St Albans School, Hertfordshire
This article may contain excessive or inappropriate references to self-published sources. (January 2015) |
St Albans School | |
---|---|
Address | |
Abbey Gateway , , AL3 4HB England | |
Information | |
Type | Independent day school |
Motto | Non Nobis Nati (Latin: "Born not for ourselves") |
Religious affiliation(s) | Church of England |
Established | 948 |
Founder | Wulsin (Abbot Ulsinus) |
Local authority | Hertfordshire |
Department for Education URN | 117647 Tables |
Headmaster | Jonathan Gillespie MA (Cantab), FRSA |
Gender | Boys (coeducational Sixth Form) |
Age | 11 to 18 |
Enrollment | 805 |
Houses | Hawking Marsh Hampson Renfrew |
Colour(s) | Black, Blue, Gold and Red respectively |
Publication | The Albanian |
Former pupils | Old Albanians |
Endowment | £9.8 million |
Website | http://www.st-albans.herts.sch.uk/ |
St Albans School is an independent school in the city of St Albans in Hertfordshire, in the South East of England. Entry before Sixth Form is for boys only, but the Sixth Form has been co-educational since 1991. Founded in 948 by Wulsin (Abbot Ulsinus), St Albans School is not only the oldest school in Hertfordshire but also one of the oldest in the world. The school has been called "Britain's oldest public school" by the Daily Mail.[1] Nicholas Carlisle, in 1818, described the school as "of very ancient origin, and of great celebrity"[2] and the Good Schools Guide describes St Albans as a "traditional public school, with a rich history".[3]
The current headmaster is Jonathan Gillespie, appointed in 2014.
School arms
The school coat of arms is composed of the cross of Saint Alban together with the School motto.
The cross of Saint Alban is a gold saltire (a cross, signifying that Alban was martyred, but diagonal, as he was beheaded, not crucified) on a blue field (or, in heraldic terms, Azure, a saltire Or).
The current school motto is Non nobis nati ("Born not for ourselves"). This dates back to the family of the 12th century Geoffrey de Gorham (Master and subsequently Abbot of St Albans), deriving from Cicero's ("Non nobis solum nati sumus"; "We are not born for ourselves alone"), and was used until the Reformation. It was re-introduced in 1994, thereby stressing the link between the School before and after the dissolution of the monastery in 1539.
Non nobis nati replaced the previous motto Medioc ria firma ("The middle road is best"), used between the 16th and 20th centuries. This was the motto of the Bacon family at Gorhambury (including Sir Nicholas and Sir Francis Bacon). This formed part of the Bacon coat of arms, which for instance can still be seen outside the Verulam Arms public house in nearby Welclose Street and inside St Mary's Church, Redbourn.
History
Pre-Reformation history
The school was founded within St Albans Abbey by Abbot Wulsin in 948 and was the first school in the world to accept students not intending to join a religious order, being the first school open to the wider public.[4] By the 12th century, the School had built for itself such a reputation that the famous Norman scholars Geoffrey de Gorham and Alexander Neckam applied for the post of Master.[4] Geoffrey de Gorham was later to become Abbot of St Albans in 1119, and the School then remained under the control of the Abbot until the dissolution of the Abbey in 1539.[5]
By the 12th century, the school was one of the largest in the British Isles. On 16 September 1309, the school was given new statutes, including scholarships for poor students.[6] The school and Abbey were sacked in 1381 during the Peasants' Revolt. (The revolt's leader John Ball, was also a former pupil of the school.) By the 15th century, the school was located in buildings in Romeland and inside the Abbey Gateway, which from 1479 housed schoolmaster's press.[7] The St Albans Press continues today, in a semi-dormant form, as "John Insomuch Schoolmaster Printer 1479 Ltd", making the school the oldest extant presses in the world.[8]
Post-Reformation history
After the dissolution of the Abbey in 1539, Richard Boreman, the last Abbot, became Headmaster and the school moved to a chapel near St Peter's church in St Albans after its buildings in Romeland were demolished by Sir Richard Lee for building materials to rebuild Sopwell Priory into a country house.[9] In 1549, to put the school on a firmer foundation, the last Abbot was granted the right to maintain a Grammar School by a private Act of Parliament.[9] Around 1545, the school outgrew its St Peter's church premises and moved again to the Lady Chapel at the east end of the Abbey, bought for the huge sum of £100, and it was separated from the rest of the abbey with a wall made of smashed stones from the ancient shrine of St Alban.[9] In 1553 the Crown sold the rest of the Abbey Church to the town for £400 (the value of the lead on its roof) and became a Church of England parish church for the new Borough of St Albans.[9]
