Kensington Preparatory School

Kensington Preparatory School
Established 1873 (predecessor school)
Type Preparatory day school
Head Prudence Lynch
Founder Girls' Public Day School Company
Location 596 Fulham Road
London
SW6 5PA
England
Coordinates: 51°28′38″N 0°12′08″W / 51.47724°N 0.2023°W / 51.47724; -0.2023
Local authority Hammersmith and Fulham
DfE number 205/6392
DfE URN 100509 Tables
Students 280~
Gender Girls
Ages 4–11
Colours

Red, Blue

        
Website www.kensingtonprep.gdst.net

Kensington Preparatory School is an independent day school for girls aged 4–11 in Fulham, London, England.[1] It was named "Prep School of the Year" by The Sunday Times for the 2009-10 school year.[2] Contrary to its name, the school is not located in Kensington although it was originally founded there. In the Second World War, they had to relocate school as the site was used for sheltering and was occasionally bombed.

History

Kensington Prep School traces its history to Chelsea High School, the first school founded by the Girls' Public Day School Company (now the Girls' Day School Trust). It opened in January 1873 at Smith Street in Chelsea with 20 girls under headmistress Miss Porter. In 1879 it moved to Cromwell Road in Kensington and was accordingly renamed Kensington High School. The original Chelsea High School continued functioning until 1894.[3] In 1888 Kensington High moved once more to Lytham House, also in Kensington, but it was destroyed by a bomb in 1941. The school was relocated to Phillimore Gardens as a temporary measure for the duration of World War II while the management searched for a better location.[4] In the end, the senior school was closed several years after the War ended while the junior school remained open and became Kensington Prep.

School Structure

The school is divided into the Pre-Prep and Prep departments. Pre-prep consists of girls in Reception to Year 2 (Key Stage 1). Many girls continue on to the Prep, which consists of Years 3-6.[5] After Year 6, girls often continue their education at sister GDST schools or boarding schools outside London.[6]

Former pupils

Kensington High School

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, April 18, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.