Stamford School
Stamford School | |
---|---|
Address | |
St Paul's Street , , PE9 2BQ England | |
Coordinates | 52°39′19″N 0°28′18″W / 52.65520°N 0.47166°W |
Information | |
Type | Public school Private day and boarding |
Motto | Christ Me Spede |
Established | 1532 |
Founder | William Radcliffe |
Principal of SES | William Phelan |
Headmaster | William Phelan |
Gender | All Genders |
Age | 11 to 18 |
Houses | Day – Beale/Ancaster, Anderson/Brazenose, Exeter/Cavell, Radcliffe/Eliot. Boarding - Browne, Byard, Park, St Paul's, Welland, Wothorpe. |
Colour(s) | Navy, maroon |
Publication | The Stamfordian |
Former pupils | Old Stamfordians |
Website | stamfordschools |
Stamford School is a co-educational independent school in Stamford, Lincolnshire in the English public school tradition. Founded in 1532, it has been a member of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference since 1920. With the former Stamford High School and the coeducational Stamford Junior School, it is part of the Stamford Endowed Schools (SES). From September 2023, Stamford became co-educational.
History
This section needs additional citations for verification. (September 2021) |
The school was founded in 1532[1] by a local merchant and alderman, William Radcliffe, who had been encouraged when younger by Lady Margaret Beaufort, (died 1509) mother of Henry VII, though there is evidence to suggest that a school existed from the beginning of the fourteenth century. Founded as a chantry school, it fell foul of the Protestant reformers and was only saved from destruction under the Chantries Act of Edward VI by the personal intervention of Sir William Cecil (later Lord Burghley) who worked in the service of Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset and who secured a specific Act of Parliament in 1548 ensuring its survival. Apart from the chantries of the University of Oxford and the University of Cambridge, only those of Eton College, Winchester College, Berkhamsted, St Albans and Stamford schools survived.
Teaching is believed to have begun in the Corpus Christi chapel of Stamford's twelfth-century St Mary's Church, but by 1566 was taking place in the remaining portion of the redundant St Paul's Church, originally built no later than 1152. This building continued in use as a school room until the early twentieth century when it was restored and extended and, in 1930, returned to use as a chapel. In 1961, a nineteenth-century Gray and Davison pipe organ was installed[2] although this was removed in the 1990s and replaced with an electronic substitute. Over its history the school has built or absorbed seventeenth-, eighteenth- and nineteenth-century buildings, besides the site of a further demolished medieval church (Holy Trinity/St Stephen's) and remains of Brazenose College built by the secessionists from the University of Oxford in the fourteenth century. Brasenose College, Oxford bought Brazenose House in 1890 to recover the original medieval brass Brazenose knocker.[3][4]
The right of appointment of the school's master, a position hotly contested in past centuries on account of the post's disproportionately large salary, was shared between the Mayor of Stamford and the Master of St John's College, Cambridge. Both Stamford Town Council and St John's College still have nominees on the school's governing body. Stamford School has a sister school, Stamford High School which was founded in 1877. The funds for the foundation of the High School and the further financial endowment of the existing boys' school were appropriated from the endowment of Browne's Hospital by Act of Parliament in 1871. This trust had been established for the relief of poverty by William Browne (died 1489), another wealthy wool merchant and alderman of the town, and his gift is commemorated in the name of a school house.
From 1975, Lincolnshire County Council purchased places at Stamford School and Stamford High School on the basis that Stamford had no LEA grammar school (unlike the county's other towns). This local form of the Assisted Places Scheme provided funding to send children to the two schools that were formerly direct-grant grammars.[5] The national Assisted Places Scheme was ended by the Labour government in 1997 but the Stamford arrangements remained in place as an increasingly protracted transitional arrangement. In 2006, Lincolnshire County Council agreed to taper down from 50 the number of county scholarships to the Stamford Endowed Schools so that there would be no new scholarships from 2012.[6][7]
In recent years, the two schools were united under the leadership of a single principal as the Stamford Endowed Schools. This organisation comprised Stamford Junior School, a co-educational establishment for pupils aged between 2 and 11 years and Stamford School and Stamford High School for students aged 11–18. Sixth form teaching was carried out jointly between Stamford School and Stamford High School.[8] This was referred to as the diamond school model.
Stamford Endowed Schools became co-educational from September 2023 and fully co-educational in every year group from 2024. The High School site is now used as the Sixth Form campus, named 'St Martin's'.[9]
Stamford School has four senior houses. Following the merger with Stamford High School, the houses combined with the High School houses. The houses are now as follows:
- Yellow House: Anderson in Years 7 – 9, Brazenose in Years 10 – 13.
