*** Welcome to piglix ***

The Royal Alexandra and Albert School

Royal Alexandra and Albert school
Crest in full colour.jpg
School crest
Established 1758
Type Voluntary aided
Day and boarding school
President The Duchess of Gloucester
Headteacher Mark Dixon
Founder Edward Pickard
Location Rocky Lane
Reigate
Surrey
RH2 0TD
England
51°15′42″N 0°10′29″W / 51.2617°N 0.1746°W / 51.2617; -0.1746Coordinates: 51°15′42″N 0°10′29″W / 51.2617°N 0.1746°W / 51.2617; -0.1746
Local authority Surrey
DfE URN 125279 Tables
Ofsted Reports
Students 1000
Gender Mixed
Ages 7–18
Houses Gatton Hall
Rank Weston
Elizabeth
Edinburgh
Albert
Kent
Gloucester
Alexandra
Cornwall
Website www.raa-school.co.uk

The Royal Alexandra and Albert School is an all-through co-educational boarding school located in Reigate, Surrey. The headmaster as of 2016 was Mark Dixon. The Royal Alexandra and Albert School Act, of 1949, united The Royal Alexandra School, which was founded in 1758, and The Royal Albert orphan School, which was founded in 1864 as a national memorial to Prince Albert, late husband of Queen Victoria. It is one of 36 state-maintained boarding schools in England and Wales, and one of the few state schools in the United Kingdom to educate children from primary school years to sixth form.

The earliest link in the school's history goes back to the Orphan Working School which was founded in 1758 by fourteen men meeting in an Inn led by Edward Pickard, a dissenting minister. The school expanded under the secretaryship of Joseph Soul in Hampstead. It continued to expand and it opened a linked convalescent home in Margate.

The other part of the school was known as the Royal Albert Orphan Asylum. It was situated in Camberley, just outside Bagshot's boundary, and was opened in 1864. The second school was intended for children between the age of five and eight and was founded by the Orphan Working School with Joseph Soul as the first honorary secretary. In 1867 Queen Victoria planted a Wellingtonia Gigantica tree during an "Inauguration Ceremony" for the school. A stone at the site was engraved VIR 1867 and is mistakenly thought by some to be the foundation stone of the building. The Wellingtonia survives to this day. A later patron of the school was Victoria's son Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught and Strathearn.

After the school left, the site was for a while used as the WRAC College. Boys at the school were required to work in addition to their schooling: for example on the farm, in the gardens, in a tailor's shop and in a cobbler's workshop.


...
Wikipedia

...