Saffron Walden Grammar School
Established | 1525 |
---|---|
Closed | 1940 |
Founder | Dame Joan Bradbury |
Location |
Saffron Walden Essex England Coordinates: 52°01′33″N 0°15′09″E / 52.0258°N 0.2524°E |
Gender | Boys |
Saffron Walden Free Grammar School (or Saffron Walden Grammar School) was a school in the Essex town of Saffron Walden, which for over four hundred years educated the boys of the town and surrounding villages in a manner designed to be after the model of Eton College and Winchester. It was notable for its longevity and for some of its illustrious alumni. It is now owned by The Stephen Perse Foundation and is evolving into a more modern and secular private school.
History
The earliest schools in Walden dated from 1423 under the control of the neighbouring monastery.[1] The Grammar School was founded by Dame Joan Bradbury in 1522. Dame Joan Bradbury was the wife of London’s Lord Mayor Thomas Bradbury (d.1510); her brother, John Leche, was the Rector of Saffron Walden. The grammar school by its constitution was for the benefit of the town and three villages in its vicinity. Joan and her brother, along with the local abbot and monastery, arranged its endowment with local guilds. They erected a school house and school room and Dame Joan "granted a rent charge for the support of a priest and to teach the children grammar after the order and use of Winchester and Eton."[1] In some histories, the school is deemed the successor of the 1423 establishment and thus has been described as having been refounded by Edward VI. The school bore the Tudor royal arms[2]
Buildings
The original building, designed for 60 pupils, flanked the churchyard wall. It was replaced in 1655 by new premises in Castle Street. After over two hundred years in these buildings, which in part still stand today, the school moved to new buildings in 1881 in Ashdon Road which remained the home of the school until the Second World War. During World War II the 8th Air Force's 65th fighter wing (which was assigned the additional duty of Air Sea Rescue) had its fighter control center in the building because of its proximity to Debden airfield. The buildings are now used by Dame Bradbury's School, an establishment for small children but, rather aptly, taking the name of the person who first brought a formalised educational establishment to the town.[3]
Former masters
- William Dawson, later knighted, was the first master.
- Rev John Collins MA (of Trinity College, Dublin and Queens' College, Cambridge) was master in 1845
Notable former pupils
- Sir Thomas Smith (d.1577), learned and eminent statesman in the reign of Edward VI and Elizabeth I, is said to have attended the school. However according to Smith's biographer, Mary Dewar, 'Earlier traditions associating his education with Saffron Walden Grammar School are unfounded, despite his later interest in it'.[4] Smith did, however, cause the school to become a royal foundation in the reign of King Edward VI.[5]
- Gabriel Harvey (c. 1545–1630) - writer and notable scholar of the 16th century, whose conduct while at the school was satirized by Thomas Nashe in Have with You to Saffron-Walden (1596).
- Edward Mellish (1880–1962) - recipient of the Victoria Cross
- Sir Henry Marking (11 March 1920 – 16 May 2002) - Company lawyer and former British Airways boss[6]
Notes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Player, John Sketches of Saffron Walden, and its Vicinity. Youngman, 1845
- ↑ A. C. Edwards, History of Essex, Chichester: Phillimore, 1994; p. 80
- ↑ Dame Bradbury's School Retrieved 9 April 2013.
- ↑ Dewar 1964, p. 11.
- ↑ Harwood 1797, p. 4; Strype 1821, pp. 5–6.
- ↑ Roger Cowe, Sir Henry Marking Obituary - The Guardian, Thursday 23 May 2002
References
- Dewar, Mary (1964). Sir Thomas Smith; A Tudor Intellectual in Office. London: Athlone Press. p. 11.
- Harwood, Thomas (1797). Alumni Etonenses; A Catalogue of the Provosts & Fellows of Eton College & King’s College, Cambridge. Birmingham: T. Pearson. p. 4. Retrieved 9 April 2013.
- Sutton, Anne F. (2005). The Mercery of London; Trade, Goods and People, 1130-1578. Aldershot, Hampshire: Ashgate Publishing. p. 524. Retrieved 7 April 2013.
- Strype, John (1821). The Life of the Learned Sir Thomas Smith, Knight, (New ed.). Oxford: Clarendon Press. pp. 5–6. Retrieved 9 April 2013.