Motto | Do ut Des (I give that thou may'st give) |
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Established | 1926 |
Headteacher | Nicola Matthews |
Founder | Jessie Elliot-Pyle |
Location | High Trees Road Reigate Surrey RH2 7EL England |
Local authority | Surrey |
DfE number | 936/6078 |
DfE URN | 125356 |
Students | c. 350 |
Gender | Girls |
Ages | 3–18 |
Website | www.dunottarschool.com |
Dunottar School for Girls is an independent girls' school for the age range three to eighteen in Reigate, Surrey, England, established in 1926.
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The school was established in 1926 by Jessie Elliot-Pyle in Brownlow Road with three pupils, and was named after Dunnottar Castle. She gave it the motto Do ut Des, which is translated as I give that thou may'st give. In 1933, it moved to the High Trees Estate in a mansion called "High Trees"[1] which had been built by Walter Blanford Waterlow, fourth mayor of Reigate, in 1867. In 1874, Waterlow remarried his younger brother's widow, Maria Waterlow (née Corss), mother of Sir Ernest Albert Waterlow.[2] Additions had been made to the mansion in about 1908.[3] In 1961, it changed from private ownership to being owned by a charitable trust.[4] In 1975, it joined the Association of Governing Bodies of Girls’ Public Schools, which is now called the Girls' Schools Association.
The school premises is a grade II listed building,[3] and the grounds are adjacent to Redhill Common.[5] The nearest railway station is Earlswood.