Stockport Grammar School

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Stockport Grammar School
SGS Emblem.png
Address
Buxton Road

, ,
SK2 7AF

Coordinates53°23′27″N 2°08′38″W / 53.3907°N 2.1440°W / 53.3907; -2.1440Coordinates: 53°23′27″N 2°08′38″W / 53.3907°N 2.1440°W / 53.3907; -2.1440
Information
TypeIndependent day school
Public School
MottoLatin:Vincit Qui Patitur
He who endures, conquers
Established1487; 534 years ago (1487)
FounderSir Edmund Shaa
Local authorityStockport
Chairman of GovernorsChristopher Dunn
HeadmasterDr Paul Owen
GenderCo-educational
Age3 to 18
Enrolment1517
Houses4
Colour(s)Black & Gold    
PublicationThe Stopfordian
Taking Stock
The Old Stops' Review
Former pupilsOld Stopfordians
Websitehttp://www.stockportgrammar.co.uk/

Stockport Grammar School is a co-educational independent day school in Stockport, England. Founded in 1487 by former Lord Mayor of London Sir Edmund Shaa, it is the second oldest in the North of England, after Lancaster Royal Grammar School, and a member of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference.

History[]

Foundation[]

The Main School's West Face. The photo (left) was taken after construction in 1916. The photo (right) was taken in 2012.

The school was founded in 1487 by Sir Edmund Shaa, the 1482 Lord Mayor of London whose will provided for a school and a small chapel in St Mary's Church in Stockport and funds to maintain a priest to chant masses and teach grammar.[1] Alexander Lowe, the mayor of Stockport, left the school a permanent home in Chestergate in his will. The school became increasingly successful with pupils being accepted at the ancient universities of Oxford, Cambridge and St Andrews, while the curriculum became increasingly broad with the rudiments of Greek joining a study of Latin, the Christian religion, writing in English and arithmetic.[2][3] Five years after the Worshipful Company of Goldsmiths met to discuss the possibility of transferring the school to a different site, new buildings open where Greek Street meets New Wellington Road. As well as paying for the building, the Goldsmiths also increased the salaries of the headmaster and usher and paid the running costs.[1]

Current site on Buxton Road[]

The Greek Street building became unsuitable for the demands of a modern school, and the school was relocated in 1915 to its present site [1] and was inaugurated on 29 January 1916 by the chairman of the Cheshire county council.[3][failed verification]

Move to coeducation[]

Path to Convent Site

In 1980, girls were admitted to the school.[citation needed]

Following the government’s decision in 1974 to phase out the direct grant status of schools such as Stockport over a seven-year period commencing in 1976, the school would become independent and the Stopfordian Trust was launched to provide bursaries that were increasingly being requested by entrance exam candidates.[citation needed]

By 1978, the school had over 600 pupils and in 1979 the convent site was acquired.[citation needed]

The school site[]

The Mile End buildings 1916-1980[]

View of the Hallam Hall across the Old Quad

The construction of the present buildings took twenty months. The exterior of the West Front has remained virtually unchanged since the time. The Hallam Hall, seen from across the Old Quad below was named after the Mayor of Stockport and major benefactor Ephraim Hallam. This was originally the School’s Assembly Hall and later the main library but due to the expansion of the School site, which included a new, multi-resource 14000 book library, the hall was converted into an entertainments room.[citation needed]

The main school building was constructed with a Victorian neo-gothic style of architecture, drawing similar appearances to that of Keble College, Oxford, which incidentally was built during the same time period. Other buildings which have been constructed since then have mostly remained continuous with the general style of the main site, particularly the muted red brick and distinctive yellow limestone bands which feature heavily on the main building.[citation needed]

Post-1980 Expansion[]

New Library and Learning Resource Centre

Since becoming co-educational in 1980 the school has developed and grown rapidly. Acquisition of the adjacent convent school site, which is now the English and music block, allowed the enclosure of the playing fields and the creation of several footballs and rugby pitches, as well as the inheritance of the convent's swimming pool. In 1997 land was bought to extend the junior school, and in 2001 a new sports and technology centre was built featuring a gymnasium and sports hall. Food technology and textiles technology classrooms were also erected. The building further includes a design technology workshop with equipment able to perform computer-aided design and computer-aided manufacture. The sports hall also holds an indoor climbing wall named after alumnus mountaineer Peter Boardman. In September 2005 a new library and learning resource centre was opened with less than a dozen books, and also new physics labs and an information technology suite. A nursery was opened in 2006. With the purchase of the playing fields at Dialstone Lane, the school site expanded its site to almost 60 acres, one of the largest in Greater Manchester.[citation needed]

