St Edmund's School

St Edmund's School
Motto "Fungar Vice Cotis"
Established 1749
Type Independent
Religion Church of England
Headteacher Louise Moelwyn-Hughes
Location St Thomas' Hill
Canterbury
Kent
CT2 8HU
England
Local authority Kent
DfE number 886/6050
DfE URN 118998
Students 500
Gender Mixed
Ages 3–18
Website www.stedmunds.org.uk

St Edmund’s School is an independent school (ages 3-18) in Canterbury, Kent, England, U.K. with over 500 pupils, including both day pupils and boarders.

Contents

History

St Edmund's School Canterbury was first established in 1749 as the Clergy Orphan Society in Yorkshire. In 1812 the School moved to St John's Wood at the nursery end of Lord's Cricket Ground. The sister school for girls was on the same site, but later moved to become St Margaret's School, Bushey in Hertfordshire. In 1855, the School came to its present location overlooking the cathedral city of Canterbury.

The school is located at the top of St Thomas' Hill, Canterbury, the site and building being paid for by Doctor Samuel Warneford; the chapel was completed in 1858. The main school building was designed by noted architect Philip Charles Hardwick (1822–1892), whose grandmother had been born in Canterbury.

In 1972 the choristers of Canterbury Cathedral joined the Junior School as the Choir House. In 1982 girls were admitted to the school. The first female Head of St Edmund’s School, Mrs Louise Moelwyn-Hughes, formerly a Deputy Head at The Perse School, Cambridge, will take up the post in September 2011.

Headmasters & Headmistresses

Masters of the Junior School

Notable former pupils

External links