In 1570 Sir Nicholas Bacon, Lord Keeper of the Great Seal and father of Sir Francis Bacon, then living at nearby Gorhambury, gave the school new statutes and re-endowed the School by successful petitioning Queen Elizabeth I for a Wine Charter (extended by King James I in 1606).[4] The only other educational institutions with the same privileges to tax the alcohol trade in their localities were the University of Oxford and the University of Cambridge. The income from wine and beer sales in the St Albans continued to fund the school until 1922, when they were surrendered to the Treasury in return for £1200 in The Oxford and St Albans Wine Privileges (Abolition) Bill.[10] Other benefactors from this period include Sir Richard Platt, Citizen of London, sometime Master of the Worshipful Company of Brewers and later founder of Aldenham School, who 'conveyed to the Mayor and Burgesses, and their Successors for ever' former-Abbey land on George Street in St Albans for the benefit of the school, and Charles Hale, whose relative Richard Hale later founded a grammar school in the town of Hertford.[11]
Queen Elizabeth I and Sir Nicholas Bacon also founded the school's library in 1570, which moved from Sumpter Yard in the 19th century to the Abbey Gateway, and then in the 1980s to an impressive converted 19th century neo-Gothic hall, opened by Professor Colin Renfrew OA, then Master of Jesus College, Cambridge. The library collection now holds over 16,000 volumes and Elizabeth I is still regarded as the 'Benefactor Royal' of the St Albans School Library.[12]
Other significant benefactions to the school include a gift of clay pits near St Albans made in 1582[11] and a significant amount of land by Charles Woollam, an Old Albanian, in the 19th century, including playing fields at Belmont Hill and St Alban's "Holy Well", which was a site for medieval pilgrimage.[13]
In 1626, King Charles I visited the school in a royal inspection. His visit to St Albans was recorded by a royal crest being built into one of the fireplace surrounds in the Abbey Gateway and this room is still called the "King Charles Room" in honour of his visit.[14]
After over three centuries in the Lady Chapel, in 1871, due to the restoration of the Abbey and the re-instatement of the Lady Chapel, the school moved into the Abbey Gateway (which had been built in 1365 and, following the dissolution, had been used as a prison for 300 years; now a scheduled ancient monument).[15]
Between 1907 and 1976, it was a Direct Grant grammar school, keeping the name St Albans School for most part not least because of the existence of 2 separate Boys' and Girls' Grammar Schools in St Albans and was generally referred to simply as a Direct Grant School. In the 1960s and 1970s many of the pupils at the school enjoyed a free education, paid for by public funds. From 1980 to 2005, it also offered free places to poor but academically talented pupils under the Assisted Places Scheme. Since the 1970s, the school has also offered a large number of scholarships and bursaries up to 100% of the school's fees, funded from its endowments.
Since the 19th century, there have been many additions to the school site, which now comprises a very interesting architectural mixture of buildings dating from the Roman-era cellar, where the archives are kept under the Abbey Gateway, to modern extensions built in the 1990s.[16] The school also includes the oldest room in the world regularly used as a classroom, the 12th century West Gate Room, which was incorporated from a previous gateway into the current Abbey Gateway in the 1360s.[16] Ptolemy Dean is the current school architect.[17]
The Woollam Playing Fields, a couple of miles away to the north of the city, provides an extensive, modern, outdoor sports facility for the School and the Old Albanian Sports Club.[18] At over 100 acres, it was the largest sporting development in Western Europe until the construction of the Olympic Park in East London for the 2012 games. The site was officially opened in October 2002 by Prince Richard, The Duke of Gloucester. Woollam's was built on part of a 400-acre farm owned by the school, which also contains a field studies centre used by the school's biology department. In 2003, the school opened a new Drama Department building and theatre in Romeland, on the site of the medieval school's building, called the "New Place".
