Buxton College
Buxton College was a boys' grammar school in Buxton, Derbyshire.
History
The school was founded in 1675 by an amalgamation of various legacies of an earlier date together with subscriptions taken then. Its motto was Sic Luceat Lux Vestra - "Let your light shine forth."
The first building was probably the old Schoolhouse in Buxton Old Church Yard which was located near the top of Church Street[1] and after re-organisation moved as the Buxton Endowed School to new premises opened on 27 September 1881 built on land off Green Lane (near the entrance to Poole's Cavern). The new building was by William Pollard of Manchester. It had a small boarding house, by 1890 under the Headmaster Dr R. Archibald Little 1888–1910 the number of boarders had increased to 33. Many alterations and additions were made to the buildings during 1891–92. A chemistry laboratory which remained in use through to the 1970s, a workshop and a gymnasium. The original laundry was converted into a dining room and both it and the dormitories on the two floors above it were extended to double their length. In 1898, the school added a sanatorium at the rear of the headmasters house. The Assembly Hall was built during 1899–1900 and at the same time the old Schoolroom was divided into three much needed classrooms and a corridor giving access to them and the hall was constructed. By 1900 there were nearly 100 boys of whom 60 were boarders. By 1910 there were still over 70 boys but the number of boarders had dropped to 26 and the position of the school was precarious.
At the end of the Summer Term 1923 after two and a half centuries as an independent school, the College entered the State system as a maintained grammar school. As a County Grammar school alterations and improvements to the buildings were carried out throughout the year, under the direction of the Derbyshire County Architect's department, including a new heating system for the whole building, improved windows for the classrooms and renovation of the top dormitory baths and washbowls. Additional laboratory equipment was acquired for Physics and the laundry was equipped as a handicraft room - later to become the boarders locker & changing room.
Buxton College July 1927 aerial photograph. ©English Heritage http://www.britainfromabove.org.uk
In September 1927 two boys became the first Sixth Form at the school and building work began on three sides of a new quadrangle in the summer of 1928 to enable some of the expansion requested by the Headmaster A.D.C. Mason (1923–1944). The fourth side was never completed as designed, although thirty years later a laboratory was built at one end of it. During the 1930s "Mr Mason accepted about 30 ... refugee German boys of Jewish extraction ... as boarders. Many of the German boys had high ability ... including Heinz Thannhauser undoubtedly one of the most brilliant boys ever to attend the School. For this act of humanity and generosity (in some cases he [Mason] charged no fees and bore the whole cost himself) he met with a fair amount of local criticism."[2]
The Boarding House remained full until the late 1960s when the contraction of H.M. Forces overseas and de-colonisation led to a reduction in the demand for boarding places and by 1968–69 numbers fell to 40.[3] Pupils at Buxton College had been divided - for the purpose of sporting competition - into 'Houses' and associated colours: 'Compton' (Red), 'Spencer' (Yellow) & 'Burlington' (Brown) first recorded in 1921 (and later Hartington). From September 1931 the 34 boarders (out of a total 192) were formed into a separate house 'Devonshire' (Blue) and in that year won the Cock House Trophy.
Former pupils of the school denote themselves as Old Buxtonians.
Current use
Buxton College finally merged to become first a boys comprehensive school, giving it two campuses, at Kent's Bank (former site of Kent's Bank Secondary Modern Boys School), and College Road (former site of Buxton College). It then successfully merged with the local girls' school in 1990 to become properly coeducational; this was with the former Cavendish Grammar School on Corbar Road and Silverland Secondary Modern School for Girls on Peveril Road - these two school sites are now housing estates. It formed Buxton Community School at the College Road campus. The School, now as Buxton Community School is fully coeducational and the historic problem of split sites for the schools of Buxton overcome. The Kent's Bank site became the site for Buxton Library.
See also
- It is not to be confused with High Peak College, a further education college.
Old Buxtonians - Principals
R. Bolton King V.T. Middlemas
Old Buxtonians - Staff
1968 E. Leyland (Deputy Headmaster) - Physics W.J. Branch - Physics K.W. Bland - Maths L. Banks - French P.W. Bray - Chemistry J.B. Cartwright - Sport W.V. Cheverst - French J.S. Collis - Sport W.E. Evans - Latin G. Frost - French & Latin B. Gollop - French C. Haslam - Chemistry E.R. Jones - Art J.C. Lidgate - Maths R.A. Lowe - Biology J.J. McCarthy - A.P. Percival - Music & History M.J. Rowe - Biology D.A. Sadler - English S.B. Smith - Maths J.R. Tate - French S.A. Tate - Geography N. Tatham - Chemistry S. Wilkinson - Scripture J.W. Wood -
Old Buxtonians - Pupils
- Mark Cocker, author and naturalist
- Hugh Hickling, author[4]
- David John Hodgkins, Director, Resources and Planning, Health and Safety Executive,[5]
- Walton Newbold (1888–1943), the first British member of parliament elected as a Communist
- Edmund Ashworth Radford, MP[6]
- Robert Waller, election expert
- Thomas Wright (1859-1936), Author [7]
- The Ven John Youens (1914–1993), Chaplain General
References
- ↑ Bolton King, R. (1973). Buxton College 1675 – 1970. Buxton College.
- ↑ Bolton King, R. (1973). Buxton College 1675 – 1970. p.52: Buxton College.
- ↑ Bolton King, R. (1973). Buxton College 1675 – 1970. p.96: Buxton College.
- ↑ HICKLING, Reginald Hugh, Who Was Who, A & C Black, 2007; online edn, Oxford University Press, Dec 2007 accessed 13 Dec 2008
- ↑ [HODGKINS, David John’, Who's Who 2009, A & C Black, 2008; online edn, Oxford University Press, Dec 2008 accessed 13 Dec 2008
- ↑ [‘RADFORD, Edmund Ashworth’, Who Was Who, A & C Black, 1920–2008; online edn, Oxford University Press, Dec 2007 accessed 13 Dec 2008
- ↑ WRIGHT, Thomas’, Who Was Who, A & C Black, 1920–2008; online edn, Oxford University Press, Dec 2007 accessed 13 Dec 2008
Coordinates: 53°15′03″N 1°55′13″W / 53.2508°N 1.9202°W