St Peter's School, Seaford was an independent boys' Preparatory School in Seaford, East Sussex, England, that ran from 1903 until 1982.
Seaford played host to St Peter's School in 1903, as an Edwardian Prep school when it was founded by a Miss Taylor in Crouch Lane. In 1907 it moved to a purpose built house designed and built by a Mr Morling and there it remained until 1982 when the school closed.
In 1914 Rolf Henderson became the Headmaster and his portrait painted by his brother, Keith, a Scottish artist, hung in the school dining room. In many ways Rolf was the first true Headmaster of St Peters.
On 20 July 1915 the school playing fields were used to host a review of troops by Lord Kitchener.
In 1934 Pat Knox-Shaw, who had joined the school in 1919 as second master, took over the reins as Headmaster on Rolf Henderson’s retirement.
With the support of Marjorie, his wife, Pat steered St Peters through until 1956.
In 1940, during the Second World War, St Peters evacuated to The Nare Hotel in Veryan near Falmouth, Cornwall. It soon moved to Castle Hill, home of Lord and Lady Fortescue at Filleigh in North Devon until the end of the war, when in 1945 St Peters moved back to its old home in Seaford, now vacated by the Army, and resumed normal service.
In 1956 Pat and Marjorie retired and Basil Talbot, an assistant Headmaster, a member of the team from the 1930s briefly took over but he retired through ill health.
Mike Farebrother, another assistant Headmaster, took the helm and shortly after was joined by an old boy, Harry Browell who together with Serena his wife, ran St Peters until 1967 when Harry and Serena retired to Australia. The gap was filled by Mike’s brother and sister-in-law, John and Margaret Farebrother who moved down from Malvern College where John was a senior housemaster.
As times changed, and boarders began to be fewer, the age of the traditional prep school’s days were numbered and that coupled with the age of the Farebrothers left no alternative but to close St Peters in the summer of 1982.
There was an auction and many of the contents were purchased by friends of the school. The buildings and grounds disappeared under a housing estate.