On 7 January 2010, the Herts Advertiser ran an article reporting that a loan of £1000 at the rate of 6% p.a. was given by the school to the city of St Albans in 1722. The St Albans City and District Council, though it acknowledges the loan, has not made any repayments on it. As of 2012, the debt stands at £21,800,000,000 (21 billion 800 million pounds).
The summer of 2012 saw the completion of a new Sports Centre on site, with sports hall, swimming pool, climbing wall, fitness suite and dance studio. Another recent development was the acquisition of Aquis Court, an office building adjacent to the school, which provides facilities for the Sixth Form, with a new Common Room, cafeteria and classrooms, while the Art Department also has new facilities.[19]
Religion and musical education
The school still maintains links with St Albans Cathedral, which doubles as the school's chapel. Services are held there every Monday and Friday morning during term time, and special events held there include the annual Founders' Day and two carol services, led by the school choir, who still wear black and blue gowns in the same style as worn by undergraduates at Trinity College, Cambridge and similar to those worn by monks at the Abbey in medieval times. In addition, the school's music staff are usually linked with the Abbey's musical staff. Andrew Parnell, organist and harpsichordist, was assistant master of music at the Abbey as well as being master of music and choirmaster at the school from 1976 to 2001. Simon Lindley also held these posts a few years earlier; John Rutter's 1974 carol Jesus Child bears a dedication "for Simon Lindley and the choir of St Albans School".[20]
Academic tradition
Scientific tradition
The school also has a long scientific tradition, stretching back to the Norman era, when Alexander Neckam became master of the school. Since the advent of modern science, the school has produced many famous scientists and mathematicians including Professor Colin Cherry, Professor Ian Grant, Professor Stephen Hawking (inspired by Dikran Tahta, a teacher at the school who later worked at the Open University), and Professor Christopher Budd. In the light of its long scientific heritage, the school was awarded a large sum of money in 2007 by the Wolfson Foundation to rebuild its physics laboratories to university standards.[21]
Historical tradition
St Albans School has also produced some notable historians and historiographers. In medieval times, the school and one of its alumni, Matthew Paris, were closely associated with the St Albans school of medieval historiography, and developed one of the first consistent methods of historical writing.[22] More recently; two teachers in the award-winning Ancient History department published a book on Roman sources in 2010.[8] Some notable historians who are alumni of the school include Colin Renfrew, an archaeological historian and former Disney Professor of Archaeology at the University of Cambridge, Ernest Gellner, an anthropological historian, Professor Malcolm Schofield of St John's College, Cambridge, and more recently Justin Pollard, a TV historian, and Peter Sarris, a specialist on the Byzantine Empire and a fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge. In 2007, one Lower Sixth Form pupil at the school had his biography of the 2nd Earl de Grey published,[23] making him Britain's youngest published biographer.[8]
The school today
St Albans School is predominantly a single-sex school for boys, but has accepted girls into the Sixth Form since the 1991. It is a member of the Headmasters' Conference of leading public schools. In its earlier days it was known as the Free School of St Albans, City of St Alban Grammar School or St Albans Grammar School.[2] It is often (erroneously) referred to as "The Boys' School", "St Albans Boys" and "The Abbey School" (thereby causing confusion with The Abbey C of E Primary School nearby which is almost always referred to as "The Abbey School", and the adjacent but now defunct Abbey National Boys' School, a name which is still borne by a building in nearby Spicer Street). The school now has 814 pupils.
The school operates a house system. The current system, which came into use in September 1996, assigns all members of the school to one of four houses. These are named after notable former pupils and staff: Hawking, Renfrew, Hampson and Marsh. Previously the house names were Abbey, Breakespeare, Debenham, Pemberton, Shirley, Woollams and School House. School House, the last remaining boarding house, closed at the end of the Summer Term 1961 and those boys in School House were integrated into other houses.
