St Leonards-Mayfield School

St Leonards-Mayfield School
Motto "Actions Not Words"
Established 1872
Type Independent School
Religion Roman Catholic
Headmistress Miss A M Beary, MA MPhil Cantab, PGCE
Founder Mother Cornelia Connelly SHCJ (1809 - 1870)
Location The Old Palace
Mayfield
East Sussex
TN20 6PH
England
Students 400
Gender Girls
Ages 11–18
Houses 4
Former pupils Old Cornelians
Website [www.mayfieldgirls.org]

St Leonards-Mayfield School is an independent Roman Catholic boarding and day school for girls aged 11 to 18. It is situated in the village of Mayfield in East Sussex. The current headmistress is Miss Antonia Beary. The school was founded by Mother Cornelia Connelly in 1872, with the oldest buildings dating from the 14th century.

Contents

History

On 26 May 1863 Mother Cornelia Connelly, who had founded the Society of the Holy Child Jesus in 1846, escorted a small group of girls from the Holy Child school at St Leonards-on-Sea to the ruins of the Old Palace of Mayfield, where they would enjoy a picnic. The peace of the countryside and the elegance of the ruins must have left their mark on Cornelia, for within a matter of weeks the estate had been purchased by the Duchess of Leeds and presented to the religious order. On the morning of 18 November 1863 Mass was celebrated at Mayfield for the first time since the mid 16th century. Restoration of the Old Palace began in 1864 and the ruins of the 14th-century hall had been transformed into a church within 14 months. Although the nuns educated a small number of orphans on site almost immediately, it was not until 1872 that young girls from St Leonards were brought over to be the first pupils at the school. The Old Palace was also the order’s Novitiate, that part of the convent devoted to the novices.

Development of the school continued in order to meet the needs of the growing number of pupils at Mayfield: the Victorian red-brick school building had been added by 1897, the concert hall by 1930, and a suite of other facilities were constructed throughout the second half of the 20th century and beyond.

In 1953 the schools at St Leonards-on-Sea and Mayfield merged to form St Leonards-Mayfield School. Pupils remained at St Leonards up to the age of 13 and then transferred to Mayfield to continue their education to 18. In 1975 the junior school at St Leonards closed and Mayfield became the school it is today, educating girls from 11 to 18.

The headmistress of St Leonards-Mayfield School was drawn from the Society of the Holy Child Jesus until the end of the 20th century, at which point the school appointed its first lay headmistress. The links with Holy Child, however, remain strong: three members of the governing body are nuns and three nuns live in the school grounds, supporting the pastoral work of the chaplaincy and boarding houses.

History of the Old Palace

The Old Palace of Mayfield served throughout the 14th- and 15th-centuries as a residence of the Archbishops of Canterbury. The great hall was built by Archbishop Reynolds c. 1325, although Archbishop Islip (1356–1366) enlarged it and built the greater part of the Palace. Seventeen Archbishops are known to have visited the Palace from 1274-1530. At the Reformation, the Old Palace was handed over to Henry VIII and a new phase in its history began. It was gifted to various leading noblemen, one of the most famous of whom was Sir Thomas Gresham, an advisor to Queen Elizabeth I. In 1573 Sir Thomas entertained Queen Elizabeth within its walls. In 1617 the estate came into the hands of the Baker family, owners of several iron foundries in the county. As the iron industry declined in the 18th century, so too did the fortunes of the Bakers. The Old Palace was abandoned in 1740 and thereafter fell into ruins.

SHCJ

The Society of the Holy Child Jesus (SHCJ) was founded over 160 years ago by Mother Cornelia Connelly, whose life, spirituality and vision still inspires the education offered by her schools. SHCJ continues to play an active and vital role in the life of the school: there are four Holy Child nuns on the Board of Governors; and three nuns live on the school site and play important pastoral roles in both the chaplaincy and the boarding houses.

Public examination results

Pupils at Mayfield achieve some of the best in the United Kingdom and each year take up university places at a wide range of leading institutions.[1]

Location and facilities

The school is located within the village of Mayfield, less than 40 miles from the centre of London. At the heart of the school are the 14th century chapel built for the Archbishops of Canterbury and a concert hall designed by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott. The sports facilities include a new all-weather pitch, eight new all-weather tennis and netball courts, an indoor swimming pool and one of the largest outdoor riding arenas in the South East of England. The creative and performing arts are served by a music school, ceramics and arts studios and a dance hall. There is also a purpose built science block.

There are three boarding houses at the school: Leeds House (named after the Duchess of Leeds who donated the Old Palace to the SHCJ), Connelly House (formerly known as St Gabriels) and St Dunstans House providing boarding accommodation in individual rooms for the Sixth Form.

Links with other Holy Child schools

The Society of the Holy Child Jesus still runs a network of schools across its three provinces: Europe, Africa and America.

Mayfield actively maintains and strengthens links with other Holy Child Schools. In 2010 children from the Cornelia Connelly School in Anaheim, California visited Mayfield and the headmistress visited Holy Child College in Ikoyi, Nigeria.

Former pupils

Former pupils of Mayfield and her sister Holy Child Schools which are now closed are known as Old Cornelians, named after Mother Cornelia Connelly who founded the Society of the Holy Child Jesus.

Notable Old Cornelians:

References

  1. ^ Department for Education Retrieved 2011-09-22

External links