New Woodsmoor building 2013-[]

In 2011, planning permission was received to erect a new teaching block on the Woodsmoor side of the site,[4] to replace the Woodsmoor hall and laboratories that were demolished in 2010.[5] The build was completed in June 2012, and the "black and white tower" and classics block were demolished later that year.[citation needed]

Extracurricular Activities[]

The school offers over 200 extracurricular activities to its pupils,[6] with the Independent Schools Inspectorate rating the school's extracurricular provision as "outstanding" in 2011.[7]

Duke of Edinburgh's Award[]

The school is its own Duke of Edinburgh's Award operating authority.[8] In 2010, the school issued its 1000th Duke of Edinburgh Award,[9] a milestone which was marked by the visit of Prince Edward, Earl of Wessex.[10]

Model United Nations[]

The school has hosted a biennial Model United Nations (MUN) conference since March 2006. At 2008's conference, Labour MP and former home secretary David Blunkett was the school's guest speaker. At 2012's conference, Senior Liberal Democrat MP, Andrew Stunell was the guest speaker.[11]

Pupils have also attended MUN conferences in many locations, including Yale, Belfast, Edinburgh, Paris, Genoa, Bath and Cambridge.

Expeditions[]

The school runs a series of expeditions for Sixth Formers every two years[12] to places such as Venezuela, Vietnam, Uganda, Namibia, Rwanda and in 2015 an expedition to Bolivia & Peru.[13] In 2017, an expedition took 41 students to Borneo. Pupils participate in planning the trips and manage their own finances, accommodation, food and transportation.[12]

House System[]

The school has four houses – Arden, Nicholson, Vernon, and Warren – into which all pupils are divided for the purposes of competitive sport and quizzes. Each year all four house compete for both the Fallow Shield (sporting success) and the Brown Cup (academic success). The houses encourage integration of all pupils into school life. Sport is not the only competitive activity for the houses, there is also chess and the competition of gaining the highest charitable amount.[citation needed]

Origin of the Houses[]

The four Houses were created initially in 1924 for competition in games and athletics with the undistinguished names of North, South, East and West. These were replaced in 1949 with rather more appropriate names of distinguished local families associated with the School in the past.

Arden[]

Arden House Coat of Arms

[citation needed]

The Ardernes were an important county family deriving from Sir John de Arnerne who lived in the 18th century and who received a great estate within the Earldom of Chester. Subsequent marriages constantly added to the Arderne estate until they included a great part of Bredbury, Romiley, Werneth, Offerton, Stockport and Alvanley. Ralph Arderne helped to defend Manchester against the Royalists in the Civil War. John Ardern (who changed the spelling of the family name), an Old Stopfordian, went to St. John’s College, Cambridge in 1728 and later became High Sheriff of Cheshire and his son Richard Pepper Arden was appointed as Lord Chief Justice of England with the title Lord Alvanley at the end of the 18th century. The Ardens had two local residences. Their town house was Underbank Hall, a fine half-timbered mansion (now the National Westminster Bank) and Harden Hall which once commanded a moated in Reddish.[citation needed]

Nicholson[]

Nicholson House Coat of Arms

[citation needed]

The Nicholsons were a very numerous, though not a powerful family, who in the 16th century lived in the Reddish district. Their names occur frequently in the early Parish Registers which were first begun in 1584. Their main home was Wood Hall, Sandy Lane. The family originated in Cumberland (Cumbria) and, after a century or two at Reddish, the main branch moved on to become landowners in Essex, but left behind numerous relatives. William Nicholson, born probably in 1561 was a former Master of the School. He attend Caius College, Cambridge in June 1581, then changed to Jesus College, where he took his B.A. in 1585 and M.A. in 1588. No-one can say when he was appointed Master of Stockport Grammar School because the records of the Goldsmiths’ Company are missing from 1579 to 1592, but it is likely to be 1587, after the death of Francis Low. He died in office and was buried at Stockport in September 1597. He was a man of substance, his will showing connections with other county families. He left money to pay for an “Usher” or assistant in the School as well as dictionaries and other books, which would of course be valuable in those days.[citation needed]