In 1967 the School acquired what was then a derelict hill farm in the Brecon Beacons. The property, Pen Arthur, was fully restored and is now a well-equipped Field Studies Centre. Academic departments use Pen Arthur for field trips and study weekends throughout the year, and it plays a key part as a base for outdoor activities organised by the CCF and Duke of Edinburgh’s Award Scheme. During their first year at the school, all pupils go to Pen Arthur for a week, during which time they participate in many "outward-bound" activities such as caving, hiking and even visiting a Roman gold mine.
Old Albanians
Former pupils of the school can use the title OA or "Old Albanian" after their name and are members of the Old Albanian Club. The Old Albanian Club has its own sports facilities at Woollam's, clubs, societies and also its own social networking website at www.oaconnect.co.uk.[24]
Notable Old Albanians
12th century
- Cardinal Boso (d. c. 1181), third English Cardinal
- Nicholas Breakspear (c. 1100–1159), who became Pope Adrian IV (1154–1159), the only English Pope.
- Alexander Neckam (1157–1217), scientist and teacher
13th century
- Matthew Paris, monk and historian
14th century
- John Ball, Christian radical political thinker and leader of the Peasants' Revolt of 1381
- William Grindcobbe, a leader in St Albans of the Peasants' Revolt of 1381
- Richard of Wallingford (1292-1336) Englishmathematician who made major contributions to astronomy/astrology and horology
- Richard of Wallingford (late 14th century) a leader in St Albans of the Peasants' Revolt of 1381
15th century
- John Whethamstede (or Bostock) (c. 1392–1465), scholar, writer and Abbot of St Albans Abbey
16th century
- Walter Curle (1575–1647), Bishop of Winchester
- Robert Wright (1560–1643), first Warden of Wadham College, Oxford and Bishop of Lichfield & Coventry
17th century
- Henry Blount (1602–1682), traveller and writer
- William Cowper, 1st Earl Cowper (c. 1665–1723), Lord Chancellor of Great Britain, grandfather of William Cowper, poet and hymnodist
- William Dobson (1611–1646), painter to King Charles I
- Major-General John Hill (?c. 1680–1735), M.P., army officer, politician and courtier
- John King, K.C. (1639–77), lawyer
- Francis Pemberton (1624–1697), Lord Chief Justice
18th century
- William Domville, Bt (1742–1833), Lord Mayor of London 1813
- Thomas Walsh (1776–1849), Roman Catholic Bishop and Vicar Apostolic, Midlands and London Districts
19th century
- Charles Woollam, businessman, philanthropist and benefactor of the school
- Colonel Sir Hildred Carlile, 1st Bt, M.P. (1852–1942), army officer, politician and philanthropist
- Alfred Faulkner (1882–1963), civil servant – Permanent Under-Secretary for Mines
- Henry Montague Grover (1791–1866), writer and theologian
- Brigadier-General Reginald Kentish (1876–1956), founder National Playing Fields Association, Member IOC
- Coulson Kernahan (1858–1943), essayist, novelist and editor
- Frank Toovey Lake (1849-1868) Naval Officer who was part of Richard Henry Brunton's team who surveyed lighthouse sites around Japan
- Henry Leach (1836–79), mercantile marine physician and author
- Max Pemberton (1863–1950), novelist and editor
- Major-General Sir Herbert Aveling Raitt (1858–1935)
- Aubrey George Spencer (1795–1872), first Anglican Bishop of Newfoundland
- Colonel F. A. M. Webster (1886–1949), English javelin champion (1911, 1923), Olympic coach and author
- Thomas Spencer Wells (1818–1897), surgeon
- William Whitaker, F.R.S. (1836–1925), geologist
- Charles Williams (1886–1945), poet, novelist, publisher and theological writer
20th century
- Rod Argent (b. 1945), musician, founder member of The Zombies
- Hugh Grundy (b. 1945), musician, founder member of The Zombies
- Paul Atkinson (1946-2004), musician, founder member of The Zombies
- Keith M. Ashman (b. 1963), theoretical physicist and globular clusters expert
- John Barber, Vice-Provost, King's College, Cambridge
- Christopher Budd, mathematician
