ARK William Parker Academy

ARK William Parker Academy
Established 1621
Type Academy
Religion Church of England [1]
Head Milker Mr Michael Duberry [1]
Location Parkstone Road
Hastings
East Sussex
TN34 2NT
England
Coordinates: 50°52′34″N 0°34′08″E / 50.87609°N 0.56879°E / 50.87609; 0.56879
DfE number 845/4003
DfE URN 139821 Tables
Ofsted Reports Pre-academy reports
Students 1,236[1]
Gender Boys
Ages 11–18
Website ARK William Parker Acamdey

ARK William Parker Academy, formerly known as Hastings Grammar School, William Parker School, and later as William Parker Sports College is a secondary school in Hastings, East Sussex in the United Kingdom. It is now the only all-boys secondary school in East Sussex.

Admissions

There is a separate Sixth form which is shared with Helenswood Academy, a local girls' school. There are over a thousand boys in years 7–11 and about three hundred boys and girls in the shared sixth form. Helenswood has places for 1100 girls in years 7-11. Each school takes approximately 200 pupils in a year.

Upper Block

Middle Block

Lower Block

The lower block is a 1/2 storey building with a 'bare-brick' style. The classrooms here are: Mathematics, DT, Graphics, ICT, Business, Economics, Politics, Drama, PE and SEN (Special Educational Needs). Also on the Lower School grounds is a Sports Centre, Engineers Garage and Athletics Track.

The lessons taught in the Lower block are:

Other Facilities

William Parker School, Parkstone road building

Sports, Clubs, and Traditions

William Parker community athletics arena

Apart from football and cricket, many other sports are played.

William Parker is divided into four houses for sporting and pastoral purposes, formerly eight, each of which has its own colour:

History

In 1619 The Rev. William Parker, Rector of All Saints Church, Hastings died, leaving a will which said:

"I give unto the Mayor, Jurates and Comynaltye of Hastings and to their successors for ever towards the maynteynance of a Religious and godlie Schoolemaster in the sayd towne w'ch shall instructe and teach the youthe of the Inhabitants of Hastings in learninge, manners and other vertuous education to gette their livinge. To which sayd use I give all my land in the parishe of Oer."[2]

This is taken as the foundation of the school, although Parker's will also stated that his widow should enjoy the income from all his property until her death, so no money was available to appoint the first master until twenty years later. The will stipulated that the master should be chosen by the jurates (town councillors) living within the parish of All Saints, rather than by the town council as a whole, and by any heir of William Parker still living in Hastings.

Parker's nephew William became Mayor of Hastings, and his nephew's son (also William) later became master of the school. Titus Oates, son of the rector of All Saints, Samuel Oates, and later infamous for fabricating the notorious Popish Plot, started his career by bringing false charges against both William Parkers in an attempt to create a vacancy for the post of master. Records of early masters are incomplete, but in 1759 John Shorter was appointed master, once again by another William Parker, mayor elect.

In 1708 a Kentish landowner by the name of James Saunders made various charitable legacies in his will, including provisions for a schoolmaster in Rye and a schoolmaster and two school mistresses in Hastings. One of the mistresses was to teach 30 pupils in the parish of All Saints and the other in the parish of St Clements, at a salary of £10 per year. The master was to teach reading, writing, Latin, accounting, mathematics and navigation to any poor child in Hastings "from the Seagate next the Fish Market", at a salary of £40 per year, subject to a maximum of 70 pupils. Saunders stipulated that the corporation of each of the towns concerned should oversee the way the other operated their school, with the penalty for failing to comply with the terms of the bequest that all the funds should go to the other town.

The previous neo-Gothic building: built 1883; demolished 1965−1966

Falling income from the two charities meant that by 1809 one master, Joseph Hannay, was employed to teach forty boys on behalf of the Parker school, and fifteen for the Saunders school. The Saunders fund continued to pay two schoolmistresses ten pounds each per year, while the master received three pounds per child. Local complaints about the low rents being charged by the corporation for the Parker fund lands had led to increases from £49 in 1787 to £134 in 1809, but the council also turned down an offer from one James Halloway to rent the estate for £205. Thomas Breeds, another prominent local man, applied to the High Court of Chancery arguing that the funds were being improperly administered, with the result that he himself rented them for £210, no higher bid being received at a public auction. The expenses of the case were paid by the funds, with the result that the Saunders school had to close for five years, but afterwards two separate masters were appointed.

