Chislehurst School for Girls


Chislehurst School for Girls is a secondary school in Chislehurst, in outer South East London, England. It caters for pupils in academic years 7-11 and offers sixth form education.

History

Founded in 1896 as Sidcup High School, which was a co-educational school located on the corner of Victoria Road, it later became Sidcup County School for Girls before moving to the new purpose-built main school building in 1931, which was expanded twice during the 1950s. After World War II, it became Chislehurst and Sidcup County Grammar School for Girls and in the 1950s Chislehurst and Sidcup Girls' Grammar School with the initials CSGGS on the blazer badge. It was the girls' counterpart to the formerly all-boys Chislehurst and Sidcup Grammar School, which has since moved to the London Borough of Bexley and became a coeducational selective academy. As the school was sited in Beaverwood Road the beaver was adopted as an appropriate symbol of industry and featured on the prefects' badges. When in 1982, the school changed from being a grammar school to a comprehensive school the name was changed to Beaverwood School for Girls. The school gained academy status on 1 March 2011. In September 2014, Beaverwood Changed its name to Chislehurst School for Girls

Houses

In the school there are 4 houses, Knightley, Eliot, Austen and Brontë. The houses are paired with charities which they must fundraise for. The more money raised equals more house points.

Notable former pupils