Vernon[]

Vernon House Coat of Arms

[citation needed]

The Vernon family belong to a wealthy, prolific and widespread English family with 11th-century origins in Vernon, France. William de Vernon arrived in England at the time of the Norman conquest and was granted lands in the County Palatine of Chester under the patronage of Hugh d'Avranches, 1st Earl of Chester.[14] His son Richard was created a medieval Baron and settled at Shipbrook, near Northwich, Cheshire. Branches of the family flourished and its influence spread beyond Cheshire over the following centuries, partly as a result of judicious inter marriage. They were large benefactors of the School around the time of its founding, and out of the four houses, have the longest historic association with Stockport Grammar School.[citation needed]

Warren[]

Warren House Coat of Arms

[citation needed]

The Warren Family were both rich and powerful being Lords of the Manor of Stockport from the time of Sir John de Warren in the 14th century until 1835 when they sold out their manorial rights to the Corporation. The Warrens of Poynton were for centuries benefactors of the School. Sir Edward Warren, Baron of Stockport, gave additional increments to the Masters of the School over and above the salary paid by the Goldsmiths. He was High Sheriff of Cheshire in 1598. John and Edward Warren in 1705 arranged for a payment out of the manorial rates to be given to the Schoolmaster and Edward Warren, Lord of the Manor of Stockport in 1711 gave a considerable area of Great Moor to provide a permanent income for the Schoolmaster, the Mayor of the Town and the poor. Hugh Warren, 1669 - 1733, son of Judge Warren and brother of Edward, benefactor, attended the School under Headmaster Timothy Dobson M.A. as did doubtless other Warren of whom records now remain. The Warrens lived at Poynton Hall of which nothing now exists. Their town house was Millgate Hall, a fine Tudor mansion in lane taken down in 1927. Warren house are the current holders of the Fallow Shield.[citation needed]

Publications[]

The Stopfordian[]

The school's annual publication is The Stopfordian, now a full-colour comprehensive review of the school year,[15] which was first published in 1929. This makes The Stopfordian one of the longest-running school publications in the United Kingdom. A predecessor, named simply Stockport Grammar School Magazine, dates back to 1899.

Taking Stock[]

The school has published Taking Stock, a short glossy newsletter rounding up recent news and photographs,[16] every term since 1996.

Old Stops' Review[]

Old Stops' Review, a new annual magazine containing news from ex-pupils,[17] was first published in 2011.

Old Stopfordians[]

Former pupils are known as "Old Stopfordians", not to be confused with simply Stopfordians (the demonym of Stockport being "Stopfordian"), or the former pupils of Bishop Stopford's School at Enfield, who are also known as Old Stopfordians.

Pupils automatically become members of the Old Stopfordians Association on leaving the school. The association runs regular reunions and there is a strong network of Old Stopfordians who provide careers advice, work experience and support to current pupils. The association also run a number of social occasions during the year, including an annual dinner,[18] and its members are encouraged to attend several of the school's regular events, including its founder's day and Christmas carol services.[19]

Stopfordians Lacrosse Club[]

The Old Stopfordians' Association operate Stopfordians Lacrosse Club, who currently play in the North of England Men's Lacrosse Association Premier 2 division.[20] The team play their home games at Disley Amalgamated Sports Club.[21]

Notable Old Stopfordians[]

Headmasters[]