- Colin Cherry (1914–1975), cognitive scientist
- Ralph Chubb (1892–1960), poet, printer and artist
- Rogers Covey-Crump (b. 1944), singer (tenor), member of The Hilliard Ensemble
- Graham Dow (b. 1942), Bishop of Carlisle
- Robert Duncombe (b. 1967), Pharmacist, HFMA Clinician of the Year 2014
- Chris Duffield, Town Clerk and Chief Executive of the Corporation of the City of London since 2003[25]
- Larry Elliott, Economics Editor of the Guardian
- Ernest Gellner (1925–1995), philosopher and social anthropologist
- Dave Gibbons (b. 1949), Kirby Award winning comic book artist and co-creator of Watchmen
- Jack Goody, FBA (1919-2015), social anthropologist[26]
- Ian Grant (b. 1930), mathematical physicist
- John Grimaldi (b. 1955), musician, songwriter, member of Argent
- David Grossman, political correspondent for Newsnight
- Patrick Burnet Harris (b. 1934), former Bishop of Southwell
- Tim Hart (1948–2009), musician, founder member of electric folk band Steeleye Span
- Stephen Hawking (b. 1942), cosmologist and theoretical physicist
- Tony Hendra (b. 1941), satirist and writer
- General Sir Richard Lawson (born 1924), Commander-in-Chief of Allied Forces Northern Europe 1982-96
- Yann Lovelock (b.1939), writer and interfaith worker
- Gregory Paul Martin (b. 1957), actor and writer[27]
- Herbert Mundin (1898–1939), Hollywood character actor
- Ed Macfarlane, Jack Savidge and Ed Gibson, members of the St Albans-based Indie band Friendly Fires
- Christopher Morris (b. 1938), TV news presenter, journalist and author
- Mike Newell (b. 1942), film director
- Professor Ray Pahl (1935–2011), sociologist
- Tony Penikett, writer and Canadian politician
- Charles Pereira FRS (1913–2004), tropical agriculturist and hydrologist
- Justin Pollard (b. 1968), writer and historian
- Lord Renfrew of Kaimsthorn (b. 1937), archaeologist
- Tim Rice (b. 1944), lyricist
- Peter Sarris, historian of Byzantine civilisation and fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge
- Professor Malcolm Schofield (b. 1942), Professor of Ancient Philosophy, St John's College, Cambridge
- Harry Solomon (b. 1937), businessman
- Arthur Swinson (c. 1915-70), army officer, writer, playwright and historian
- Philip Watson (b. 1919), Vice-Admiral R.N., Chief Naval Engineer Officer, 1974–77, and chairman of Marconi Radar Systems
- Nicholas Tarling (b. 1931), historian
- Joseph Dobbs (b.1997), Twitter celebrity
Notable teachers
- Bruce Balden (b. 1957), mathematician and participant in TV series Seven Up!
- Charles Bloxham (1915–2010), who was a master at the school for 43 years, played rugby for Oxford (62 Varsity caps in four years as a blue) and Blackheath, was in the Warwickshire county championship winning side and a reserve England forward against Ireland in 1939 and was tipped for the full England squad but went to war instead, after which he returned to teach at St Albans.[28] A brief obituary was broadcast on BBC Radio 4
- Hilary Davan Wetton, musician
- David Franklin, broadcaster
- Geoffrey de Gorham (d. 1146), scholar, Abbot of St Albans Abbey 1119–1146
- Vivien Graveson, writer
- Tommy Hampson (1907–1965), middle distance runner (800m Gold Medal at the 1932 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles)
- John Harmar was headmaster from 1626 to 1635[29]
- Peter Hurford, organist
- Simon Lindley, organist
- Eric James Logan, founding member of the 80's pop band The Mood
- John Mole (b. 1941), poet, critic and jazz clarinettist. City of London Poet In Residence since 1998 (under the Poetry Society's Poet in the City scheme)
- Alexander Neckam (1157–1217), scientist and teacher
- Herbert Edward Palmer (1880–1961), poet
- Valentin Pappert, a count (graf) in Germany
- Andrew Parnell, organist (taught at the school 1976–2001)
- James Shirley (1596–1666), playwright
- Dikran Tahta (taught at the school 1955–1961), mathematician who taught Stephen Hawking
In popular culture
- Some scenes, including the opening croquet game, of the BBC comedy All Gas and Gaiters were filmed at the school.
