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St Lawrence College is a co-educational independent school situated in Ramsgate, Kent and has been established as a "public school" ever since it was founded.
St Lawrence College | |
---|---|
Address | |
College Road , , CT11 7AE England | |
Coordinates | 51°20′35″N 1°24′54″E / 51.343°N 1.415°E |
Information | |
Former name | South Eastern College |
Type | Public school Private day and boarding school |
Motto | In Bono Vince (Latin for Conquer with Good) |
Religious affiliation(s) | Church of England |
Established | 1879 |
Founder | Rev. Emile Cornet d'Auquier |
Department for Education URN | 118947 Tables |
Chairman of the Governors | Mike J Boulton |
Head of the College | Barney Durrant |
Gender | Coeducational |
Age | 3 to 18 |
Enrolment | ≈620 (Senior school 420, Junior school 200) |
Colour(s) | Maroon and white |
Publication | The Lawrentian |
Houses | 7 |
Former Pupils | Old Lawrentians |
School Song | Carmen Laurentium |
Website | https://www.slcuk.com |
History
editThe college was founded in 1879 as South Eastern College (colours: gold and black). The name was changed in September 1906[1] because of its location in the St Lawrence area of Ramsgate. New colours were also given: maroon and white. The school rapidly outgrew the single house, leading to the main building of the present day college by 1884. The chapel was completed in 1927. During the world wars, the school was evacuated to Chester (1915) and Courteenhall in Northamptonshire (1940), seat of Sir Herewood Wake, because of its position on the South-East coast. Later in the school's existence, girls were admitted, and the current mix of sexes is now roughly equal.
There were initially four houses: Light Red, Dark Red, Light Blue and Dark Blue; these later became Grange, Tower, Manor and Lodge. During World War II a fifth house was added called Courtenay when a nearby school having failed to maintain numbers was incorporated into the school. Newlands was later added for day scholars and Deacon followed as the Junior end of this house.
In 1930, Richard Maunsell designed for the Southern Railway a fleet of 40 "Schools Class" locomotives one of which was named St Lawrence. These locos were compact but particularly powerful, weighing over 100 tons with tender. As late as 1958 the St Lawrence Loco (BR 30934) was attached to the School Train departing from Ramsgate. Parts of the tender still exist on the Bluebell Railway.[citation needed]
Senior and middle school
editThe Senior School is divided into five separate houses. The oldest, Tower and Lodge, the two boys' boarding houses, were created in 1889. Newlands is the boys' day house, while Laing is the girls' day house. Boarding girls are part of Bellerby. All houses are located in the main school building except Bellerby, who have their own building which is situated in the site of the previous Taylor Hall.
Cameron and Courtenay are mixed boarding and day sub-houses, respectively, for the Middle School (Kirby). They accommodate students from age 11 to 13. They are housed in the modern Kirby House Building, which opened in January 2007 by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams. In January 2013, Mark Aitken retired his post of Headmaster and was succeeded by Antony Spencer.
Junior school
editSt Lawrence College Junior School is located on the same site as the Middle and Senior schools and accommodates pupils from age 3 to 11. The Junior School pupils study in the Hamblen Block which includes classrooms for Years 3-6.
Performance
editIn 2009, the Daily Telegraph placed the school 330 in its League Table of Independent School A-level results, with 48.81% of pupils gaining A or B grades at A-level.[2] In 2012, the school gained a pass rate of 92.9% with 18% of them being at grades of A and A* at A-level. The GCSE results had a pass rate of 86.5% and 15.5% being at grades of A*. [citation needed] In 2017, the school had 30% A*/A grades at A-level, and 33% A*/A at GCSE, despite the introduction of the new exams.[3]
Notable former pupils
editOld Lawrentians (OLs) of note include:
- Alfred Bellerby, Olympic long jumper[4][5]
- Hubert Broad, World War I aviator and test pilot[6]
- John Russell Carlisle, Director of the Tobacco Manufacturers' Association
- John Carr, first-class cricketer and British Army officer
- Sir Conrad Corfield KCIE, CSI, MC and Chief Advisor in India
- Professor Durward Cruickshank FRS, crystallographer
- Michael Curtis, newspaper editor
- General Richard Dannatt, Baron Dannatt GCB, CBE, MC, DL, former Chief of the General Staff, defence advisor to the Conservative party[7]
- Gordon Edington, CBE, chair NCH[8]
- Captain David Hart Dyke CBE, LVO, ADC, Captain of HMS Coventry during the Falklands War
- Ted Fillary, cricketer
- Humphrey Hawksley, BBC World Affairs Correspondent (BBC News)
- John Ironmonger, novelist
- Sir Maurice Laing CBE, DL, FRICS, construction industry entrepreneur, first president of the CBI
- Herbert Linnell, cricketer
- Eric Mansfield, Aeronautical Engineer, won the Royal Medal in 1994
- Sir George Middleton, diplomat
- Major Claude Myburgh, cricketer and soldier
- Denis Oswald (codebreaker), Bletchley Park, first-class cricketer, linguist, housemaster Meadhurst, Uppingham.
- Major General Frank Crowther Roberts VC, DSO, OBE, MC
- John Ruddock, actor
- Clifford Dyce Sharp, journalist and editor
- Herbert Sharp, cricketer and soldier
- Alexander Siddig, actor
- John Smyth QC, barrister and child abuser
- Michael Steed, political scientist
- The Right Honourable John Stevens, Baron Stevens of Kirkwhelpington, former commissioner of the Metropolitan Police
- Robert Summerhayes, cricketer
- John Vernon Taylor, Bishop of Winchester
- Colin Tilsley, missionary
References
edit- ^ "slcuk.com "about us"". slcuk.com.
- ^ "League Table of Independent Schools", The Daily Telegraph, London, 15 September 2009, retrieved 10 October 2011
- ^ "ST LAWRENCE COLLEGE EXAM RESULTS 2017". Retrieved 21 December 2017.
- ^ Alfred Bellerby profile at sports-reference.com
- ^ Alfred Bellerby profile at This is Kent
- ^ 1911 Census of Thanet, RG14PN4536, Hubert Stanford Broad, Hollicondane Ramsgate.
- ^ Dannet, General Sir Richard. Leading from the Front. pp. 11–28.
- ^ Gordon Edington profile at Debretts Online
External links
edit- St Lawrence College website
- Old Lawrentian Society
- Profile on the ISC website
- Profile on the HMC website