Established | 1964 |
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Headteacher | Mr Martyn Morgan |
Specialism | Sports College |
Location | Windmill Crescent Wolverhampton West Midlands WV3 8HU England |
Local authority | Wolverhampton |
Students | 995 |
Gender | Co-educational |
Ages | 11–18 |
Website | http://www.smestow.org.uk/ |
Smestow School (also known as Smestow Sports College, pronounced "smest-oh") is a co-educational state school located in the city of Wolverhampton, England.
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The school was founded in 1964 under the authority of Staffordshire County Council. Originally it was known as Tettenhall Number 2 with the number 1 school becoming Regis (now The Kings School). It is named after the River Smestow and lies in its valley. It was incorporated within Wolverhampton by the boundary changes accompanying local government reform in 1974.
The school badge has its origins in the Tettenhall coat of arms.[1] The three roundels in the arms are of a special type, with a distinctive wavy pattern, known in Heraldry as fountains. They were considered to represent the Severn/Trent watershed and the tributary rivers which originate in the area, one of the being the River Smestow. The original Tettenhall arms had three trees, representing the three great forests of southern Staffordshire which met at Tettenhall: the forests of Kinver, Brewood and Cannock. The school badge adapted this into a tree composed of four circles, representing the four houses of the school, which were named after the new Universities of Lancaster, Sussex, Warwick and York, founded around the same time as the school. The badge also contains allusions to other features of the Tettenhall arms: the Windmill and the Battleaxes, reminders of the Battle of Tettenhall which took place on 5 August 910.
The school is a specialist sports college, and was presented with ARTSMARK (alongside the previously awarded SPORTSMARK) in 2004 for outstanding success in Drama & the Arts. Smestow has a wide variety of sporting facilities including a gymnasium, swimming pool, PE hall, four separate changing rooms, a fitness suite/gym, a small dance/aerobics area (also used for drama room) a set of tennis courts and two large playing fields as well as the new sports hall.
In January 2005 a new Sixth Form Study Centre and library opened to promote and support students studying at Smestow. The school is receiving £14m from Building Schools for the Future and plan to build a sports hall within the next 3–4 years.