*** Welcome to piglix ***

Oundle School

Oundle School
GrocersCompany Arms.gif
Motto God Grant Grace
Established 1556
Type Independent school
Day and boarding school
Religion Church of England
Head Sarah Kerr-Dineen
Chairman of Governors J G Tregoning
Founder The Worshipful Company of Grocers
Location Oundle
Northamptonshire
PE8 4GH
England
Coordinates: 52°28′56″N 0°28′09″W / 52.48218°N 0.4691°W / 52.48218; -0.4691
DfE number 928/6007
DfE URN 122129 Tables
Students 1,200~
Gender Coeducational
Ages 11–18
Houses 14
Colours

blue and maroon

         
Website www.oundleschool.org.uk

blue and maroon

Oundle School is a co-educational boarding and day independent school located in the ancient market town of Oundle in Northamptonshire. The school has been maintained by the Worshipful Company of Grocers of the City of London since its foundation in 1556. Oundle has eight boys' houses, five girls' houses, a day house and a junior house. Together these accommodate more than 1100 pupils. It is the largest boarding school in England after Eton and Millfield.

The current head is Sarah Kerr-Dineen, who in 2015 became the first woman to lead the school in Oundle's 450-plus-year history.

The original school was known as Laxton Grammar School, and founded by Sir William Laxton. Laxton had been eight times Master of the Worshipful Company of Grocers and was Lord Mayor of the City of London in 1544. After Laxton's death in 1556, his will decreed the founding of a school for the local boys of Oundle, which was to be maintained by the Worshipful Company of Grocers. There had been a school on the site since at least 1485, at which Laxton himself was educated.

The size and reputation of Laxton Grammar School rose gradually in the following centuries such that by the mid-nineteenth century, many of the school's pupils had been sent from around the country to receive their education in Oundle. In 1876 the decision was made by the Grocers to divide the school into Oundle School and Laxton Grammar School. Laxton Grammar School was to continue to educate boys from Oundle and its surrounding villages while Oundle School was to accept only the sons of gentlemen from further afield.

It is during this period that Oundle rose to prominence as an English Public School, which can be largely attributed to F. W. Sanderson in his role as headmaster from 1892 until his death in 1922. When Sanderson joined Oundle he found a minor country boarding school; by the time of his death the school had become the leading establishment for science and engineering education. The success of Sanderson can be attributed to his educational ethos; he believed in teaching students what they wanted to learn and as a result helped to introduce subjects such as science, modern languages, and engineering to the English independent school system.


...
Wikipedia

...