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Bournemouth School

Bournemouth School
Motto Pulchritūdō et Salūbritas (Latin)
Beauty and Health (English)
Established 1901
Type Grammar school;
Academy
Headmaster Dr Dorian Lewis
Founder Dr E Fenwick
Location East Way
Bournemouth
Dorset
BH8 9PY
England
Coordinates: 50°44′55″N 1°51′30″W / 50.7486°N 1.85844°W / 50.7486; -1.85844
DfE URN 137452 Tables
Ofsted Reports Pre-academy reports
Staff 72 full-time teachers, 32 auxiliary staff
Students 1,088 (lower school), 388 (Sixth form, though this is set to increase)
Ages 11–18
Houses Darwin (Yellow), Elgar (Light Blue), Newton (Dark Blue), Scott (Red) and Turner (Green)
Colours Blue, Grey, White, Brown
Chairman of Governors Colby Capron
Official ethos Hard Work, Smart Appearance, Discipline, Respect
Website www.bournemouth-school.org

Bournemouth School is a boys' grammar school and co-educational sixth form in Charminster, Bournemouth, Dorset, England, for children aged 11 to 18.

The school was founded by Dr. E. Fenwick and opened on 22 January 1901, admitting 54 boys. The 1906 syllabus included natural science, drawing, vocal music, drill and gymnastics alongside history, geography, shorthand and book keeping. During the First World War, at least 651 young men who had been or were attached to the school served, and 98 of those died, while 95 were wounded.

The school moved to the present East Way site in 1939, formerly occupying buildings in Porchester Road and Lowther Road.

From 1939 to 1945 the school housed over 600 members from Taunton's School, Southampton (then a grammar, now a sixth form college), due to evacuation from large cities. Among the Taunton staff was English master Dr. Horace King, later Lord Maybray-King, Speaker of the House of Commons.

On 2 June 1940, about 800 French soldiers evacuated form Dunkirk were temporarily billeted in the school. Additional gas cookers were installed in the kitchen (now Languages Office) and staff were involved in preparing food and drink for the soldiers who occupied corridors and form rooms. One form room was used a temporary hospital for the more seriously wounded. Two days later, a further 300 arrived and remained in the school for about a week. An absence of occupation was not to last long. On 19 June, after the French had been moved elsewhere, 400 or so British soldiers arrived, having been rescued from Cherbourg by the Royal Navy. It was agreed they would occupy the ground floor, leaving the senior school to carry out their summer examinations in the rooms above. Normal education resumed on 26 June.

The original Victorian school buildings occupied a plot in Porchester Road. Adjacent to the main school was the purpose-built boarding house (pictured), in which the headmaster and a select number of boarders lived (at an annual fee of 12 guineas). As the number of students increased (200 in 1904, 306 in 1914, 479 in 1925), so too did the accommodation; the school encompassed a former Royal Victoria Hospital in 1925 for lower school classes, which was situated in the nearby Lowther Road. The two sites were known within the school as "Porchester" and "Lowther".


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