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Colston's School

Colston's School
ColstonsSchool.jpg
Motto Go and do thou likewise
Established 1710
Type Independent day school
Headmaster Jeremy McCullough
Head of Lower School Stuart Smart
Chairman of Governors Robert Bernays
Founder Edward Colston
Location Bell Hill
Stapleton
Bristol

BS16 1BJ
England
Coordinates: 51°28′50″N 2°33′19″W / 51.4806°N 2.5554°W / 51.4806; -2.5554
DfE URN 109336 Tables
Capacity 823
Students 751
Gender Mixed
Ages 2–18
Houses Aldington, Dolphin, King's, Roundway
Colours Navy and Gold
Website www.colstons.bristol.sch.uk

Colston's School (formerly known as Colston's Collegiate School) is an independent school in Bristol, England and is a member of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference.

It was founded in 1710 by the slave trader and philanthropist Edward Colston as Colston's Hospital, originally an all boys boarding school. Day-boys were admitted in 1949 and girls were admitted to the sixth form in 1984. In 1991 it merged with Collegiate School, a girls' school in Winterbourne and was given the name Colston's Collegiate School, but this was reverted to Colston's School in 2005. The current headmaster of the upper school is Jeremy McCullough (since September 2014); he joined the school from Lancing College.

The school motto Go and do thou likewise, was the motto for the Colston family. It is also one of the mottos for Colston's Girls' School. Its origin is Luke 15:37, the conclusion of the parable of the Good Samaritan.

Colston made a donation to Queen Elizabeth's Hospital in 1702 and proposed endowing places for a further 50 boys. This came to nothing, probably because of Colston's insistence that the children of Dissenters should be excluded. Instead, he persuaded the Society of Merchant Venturers to manage a school he established for 50 boys on Saint Augustine's Back, where the Colston Hall now stands. It cost him £11,000 on capital cost and an endowment income of over £1,300. The boys (soon increased to 100) were admitted between the ages of seven and ten years and stayed for seven years. The curriculum covered reading, writing and arithmetic, and the church catechism. On leaving they were to be apprenticed to a trade. Colston was opposed to Dissent and proposed that any boy who attended a service of worship in any place other than an Anglican church should be expelled. He also told the Merchant Venturers that if they apprenticed a boy to a Dissenter they would be in breach of their Trust.


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