King's School, Rochester
The King's School, Rochester, is an independent co-educational day and boarding school in Rochester, Kent. It is a cathedral school and, being part of the foundation of Rochester Cathedral, the Dean of Rochester serves as chair of the school's governing body.[2][3] The school claims to be the second oldest continuously operating school in the world, having been founded in 604 AD.[1][2] [lower-alpha 1]
The King's School | |
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Address | |
Boley Hill , , ME1 1TE England | |
Coordinates | 51°23′15″N 0°30′06″E |
Information | |
Type | Cathedral school Private day and boarding school Public School |
Motto | Disce aut discede ("Learn or leave") |
Religious affiliation(s) | Church of England |
Established | 604 AD[1] |
Founder | (refounded) Henry VIII |
Chairman of the Governors | Dean of Rochester |
Principal | Ben Charles |
Gender | Coeducational |
Age | 3 to 18 |
Enrolment | 700 |
Houses | 4 |
Colour(s) | Blue, black and white |
Former pupils | Old Roffensians |
School Song | "Carmen Roffense" |
Website | http://www.kings-rochester.co.uk/ |
History
The cathedral school in Rochester was founded in 604 AD, at the same time as the cathedral. It was refounded by Henry VIII in 1541 during the English Reformation when the monastery in Rochester was dissolved.[1] It is the second oldest school in the United Kingdom after The King's School Canterbury.[4] The current principal is Ben Charles, who also acts as the senior school headmaster. Tom Morgan is the preparatory school headmaster and Kellie Crozer is the acting headmistress of the nursery and Pre-Preparatory school.[3][lower-alpha 2]
Site
The school is housed in a variety of buildings around Rochester (the school also uses Rochester Cathedral for school services).
Satis House
A 16th-century town house rebuilt as an 18th-century Georgian house, the school took it over in 1950 and purchased it outright in 1968. It had originally been built for Richard Watts who had entertained Queen Elizabeth I there in 1573: asked for her verdict on her stay, the Queen had answered, "satis" (from the Latin satis for "enough"), hence the name of the house.[5] Above the entrance portico is a 1578 bust of Watts who represented Rochester in Parliament between 1563 and 1571. At Satis House are the office of the principal of King's Rochester, administrative offices and the senior school Library.
Main school
The oldest building in use which was specifically built for the school. It was completed in 1742, the tower and additional classrooms were added in 1880 and the building extended with porches either end in 1913. During WW2 the building was commandeered for ARP purposes. The wooden roof which had served as the school's assembly hall was removed in 1976. In 1985, it became the Design and Technology Centre. At the entrance are the Parker Memorial Gates (after the Reverend William Parker, headmaster 1913-35) which were dedicated in 1955.
Cheetham Memorial Building
This was opened in 1909 by Richard Glazebrook, director of the National Physical Laboratory. It originally consisted of a science laboratory and an art room and now contains two computing suites. The Venerable Samuel Cheetham was Archdeacon of Rochester from 1882 until his death in 1908.
Laboratory and lecture theatre
The building was opened in 1952 and was the school's first new building for nearly 40 years. Further adjacent science laboratories for chemistry and physics were opened in 1959 and the biology wing in 1980.
College
Built in 1640, this was the deanery from 1661 to 1961. The building was home to the Rochester Theological College (founded by Bishop Christopher Chavasse) from 1961 until its closure in 1970. It then became in part the King's School Sixth Form Centre with the senior school history and geography departments.
Mackean House
This was built in 1840 and later named after the last canon of the cathedral to live there, Canon William Herbet Mackean (1877-1960), Canon of Rochester 1925-58. The headmaster's study and the senior school were housed there until both were relocated Satis House in 1986. The property is marked on early maps as the house of the second prebend. During World War 2 the house was used for ARP purposes and is now used by the senior school English, economics and business studies departments.
Davies Court
Opened in 1982 by the Archbishop of York and named after Ernest William Davies (headmaster 1935-57), it houses the school's art, religious studies and language centres (French, German and Russian). Memorial gates at the entrance from the Vines were dedicated in 2006.