  • 1496 Sir John Randall
  • 1509 Sir Randall Hulton
  • 1521 Sir George Bamford
  • 1534 Sir William Chorlton
  • 1534–1543 Scholemaister of Stopport (name unrecorded)
  • 1557 Sir William Chorlton (reappointed)
  • 1559 Leonard Harrison
  • 1564 Thomas Leigh
  • 1565 John Brownswerd
  • 1579 Bamford
  • 1587 Francis Lowe
  • 1597 William Nicholson
  • 1597–1598 William Lingard
  • 1601 Kirke
  • 1601 Lang
  • 1601 Nicholson
  • 1601–1602 John Cobb
  • 1604 Thomas Bower
  • 1609 Luke Mason
  • 1610 Walter Pott
  • 1623 Thomas Rossen
  • 1625 Reginald Pott
  • 1627 Edmund Clough
  • 1628 John Pollett
  • 1630 William Plant
  • 1633 Samuel Edwards
  • 1634 Bradley Hayhurst
  • 1645 Randall Yarwood
  • 1647 Thomas Peirson
  • 1651 Rev Thomas Coombes
  • 1668 Rev Daniel Leech
  • 1669 Rev Joseph Whittle
  • 1673–1674 Rev Samuel Needham
  • 1683 Rev Timothy Dobson
  • 1691 Rev George Esclome
  • 1692–1693 Rev William Dickens
  • 1703 Rev Joseph Dale
  • 1752 Rev William Jackson
  • 1792 Rev George Porter
  • 1792 Rev Elkanah Hoyle
  • 1829 Rev William Newstead
  • 1832 Rev Thomas Middleton
  • 1847 Rev William Gurney
  • 1860 Rev Charles G Hamilton
  • 1887 Rev William A Pemberton
  • 1903 Alfred E Daniels
  • 1929 Christopher Herman Gilkes
  • 1941 Frederick H Philpot
  • 1962–1979 Francis Willoughby Scott
  • 1979 Hugh Wright
  • 1985 David Bird
  • 1996–2005 Ian Mellor
  • 2005–2018 Andrew Chicken
  • 2018 Dr Paul Owen

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c "Stockport Grammar Junior School". educationbase.co.uk. Retrieved 2013-10-25.
  2. ^ Nicholas Carlisle, Concise Description of Endowed Grammar Schools (1818)
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b Stockport Grammar School | Stockport Grammar School. facebook.com. Retrieved on September 7, 2012.
  4. ^ Stockport Metropolitan Borough Council, notice of planning decision[permanent dead link]. stockportgrammar.co.uk. Retrieved on January 20, 2012.
  5. ^ New building | Stockport Grammar School Archived 2012-01-30 at the Wayback Machine. stockportgrammar.co.uk. Retrieved on January 20, 2012.
  6. ^ Twitter / @stockportgs: We've got a new section on. ... Twitter.com. Retrieved on January 19, 2012.
  7. ^ Independent Schools Inspectorate Stockport Grammar School Standard Inspection. isi.net. Retrieved on January 19, 2012.
  8. ^ Duke of Edinburgh's Award | Stockport Grammar School. stockportgrammar.co.uk. Retrieved on January 20, 2012.
  9. ^ Cheshire Life Single Issues - January 2011 digital edition. Cheshire Life Magazine. Retrieved on January 20, 2012.
  10. ^ Cheshire Independent Newspaper | Local Community Newspaper for the Cheshire Area. The Cheshire Independent. Retrieved on January 20, 2012.[permanent dead link]
  11. ^ Greenhead News - The Newsletter of Greenhead College[permanent dead link]. Greenhead College. Retrieved on January 20, 2012.
  12. ^ Jump up to: a b "Jungle adventure takes pupils to new heights". Stockport Grammar School. September 11, 2017. Retrieved February 16, 2019.
  13. ^ "Out and About: Bolivia and Peru" (PDF). Taking Stock (Stockport Grammar School Newsletter) (61): 4. Autumn 2015.
  14. ^ Earls of Chester. Retrieved on January 23, 2012.
  15. ^ Stopfordian magazine | Stockport Grammar School Archived 2012-01-30 at the Wayback Machine. stockportgrammar.co.uk. Retrieved on January 20, 2012.
  16. ^ Taking Stock newsletter | Stockport Grammar School. stockportgrammar.co.uk. Retrieved on January 20, 2012.
  17. ^ Old Stops' Review magazine | Stockport Grammar School. stockportgrammar.co.uk. Retrieved on January 20, 2012.
  18. ^ Old Stops | Stockport Grammar School. stockportgrammar.co.uk. Retrieved on January 31, 2012.
  19. ^ Events | Stockport Grammar School. stockportgrammar.co.uk. Retrieved on January 31, 2012.
  20. ^ English Lacrosse NEMLA Premier 2, lacrosse tables and lacrosse standings. League Republic. Retrieved on January 31, 2012.
  21. ^ Lacrosse. Disley Amalgamated Sports Club. Retrieved on January 31, 2012.

External links[]

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