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Wycombe Abbey

Wycombe Abbey School
Wycombe Abbey Logo.jpg
Motto Latin: In fide vade
Go in faith
Established 1896
Type Independent day and boarding school
Religion Church of England
President Maj The Rt Hon
Peter, Lord Carrington
KG GCMG CH MC PC DL
Headmistress Mrs R Wilkinson MEd MA (Oxon)
Deputy Heads Mrs A Hems
Miss E Boswell
Miss R A Keens BEd
Chairman of The Council Patrick Sherrington
Founder Dame Frances Dove
DBE
Location High Wycombe
Buckinghamshire
HP11 1PE
England
Coordinates: 51°37′33″N 0°45′04″W / 51.6259°N 0.7511°W / 51.6259; -0.7511
DfE number 825/6018
DfE URN 110547 Tables
Staff 117 Teaching
167 Support
Capacity 615
Students 589
Gender female
Ages 11–18
Houses 11
Colours         
Website Wycombe Abbey School

Wycombe Abbey is an independent girls' boarding school in High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, England. Consistently ranked as one of the top schools regionally and nationally in academic results, the school was founded in 1896 by Frances Dove, who was previously headmistress of St Leonards School in Scotland. Its present capacity is approximately 615 girls, aged 11 to 18. The school is situated on a 160 acres (65 ha) campus in central High Wycombe. The land includes woods, gardens and a lake, and rises up to 500 feet (150 m) above sea level in the Chiltern Hills. The freehold is owned by the school; the main house and several buildings at Wycombe Abbey are Grade II* listed. The current headmistress is Rhiannon Wilkinson.

The history of the building predates school's acquisition of it. In the thirteenth century, the area, with the parish church, was part of the holding of the Abbess of Godstow. 600 years later, the priory at Godstowe was also re-founded as a school by Dame Frances Dove, and today is a 'feeder' preparatory school for Wycombe Abbey.

On the site of the present Wycombe Abbey was a large manor house known as 'Loakes House' which was the seat of the Archdale family, until 1700, when Thomas Archdale sold it to Henry Petty, 1st Earl of Shelburne. The earl in turn bequeathed the estate to his grandnephew, William Petty, (who inherited a different Earldom of Shelburne in 1761 and became Prime Minister in 1782). The Shelburnes, though, had a far larger and grander residence at Bowood House in the Savernake Forest and spent little time at Loakes House.

Consequently, Lord Shelburne sold his estates in the area. Loakes House was purchased from them at auction by Robert Smith, 1st Baron Carrington, in 1798. He employed the architect James Wyatt to transform Loakes House into Wycombe Abbey as we see it today. The original house and other parts of the school are listed as Grade II* by English Heritage.


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