*** Welcome to piglix ***

William Howard School

William Howard School
Type Academy
Trust Cumbria Education Trust
Headteacher Mr Alex Scott jn
Location Longtown Road
Brampton
Cumbria
CA8 1AR
England
54°56′38″N 2°44′33″W / 54.94400°N 2.74254°W / 54.94400; -2.74254Coordinates: 54°56′38″N 2°44′33″W / 54.94400°N 2.74254°W / 54.94400; -2.74254
DfE URN 137252 Tables
Ofsted Reports Pre-academy reports
Students approx. 1600
Gender Coeducational
Ages 11–18
Houses Mpingo, Acacia, Ndizi, Baobab
Colours Blue Yellow
Website www.williamhoward.cumbria.sch.uk

The William Howard School is a co-educational secondary academy school on Longtown Road (A6071) in Brampton, Cumbria, England for pupils aged 11–18.

The school is named after Lord William Howard (1563–1640), who was the third son of Thomas, Duke of Norfolk. He married Elizabeth, the daughter and co-heiress of William, Lord Dacre, from whom the Naworth Castle branch of the Howard Family is descended. A Grade II monument of William Howard, 7th Earl of Carlisle, is positioned on one of the highest hills to one side of the town of Brampton, known as the Mote.

The school used to be known as the Irthing Valley Secondary Modern School, and was built between 1949 and 1953. It merged with another school in Brampton called the White House Grammar School situated on Main Street, in 1980 when comprehensive education replaced the selective education system. The ex-BBC newsreader Anna Ford was a head girl of White House Grammar School in 1961. More recently, the school had to be expanded after the closure of Lochinvar school in Longtown in 2008. A new Performing Arts block was built in 2010, allowing the old Drama suite to be extensively refurbished to become the new 6th form centre, which was officially opened by Radio 1 DJ Greg James on 10 May 2011.[1] The school used to have an outdoor swimming pool, but the block which is currently the 6th form centre was built on the site of the pool in the 1990s.

William Howard School was awarded Specialist Science status in 2004, Leading Edge status in 2005 and the International School Award in 2007. The school converted to become an academy in August 2011. It retained its own sixth form centre after some argument over a proposed merger with a larger Carlisle Sixth Form Centre.


...
Wikipedia

...