Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School, Horncastle
Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School, Horncastle, is a co-educational grammar school with academy status in Horncastle, Lincolnshire, England. In 2009, there were 877 pupils, of whom 271 were in the sixth form.
Although royally chartered by Queen Elizabeth I in 1571, there had already been a school in Horncastle for 250 years. The original charter document, with its royal seal, remains in the custody of the school's governors.
The school's catchment area includes Horncastle and the surrounding area: Wragby, Bardney and Woodhall Spa to the west, the Lincolnshire Wolds to the north and east, and Coningsby.
History
Foundation
A school is known to have existed in Horncastle in 1327, but records of the present school effectively begin when Queen Elizabeth I granted the charter to establish a grammar school in Horncastle, on the petition of Edward Clinton, 1st Earl of Lincoln. The school received its seal on 25 June 1571 and the charter document remains in the possession of the present school governors.The original school was built on a site adjoining the River Bain, close to St Mary's Parish Church. It was demolished and rebuilt after the Civil War on the same site, remaining there until the first decade of the 20th century. The first building on the present site was established in 1908, and now serves as the dining hall. The summer of 2008 was the school's 100th year on the present site and was duly marked by several centenary celebrations.
Coeducation and expansion
For much of its existence, Queen Elizabeth's was a boys-only day and boarding school. Girls were first admitted around the time the school moved to its present site. The school continued to expand, with further buildings added as enrolment increased. Queen Elizabeth's was an independent school until the Education Act of 1944 came into effect, after which the school voluntarily transferred control and finance responsibility to the local authority.Change of status
In the autumn of 1991, the parents voted overwhelmingly for the school to become a self-governing grant maintained school. When grant maintained status was abolished by the new Labour government under the School Standards and Framework Act 1998, schools were offered a choice of returning to local authority control or opting for foundation status. Foundation status offered an environment within the education authority but with autonomous school governors controlling admissions criteria and standards for the school, directly hiring and employing the school's staff and holding ownership of the school's estate. This was the route the school selected and Queen Elizabeth's gained a degree of independence from the local authority. In 2003, Queen Elizabeth's gained joint specialist status for science and mathematics in partnership with Banovallum School, Horncastle's secondary modern school. A second specialism for modern languages was added in 2008. The school converted to academy status in September 2012, and became independent of local authority control.School estate
The school consists of the main school building and several outer buildings.The main building contains 30 classrooms, 4 information technology rooms, school offices, a main hall, a sports centre, a sixth-form block and a library.
There are several outer buildings, including the science, English and music blocks. The music block contains two music classrooms along with practice rooms, a large drama studio and lighting balcony, two art classrooms and a gallery. The new English block contains four classrooms and an office.
Admissions
The school is made up of three parts:- Lower School
- Middle School
- Upper School
The school uniform is mandatory for all pupils. For years 7 to 11, this consists of a maroon blazer and a maroon-blue-and-white tie. In the sixth form, until the start of the 19/20 academic year, boys wore a black blazer and black-and-gold tie, while girls wore a navy blazer with a navy-and-silver tie. Since the start of the 19/20 academic year, boys and girls in the sixth form wear a black blazer with a red-and-silver tie.
Catchment
The school's catchment area includes Horncastle and the surrounding area: Wragby, Bardney and Woodhall Spa to the west, the Lincolnshire Wolds to the north and east, and Coningsby.Transport arrangements
A fleet of contract and services buses, organised by the education authority, provides transport for pupils in the school's catchment area, who live more than from the school. The school is also served by a privately organised service for out-of-catchment area pupils from the Sibsey and Stickney areas to the north of Boston, as well as Lincoln and its surrounding area.Academics
A November 2011 Ofsted inspection described the school as "outstanding", consistently placing above national averages in GCSE examinations.The subjects taught at Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School are:
- English
- Maths
- Further maths
- Science
- Geography
- History
- Technology
- Music
- Art
- Drama
- Film Studies
- ICT
- French
- German
- Spanish
- Business studies
- Religious studies
- Geology
- Sport studies
- Product design
- General studies
Sports
- Athletics track
- Gymnasium including table tennis
- Sports hall
- 3 football pitches
- 5 netball courts
- 9 tennis courts
- 2 grass hockey pitches
- 1 cricket pitch
- 4 rounders pitches
- 5 outdoor table tennis tables
Sporting achievement
- Pupils have represented county and higher level in sports such as cricket, hockey, tennis, football and squash.
- Many of the schools sports teams won county competitions and went on to national level.
- Several teams played sports in other countries.
Controversy
The school was met with dismay from the parents with one explaining "I am worried about letting my children go on trips and I know some other parents feel the same." A pupil also added "It's no big secret. It has gone on on other trips."
The school's chair of governors stated that the welfare of pupils is a priority and that school trips are assessed for risks, and that the matter had been dealt with in an "appropriate and proportional way".
Notable former pupils
- Gavin E Crooks, chemist known for his work on non-equilibrium thermodynamics and statistical mechanics, discoverer of the Crooks fluctuation theorem
- Colin Bailey, Chief Constable of Nottinghamshire Police
- Boothby Graffoe, Radio 4 comedian
- Mark Kent, UK Ambassador to Vietnam
- Alfred Lodge, professor; mathematician and former head boy; President of the Mathematical Association 1897–1898; brother of physicist Oliver Lodge
- Tim Shipman, political editor at the Times and Sunday Times, 2014–
- Henry Simpson Lunn, founder of the Lunn Poly travel agents
- Ben Pridmore, World Memory Champion 2004, 2008 and 2009
- Abigail Tarttelin, actress, writer and novelist
- Arthur Thistlewood, conspirator in the Cato Street Conspiracy
- Algernon Ward, Archdeacon of Warwick, 1936–1945
- Robert Webb, actor and comedian, known for Peep Show and That Mitchell and Webb Look