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Coordinates: 51°25′21″N 0°12′39″W / 51.4226°N 0.2107°W / 51.4226; -0.2107
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The junior houses are Austen (Red), Garrett-Anderson (Green), Hepworth (Yellow) and Somerville (Blue). The houses were name after famous and influential women.
The junior houses are Austen (Red), Garrett-Anderson (Green), Hepworth (Yellow) and Somerville (Blue). The houses were name after famous and influential women.

The houses compete on various occasions during the year, such as Sports Day and Off-Timetable Day.


==Previous Headmistresses==
==Previous Headmistresses==

Revision as of 16:40, 15 May 2010

Wimbledon High School Logo

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Wimbledon High School is an independent all-girls school in Wimbledon, southwest London. It is run by the Girls' Day School Trust and celebrated its 129th birthday on November 9 2009, having been founded by Edith Hastings in 1880. WHS educates girls between the ages of 4 to 18.

The motto is "ex humilibus excelsa" meaning "From humble beginnings to great things". Another motto coined by the school is "stepping in, striding out".

The four school houses, Arnold (green), Scott (yellow), Meredith (red) and Hastings (blue) are named after the first girls to join the school. The current headmistress is Mrs. Heather Hanbury.

The Good Schools Guide called the school an "Academic school with good results," stating that the "Strengths of the school [are] drawn from the atmosphere and friendships."[1]

Key Information

  • Headmistress: - Ms. Heather Hanbury
  • Junior School Headmistress - Ms. Kate Mitchell
  • Established: - 1880
  • Location: - Wimbledon, London
  • Website: - [1]

History

The school was founded when a woman called Mary Gurney, who was a member of the Girls' Day School Trust, was asked by a friend to start a GDST school in Wimbledon. When the school was founded in 1880, it had twelve girls. They included Meg and Margaret Arnold, Mildred Hastings, Violet Scott-Moncrieff and Sophie Meredith. By 1887 there were more than 100 girls and so the school expanded its site along Mansel Road. Edith Hastings was the first headmistress from when the school opened to 1908.

The first lesson taught was on the subject of the apple. Soon after the fruit was used as the emblem of the school. Every year on the school's birthday in November pupils and staff eat apple-green cakes in memory of this.

On a Saturday in February in 1917, fire broke out. Nearly all of the school's documents and papers were burnt and the library was destroyed.

The school playing grounds, known as Nursery Road, used to be home to the Wimbledon Lawn Tennis Championships until 1923 when it moved to its current setting a mile away. Nowadays a number of the Year 9 and 10 girls are selected to be ball girls at the Championships each year.

The School Song

The school song was written by a former pupil and later teacher of Wimbledon High School, The Duchess of Atholl, Kitty Ramsay. It is tradition to sing this on the school's birthday and at the end of the school year when the sixth formers are leaving. The words are:

From year to year, our onward course we take,
Through strife and victory, through weal and woe,
Making new friends, ne'er losing those we love,
So onwards, ever onwards let us go.

Above us loom new fields to conquer still,
Behind us are the heights already gained
By those who bore the fiercest of the fight,
That brave small band who to so much attained.

Those who have led and those among the ranks,
Who did true yeoman service with their might,
All those we love and strive to emulate
Keeping their memory ever clean and bright.

Onwards we go, cheered by a happy past,
Stong in our union of loyalty and love
To this our school its memories and aims
Still onwards to the unconquered peaks above.

The school hymn is Praise My Soul The King of Heaven. It is sung on special occasions in the school.

The School Houses

The four senior houses are Arnold (Green), Hastings (Blue), Meredith (Red), and Scott (Yellow). The houses were named after four of the twelve first students to attend Wimbledon High School. Each house has its own house committee consisting of a house captain and deputy house captain elected by the girls, and then Music, Art, Sports and Drama captains and a secretary elected by the house captain. Throughout the year there are several house events such as The Big Draw, The Interhouse Music Competition, Junior Drama and Off-timetable Day. Housepoints are also awarded by teachers in recognition for academic excellence and good deeds around school.

The junior houses are Austen (Red), Garrett-Anderson (Green), Hepworth (Yellow) and Somerville (Blue). The houses were name after famous and influential women.

Previous Headmistresses

  • Miss Edith Hastings (1880-1908)
  • Miss Ethel Gavin (1908-1918)
  • Miss Mabel Lewis (1918-1939)
  • Miss Kathleen Littlewood (1940-1949)
  • Miss Marguerite Burke (1949-1962)
  • Mrs Anne Piper (1962-1982)
  • Mrs Rosemary Smith (1982-1992)
  • Mrs Elizabeth Baker (1992-1995)
  • Dr Jill Clough (1995-2000)
  • Mrs Pamela Wilkes (2001-2008)
  • Mrs Heather Hanbury (2008-present)

Associated People

Notable Alumnae

Notable Former Teachers

See also

Girls Day School Trust

References

51°25′21″N 0°12′39″W / 51.4226°N 0.2107°W / 51.4226; -0.2107