Motto | Semper Quaereamus Virtutem (Let Us Always Seek Virtue) |
---|---|
Established | 1834 |
Type | Phase 2 Academy |
Religion | Church of England |
Headteacher | Julie Hollis MA (Oxon) |
Chair of Governors | J. Lees |
Founder | Thomas Henshaw |
Location |
Egerton Street Oldham Greater Manchester OL1 3SQ England Coordinates: 53°32′46″N 2°06′30″W / 53.546°N 2.1083°W |
DfE URN | 137133 Tables |
Ofsted | Reports |
Students | 1,400 (300 in sixth form) |
Gender | Co-educational |
Ages | 11–18 |
Houses | Birley Hall Lord Mothersill Rountree Wrigley |
Colours | Navy Blue |
Publication | The Blue Print |
Website | www |
The Blue Coat School is a mixed gender Church of England academy for 11- to 18-year-olds, located in the town of Oldham, Greater Manchester, England.
The school caters for pupils aged 11–18, offering A-level and GCSE courses. It is one of the few schools in the country to hold Leading Edge Partnership programme and science college status. Prior to becoming leading edge, Blue Coat had been a beacon school. This means the school has social responsibility to help develop other secondary schools in the area, as well as themselves.
The motto of the school is from the Latin: Semper Quaereamus Virtutem – "Let us always seek virtue".
Thomas Henshaw, who died in 1810, left the sum of £40,000 (£2.6 million as of 2017) for the endowment of the Blue Coat School. The estate was tied up in litigation for many years but was eventually released. As no provision had been made for the cost of the building, a public meeting was held in Oldham in September 1825, when offers of land were received, and a public appeal was launched for funds to build the school. From the design of the architect Richard Lane, a start was made in 1829 when the foundation stone was laid, and the school was opened in 1834. Throughout the remainder of the 19th century, the school continued to maintain and instruct between 100 and 130 boys.
In July 1952, the trustees decided that, as the number of boarders in residence was gradually decreasing, Blue Coat should be closed as a residential school and the building converted for use as a secondary modern day school. This plan was effected, and the school became co-educational accommodating approximately 400 students.
The Oldham Henshaw and Church of England Educational Trust, constituted in 1950, had as one of its aims the building and maintenance of new secondary schools, and one of its objectives was to provide a Special Agreement secondary school by extending and reorganising the Blue Coat into a comprehensive school. This plan was realised in September 1966 when the Blue Coat School became fully comprehensive. It is now a nine form entry voluntary aided comprehensive school admitting 218 boys and girls each year, with a sixth form, the majority of whom go on to Higher Education. Voluntary aided status means that the governors of the school are responsible for the upkeep of all buildings and have to rely on the financial support and generosity of parents and friends of the school.