King Edward's School, Witley


King Edward's School, Witley is an independent co-educational boarding and day school, founded in 1553 by King Edward VI and Nicholas Ridley. The School is located in the village of Wormley, Surrey, England, having moved to its present location in 1867. The School became fully co-educational in 1952. As of September 2010, the school has joined the small number of independent schools in the UK which offer the IB Diploma Programme in place of A-Levels in the sixth form. The School re-introduced A-Levels as part of the curriculum from September 2015.

History

The School was founded as Bridewell Royal Hospital, after Nicholas Ridley preached to Edward VI to give some of his empty palaces over to the City of London to house homeless women and children.
The school was commandeered by the Royal Navy during the Second World War to test and develop the use of radar. The school still remembers this with a plaque in the central area, a junction of corridors known as 'Piccadilly'. The President of Bridewell Royal Hospital is now The Duchess of Gloucester, appointed from 1 January 2006. The Queen Mother held the title from 1953 to 2002. The school's creation was sanctioned by the same charter as that of Christ's Hospital and St Thomas' Hospital, and uses the same coat of arms as Christ's Hospital. The school maintains strong links with the City of London, and is still supported by it, with some students on bursaries funded by the City. As of the academic year 2018/19 Senior School day fees are £19,200 per year, with Senior School boarding fees £30,810 per year, though a number of bursaries and scholarships are available.
In early 2015 Edward Moore, a choirmaster at King Edward's, Witley, was handed a 9-month sentence for inappropriate sexual conduct with a girl student.

Boarding houses

There are ten functioning houses in total, five male and five female. The boarding houses at the school are paired, and, in the case of the senior pupils, conjoined in the centre of the buildings. This central area allows the boys and girls from the paired houses to meet in the evenings and during spare time. The right-hand half of the iconic front building of the school is used as Copeland House, the junior girls' boarding house, while Queen Mary House was formerly a care home for the mentally ill and then the school sanatorium, until later becoming the junior boys' boarding house.
The senior houses were built in the 1970s, and the plans can be seen in the School Museum, housed in the History Department. Boarders moved into these new buildings in fall 1976 and the inauguration was commemorated by a visit from HM Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother.
The houses, in their pairs, are:

Juniors

The school has its own magazine, The Edwardian, which it publishes yearly. There is a short school newsletter, KEStrel, published bi-annually, that incorporates recent school events and news.

Notable Old Witleians

Former pupils of King Edward's are referred to as Old Witleians, or Old Wits.