The two were permanently re-merged in 1878, together with part of the Magdalen trust, to form the Hastings Grammar School Foundation. A Victorian Gothic Revival building was constructed by John Howell & Son to the design of Jeffery & Skiller on a slope overlooking Hastings,[3][4] at Standen's High Field which became Nelson road, and occupied in July 1883. The school was originally designed as a central tower with wings either side. Owing to lack of funds, the wing intended as accommodation for the headmaster and boarders was never built.

Modern educational reforms

Following the Education Act of 1902, the school began to receive a grant from the British Government. Under the Education Act of 1944, secondary schools in England were reorganised in three categories: grammar schools, technical schools, and secondary modern schools. The school was naturally classed as a grammar school under this scheme, and had voluntary aided status: in other words the income from the Foundation was supplemented by a grant from the Local Education Authority. From now on, admission to the school was solely via the eleven-plus examination, and education was free (previously there had been fees of five guineas a year). Classes were held six days a week, with no lessons on Wednesday and Saturday afternoons. Saturday morning school was abolished in 1967.

Voluntary controlled status

In 1959 the school governors decided to change the status of the school from voluntary aided to voluntary controlled. The school was now controlled by a board of ten governors appointed by the borough of Hastings and five appointed by the charitable foundation. The charitable funds remained under the control of the foundation governors, but responsibility for providing buildings now fell to the education authority. A new modern building was constructed further from the town centre, on 42 acres (170,000 m2) of land which had long been used as the school's playing fields. The new school was designed for 570 boys, including a sixth form of 120, and is now the Parkstone Road half of the school. The foundation stone of the new school was laid on 4 July 1962, and the school occupied in 1964.

Comprehensive school

The incoming Labour government of 1965 introduced a change in national education policy intended to phase out grammar school education and replace it with comprehensive education. This was resisted by the borough of Hastings, but local government reorganisation under the following Conservative administration meant that the autonomous county borough was abolished and replaced by East Sussex County Council as the education authority. A decision was taken to change to a comprehensive school intake, and at the same time to merge the school with Hastings Secondary School. A further new building was constructed on the same site, but reached by a separate road entrance in Park Avenue. The school was renamed "the William Parker School" and had its first comprehensive system intake in 1978. This first year of comprehensive students were temporarily taught in Priory Road School, with occasional lessons at the old Grammar School while the new building was being completed, and moved across to the new location for 1979 start of school year.

College

In 1998, the school achieved specialist Sports College status, following the new opening of an athletics arena.

Towards 2000 the Alan Booth Jones Cricket centre opened, which featured indoor cricket and other sports facilities used both by the school and externally.

In 2006, the school re-instated the roles of Head Boy, Deputy Head Boy and Prefects for the Year 7-11 year group. They are chosen from the current group of year 11s and are distinguished from the rest of the year group by their tie, which is dark blue with the school crest and the person's role.

Academy

In 2013, the governing body applied with Ark to become an academy. The College then turned forth into an academy on 31 August 2013.

Uniform

Notable former pupils

Hastings Grammar School

William Parker School

Notable former teachers

Further reading

J. Manwaring Baines, J. R. Conisbee, and N. Bygate, The History of Hastings Grammar School 1619-1966, published by the Governors of the Hastings Grammar School Foundation, 1956, revised 1967.

References

  1. 1 2 3 [http://schoolsfinder.direct.gov.uk/8454500/overview/?d=1&distanceMeasure=miles&d=1&pagetype=search- results&Specialism=0&type=Primary%2CSecondary&searchstring=ARK+William+Parker+Academy&distanceValue=5 "School Overview - ARK William Parker Academy"] Check |url= value (help). Directgov. Retrieved 28 February 2010. line feed character in |url= at position 100 (help)
  2. From a school prospectus. A shorter version with modernised spelling is given in John Manwaring Baines FSA, Historic Hastings. F J Parsons Ltd, Hastings, 1955 and 1963, Page 275.
  3. "Hastings Chronicle". New grammar school. 15 September 1882. Retrieved 14 March 2011.
  4. "Hastings Chronicle". New grammar school opens. 6 July 1883. Retrieved 14 March 2011.
  5. Grey Owl's Hastings 1066.net.
  6. Marre, Oliver (14 January 2007). "The man with stars in his eyes". The Guardian (London).
  7. "Player profile: Timothy Booth Jones". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 3 January 2012.
  8. 1 2 3 "England star back in town with Sussex". Hastings & St Leonards Observer. Retrieved 28 February 2010.
  9. Reminiscences of Smugglers and Smuggling by John Banks, published by J.C Hotten, 1873

External links

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