Old St Margaret's
Originally a Richard Watts charitable school (as per the plaque on the façade explains), this is the oldest building in the towns of the Lower Medway in continuous educational use. As a Church of England primary school, St Margaret’s, it was taken over by King's School in 1960 and purchased outright in 1968. It is used by the senior school mathematics and classics departments. Parts of the building and outbuildings house the offices of the school's Combined Cadet Force which celebrated its centenary in 2011.
School hall
This was opened and dedicated by the Archbishop of Canterbury in 1967. It is regularly used to host school productions, assemblies and other events. It is due to be renovated in mid 2018.
Bob Doubles
Named after a method of change ringing on five bells. This is the school's café and tuck shop and occupies the former stables of Prior Gate's House.
King's Rochester Sports Centre
A joint venture with Medway Council, the King's Rochester Sports Centre was officially opened in June 2014 and provides among its modern facilities, netball and tennis courts and a gymnasium which are also available to the general public.[6] The school also has a Boathouse by Allington Lock near Aylesford on the River Medway which opened in 1984. The school has a long rowing tradition with the King's School Rochester Boat Club being founded in 1861.
Preparatory School[7]
The main building was opened in 1958, extended in 1984 and with a new wing added in 1992. The part of King's Rochester was called the Junior School until 1989.
St Nicholas House
The late Victorian former vicarage for St Nicholas Church, was purchased in 1946 and used as the Junior School until the new buildings were opened in 1958. From 1958 until 1974 it was a boarding house and now contains Preparatory School administrative offices. Adjacent to St Nicholas House was a wartime decontamination shelter which had been converted to Junior School changing rooms. An additional floor and gabled roof were added in 2000 and opened that year in memory of David Dann (King's Scholar 1942-52) and a Governor of the school, to provide additional music facilities.
Rookwood
Previously used as a Junior School boarding house, as the first site of the Pre-Preparatory School (opened in 1988) and for the Nursery School and is now used for general teaching. From 1946 to 1961 it was the Headmaster's house.
St Ronan's
Built in 1908, acquired in 1948 and now used as a supplementary boarding house until boarding capacity at School House was increased in 1972 and now houses the Music Department.
The Pavilion
Situated above a bank on the west side of the paddock. The original building was created in 1905. An extension to the north, later called the Colours Room, was added in 1920 in memory of Major Maurice Miskin (1903–10), who was killed in action in 1918. The 25m Rifle Range immediately to the south and used by the Combined Cadet Force was built in 1926.
Conference Centre
Opened in 2006, the Conference Centre consists of a small hall on the ground floor and a basement used as a dining hall for the Preparatory and Pre-Preparatory Schools.
Pre-Preparatory School
Chadlington House
King's Rochester Pre-Preparatory School was opened in 2000 and named Chadlington House after Old Roffensian life peer Peter Gummer (Lord Chadlington). This modern building also now houses King's Nursery School.[8] In 2017 'Armadilla Pods' were constructed in the grounds for music lessons.[9]
Houses
Senior School
House | Colour | Inception | Origins |
---|---|---|---|
Crick | Dark Green | 1951 | Thomas Crick – Dean of Rochester (1943–1958) |
Parker | Pale Blue | 1913 | William Parker – Headmaster of the School (1913–1935) |
School House | Purple | ???? | School Boarding House (senior and preparatory school) (House was merged with the other 4 Day Houses in 2021) |
Storrs | Cerise (Red) | ???? | John Storrs – Dean of Rochester (1913–1928) |
