Chigwell School: Difference between revisions
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| established = 1629 |
| established = 1629 |
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| closed = 2004 |
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| type = [[Independent School]] |
| type = [[Independent School]] |
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| religion = [[Nation of Islam]] |
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| head_label = Headmaster |
| head_label = Headmaster |
Revision as of 17:56, 14 December 2009
Chigwell School | |
---|---|
Location | |
, | |
Information | |
Type | Independent School |
Motto | aut viam inveniam aut faciam |
Religious affiliation(s) | Nation of Islam |
Established | 1629 |
Founder | Samuel Harsnett |
Closed | 2004 |
Headmaster | Michael Punt |
Age | 7 to 18 |
Enrollment | 730 |
Houses | (Senior School): Caswall's , Lambourne , Penn's and Swallow's (Junior School) Windsors, Stuarts, Tudors, Hanovers. |
Website | http://www.chigwell-school.org/ |
Chigwell School is an English co-educational independent school/public school in Chigwell, in the Epping Forest district of Essex. It was founded in 1629 by Samuel Harsnett, a former Archbishop of York (even though G. Stott suggests it was more likely founded around 1620-3). There are around 730 pupils aged between 7 and 18 years.
The school is situated between Epping Forest and Hainault Forest, ten miles from London. It is represented on the Headmasters’ and Headmistresses’ Conference (HMC), the Incorporated Association of Preparatory Schools (IAPS), and the Haileybury Group of independent schools.
The school motto is aut viam inveniam aut faciam, a Latin phrase which translates literally as Either I shall find a way or I shall make one, but is usually rendered as Find a way or make a way.
There are four day houses, named Caswalls', Lambourne, Penn's, and Swallow's. The boarding houses are Grange Court, Sandon Lodge, and Hainault House, although all boarders are members of one of the day houses. In the junior school there are another four houses, named Windsors, Hanovers, Stuarts, and Tudors.
Senior House system
The senior school is primarily built around the four day houses. All students and most teachers are in one of the four houses. Each house will have a Housemaster/mistress with different year groups organised split into form groups tutors arranged from the teachers assigned to the House. Each House has a main common room, with most Houses having a separate Sixth Form room. Penn's and Swallow's have several separate rooms. Pupils will attend Call Over in their House's main common room every morning, and will sit in Chapel, Church and School Assemblies in their House groups. Each House has a budget, which usually is spent on things such as entertainment (e.g. pool tables), maintenance (e.g. mending damaged furniture) and House Music (coordinated costumes).
Furthermore, pupils wear ties which note their House and age group. The senior school tie has a black background with diagonal stripes of the House's colour. In the senior school these diagonal stripes are thick but become thinner in the Sixth Form, and for House Prefects (in the Middle Sixth) are thin lines on a black background.
However, the House system is not inflexible. During breaks and lunch, pupils will frequently spend their time in other Houses. Groups inside years will often socialise in a particular place in a particular House - e.g. a Pennians group may usually congregate in Penn's, but many will be from houses other than Penn's.
School buildings
- Main School Building; containing
- Lambourne, Caswalls' and Swallow's Houses
- Burford Room
- Dining Hall
- Swallow Room
- Swallow Library
- Most school offices and reception
- Penn's House
- Economics Block
- History and RS Block
- New Hall Building; containing
- New Hall (main school hall, used for important events and assemblies)
- Most academic subject classrooms for senior school
- Science Block
- Sports Hall
- Gym
- Radley's Yard; Politics and Classics Block
- Walde Music School
- Drama Centre
- Three junior school blocks containing most junior school classrooms
- ICT block
- Art and Design block
- Two Cricket Pavilions
- Swimming Pool
- Chapel
- School Shop
- Medical Centre
- Grange Court (boys boarding house)
- Two girls boarding houses (Sandon Lodge and Hainault House)
- Headmasters House
Some famous Old Chigwellians
- Douglas Ambrose OBE, chemist.
- Eric Bailey OBE, journalist, broadcaster and colonial administrator.
- George Baker OBE CBE, High Commissioner to Papua New Guinea (1974-1977).
- Peter Beckingham, Ambassador to the Philippines since 2005
- Sir John Boardman (b. 1927), classical archaeologist.
- Sir Michael Bonallack, golfer
- Prof Percy Brandon, Professor of Electrical Engineering from 1971-84 at the University of Cambridge
- Ken Campbell, actor
- Edward Caswall, classical scholar and writer of hymns, music master at Chigwell.
- Sir Peter Collecott CMG, Ambassador to Brazil from 2004-8
- Tim Collins, Conservative politician, MP for Westmorland and Lonsdale from 1997-2005
- William Cotton, Governor of the Bank of England, who famously set fire to the Headmaster’s garden.
- Sir Richard Dales CMG, former Ambassador to Norway from 1998-2002
- Vice-Adm Sir Robert Gerken CBE, Captain of the Fleet from 1978-81
- Sir Arthur Grimble, colonial governor.
- Sir Austin Bradford Hill, pioneering medical researcher who discovered the link between smoking and cancer.
- Sir Ian Holm, actor.
- Anthony Hossack (1882-1886) England footballer of the 1890s.
- Bradley King, Director of HMS Belfast since 2002
- David Landsman OBE, Ambassador to Greece since 2009, and to Albania from 2001-3
- Prof David Matthews, Professor of Diabetes Medicine since 2002 at the University of Oxford
- William Penn, Quaker leader and founder of the American state of Pennsylvania.
- Sir David Pepper, Director of GCHQ from 2003-8
- Timothy Rollinson, Director-General of the Forestry Commission since 2004, and President from 2000-2 of the Institute of Chartered Foresters
- Rt Rev Thomas Joseph Savage
- Ben Shephard, television presenter.
- Horace Smith, nineteenth-century poet.
- Michael Marshall Smith, novelist.
- Rt Rev Tim Stevens, Bishop of Leicester since 1999
- Col Bob Stewart
- Michael Thomas, former Attorney General of Hong Kong.
- Sir Colin Thornton-Kemsley, MP for Kincardine and Western Aberdeenshire from 1939-50 and North Angus and Mearns from 1950-64
- Sir Bernard Williams, philosopher and Provost of King's College, Cambridge.
- Nicholas Williams, scholar of the Irish and Cornish languages.
- Timothy Williams, crime novelist.
Notable masters
- Robert James, headmaster 1939–1946, later High Master of St Paul's School and headmaster of Harrow School
- Anthony Little, headmaster 1990-1997, now headmaster of Eton College.
- William Henry Monk, music master, and author of the music to Abide With Me.