Reading Blue Coat School

Reading Blue Coat School, Sonning-on-Thames
Motto Veritas Omnia Vincit
(Truth Conquers All)
Established 1646
Type Independent school
Religion Church of England
Headmaster M. J. Windsor, MA London, BA (Hons) Durham, PGCE London
Ex-officio, Chairman of Trustees of The Blue Coat Foundation The Reverend Canon B Shenton
Founder Richard Aldworth
Location Reading
Berkshire
RG4 6SU
England
Students 670 (approx.)
Gender Male with co-educational sixth form
Ages 11–18
Houses 4
Colours

Blue and Yellow

         
Former pupils Old Blues
Affiliations Headmaster's Conference
Website www.blue-coat.reading.sch.uk

Reading Blue Coat School is a boys' independent school (and co-educational in the 6th form) in Holme Park in the village of Sonning, in the English county of Berkshire, to the east of the town of Reading. It is situated beside the River Thames, and was established in 1646 by Richard Aldworth, who named it "Aldworth's Hospital".

Aldworth, who had been a governor of Christ's Hospital in London, modelled the new foundation on his former school, the boys being required to wear the Bluecoat attire of gown, yellow stockings, and buckled shoes. Aldworth’s Will further stipulated that the Master of the new school should be "an honest, Godly and learned man" who for his "paines" would receive a stipend of £30 a year. His duties were to include the instruction of reading, writing and ciphering and to "teach the Catechism in the points of Christian Religion."

Contents

History

Established in 1646 at the height of the English Civil War, a wealthy London merchant, Richard Aldworth of Stanlake Park, left the Corporation of Reading the sum of £4,000, the proceeds of which were to be devoted to "the education and upbringing of twenty poor male children, being the children of honest, religious poor men in the town of Reading." From this bequest, which in 17th century terms was quite substantial, originated the Aldworth's Hospital charity school now better known as the Reading Blue Coat School.

Aldworth, who had been a governor of Christ's Hospital in London, modelled the new foundation on his former school, the boys being required to wear the Bluecoat attire of gown, yellow stockings, and buckled shoes. Aldworth’s Will further stipulated that the Master of the new school should be "an honest, Godly and learned man" who for his "paines" would receive a stipend of £30 a year. His duties were to include the instruction of reading, writing and ciphering and to "teach the Catechism in the points of Christian Religion."

The Talbot

The School was originally accommodated in an old building situated at the corner of Silver Street and London Street known as 'The Talbot' in one of the oldest parts of Reading. The house, once an old inn, was in a dilapidated condition. Owing to litigation in connection with Aldworth's will, it was not until 1660, the year of Charles II's restoration, that the first boys entered the School to be taught. Despite many difficulties at the outset, the School flourished and even received generous subventions from local benefactors such as William Malthus and John West. Malthus also left a certain sum for an annual sermon to be preached to the boys, a tradition still maintained in Reading at the end of each summer term.

In 1666, Sir Thomas Rich of Holme Park, Sonning, gave the Corporation the sum of £1,000 to "maintain six poor boys in Aldworth's Hospital, three of whom to be chosen from the parish of Sonning". These boys were contained against their own will for an unannounced amount of time. By a happy coincidence, in 1947, the new School moved to its current home on Rich's estate. Indeed, the present Holme Park mansion is situated within a few hundred yards of Rich's own manor house, an old residence which in turn had been built near an ancient but ruined palace that had belonged to the Bishops of Salisbury long before the Norman Conquest in 1066.

The 'Talbot' was a mean and uncomfortable building not at all suited to the needs of a growing school, and soon the Corporation, as Trustees, decided to replace it with a more modern structure in 1723. A place "where the rays of the sun never penetrate, and where the atmosphere must have been particularly noxious from want of circulation…" was hardly conducive to the healthy upbringing of youngsters. That the School's reputation and circumstances stood at a low ebb is further confirmed by an order of the Trustees that "the Master of the Blue Coat School do not suffer the boys to play about the streets but that they be kept within the limits of the said School between and after School times, and that the Master go with the said children to the Parish Church of St Laurence every Sunday". This they unfailingly did, every Sunday until 1946. In these premises the School was to remain until 1852 when it removed to the more commodious Brunswick House on the Bath Road in Reading. For nearly 90 years, generations of Blue Coat boys were to be educated there in 'the three Rs', many proceeding to a variety of local apprenticeships, trades and professions.

Changing times

The impact of the Second World War, combined with rising educational expectations, posed immense challenges to the School which was faced with the fate of eventual closure unless it removed to more extensive premises outside Reading and met the terms of the Education Act 1944. Described by the Headmaster, Bernard Inge, as "an act of faith", and following a local fundraising appeal sponsored by the Bishop of Reading, the Mayor, and Corporation, the Trustees acquired the Holme Park estate and the School began a new and initially uncertain lease of life. 150 boys, of whom a hundred were boarders, with nine teachers eventually made the move to Sonning on 21 January 1947, the headmaster’s 44th birthday.

The early days at Holme Park represented something of a race against time. Buildings and facilities had to be updated in haste if the Ministry of Education's stringent regulations were to be met and its much coveted 'recognition of efficiency' accorded. New classrooms were opened in 1955 and named after the Dunster brothers, two Old Blues who had laboured so hard since 1947 to turn that 'act of faith' into reality. In 1961, the School's first Sixth Form was opened. A major new science centre was opened in 1973, closely followed by a brand new Sixth Form Centre and enlarged library. Further classrooms including modern facilities for technology and computing were added in the 1980s in response to rising educational expectations and growing pupil numbers. In 2001, the new Allan Sanders Science Centre was completed and a brand new Sports Hall opened in 2004. In 2006, the School celebrated its 360th anniversary with optimism, and pride in its achievements. In 2008, the school opened their brand new cricket pavilion which overlooked the cricket field adjacent to the car park. 2009 was a year of change in the school, the new Boat House was opened on the banks of the river below the school and the sixth form centre was expanded and altered with the knocking through of many interior walls. The connecting (and little used) squash court was incorporated into the centre. The newly completed 'James McArther Sixth Form Center' (named after a previous headmaster) was opened in the autumn of 2010 by Old Blue and MP for Reading West Alok Sharma

April 2011 saw the demolition of the Dunster, Gaines Cooper and Lesser buildings and the start of construction of a new classroom block, which will provide first-class teaching facilities for a number of major departments. English, Maths, Modern Languages, Classics and Geography will be housed in the new building, which will also include a new Art department that will enjoy a view over the School’s pitches and the River Thames. The building will also contain a Common Room for Middle School pupils (aged 13-16) and the landscaping around the building will provide further spaces for pupils to socialise and relax. The building will have a light and airy feel thanks to an atrium design and a glass roof running the length of the building and includes a number of environmental features, such as a ground-source heat pump and the recycling of rainwater. Access to the building, which has been designed to fit harmoniously with the oldest building on the school site, the Holme Park mansion, will be through a spacious foyer, which will also be used for receptions and entertaining guests.

Whilst construction takes place many rooms in the old school house (the Holme Park Mansion) have been converted into classrooms and 4 temporary classrooms have also been installed in the grounds. A live webcam view of the construction can be found on the school website. The new building is expected to be opened in time for the start of the 2012/13 academic year.

Media location

The school has been used as the location for a number of films, documentaries, and television programmes.

Trivia

Notable former pupils

Former pupils are known as Old Blues. Some better known Old Blues include:

References and notes

External links