King Henry VIII School, Coventry
This article possibly contains original research. (April 2019) |
King Henry VIII School | |
---|---|
Address | |
Warwick Road , , CV3 6AQ England | |
Coordinates | 52°23′57″N 1°31′01″W / 52.3993°N 1.5169°W |
Information | |
Type | Independent day school |
Motto | Religioni et reipublicae (For religion and for public affairs) |
Religious affiliation(s) | Church of England |
Established | 1545 |
Founder | John Hales |
Local authority | Coventry |
Department for Education URN | 103750 Tables |
Chair | Coventry School Foundation |
Head teacher | Philip Dearden |
Gender | Coeducational |
Age | 3 to 18 |
Enrolment | 1,337 |
Houses | Senior: Hales' Holland's Sherwyn's White's Junior: Greenwich Hampton Richmond Windsor |
Colour(s) | Red, Black, Yellow |
Publication | The Arrow (Monthly) The Coventrian (Annually) |
Former pupils | Old Coventrians |
Website | http://www.kinghenrys.co.uk/ |
King Henry VIII School is a coeducational independent day school located in Coventry, England, comprising a senior school (ages 11–18) and associated preparatory school (ages 3–11). The senior school has approximately 800 pupils (120 in each of years 7–11 and 100 in each year of the Sixth Form). The current fees stand at £13,785 per year,[1] with bursaries and scholarships available.[2] Due to its location close to Coventry railway station, the school accommodates pupils from around the West Midlands area, including towns at 30 miles' distance, such as Northampton, Warwick, Balsall Common, Leamington Spa, Kenilworth, Rugby and Nuneaton.
The school is situated on an 11-acre (4.5 ha) urban site. The buildings are an example of Victorian collegiate architecture. The campus has more recent buildings, including a new art complex, drama studio, sports hall, library and, most recently, a swimming pool and fitness suite. In 2015 an extension was added to the library. The Junior school has its own building on the same site but the preparatory school is located on a different site, a few minutes away.
Pupils take part in extra-curricular activities including sports played at county, regional and national levels, music, drama, Duke of Edinburgh's Award scheme, public speaking, chess and a variety of additional academic societies.
The school is run by the Coventry School Foundation, a registered charity, and jointly administered with Bablake School under a common Board of Governors. The schools have mutual arrangements such as a common entrance examination, shared astroturf pitches, and similar school uniforms, differing only in the style of tie and the badge on the blazer. The Coventry School Foundation also includes the new Bablake Junior School and King Henry VIII Preparatory School, formed from the merger of Coventry Preparatory School with King Henry VIII Junior School from the beginning of the 2008/9 academic year. The two school sites remain in use by the preparatory school, with the Reception to Y2 classes occupying the old Coventry Preparatory site, which is known as Swallows, in honour of the school's founder. The Y3 to Y6 classes occupy the former King Henry VIII Junior School site, adjacent to the senior school, which is known as Hales in honour of that school's founder. With effect from September 2008, King Henry VIII School began to offer continuity of education from ages 3 to 18.
History
The school was founded on 23 July 1545 by the Clerk of the Hanaper John Hales as the Free Grammar School under letters patent of King Henry VIII. During the initial foundation of the school it was located in the Whitefriars' Monastery. Nevertheless, due to religious differences, the school was relocated to the building of the former St. John's Hospital in 1558, where it spent more than 300 years before moving to its present site on the south side of the city in 1885, a building there having been designed for it by Edward Burgess. Much of this original redbrick still stands despite Second World War damage, as well as many expansions.
In 1572 the school's administration was conveyed to the Coventry Corporation. In 1573 a deed was legalised by the Mayor of Coventry, according to which endowments were allocated to the school for the school's overall maintenance, but more particularly to fund music as part of the educational curriculum.[citation needed]
In 1601, the School's library was established and maintained by the donations of affluent contributors.[citation needed]
In the 18th century the School experienced decline and struggle.[citation needed]
Due to financial difficulties, the School was required to introduce fees to the students. In an attempt to deal with these struggles the School was divided into two departments: Classical and Commercial. The Commercial subjects were taught at the Schoolroom and were greatest in demand, while the Classical subjects were taught in the library and were specifically aimed at boys willing to attend the University.[citation needed]
In 1878 the School was no longer a "Free Grammar School" and it became an independent institution after being under the administration of the Corporation and the City Authorities for 300 years.[citation needed] The old school premises were condemned and the new buildings, used at the present, were established on Warwick Road in 1885. Further improvements to the curriculum were also implemented and more subjects were introduced. By 1910 the number of pupils had increased. Over the next several years, the school continued to thrive and in 1926 the Preparatory classes were reinstated. By 1939 the number of boys in the school had grown from 94 in 1901 to approximately 500.[citation needed] The number of pupils continued to grow during the Second World War (1939–1945) with over 822 students in the school, 179 in the Junior division. Regardless of the damage caused by the bombings over Coventry, which diminished the school's library and other buildings, the school continued to expand and develop. Girls were first admitted to the school in 1975.
