Christ's Hospital
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Christ's Hospital (also popularly known as the Bluecoat School, and also known by the nicknames Housey and CH) is a full board boarding school located in the countryside just south of Horsham, West Sussex, England. The school was originally founded in the 16th century in Blackfriars, London and Hertford.
Christ's Hospital is unique for a British independent school in that it still educates a large portion of its students for free. This stems from its founding charter as a charitable school. School fees are paid on a means-tested basis, with substantial subsidies paid by the school so that students from all walks of life are able to have a comprehensive, high quality, public school education that would otherwise be beyond the means of their parents.
In 2005, just over 20% of parents paid nothing at all and about one third paid less than £250 per year per child. The entrance process uses exams and interviews and prefers to award school places to those who show academic potential that would benefit from the high quality environment that the school offers to those that would otherwise not be able to afford it. The number of pupils that pay the full fee (~£17,050) is limited to 6% of the School population.
History
Christ’s Hospital was the result of the vision of King Edward VI, assisted by Nicholas Ridley, Bishop of London, and Sir Richard Dobbs, Lord Mayor of London. Its genesis was the earlier dissolution of the monasteries and the resultant overflow onto the streets of the poor and destitute. Encouraged by a sermon from Ridley, exhorting mercy to the poor, the King wrote to the Lord Mayor encouraging him to action. This he did via a committee of 30 merchants. Henry VIII had already granted the use of Greyfriars to the City for the relief of the poor and Edward granted The Palace of Bridewell, his lands of the Savoy and rents and other chattels to create three Royal Hospitals – Bridewell Hospital (now now King Edward's School, Witley, Surrey), St Thomas Hospital and Christs Hospital, which was for the education of poor children.
The first boys and girls entered the School in Newgate in 1552. The Royal Charter was granted and signed by its Founder, Edward VI, the following year.
The School occupied Newgate as its major site for 350 years, but from time to time children were housed in other parts of the country, especially after the Great Fire of London made parts of the School uninhabitable. Eventually, the girls settled at Hertford and the boys were relocated from Newgate to the purpose built site in Horsham in 1897. The Foundation stone was laid by Edward, Prince of Wales on 23 October 1897, on behalf of the Sovereign, the date being the anniversary of the birthday of the Founder.
Christ’s Hospital was bestowed with its second Royal Charter by Charles II in 1673. This Charter specifically created the Royal Mathematical School whose original purpose was to train mathematicians and navigators who would progress into careers as Naval officers or merchant seafarers. Samuel Pepys, Secretary to His Majesty’s Navy and later Vice President of Christ’s Hospital, featured strongly in his considerable contribution to Christ’s Hospital
Over the centuries Christ’s Hospital has continued to enjoy Royal patronage. His Royal Highness the Duke of Cambridge started a tradition of Royal Presidents in 1854. In 1919 His Majesty George V became the first Royal Patron, followed by His Majesty George VI in 1937 and Her Majesty the Queen in 1953. The magnanimous support of the City of London Corporation and Livery companies of the City (some 20 actively support children in the School) remains uninterrupted. Christ’s Hospital remains true to its Founder’s principles of supporting disadvantaged children and by remaining a School for the public.
Christ's Hospital today
The move to the 1200 acres at Christ’s Hospital was greeted with much consternation among Christ’s Hospital Governors, being at the behest of a Government commission. His Royal Highness the Duke of Cambridge was moved to say "I am one of those who are perfectly prepared to go with the spirit of the age in which we live, but I confess that I am also one of those who do not love change for change’s sake. To upset an old and long standing institution… is a very dangerous experiment to try."
The Hertford school for girls merged with the boys at Horsham in 1985 and hence Christ’s Hospital returned to its original co-educational roots. The Charitable Foundation staff, who had remained in Great Tower Street, London, moved to Horsham in 1987.
In 2002 Christ's Hospital was declared the richest and most philanthropic of all independent schools with assets of £261 million and an income from its investments in property and securities of £9 million (a substantial proportion of the income goes towards subsidising school fees). It said it was in a sound enough position to "withstand the vagaries of the markets".
Christ's Hospital recently took part in first series of the reality television programme Rock School, in which Kiss (band) legend Gene Simmons helped a group of CH pupils form their own rock music group.
The school band lead the procession at the Queen's 80th birthday bin London on 21 April 2006.
