The College of Richard Collyer

The College of Richard Collyer
Motto Honor Deo
Established 1532[1]
Type Sixth Form College
Principal Sally Bromley
Founder Richard Collyer
Location Hurst Road
Horsham
West Sussex
RH12 2EJ
United Kingdom
Coordinates: 51°04′16″N 0°19′26″W / 51.071°N 0.324°W / 51.071; -0.324
Local authority West Sussex
DfE number 938/8602
DfE URN 130847 Tables
Ofsted Reports
Students 1600
Gender Mixed
Ages 16–19
Houses Denne, Garnet, Hurst, Mercers', Pirie, Richmond, St. Leonard's, Whittington
Former pupils Old Collyerians
Website Collyer’s

The College of Richard Collyer, formerly called Collyer’s School, is a coeducational sixth form college in Horsham, West Sussex, England.

In recent years, the college has achieved the best A-level results in West Sussex for state-run institutions and is widely regarded to be one of the best sixth form colleges in the country. Academically it is a very strong school; the students regularly achieve good results and a significant number progress to the most prestigious universities.[2][3] The college is rated as being 'Outstanding' by Ofsted and is the only further education college in the county to have achieved this.[4]

It is also the second oldest school in West Sussex after The Prebendal School in Chichester and the fourth oldest school in Sussex. The college is Grade II listed by the English Heritage.

Admissions

Collyer’s serves about 1600 students between 16 and 19 years of age. It offers AS and A-level courses in 45 different subjects, including a selection not taught at other local colleges. 20 further subjects are offered towards AVCE, BTEC, GNVQ and vocational certifications and GCSE examinations.

A wide variety of adult education classes are offered at Collyer’s in the evenings. It is situated on the B2180 opposite Horsham Community Hospital, and close to the fire and police stations.

History

The College was founded in 1532 (Old Style) in the will of Richard Collyer, who was born in Horsham, and became a wealthy member of The Mercers’ Company of the City of London. The Mercers’ Company are still the school’s trustees, and maintain a close relationship with the school. Collyer willed that one of his houses in the City, variously called ‘The Sonne’ or ‘The Sunne’, be sold and the proceeds used to build a school-house in Horsham for “the nomber of thre score scholars”.[5] Under the terms of the will the money was not freed until 1540, and the new school was eventually opened in the early summer of 1541. The education granted to those sixty scholars, who were naturally all boys, was to be provided “freely without any money paying therefor”, with the Mercer’s Company paying the masters’ salaries.

The original building was on the site of the current St Mary's Church of England Primary School, adjacent to the parish church. However, it was extended then rebuilt in 1660, in order to accommodate “neare an hundred scholars ... with diligence and good success” by 1666, such that none of Collyer's original structure survives. (Part of the 1660 building remains in structure of Arun House, in Denne Road.)[6] In the eighteenth century it fell into disrepair, such that the Mercers’ Company surveyor reported that it would cost £1,040 to renovate, “but you will still have a very old and imperfect building.” Accordingly, in 1840 the second building was demolished (save for the part incorporated into Arun House), and a new, late-Elizabethan style structure built for the sum of £2,240.[5]

Hurst Road Site

By the late nineteenth century, the population of Horsham had expanded to 10,000 (accelerated by the coming of the railway and its associated employment), the City and Guilds Institute (which the Mercers' Company had helped found) decreed that education needed to be extended to include the new sciences, and money needed to be found to replace the school buildings yet again. Thus after a long campaign against fees, including a petition of 1,100 signatures, the new school charter of 1889 stated that, “Tuition fees might vary between £4 and £10 p.a. and Boarding fees were not to exceed £40 a year.” A new and larger site was sorely needed.[5]

The present site in Hurst Road was found, and the current building was designed in 1892 by Arthur Vernon,[7] and built by Joseph Potter for a contract price of £5,795. It is now grade II listed by English Heritage.[8] Above the entrance is a stone engraved with, “Grammar School, Founded by Richard Collier AD 1532”. (Historically the founder's name was often spelled as ‘Collier’, but from the twentieth century it has always been spelled as it is today.[5]) The 1892 building facing Hurst Road has been extended continually as the school has expanded. This included the addition of science laboratories in 1897, a ‘Great Hall’ in 1912, and the ‘New Block’ classrooms in 1932.

In the 1890s Collyer’s taught 110 boys from ages 7 to 17, both boarders and day-schoolers, and for the first time included a sixth form to study for university entrance. From 1923 the Rev. W.M. Peacock started to model the school on public school lines, introducing (among other things) four houses (see below), The Horsham Grammar School Magazine (later to become The Collyerian), and a school song. By 1926 it was a single-stream school of 220 boys with a sixth form of “less than a dozen”, and ten teaching staff.[5]