In October 2020, it was announced that the school would merge with Bablake School,[3] with the combined school is set to open in September 2021.[4] The proposed new school was initially named Coventry School, before backlash from parents and staff led to Bablake and King Henry VIII School being chosen.[5]
Le Fousseau
In 1991 Le Logis de Fousseau, a manor house in the French Department of Mayenne, was donated to the Foundation by Mr Bill Boucher for the use and benefit of the pupils of the Foundation.[citation needed] Le Fousseau is around 15 km from Fougères. The border with Brittany is only a few kilometres to the west and that of Normandy some 20 km to the north. The chateau was typically used for residential trips by students practising French.
With effect from September 2012, the school no longer made use of Le Fousseau. The Coventry School Foundation took the decision in 2012 to sell the property.
Publicity
King Henry VIII School's swimming pool was shown in a BMW ad starring Rebecca Adlington.[6][better source needed]
In 2017 a large scale advertising campaign was launched by the Senior School in the Coventry and West Midlands area in an attempt to attract new, external, enthusiastic students.[citation needed]
Controversies
Debee Ashby, a teenage glamour model was expelled from the school in 1983 after topless Page 3 pictures were published.[7][8]
Former headmaster, Terence James Vardon, left his position after pleading guilty to three charges of possessing indecent images of children between 1989 and April 1999.[9] In 1999, John Skermer, a senior teacher was also convicted of taking and possessing photographs of naked boys.[10]
A teacher at the school, James Anstice, admitted to a charge of causing criminal damage in 2004 costing £2,500 by destroying a nativity scene at Madame Tussauds featuring David and Victoria Beckham.[11][12][13]
In 2012, two pupils were expelled over allegations they sold drugs to other children; three other students were suspended for a term.[14][15]
Former Headmasters
- Thomas Sherwyn BA (Oxon)
- Leonard Cox BA (Cantab) MA (Oxon), 1572–1599
- John Tovey MA (Oxon), 1599–1602
- Jeremiah Arnold, MA (Oxon) MA (Cantab), 1602–1611
- James Cranford, 1611–1627
- Philemon Holland MD (Cantab) MA (Oxon), 1628–1629
- Phineas White BA (Cantab), 1629–1651
- Samuel Frankland MA (Cantab), 1651–1691
- Samuel Carte MA (Oxon), 1691–1700
- George Greenway, 1701–1717
- Richard Marsden MA (Oxon), 1717–1718
- Edward Jackson BA (Cantab), 1718–1758
- Thomas Edwards DD (Cantab), 1758–1779
- William Brooks MA (Oxon), 1779–1833
- Thomas Sheepshanks MA (Cantab), 1834–1857
- Henry Temple, 1857–1867
- John Grover, 1867–1879
- W.W. Sweet-Escott MA (Oxon), 1879–1889
- C.R. Gilbert MA (Cantab), 1890–1906
- A.D. Perrott MA (Cantab), 1906–1910
- John Lupton MA (Cantab), 1910–1931
- A.A.C. Burton MA (Oxon), 1931–1950
- Herbert Walker BA (London), 1950–1974 worked in postwar Germany engaged under Lord Annan in denazification of German Universities
- Roy Cooke MA (Oxon), 1974–1977
- Rhidian James BA (Leeds), 1977–1994
- Terence Vardon MA (Oxon), 1994–1999
- George Fisher MA (Oxon), 2000–2010
- Jason Slack BSc (Durham), 2010–2020
- Philip Dearden BA MA Ed, 2020-
Notable Old Coventrians
This section needs additional citations for verification. (February 2020) |
- Debee Ashby, glamour model.[16]
- Terence Brain, Bishop of Salford.
- Richard Baylie, President of St John's College, Oxford.
- Paul Barnes, graphic designer and typographer.
- Ralph Bathurst, Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University.
- Colin Blakemore, author and scientist.
- Nicholas Bullen, musician, composer and writer, co-founder of Napalm Death.
- Joseph Butterworth, English law bookseller.
- Bob Carlton, composer of the rock musical Return to the Forbidden Planet.
- Andrew Copson, Chief Executive of Humanists UK and president of the International Humanist and Ethical Union.