Traditions
The school is best known for the Tudor uniform: long blue coat, knee-breeches and yellow socks, and bands at the neck for boys, and a complementary uniform was introduced for girls on re-unification of the schools – knee length pleated skirt, summer jacket, yellow socks (for the juniors), and grey socks or grey/black tights for seniors, as well as the long coat in winter, and the bands. The nickname "Blue-coat School" comes from the blue coats worn by the students – however the nickname used within the school community itself is "Housey" and the long coat is called a housey coat.Links with the City and the Lord Mayor of London are maintained, with an annual parade through the City of London on St Matthew's Day and a regular place in the Lord Mayor's Show.
One of the Christ's Hospital traditions is marching into lunch each day with the band.
Organisation of the school
Year groups
The ages currently range from 11 to 18, although "Leigh Hunt" was originally a prep school which took children from the ages of 8/9, in preparation for the senior school.The School has traditional names for each of its year groups. Starting at the youngest:
- 2nd Form
- 3rd Form
- Little Erasmus (L.E.)
- Upper Fourth (U.F.)
- Great Erasmus (G.E.)
- Deputy Grecians (Deps)
- Grecians
Accommodation
The School Houses are named after notable Old Blue writers. Each House has an "A" and "B" side, each housing roughly 50 pupils:
- Peele
- Thornton
- Middleton
- Coleridge
- Lamb
- Barnes
- Maine
- Leigh Hunt
- Grecians East & Grecians West
Originally the other houses provided two dormitories (Upper Dorm and Lower Dorm) sleeping up to about 30 boys each. As the merger of the boys and girls approached, some dormitories were divided into cubicles, and subsequent developments created dormitories accommodating about 12 pupils each. Since 2001 there has been a rolling refurbishment program (due for completion in 2007). The refurbished houses provide a range of accommodation: 4-bed rooms for the junior pupils to 1-bed rooms for the more senior pupils.
Until the 1960s, boys at Horsham lived in all-through houses from 2nd Form to Grecians. Then houses were divided into Senior houses (Peele, Thornton, Middleton, Coleridge and Lamb) and Junior houses (Barnes, Maine, Leigh Hunt) with boys transferring to a Senior house after L.E. In conjunction with the merger, a further reorganisation occurred with each house converting to a Senior side and a Junior side. This system reverted to the all-through houses in 2000.
In addition to this, Thornton will be converted into a girls' house in 2006/2007 (with girls moving into Thornton B in September 2006, and boys being moved out of Thornton A at the end of the 06/07 school year and girls moving into Thornton A in September 2007) in order to balance the boy/girl ratio to 1:1, instead of the 5:3 ratio that has existed since the early 90's.
Old Blues
Former pupils (known as Old Blues) include:- Damian Le Bas
- Joshua Barnes
- Thomas Barnes
- Kit Bartlett
- Edmund Blunden
- Arthur Bowley
- John Butler
- Cyril Burt
- Edmund Campion
- Sydney Carter
- Pierre Louis Napoleon Cavagnari
- Richard W. B. Clarke
- John Colborne, 1st Baron Seaton
- Henry Cole
- Samuel Taylor Coleridge
- James D'Arcy
- Sir Colin Davis
- Ruth Deech
- Keith Douglas
- George Dyer
- John Edmonds
- Jason Flemyng
- Louis Harold Gray
- Warren Hastings
- Caesar Henry Hawkins
- Thomas Hartwell Horne
- Leigh Hunt
- Charles Lamb
- Constant Lambert
- Bernard Levin
- Bryan Magee
- Jeremiah Markland
- Russell Meiggs
- Thomas Middleton
- Henry James Sumner Maine
- Aylmer Maude
- John Middleton Murry
- Phillip Osborne
- George Peele
- August Pugin
- James Scholefield
- John Snow (cricketer)
- John Robin Stephenson
- Michael Stewart
- Mark Thomas
- Rupert Thomson
- Bill Turner (politician)
- Keith Vaughan
- Barnes Wallis
- Michael Wilding
See also
References
- Christ's Hospital, G.A.T. Allan (revised J.E. Morpurgo), London 1984, ISBN 0863640052
- Christ's Hospital quad and Grecians East photos by Sergiu Panaite
External links
- [Official website]
- [Christ's Hospital Association website]
- [Unofficial Christ's Hospital Forum]
- [www.oldblues.com] (Alumni website)
- [BigGrecian.com] (Alumni website)
- [Lousey] (Parody of the school newsletter from previous years)
- [Lousey: The Sequel] (More recent parody of the school newsletter)
- [Shaw architects]
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