Kilgraston School

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Kilgraston School
Motto Act with determination
Established 1930
Type Independent day and boarding
Religion Roman Catholic
Principal Frank Thompson
Founders Society of the Sacred Heart
Location Bridge of Earn
Perth
PH2 9BQ
Scotland Coordinates: 56°20′29″N 3°24′58″W / 56.3414°N 3.416°W / 56.3414; -3.416
Local authority Perth and Kinross
DfE number 538/3320
Students 340~
Gender Girls
Ages 2–18
Campus Rural; 72 acres (290,000 m2)
Website Kilgraston School

Kilgraston School is an independent Roman Catholic boarding and day school for girls aged 2½–18 and day boys aged 2½–9. The school is centred upon a mansion house set in 72 acres (290,000 m2) of parkland, at Bridge of Earn, 3 miles (4.8 km) south of Perth and less than an hour’s drive from Edinburgh. The school has links with the boys' school Merchiston Castle School in Edinburgh and occasionally co-organises socials and functions together.[1]

Kilgraston is organised into four schools: Nursery (ages 2–3 to 5), Preparatory (ages 5–13, up to 9 for boys), Senior School (ages 13–16) and Sixth Form. It is a member of the Girls' Schools Association.

History

Kilgraston's earliest records date back to the 13th century where it was called Gilgryston. John Grant, the eldest son of Patrick Grant of Glenlochy, in Strath Spey, Inverness-shire, and whose principal wealth was made in Jamaica, was for several years a member of the Assembly there, becoming an assistant Judge of Jamaica's Supreme Court, and eventually succeeded Thomas French as Chief Justice of that island in January 1783, which office he held until 1790. Also, in 1783, he was confirmed as an armiger by the Lord Lyon King of Arms. Grant purchased, towards the end of the 18th century, from the Murray and Craigie families, the contiguous estates of Kilgraston and Pitcaithly, situated in the east end of the beautiful and rich valley of Strath Earn, and extending over part of the Ochil Hills. He died issueless at Edinburgh on 29 March 1793, and is buried under a marble tablet in St Cuthbert's Churchyard. He was succeeded in his estates by his brother Francis (d. 1819, who built the mansion.

The mansion was used as a private home until World War I during which it was used as a hospital. In 1930 the house and grounds were purchased by the Society of the Sacred Heart and opened as a school with 40 boarders. The Society ran the school as a charitable trust until 2000 when it became an independent school.[2] It briefly participated in the Assisted Places Scheme during the 1990s until its abolishment.[3] In 2003, it absorbed the nearby all-girls Butterstone Prep School due to the latter's financial difficulties. Its girls was transferred 22 miles to Kilgraston in a controversial and highly unpopular move.[4] One of the boarding houses was named Butterstone after the school.

Recent capital investments have included the opening of a 25m indoor swimming pool complex (May 2008) and upgrades to the equestrian centre (Kilgraston is the only school in Scotland with equestrian facilities on campus) including a 60m x 40m floodlit arena (August 2008) and a new international sized all-weather floodlit hockey pitch (June 2010). Other developments have been a new theatre with retractable seating for 150, a bistro style dining room, sports pavilion as well as an ongoing upgrade of the residential facilities. As a member of the Network of Sacred Heart Schools, there are exchange and twinning programmes available for girls to interact with fellow students from sister schools around the world.

In January 2012, Kilgraston was named "Independent School of the Year" ahead of 27 other independent schools across Britain at the Independent School Awards. It was also nominated for the Outstanding Strategic Initiative Award in recognition of the changes the school has made to achieve 55% growth in the last five years and received the Outstanding Financial Initiative prize for its £2m investment in facilities and the introduction of a number of Sports Academies.[5]

Academics

Kilgraston has a strong academic record in examination league tables. It was ranked third nation-wide in the Advanced Highers for 2011 with a 92% pass rate and 54% achieving A grades.[5][6]

Boarding

Boarding is available to girls aged 8 and above. Approximately half of pupils are boarders, most of whom board on weekdays or on flexible arrangements. The girls reside in three boarding houses: Butterstone (Prep School),[7] Mater (Senior School)[8] and Barat or Swinton (Sixth Form).[9] Senior School and Sixth Form boarders have their own bedrooms.

References

  • Burke, John, Esq., A Genealogical History of The Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland enjoying Territorial Possessions or High Official Rank, London, 1835, volume II, p. 613.
  • Smith, John, & Balfour Paul, Sir James, editor, Monumental Inscriptions in St. Cuthbert's Churchyard, Edinburgh, Scottish Record Society, Edinburgh, 1915, p. 13.

External links

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