Motto |
Latin: Arduus ad Solem ("Reach for the Sun") |
---|---|
Established | 1877 |
Type | Preparatory day and boarding school and Pre-Prep school |
Religion | Christian (Anglican) |
Head Master | Crispin Hyde-Dunn (Prep); Annie McNeile (Pre-Prep) |
Founder | The Revd A.E. Clarke |
Location |
Bardwell Road Oxford Oxfordshire OX2 6SS U.K. 51°46′05″N 1°15′23″W / 51.76818°N 1.25639°WCoordinates: 51°46′05″N 1°15′23″W / 51.76818°N 1.25639°W |
DfE URN | 123288 Tables |
Students | 800+ |
Gender | Co-Educational |
Ages | 8–13 |
Houses | 9 |
Colours | Navy & Mustard |
Publication | The Draconian |
Former pupils | Old Dragons |
Website | www |
The Dragon School is one school on two sites based in Oxford, England, U.K.. The Prep School (children aged 8–13) and Dragon Pre-Prep (aged 4–7) are both co-educational schools. The Dragon Prep School was founded in 1877 as the Oxford Preparatory School and is one of Great Britain's best known boarding schools, although it also takes day pupils.
Originally established for boys, the Dragon school first admitted girls as boarders in 1994. The Dragon School is a feeder school to a range of Independent Schools, including Eton College, Shrewsbury School, Cheltenham Ladies' College, Harrow School, Radley College, Rugby School, Marlborough College, Canford School, St Edward's School, Oxford and Abingdon School.
Together with Lynams' School (now Dragon School Pre-prep for better worldwide recognition), the Dragon educates children from aged 4 to 13, in two sites: Bardwell Road and Richards Lane. Boarding starts at 8 and there are 10 boarding houses, including one weekly-boarding house.
Teaching started in September 1877 at rooms in Balliol Hall, located in St Giles', central Oxford, under A. E. Clarke. The school expanded and moved within two years to 17 Crick Road, which became known as "School House". Charles Cotterill Lynam (known as the "Skipper") took over as headmaster in 1886.
In 1894, C. C. Lynam took out a lease on land at the current site at Bardwell Road. £4,000 was quickly raised through subscriptions from local parents for the erection of new school buildings and the move was completed within a year. The school was known as Oxford Preparatory School and also Lynam's, but gradually its current name was adopted.