Culford School is a coeducational public school for pupils age 3-18, in Culford, near Bury St Edmunds in Suffolk, England.
In 1935 the school moved four miles north of Bury to Culford Park, former home of the 7th Earl Cadogan, and thereafter became known as Culford School. It is at the centre of East Anglia, accessible in c.90 minutes from London, 60 from Norwich, 40 from Ipswich, and in c.30 minutes from Cambridge.
The school sits in of Repton parkland with grazing, formal gardens, lake, and the 16th-18th Century Culford Hall. Originally the Hall became dormitories and classrooms; the laundry the sanatorium; the forge the art and woodwork studios (now the Pringle Centre for Design Technology); and the stables the Junior Department (now the Preparatory School).
The first new building to be added was Cadogan House, for junior boys, in 1938. The Leigh Memorial Swimming Pool was built in the same year. The Skinner and Hastings buildings were added in the 1960s, followed during the 1970s-1990s by an auditorium, pre-prep school, medical centre and biology laboratories. Purpose-built boarding houses and the Ashby Dining Hall (named after the then Chairman of the Governors) were constructed in 1972.
1972 was the year in which Culford amalgamated with its sister school, the East Anglian School for Girls (EASG), becoming one of the first co-educational HMC schools. New Houses were formed as follows:
Edwards House | Senior Boys (named after G. S. Edwards, French & hockey master, Deputy Headmaster 1923-1962) | |
Cornwallis House | ||
Jocelyn House | Senior Girls (name transferred from EASG) | |
Storey House | Sixth Form Co-educational House - closed 2003 (named after Dr C. Storey, Headmaster 1951-1971) | |
Robson House | Senior Day Boys - formed 1993 (named after D. Robson, Headmaster 1971-1992) | |
Fitzgerald House | Originally Junior Girls - Senior Day Girls since 2003 (name transferred from EASG) | |
Cadogan House |
The Senior School is also a mixed boarding and day school, for ages 13 – 18. The houses overlook parkland and pitches, with academic pursuits centred upon Culford Hall and the newer buildings. Pupils join from UK and overseas prep and maintained schools; scholarships are offered for academic all-rounders, art, boarding, drama, engineering, mathematics, music, rugby, science, sports, tennis and technology. Exhibitions, bursaries, Forces allowances and Methodist Schools assistance are also available.
The ten thousand volume Library is an oak panelled room overlooking Culford Hall’s south front, completed for the visit of King Edward VII in December 1904. The Centenary Hall, containing a Studio Theatre opened in 2006 by HRH the Duke of Gloucester (twenty five years after his first visit for the school's centenary), is also within the main building.
The Culford Foundation has raised funds for a new Pre-Prep nursery and dining hall; an astro-turf; the William Miller Science Centre (built in 2002 following a £1m donation by an Old Culfordian); and the restoration of Culford Hall. The Foundation also maintains the Old Culfordians association.
Culford's character is shaped by its Christian Methodist foundation, and the Church supports the school whilst welcoming pupils of all faiths and none. There are nine acts of weekday worship plus Sunday services at St Mary's church – which, as the school’s Chapel since 1935, meant that Culford was an Œcumenical pioneer (pupils who so wish are still confirmed jointly as Methodists and Anglicans). The Chaplaincy provides spiritual and pastoral leadership as well as compulsory chaplaincy studies until the Fifth Form (Year 11): a new Chaplaincy Centre opened in 2008. Signs of Culford's foundation include its emphases on teaching a broad range of abilities and on pastoral care; and pupils’ charity and community service groups.
A November 2008 inspection report by the Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI) states that the school is “outstanding” at the spiritual, moral, social and cultural development of pupils; in the quality of its pastoral care and boarding provision; and in its community links and its governance and management. The quality of the educational experience provided, and pupils’ learning and achievements, are “good, with many outstanding features;” and teaching is “good, and in a high proportion of lessons it is outstanding”. A parallel Ofsted report rated boarding provision as outstanding; and the Nursery, for children aged 3–4, was rated outstanding in every area by Ofsted inspectors in June 2008.