- Edward Thomas Copson, mathematician.
- Jerry Dammers, Musician. Founder Member of The Specials.
- Peter Ho Davies, author.
- Paul Daniel, conductor.
- Alison Dougall, academic consultant in special care dentistry.
- Sir William Dugdale, antiquary.
- David Duckham, England international rugby player.
- Omar Ebrahim, baritone vocalist and actor.
- Jackie Fisher, 1st Baron Fisher, admiral in the Royal Navy.
- Sir Frederick Gibberd, architect of Liverpool Metropolitan Cathedral.
- Sir Leslie Gibson, KC, former Chief Justice of Trinidad, Palestine and Hong Kong.
- Andy Goode, rugby player.
- James Grindal, rugby player.
- Roger Harrabin, BBC journalist and reporter.
- Basil Heatley, marathon runner.
- Ian Hobson, pianist.
- Martin Jacques, journalist, writer and TV presenter.
- Philip Larkin, Poet. Has a room, connected to the main school hall, named after him (Philip Larkin room).
- John Wilfrid Linnett, chemist and Vice-Chancellor of Cambridge University.
- Christopher Marshall (doctor), Professor of Cancer Biology, Institute of Cancer Research.
- David McCutchion, Indophile academic.
- Eric Malpass, novelist.
- Simon Over, pianist and conductor
- Robert Paterson, Bishop of Sodor and Man.
- Arthur Samuel Peake, theologian and biblical scholar.
- S. S. Prawer, Taylor Professor of German Emeritus, Oxford University.
- Peter Preece, England international rugby player.
- Professor Rebecca Probert, legal historian.
- Peter Robbins, rugby football player
- Peter Rossborough, England international rugby player.
- John Sheepshanks, Bishop of Norwich.
- J. B. Steane, teacher, literary scholar and music critic.
- Michael Tooby, curator, Professor of Art & Design, Bath School of Art & Design, Bath Spa University since 2012
- Humphrey Wanley, librarian, palaeographer and scholar of Old English.
- Rear Admiral Anthony Whetstone CB, former Royal Navy officer who served as Flag Officer Sea Training.
- Peter Whittingham, football player (Aston Villa FC, Cardiff City FC and England U21).
- R. E. S. "Bob" Wyatt, England test cricketer.
References
- ^ "Fees/Finances on www.kinghenrys.co.uk". kinghenrys.co.uk. Retrieved 16 August 2013.
- ^ "Scholarships & Bursaries". kinghenrys.co.uk. Retrieved 23 February 2012.
- ^ Souza, Naomi de (2 October 2020). "Two historic Coventry schools announce they are merging". CoventryLive. Retrieved 1 February 2021.
- ^ "Bablake and King Henry VIII to merge into a single all-through school in 2021". Coventry Observer. 2 October 2020. Retrieved 1 February 2021.
- ^ Souza, Naomi de (14 January 2021). "New name revealed in private schools merger". CoventryLive. Retrieved 1 February 2021.
- ^ "BMW presents Beneath the Surface with Rebecca Adlington".
- ^ Lockley, Mike (14 September 2014). "Page three stunner who said no to Reggie Kray". Birmingham Mail. Birmingham Live.
- ^ Chilton, Steve (23 January 2015). "Red Button: Coventry 'stunner' Debee Ashby says Page Three should be consigned to dustbin of history". coventrytelegraph.
- ^ "UK Ex-head had child porn". BBC News. BBC. Retrieved 7 October 2019.
- ^ "Crimes, Fires & Accidents - King Henry VIII Teacher Awaits Sentence - 23 June 1999". cwn.org.uk. Retrieved 7 October 2019.
- ^ "The law lecturer who launched 'a war against crap' in Madame Tussauds". The Independent. 25 January 2005. Retrieved 7 October 2019.
- ^ "Becks waxwork vandal discharged". BBC News. BBC. 24 January 2005. Retrieved 7 October 2019.
- ^ "Nativity scene attacker escapes jail". Evening Standard. London. 24 January 2005. Retrieved 7 October 2019.
- ^ "Two pupils expelled over drug allegations at Coventry's King Henry VIII School". coventrytelegraph. Coventry Telegraph. 18 September 2012. Retrieved 7 October 2019.
- ^ "Pupils expelled over cannabis use". BBC News. BBC. 19 September 2012. Retrieved 7 October 2019.
- ^ Duck, Alison. "Debbie's all set to be a model mum; Couple's baby delight". Coventry Evening Telegraph. Archived from the original on 25 October 2012. Retrieved 1 December 2007.