- Blue House: Radcliffe in Years 7 – 9, Eliot in Years 10 – 13
- Green House: Exeter in Years 7 – 9, Cavell in Years 10 – 13
- Red House: Beale in Years 7 – 9, Ancaster in Years 10 – 13
Since 1885 The Stamfordian has been the school magazine of Stamford School. Currently published annually in the Autumn term, it provides for current pupils and parents as well as Old Stamfordians and prospective parents an account of a year in the life of the school.
The school has rivalries with nearby Uppingham School, Oakham School and Oundle School.
School crest
The school's crest is a stork (the spede bird) with wings displayed on a wool bale over the motto + me spede, that is Christ me spede. The emblem was adopted from medieval wool merchant, William Browne, after the school had been re-endowed from Browne's Charity in 1873.[10] (The stork is supposed to be a rebus on his wife, Margaret's maiden name of Stoke). The current form was designed by Nelson Dawson.[citation needed]
Notable alumni (Old Stamfordians)
This section needs additional citations for verification. (September 2021) |
Politics and public service
- Nick Anstee, Lord Mayor of London[11]
- Simon Burns, Conservative MP for West Chelmsford, Minister of State[12]
- John Cecil, 5th Earl of Exeter, MP for Stamford, Grand Tourist and connoisseur
- William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley, Lord High Treasurer of England and chief advisor to Queen Elizabeth I
- Alfred Harmsworth, 1st Viscount Northcliffe, newspaper magnate, founder of the Daily Mail and Daily Mirror, owner of The Times
- J. F. Horrabin, Labour MP for Peterborough, journalist and broadcaster
- Sir Thomas Wilson, author, translator, diplomat, Member of Parliament, Keeper of the King's Records
Law
- Sir Richard Cayley, Chief Justice of Ceylon
- Sir Ronald Long,[13] President of the Law Society
- Nicholas Fluck, President of the Law Society
Music
- Sir Malcolm Sargent,[14] conductor
- Sir Michael Tippett, composer
- Julian Wastall, composer
Literature and the arts
- Michael Asher, author and explorer
- Oliver Bayldon, production designer and writer[15]
- Torben Betts, playwright
- Tom Butcher, film, television and stage actor
- Nelson Dawson,[16] silversmith, jeweller, designer, etcher and painter of the Arts and Crafts movement.
- Colin Dexter, author of the Inspector Morse detective novels; Morse is described as an Old Stamfordian
- Neil McCarthy, film and television actor
- Francis Peck, antiquary
- John Radford, wine writer and broadcaster
- George Robinson, television actor[17]
- Ralph Robinson, Renaissance scholar, first translator into English of Thomas More's Utopia
- Thomas Seaton, founder of Seatonian Prize for Poetry at the University of Cambridge
- John Terraine, military historian
- Ben Willbond, film and television actor
Military
- Apparanda Aiyappa, Indian Army
- Simon Bryant, Commander-in-Chief, RAF Air Command
- John Drewienkiewicz
- Mike Jackson,[18] Chief of the General Staff.
Academia and the church
- Martin Aitken, professor of archaeometry, University of Oxford, Fellow of Linacre College, Oxford
- Zachary Brooke, Lady Margaret's Professor of Divinity, University of Cambridge
- Henry Edwards, Dean of Bangor
- Charles John Ellicott, professor of divinity at King's College London and the University of Cambridge and Bishop of Gloucester and Bristol
- Philip Goodrich, Bishop of Worcester
- Malcolm Jeeves, psychologist
- Steven V. Ley, Professor of Chemistry at the University of Cambridge, Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge
- Cecil Richard Norgate,[19] bishop of Masasi, Tanzania
- Ian Roberts, professor of linguistics University of Cambridge, Fellow of Downing College
- M. Stanley Whittingham, lithium-ion battery pioneer and 2019 Nobel Prize in Chemistry laureate
Commerce and industry
- Oliver Hemsley, CEO, Numis Securities
Sport
- Robert Clift, gold medal-winning hockey player at the 1988 Seoul Olympics
- Joey Evison, Nottinghamshire county cricket[20]
- Simon Hodgkinson,[21] England international rugby
- Josh Hull, cricketer
- Mark James, golfer, captain European Ryder Cup team
- Shan Masood, Pakistani Test cricketer
- Alexander Sims, racing driver in Formula E
- M. J. K. Smith, England international rugby, England international cricket captain
- Iwan Thomas, Olympic athlete
Notable schoolmasters
This section needs additional citations for verification. (September 2021) |
- Robert Browne, clergyman and founder of the Brownists
- Walter Francis Edward Douglas
- William Dugard, headmaster of Merchant Taylors' School, Northwood, Royalist propagandist, printer of Basilikon Doron, a treatise on government written in 1599 by James VI of Scotland, the future James I of England
- Anthony Ewbank
- Dean Headley,[22] Rugby and Cricket professional
- Gerard Hoffnung, musician, humourist, cartoonist
- Harold Andrew Mason
- F. L. Woodward
See also
- List of the oldest schools in the United Kingdom
- History of Brasenose College, Oxford
- St Paul's Church, Stamford – The school chapel
Further reading
- B. L. Deed, The History of Stamford School, Cambridge University Press, 1954 (1st edition); 1982 (2nd edition).