The curriculum is supplemented by subjects such as Ancient History/ Classical Civilisation, Critical Thinking, Music Technology, Psychology and Theatre Studies. There is a Scholars Programme, plus societies including for English, Art History and Medicine. Lecturers in 2009-11 include Sir Andrew Motion, Ann Widdecombe, George Alagiah and Henry Olonga.
A Sixth Form Enrichment Programme offers Open University degree modules and pupils also compete in competitions such as the Intermediate Mathematical Challenge. Like many independent schools, Culford teaches the IGCSE and in 2010, all of the pupils who took IGCSE mathematics a year early achieved A* or A grades. The Good Schools Guide claims that Culford has one of the six best maths departments in the country.
The school teaches pupils with special educational needs and for whom English is an additional language. Latin lessons are offered to pupils from local maintained schools. The pupil/staff ratio is approximately 1:10.
String and Wind Days are held for preparatory schools and the Suffolk Youth Orchestra is a regular visitor. Two major dramatic productions are staged each year, one musical and one stage play. Smaller productions are staged more regularly, including during House drama competitions. The Studio Theatre, the 400-seat Centenary Hall, and the Regency Theatre Royal are used as venues.
2009 saw the restoration of the west wing of Culford Hall to create the Beech Centre for Music and Performing Arts (part-funded by Old Culfordian David Beech). A recording studio in the cellars is to follow.
In the last few years pupils have gained places in the National Youth Orchestra and won choral and violin scholarships to Cambridge and the Royal Northern College of Music. Recently ''The Daily Telegraph'' ran an article on drama at three schools including Culford Prep; and Old Culfordian and BBC Producer Jon Jacobs re-visited the Music School to film for the The Proms.
Numbered amongst current Old Culfordians are an Olympic horserider, a British Modern Pentathlon champion, a Welsh hockey international, and club rugby and cricket players for Richmond and Middlesex respectively. Previous generations of Old Culfordians have included several hockey players for England and one for Scotland, a captain of the Welsh team, and a Great British hockey Olympian; as well as an England badminton player. The school has also produced numerous Oxford and Cambridge Blues.
In addition to the major sports, Culford offers a wide range of other sports and activities utilising its of parkland and extensive facilities.
List of facilities:
*A Sports Centre (built in the 1990s) with 25m indoor swimming pool, sports hall with 4-lane cricket nets, bowling machine, squash courts, fitness suite, aerobics and dance studio, video assessment suite, and a climbing wall | |
*Floodlit astroturf | |
*Six rugby and five grass hockey pitches | |
*A 4-court Indoor Tennis Centre | |
*Six grass, six hard and six astroturf tennis courts | |
*Three cricket pitches including Cricket Square with thatched pavilion, views of the Hall and Park, and grass nets | |
*A lake, used for fishing, canoeing and punting, bordering Repton's gardens and crossed by a cast-iron bridge by Samuel Wyatt (the fifth-oldest in the world, listed Grade I) | |
*A 9-hole pitch and putt golf course | |
The school is linked to the LTA High Performance Centre in Cambridge, and six coaches offer a tennis scheme encompassing a scholarship structure and junior Academy programme. The school also provides elite cricket tuition from coaches Ian Pont and Darren Cousins and is listed as a potential training venue for tennis and archery Olympians during the 2012 London Games. Cricket matches between the Lashings World XI and a Headmaster’s XI are organised every two years and Culford play an MCC side annually. An Activities Programme offers over sixty pursuits including climbing, clay pigeon shooting, chess, critical thinking, Cub Scouts, debating, Duke of Edinburgh's Award, expeditions, fencing, horse riding, Portuguese, sub aqua and Young Enterprise. In addition, external organisations using Culford's facilities contribute to provision for pupils:
{{Image gallery |title=Sports and Activities – Image Gallery |lines=5 |width=160 |height=140 |Culfordpool2.jpg|25m level deck swimming pool|Culford Sports Centre – Pool. |Culftennisctr.jpg|4-court indoor tennis centre|Indoor tennis centre. |Culfordsportshall.jpg|Sports hall, climbing wall, indoor cricket nets from viewing gallery|Culford Sports Centre - Hall. |Culfordcricket.JPG|Culford Headmaster’s XI v. Lashings World XI, 2007|Match on 1st XI Cricket Square. | Culfordccf.jpg|The CCF|Combined Cadet Force, Armistice Day 2009. }}
The current CCF is the successor to several individual service cadet forces, established during the two world wars and at various other stages, as well as to Culford’s Air Scouts troop which, in 1939, was amongst the first five to be established in the country and which grew to become the largest in eastern England prior to dwindling in the 1960s.
