Lady Margaret School

Lady Margaret School
Motto I have a goodly heritage
Established September 1917
Type Academy
Religion Church of England
Headteacher Mrs Sally Whyte
Founder Enid Moberly Bell
Location Parsons Green
London
SW6 4UN
England Coordinates: 51°28′26″N 0°11′56″W / 51.474°N 0.199°W
DfE number 205/4632
DfE URN 138607 Tables
Ofsted Reports Pre-academy reports
Students 719 (183 in Sixth Form)
Gender Girls
Ages 11–18
Houses Carver, Chirol, Kensington, Lyttleton, Marshall, Moberly-Bell
Colours Black & Red strips
Website Lady Margaret School

Lady Margaret School is a smaller than average all-girls' Church of England secondary school in Parsons Green, Fulham, London. It was awarded specialist school status as a Mathematics & Computing College in September 2003,[1] and became an academy in September 2012.

History

The school has approximately 719 girls aged between eleven and eighteen years, about 183 of whom are in the sixth form. The school is heavily oversubscribed, with more than 7 girls applying per place.[2] The majority of girls stay on into the Sixth Form. A number of students from other schools are given places in the Sixth Form following its expansion with the opening of the purpose-built Olivier Centre in 2010.

The headmistress is Mrs. Sally Whyte, and the deputy head is Mr. Richard Sanderson following the retirement of headmistress Mrs. Joan Olivier and deputy head Mr. Busby in 2006.

Lady Margaret School has its origins in Whitelands College School, founded in 1842, soon after the College itself. In 1917, Whitelands School was threatened with closure, and it was only by the strenuous efforts of Miss Enid Moberly Bell, the Second Mistress, and the Staff of the School, that a substantial number of the pupils were "rescued" and became Lady Margaret School in September 1917.

The School began life in the oldest of the three houses facing Parsons Green which now form the present school: Belfield House. The School was named after the Lady Margaret Beaufort, mother of Henry VII, founder of St John's and Christ's Colleges, Cambridge, and a benefactress of education. In 1937, the second house, Elm House, was purchased through the generosity of Miss Anne Lupton (died 1977).

With the passing of the Butler Act in 1944 the Kindergarten and Junior School were phased out and Lady Margaret became a two-form entry grammar school. In April 1951 its relationship to the Church of England was regularised when it became a Voluntary Aided School.

Today Lady Margaret School is a successful Church of England academy in the London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham. In 2003 the school achieved specialist status in Mathematics and Computing. In 2007 the school was described by Ofsted as 'good with outstanding features' and by the Statutory Inspection of Anglican Schools as 'outstanding'.

In 2010, the school opened a new building named the 'Olivier Centre', after the former headteacher. The auditorium in there was named after Mr. Busby, the former deputy head.

It was reviewed again in 2011, with Ofsted describing the school as 'outstanding'. Having been designated a 'high performing specialist school' following the successful Ofsted inspection, the school has now been awarded a second specialism in Music.

In December 2012 the school was given the go ahead by Hammersmith & Fulham Council to expand to permanently admit four forms of entry in Year 7 following the success of two earlier 'bulge' years. From September 2014 the school admits four forms (120 pupils) in Year 7.

The school's alumnae association is called LMX.

Houses

There are six houses in the school, each with a distinctive colour to be worn during house activities, and in the lower years house points can be collected for these houses. In addition, there are many inter-house competitions including poetry, sport and debating; the two biggest house events being Sports Day at the end of the academic year and also the School's Birthday, on 29 September, when each of the houses performs a short play whose plot corresponds to a uniting theme, for example: Grimm's Fairy Tales, Greek Myths or Musicals. The plays are judged by a Teacher Panel on the basis of plot coherence, quotable lines, specific references to the school, the quality of the teacher parodies and overall effort from the house.

In 2010 the house plays were won by Lyttelton with their version of The Titanic. Kensington won in 2011, with their version of Grease. Sports Day, the final house event of the year, was won by Chirol. Lyttleton won in 2012, playing The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, and Kensington coming a close second (with Alice in Wonderland). However the house with the most house points - points received when students are extremely well behaved or do exceptional homework etc. - was Kensington. In 2013-14 the overall house competition points tally was: 1st - Chirol (18,901 points) 2nd Carver (18,212 points) 3rd Moberly Bell (16,629 points) 4th Marshall (16,054 points) 5th Kensington (15,781 points) 6th Lyttleton (15,778 points).[3]

The houses are as follows: Moberly-Bell, (named after Enid Moberly-Bell, first Headmistress of LMS) (pink), Lyttelton (after Dr. Edward Lytellton, a benefactor of the school) (blue), Carver (green), Marshall (Florence Marshall, a previous headmistress)(purple), Chirol (Sir Valentine Chirol) (red) and Kensington (The Bishop of Kensington) (yellow).

Notable former pupils

References

  1. "Specialist Schools Home". Department for Children, Schools and Families. Retrieved 2008-01-08.
  2. "Moving Up" (PDF). Hammersmith & Fulham Council. 2013.
  3. "School website".

External links