, in 1955 bequeathed to the school a small plot of land. Known as "Dr. Archer’s plot", this was to be planted with flowers and kept for ever green.

In 1957 there several events commemorated the fourth centenary of the school. A new stained glass window was installed in the building to mark the event.

[edit] 1971 Reorganisation

Up to 1971, Friars had been a grammar school for boys. As a grammar school, education was selective, boys having to pass the eleven plus exam to gain admission.

A significant reorganisation in 1971 combined three schools –Friars School, the Bangor County School for Girls (also a grammar school), and Deiniol School, a mixed Secondary modern school. The three schools brought together formed a new comprehensive school , under the Friars name, but on three sites. The former girls’ school became the Tryfan site, a Welsh language medium for the lower years, while the Ffriddoedd building was the location of the English language medium lower years. The senior years came together at a new building, built for £300,000 [1] on a new site at Eithinog.

A further reorganisation in 1978 split the school in two: Ysgol Tryfan was formed as an 11-18 Welsh medium school on the Tryfan site. Friars School became a mainly English-medium school on Ffriddoedd and Eithinog sites.

Shoddy building practices of the 1960s meant that the Eithinog building had to be almost completely rebuilt over the following few decades. These were gradually replaced and expanded, until the whole school was able to relocate to Eithinog in 1999. The final contract for completing the school was valued at £5.4 million. [2]

Friars School: entrance to Eithinog site
Friars School: entrance to Eithinog site

In that year, the former Friars building at Ffriddoedd was sold to further education college Coleg Menai and continues in educational use.

[edit] Celebrating 450 years

A Service of Commemoration and Thanksgiving was held in Bangor Cathedral in April 2007 to mark 450 years of Friars School.[3]

[edit] The modern school

Since 1999, the present school has been united on the Eithinog site.

It is a comprehensive school for the 11-18 age group, and draws pupils from a wide area around Bangor. The current headteacher is Neil Foden.

[edit] Remains and Artefacts

Traces of the older sites are seen in names of streets: Friars Avenue, Glynne Road, and building: Friars Terrace, Glyn House. A plaque on houses in Glynne Road records the site of the 1789 buildings.

The letters patent granted by Elizabeth I are on display in Bangor Cathedral.

The Ffriddoedd building has lasted well and is now a Grade II Listed building. It is well used by Coleg Menai.

For a considerable period of Friars School’s history, its running costs were supported by rents on land in Southwark. A primary school now stands on part of those lands – and records the connection in its name of "Friars Primary School".

[edit] Symbols

The school colours are black and yellow, the black deriving from the dress of the Black Friars.

The coat of arms is a double-headed black eagle on a yellow shield. This was taken from the arms of the Glyn family of Glynllifon, in the mistaken impression that these were the arms of Geoffrey Glyn. Despite this error (Geoffrey Glyn’s arms having been three saddles), the double-headed eagle survived.

The Latin motto, Foedere Fraterno - “On with the brotherhood" – again recall the Black Friars.

These symbols, which once graced the caps and blazers of grammar school boys, are today seen on polo shirts and sweatshirts of the modern school.

Image:Friars logo AV.jpg This is the current logo.

[edit] Notable Former Pupils

[edit] External links

[edit] Bibliography

Barber, H. & Lewis, H. (1901), The History of Friars School, Jarvis & Foster

Clarke, M.L. (1955). The Elizabethan Statutes of Friars School, Bangor, Transactions of Caernarfonshire Historical Society, Volume 16, pp. 25-28

Griffith, W.P. (1988), Some Passing Thoughts on the Early History of Friars School, Bangor, Transactions of Caernarfonshire Historical Society, 49, pp. 117-150

Jones, E.W. & Haworth, J. (Eds.) (1957) The Dominican, Friars School

  1. ^ The Dominican, 1971
  2. ^ CLAW (2001). CLAW Annual Report, 2001. Retrieved on 2007-08-15.
  3. ^ BBC (April 2007). BBC News article. Retrieved on 2007-04-22.
  4. ^ BBC (2007). BBC article. Retrieved on 2007-08-14.
  5. ^ Bangor Rugby Club (2007). Bangor Rugby Hall of Fame. Retrieved on 2007-08-14.
  6. ^ Jones, E.W. & Haworth, J. (Eds.) (1957) op. cit.
  7. ^ Jones, Robert Tudur. Daniel, John Edward (1902–1962), college lecturer and inspector of schools. Welsh Biography Online. National Library of Wales. Retrieved on 2008-06-09.
  8. ^ Robert David Griffith, M.A.. Welsh Biography Online. Retrieved on 2008-03-11.
  9. ^ BBC (2007). Presenters of Cardiff Singer of the World. Retrieved on 2007-08-14.
  10. ^ Daily Telegraph (December 2006). Obituary.
  11. ^ Bangor Rugby Club (2007). Bangor Rugby Hall of Fame. Retrieved on 2007-08-14.
  12. ^ Mary Gwendoline Ellis, M.A.. Welsh Biography Online. Retrieved on 2008-03-15.
  13. ^ Iwan Llwyd. Homepage. Retrieved on 2007-08-15.
  14. ^ BBC (2007). BBC Cymru Profile. Retrieved on 2007-08-14.
  15. ^ BBC (July 2007). BBC article. Retrieved on 2007-07-27.
  16. ^ Syr John Morris-Jones, in Bedwyr Lewis Jones (ed.) Gwŷr Môn (1979) Cyngor Gwlad Gwynedd. ISBN 0903935074
  17. ^ Goronwy Owen, in Bedwyr Lewis Jones (ed.) Gwŷr Môn (1979) Cyngor Gwlad Gwynedd. ISBN 0903935074
  18. ^ De Santis (2004). Biography. Retrieved on 2008-08-26.
Languages