''Visitor:'' The President of the Methodist Conference
Estote Fortes :When the task is dull and the days are long, :And the world is full of tears, :We shall hear from afar the tune of a song :Come rolling down the years. :Viriliter Agite Estote Fortes :Quit ye like men. Be Strong!
:We shall hear the tramp of a thousand feet, :As the road goes sliding by, :And we'll feel again the throb of the beat :That keeps our Courage high. :Viriliter Agite Estote Fortes :Quit ye like men. Be Strong!
:As we go forth to fight and to right what is wrong :And the work of the world to do, :The clarion call of the Old School Song, :Shall carry us bravely through :Viriliter Agite Estote Fortes, :Quit ye like men. Be Strong!
The school is featured in a 2005 Victorian crime novel by Ethard Wendel Van Stee as having turned out one James Lott, notorious swindler and one of the chief protagonists of the tale. Van Stee imagines Lott's father having "packed him off to join the first class at the East Anglian School for Boys, later the Culford School, in Bury St Edmunds, ostensibly to provide him with a good Christian education." Having "expected the school, in its mysterious way, to turn the son of a publican into a young gentleman," he would not be disappointed; "However, like ice cream, the products of the East Anglian School for Boys were turned out in distinctive flavours..."
The Culford Masonic Lodge numbers Old Culfordians and former staff amongst its members.
A bronze statue of the Victorian racing greyhound Master McGrath on the south lawns of Culford Hall led to some speculation that he is buried there.
Category:Educational institutions established in 1881 Category:1881 establishments in England Category:Independent schools in Suffolk Category:Boarding schools in England Category:Member schools of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference Category:Member schools of the Independent Association of Preparatory Schools Category:Schools with Combined Cadet Forces Category:Preparatory schools in Suffolk Category:Methodist schools in England Category:Grade I listed buildings in Suffolk Category:Grade II* listed buildings in Suffolk Category:Grade II listed educational buildings Category:Sports venues in Suffolk
This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
Coordinates | 38°37′38″N90°11′52″N |
---|---|
official name | Culford |
country | England |
region | East of England |
latitude | 52.297 |
longitude | 0.693 |
post town | Ipswich |
postcode area | IP |
postcode district | 28 |
dial code | 01284 |
shire county | Suffolk |
hide services | Yes }} |
Culford is a small village about north of Bury St Edmunds in the English county of Suffolk. The villageis based around a straight road called "The Street" and there are also some smaller residential areas in Culford, like Benyon gardens, a complex of small lanes. Most of the houses in central Culford are pre-war while those at the edges of the village are post-war and later
Culford is home to Culford School, a public school and a member of the Methodist Schools Foundation. The school occupies a former stately home in Culford Park, built in 1796 for the Cornwallis family.
Culford's Public House, ''The White Hart'', (now known as Benyon Lodge) was closed in December 1840 by Richard Benyon, owner of the Culford Estate between 1824 and 1883, because he regarded it as "a scene of moral debauchery".
The first mention of a postal service in Culford is in July 1852, when a type of postmark known as an undated circle was issued. The post office closed in January 1990 and has since been turned into Culford Day nursery.
nl:Culford pl:Culford
This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
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