Whiston | Gold (Yellow) | ???? | Robert Whiston – Clerk in Holy Orders and Headmaster of the Cathedral Grammar School (1842–1877) |
Headteachers
Senior school
Headmaster | Years as Headmaster | Duration |
---|---|---|
Rev. Robert William Whiston | 1844 - 1877 | 33 years |
John Langhorne | 1877 - 1893 | 16 years |
Rev. John Bennett Lancelot | 1893 - 1901 | 8 years |
Rev. Thomas Frederick Hobson | 1901 - 1910 | 9 years |
Rev. Richard Frederick Elwyn | 1910 - 1913 | 3 years |
Rev. William Parker | 1913 - 1935 | 22 years |
Rev. Ernest William Davies | 1935 - 1957 | 22 years |
Rev. Canon Douglas Vicary | 1957 - 1975 | 18 years |
Roy Ford | 1975 - 1986 | 11 years |
Ian Robert Walker | 1986 - 2012 | 25 years |
Jeremy Walker[10] | 2012 - 2018 | 6 years |
Roger Overend (interim)[10] | January - April 2019 | 4 months |
Ben Charles[3] | 2019–Present |
Notable former pupils
- Sir Edwin Arnold, poet and author
- Sir Derek Barton, Nobel Prize-winning chemist
- James Hadley Chase, One of the best known detective/thriller authors
- Michael Brown, Archdeacon of Nottingham
- Richard Dadd, artist
- Edward Mortlock Donaldson, World War II flying ace
- Christopher Gabbitas, singer with the King's Singers
- Michael S. K. Grant, IT professional and resident of the BCS
- John Griffiths, Warden of Wadham College, Oxford
- John Gummer, former Conservative cabinet minister
- Peter Gummer, Baron Chadlington, Conservative peer
- Richard Keen, lawyer and Conservative Party politician
- David Clive King, author
- Dinsdale Landen, actor[14]
- Harold Stephen Langhorne, Brigadier-General in the Royal Army Ordnance Corps
- Geoffrey Lees, cricketer and educator
- G. R. S. Mead, author and member of the Theosophical Society
- Peter Rogers, film producer
- Simon Shackleton, musician from Lunatic Calm
- John Storrs, Dean of Rochester
- Pete Tong, BBC Radio 1 disc jockey
- Sir Cecil Wakeley, 1st Baronet, surgeon
- Matthew Walker, professional cricketer,[15] Kent Cricket coach (2017–present)
- Martin Warner, Bishop of Chichester
- Michael Wilkes, Adjutant-General to the Forces
- Douglas Wilson, Bishop of Trinidad
- Charles Andrews , organist
References
- Footnotes
- Shishi Middle School in China claims a foundation c. 142 BC but this is disputed owing to a gap in its functioning. The King's School, Canterbury was founded in 597 AD.
- Note that Jeremy Walker took over as principal from Ian Walker in 2012, the same surname has caused some confusion.
- Citations
- "King's School Rochester: History". 28 September 2006. Archived from the original on 30 January 2011. Retrieved 10 January 2011.
- "About Us | King's Rochester". www.kings-rochester.co.uk. Retrieved 27 April 2018.
- "Staff and Governors | King's Rochester". www.kings-rochester.co.uk. Retrieved 26 July 2019.
- Page, Anne. "Rochester, King's School". Of Choristers – ancient and modern. Archived from the original on 5 September 2012. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
- "City Of Rochester Society - A Brief History of the City". city-of-rochester.org.uk.
- "King's Rochester and Medway Council Sports Centre Partnership for school and community use". www.schoolstogether.org. Retrieved 26 July 2019.
- At the Heart of Historic Rochester - A Brief Guide to Buildings and Places. The Old Roffensian Society LTD. 2016. pp. 4–13.
- "Pre-Preparatory School". Retrieved 8 November 2017.
- "Encapsulated in Music Inside our New Pods". 9 January 2017. Retrieved 8 November 2017.
- "New Principal for King's School, Rochester". www.kings-rochester.co.uk. Retrieved 3 January 2019.
- "NEW HEADMASTER APPOINTMENT FOR PREPARATORY SCHOOL". www.kings-rochester.co.uk. Retrieved 26 July 2019.
- "King's prep school head's farewell after 20 years". Kent Online. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
- "Farewell to a much loved Headmistress". 8 July 2016. Retrieved 8 November 2017.
- Snoo Wilson (4 August 2013). "Dinsdale Landen". The Telegraph. London. Retrieved 8 November 2017.
- "Matt Walker player profile". Cricinfo. Retrieved 23 November 2007.