Hipperholme Grammar School
Motto |
Doctrina Fortior Armis (Latin: The pen is mightier than the sword) |
---|---|
Established | 1648 |
Type | Independent school |
Religion | Church of England |
Headmaster | J. D. Williams |
Chair of Governors | Chris Redfearn |
Location |
Bramley Lane Hipperholme Halifax West Yorkshire HX3 8JE England Coordinates: 53°43′43″N 1°48′48″W / 53.728489°N 1.813201°W |
DfE URN | 107585 Tables |
Staff | 51 |
Students | 371 |
Gender | Mixed |
Ages | 3–18 |
Houses | Sunderland, Lister and Broadley |
Colours | Red and Blue |
Publication | The Broadelian |
Website |
www |
Hipperholme Grammar School is an independent grammar school in Hipperholme (near Halifax), West Yorkshire, England. It educates pupils between the ages of 3 and 18.
The Hipperholme Grammar Junior School was formerly known as Lightcliffe Preparatory School
The school has it origins in 1529 within the chantry chapel of the nearby village of Coley. In 1648 (the date the school classes as its founding year) Matthew Broadley, paymaster to Charles I, endowed a large sum of money to build a school on land donated by Samuel Sunderland of Coley Hall; the school opened its doors on its current site in 1661. Two of the current school houses, Broadley and Sunderland, are named after the founders.
In 1783 a new school hall was constructed, designed by Longbottom. Originally an all-boys school, it became independent (ISA, AGBIS) in the 1980s and began admitting girls at the same time.
Notable alumni
- Richard Alexander – TV presenter and producer
- Professor Nicholas Wilson - University of Leeds
- Gary Cady – actor, restaurateur
- Lawrence Heyworth, Radical MP and merchant[1]
- Danny McNamara – singer
- Richard McNamara – guitarist
- Sir Robert Peel – Victorian era Prime Minister and creator of the Metropolitan police [2]
- Laurence Sterne – 18th century author and satirist
- Donald Thompson – former Conservative MP
- Paddy Tipping – former Labour MP
References
- ↑ Newbigging, Thomas (1893), History of the Forest of Rossendale (Second ed.), The Rossendale Free Press, pp. 241–242
- ↑ "Sir Robert Peel". Tamworth. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
External links
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