References
- ^ "Stamford Endowed Schools | Independent Day and Boarding School – History of the School". www.ses.lincs.sch.uk. Archived from the original on 20 December 2016.
- ^ "Lincolnshire Stamford, Stamford School, St. Paul's Street [R01446]". National Pipe Organ Register. British Institute of Organ Studies. Retrieved 19 March 2019.
- ^ Sheehan, Nicholas. "The Brazenose Site in Stamford". Stamford Local History Society. Retrieved 14 April 2017.
- ^ Madan, F. "The Brazen Nose" (PDF). Brasenose College. Retrieved 14 April 2017.
- ^ "Last stronghold of assisted pupils faces legal threat" by Julie Henry, The Daily Telegraph 23 March 2003
- ^ "Stamford Endowed Schools Scholarship Tapering – Interim (8th Year) Review; 6 March 2015" (PDF). Lincolnshire.moderngov.co.uk. Lincolnshire County Council. Retrieved 17 March 2019.
- ^ "Private pupils' subsidy to finish". BBC News. 5 July 2006. Retrieved 17 March 2019.
- ^ "Co-educational School". stamfordcoed.org. Archived from the original on 22 May 2023. Retrieved 12 July 2023.
- ^ "Co-educational School". stamfordcoed.org. Archived from the original on 22 May 2023. Retrieved 12 July 2023.
- ^ "The staircase". Stamfordcivicsociety.org.uk. Retrieved 7 June 2020.
- ^ "City of London Member Details". City of London. Retrieved 11 February 2012.
- ^ "Which Tory went where?". The Guardian. London. 2 June 2007. Retrieved 11 February 2012.
- ^ Obituary, Law Society Gazette
- ^ "Sir Malcolm Sargent". iTunes. Retrieved 11 February 2012.
- ^ "News from Old Boys" (PDF). The Stamfordian. Summer Term (164). Stamford: Stamford School: 779. 1958.
R. O. M. Bayldon has received an award at Leicester Art College for his design of theatrical costumes and sets.
- ^ "Nelson Dawson". Lincs to the Past. Retrieved 11 February 2012.
- ^ "'My Sex Education character Isaac helped me to embrace who I am'". Stamford Mercury. 11 March 2021. Retrieved 27 September 2023.
- ^ "Sir Mike Jackson". Abingdon Speakers. Retrieved 11 February 2012.
- ^ The Reverend Richard Norgate; Obituary in The Telegraph
- ^ "Joey Evison profile and biography, stats, records, averages, photos and videos". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 22 April 2021.
- ^ "Guy gets an England call". Rutland & Stamford Mercury. 8 March 2007. Retrieved 11 February 2012.
- ^ "Where are they now? Dean Headley". Kent Cricket. 15 December 2010. Retrieved 11 February 2012.
External links
- Profile on the ISC website
- Stamford Endowed Schools website
- Photographs of Stamford School
- The Foundation Card
- The recent issues of the Stamfordian magazine can be downloaded
- Stamfordian 2005 (PDF 15MB)
- Stamfordian 2006 (PDF 10MB)
- Stamfordian 2007 (PDF 15MB)
- Educational institutions established in the 1530s
- Boarding schools in Lincolnshire
- Private schools in Lincolnshire
- 1532 establishments in England
- Member schools of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference
- Boys' schools in Lincolnshire
- Buildings and structures in Stamford, Lincolnshire
- Education in Stamford, Lincolnshire
- Diamond schools