Grammar school

Collyer’s ceased to accept boarders in 1935, and the dormitories were converted into much-needed library and common-room space. Plans for adding a gymnasium and other facilities were abandoned in 1939, when the school accepted evacuees from the Mercers’ School in London, and pupil numbers soared to over 400 in three streams. (The accommodation crisis was solved by building hutted classrooms, but numbers continued to rise because of the post-war ‘baby boom’, and the huts were not demolished until the 1980s.) In 1944 it became a voluntary-aided grammar school, and its education was again made available free to the scholars. In the 1950s it had around 500 pupils, rising slowly to over 600 during the 1960s.[5]

In the early 1960s when an Old Collyerian (OC), Dr. William W. Duckering (1861–1945)[9] bequeathed £22,000 to the school ‘for its general purposes’. The bequest paid for a new laboratory block, gymnasium and changing rooms in 1961, and an assembly and dining hall with theatrical stage facilities, modern kitchens attached, and a ‘Small Upper Hall’ above the new foyer, all completed in 1963. The new hall was named the ‘Duckering Hall’, and the smaller hall the ‘Duckering Room’. (The final phase of building work, to be a new classroom block replacing the World War Two emergency wooden huts, was never undertaken.) Between 1960 and 1963 the playing fields were also extended, levelled, and new sports facilities were added. In 1964 a headmaster’s house was built on the site, replacing the accommodation that was originally included in the 1892 school block.[5]

Sixth form college

It started its transition to become a voluntary-aided sixth form college in 1976.[10] The other three state secondary schools in Horsham (Forest Boys, Forest Girls and Horsham High School for Girls) became comprehensives. Collyer’s had taken its last first form intake in the previous September, and started to expand its sixth form. Initially this was done by taking students from the two existing secondary moderns to do O-levels, and girls from Horsham High School who wanted to study A-level choices that were not offered by their previous school.

In the early 2000s, annual reports from the Office for Standards in Education (OFSTED) have deemed the school outstanding. On the strength of a recent OFSTED Grade One for Science provision, the college was awarded ‘Beacon Status’ for Science in 2005 by the Department for Education and Skills. In the same year, it achieved the status of Centre of Vocational Excellence (CoVE) for sport and recreation. A new £2 million, three storey Learning Resources Centre was unveiled during this period. In 2006 work began to extend the Sports Hall, or Cowley Building, to provide more teaching and social space.

The £2 million Learning Resources Centre, 2009

Houses

From the 1920s the students and some teaching staff in the college have been divided into a number of different houses. All houses names are associated with the history of the college or the town. The current eight houses are:

Former house names include Collyer’s, Duckering and Weald

Sculpture of William Pirie, Piries Place, Horsham

Headmasters

The following list of the headmasters from the school’s opening until 1965 was provided in the history of the school that was published in that year.[5]

Principals

In 1976, the title was changed from Headmaster to Principal. Since then the college’s principals have been:

Academic performance

After recovering from a country-wide low point in schooling in the eighteenth century, headmasters from William Pirie to George Thompson successively raised standards, such that in 1904, when the school had 110 pupils, six OCs held open awards at Oxford or Cambridge, and another was a City and Guilds scholar. By 1962, university education also having been made free to students, the school sent 55 students out of 80 leavers into higher education.[5]

Today it is considered one of the best sixth form colleges in England. Academically it is a very strong school; the students regularly achieve good results and a significant number progress to the most prestigious universities. It achieves the best A-level results in West Sussex for state-run institutions, together with The Weald School, Billingshurst.

Courses

The following is a list of AS, A2 and BTEC courses available at the college today:

Notable alumni

See Category:People educated at The College of Richard Collyer.

Collyer’s School

References

  1. Old Style date; the accepted date of founding is taken as 23 January 1532, being the date of Richard Collyer’s will (Willson, 1965); but that is 1533, New Style.
  2. http://www.collyers.ac.uk/exam-results-11| The third paragraph down explains individual successes by students, with universities such as Oxford and Cambridge being used for further education by a significant number of students
  3. http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/datablog/interactive/2012/jul/18/oxbridge-students-secondary-school| Interactive map shows that the college sent 2% of students to either Oxford or Cambridge University in 2011
  4. http://www.ofsted.gov.uk/inspection-reports/find-inspection-report/provider/ELS/130847
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Willson A.N. (1965) A History of Collyer’s School 1532-1964, Edward Arnold (Publishers) Ltd., London: 210 pp.
  6. This was because an extension had been incorporated into Arun House, then occupied by the Shelley family; see Willson (1965).
  7. Hidden Horsham page on Collyer’s School
  8. Hidden Horsham listed buildings page
  9. Duckering attended Collyer's from 1873 to 1875 (Willson, 1965).
  10. college.http://www.collyers.ac.uk/history
  11. He was also a Jacobite, and rector of Itchingfield church; see parish history.
  12. “Making the office a mere sinecure ... we found a school without scholars no one having been sent there within the memory of men ... everything neglected but the receipt of salaries and emoluments.” (Quoted by Willson, 1965)
  13. Link to William Pirie's statue in Pirie’s Place, Horsham
  14. Derek Slynn’s obituary in West Sussex County Times, 2009
  15. "Principal of Collyer’s to leave after ten years". West Sussex County Times. 2014-04-05. Retrieved 2014-07-27.

External links

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