- The school was used as a site of part of the film Incendiary (2008).
- The school was mentioned in the 2004 film Alfie.
- The school featured in episode of Anneka Rice's show Treasure Hunt
- The school and areas around it substitute for Oxford colleges in Morse
See also
References
- ^ http://www.flickr.com/photos/stalbansschoolarchive/5884022647/
- ^ a b N. Carlisle, "A concise description of the endowed grammar schools in England" (1818) p. 508
- ^ St Albans School | St Albans | LEA:Hertfordshire | Hertfordshire. The Good Schools Guide. Retrieved on 2011-12-13.
- ^ a b c F.J. Kilvington, A Short History of St Albans School (1986)
- ^ Houses of Benedictine monks – St Albans Abbey – After the Conquest | A History of the County of Hertford: Volume 4 (pp. 372–416). British-history.ac.uk (2003-06-22). Retrieved on 2011-12-13.
- ^ "St Albans School Statutes" [1309], in A. F. Leach, "Educational Charters and Documents 598 to 1909" pp. 241–253
- ^ See exhibition in the north aisle at St Albans Abbey
- ^ a b c DIRECTORS' REPORT AND FINANCIAL STATEMENTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 5 APRIL 2007. ST ALBANS SCHOOL
- ^ a b c d Rickmansworth Historical Society – St Albans dissolution of monastery. Rickmansworthhistoricalsociety.btck.co.uk. Retrieved on 2011-12-13.
- ^ OXFORD AND ST. ALBANS WINE PRIVILEGES (ABOLITION) [MONEY]. (Hansard, 9 May 1922). Hansard.millbanksystems.com (1922-05-09). Retrieved on 2011-12-13.
- ^ a b N. Carlisle, "A concise description of the endowed grammar schools in England" (1818)
- ^ See library boards dated c. 1570, St Albans School
- ^ Parks and Gardens UK. Parksandgardens.ac.uk. Retrieved on 2011-12-13.
- ^ Frank Kilvington’s Slide Collection. Tray Index. (DOC file). stalbanshistory.org
- ^ Character Area 2. (PDF) . Retrieved on 2011-12-13.
- ^ a b Hertfordshire HER & St Albans UAD. heritagegateway.org.uk
- ^ The Capital Development Programme – The Old Albanian Club. Oaconnect.co.uk. Retrieved on 2011-12-13.
- ^ OA Sport. OA Sport. Retrieved on 2011-12-13.
- ^ St Albans school reveals expansion plans (From St Albans & Harpenden Review). Stalbansreview.co.uk (2011-09-26). Retrieved on 2011-12-13.
- ^ J. Rutter (eds.), "Carols for Choirs I"
- ^ St Albans School Foundation Annual Report 2009-2010. Issuu.com (2011-06-29). Retrieved on 2011-12-13.
- ^ A. Gransden, "Historical Writing in England: c. 500 to c. 1307" (1996) pp. 355–360
- ^ Charles Read, "Earl de Grey" (London: Willow, 2007)
- ^ Welcome. The Old Albanian Club. St Albans School. oaconnect.co.uk
- ^ [1][dead link]
- ^ http://www.joh.cam.ac.uk/professor-sir-jack-goody-1919-2015
- ^ Biography of Gregory Paul Martin. Gregorypaulmartin.com (1962-01-21). Retrieved on 2011-12-13.
- ^ Obituary, Oxford University Rugby Club Archived 2011-07-28 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Kilvington 1970, pp. 128.
External links