Shrewsbury School
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
Shrewsbury School is an independent school in Shrewsbury, Shropshire, England, for students aged 13 to 18. It was founded in 1552 by Edward VI. It is one of the famous "public schools" in the UK, meaning it is a private school with special rules and history.
Originally, Shrewsbury School was only for boys. It began accepting girls in its sixth form in 2008 and became fully co-educational in 2015. As of 2023, the school had around 842 students, with more boys than girls. Students who graduate from Shrewsbury are called Old Salopians.
The school is well-known because one of its students was Charles Darwin, the famous scientist who developed ideas about how plants and animals change over time. Today, the school is located on the south bank of the River Severn, a place where students can enjoy both learning and nature.
History
Circumstances of the foundation
Since Saxon times, churches in Shrewsbury provided education, along with Shrewsbury Abbey, founded in the 11th century. These were disrupted during the Reformation, which caused local concern. By 1542, townspeople asked King Henry VIII for a new school, hoping to use money from the closed Shrewsbury Abbey. Their request was not granted right away.
Foundation and early years
Shrewsbury School was officially founded in 1552 by a charter from King Edward VI. It began in a house bought from John Proude in 1551, along with three rented buildings, including Riggs Hall from 1450. Early teaching followed Continental Calvinism, attracting many Protestant students. Pupils stayed with local families.
1600s
In 1608, a disagreement happened over choosing a new teacher, causing a standoff between townspeople and school staff. A house was built in Grinshill in 1617 for use during bad sickness. Stone buildings with classrooms and a library were finished by 1630. During the Civil War, the school was used by King Charles I, and some books were damaged.
Restoration and 1700s
Records from 1664 to 1798 are missing, but this time included notable students like Richard Hill, Baron Digby, and poet Arthur Maynwaring. Visitor Celia Fiennes described the school in 1698, and Daniel Defoe visited in the early 1700s. A new wing was added during the Georgian period but was later torn down.
1800s
The school had only three headmasters in the 1800s. Samuel Butler led from 1798, followed by Benjamin Hall Kennedy in 1836, and Henry Whitehead Moss in 1866. The school moved to a new 150-acre site in 1882, designed by Sir Arthur Blomfield. The old buildings became a public library.
1900s
A big fire damaged the main building in 1905. Cyril Alington became headmaster in 1908 and added new buildings, including Alington Hall. During World War I, 321 former students served, and a memorial was put up in 1923. The current library was added in 1916. Mountaineer Andrew Irvine attended during World War I.
After World War II, John Wolfenden led the school until 1950. Michael Heseltine and Michael Palin attended in the mid-20th century. Donald Wright served as headmaster from 1963 to 1975, and Sir Eric Anderson from 1975 to 1980.
2000s
Girls were first admitted in 2008, and the school became fully coeducational in 2015. New buildings include a music school opened by King Charles III in 2001, a statue of Charles Darwin, and a new theatre in 2022. A boarding house named for Queen Elizabeth II opened in 2023.
Sports
The main sport changes with each school term. In the Michaelmas term (autumn), the main sport is football. In the Lent term, students play fives and rugby, and in the summer term, they play cricket. Rowing happens in all three terms. The sports team kits often feature a special cross from the school’s coat of arms, a tradition that has lasted for over 150 years.
Since 2015, when girls joined the school, new sports like hockey and netball have been added, and students also play cricket and tennis in the summer term.
The school has special fields and pitches for these sports, including nine grass football fields, two hockey fields with artificial surfaces, and a special football pitch finished in 2023. Most boys play football in the Michaelmas term, while girls play football in the Lent term.
Football
Football has a long history at Shrewsbury School. Students from the school were important in forming early football teams at Cambridge University. The school has old copies of early football rules and has produced many skilled players over the years.
The school has won many football competitions, including the Arthur Dunn Challenge Cup 11 times and was named the English Schools Football Association National Champions in 2024.
Rowing
The school’s rowing club is one of the oldest in the world, starting as a fun activity before becoming official in 1866. The club has taken part in important rowing races and has won many times at Henley Royal Regatta.
The school also hosts special rowing races between its different houses.
Running
The school has one of the oldest cross-country running clubs in the world, with records dating back to the 1800s. Students follow a trail marked with paper and race to the finish line. Every October, the whole school takes part in a special 3.5-mile run called “The Tucks.”
Cricket
Cricket has been played at Shrewsbury since the 1840s. The school’s first XI team competes for the Silk Trophy each summer. The school has also success in other cricket competitions.
Eton Fives
Eton Fives is a popular sport at the school, with 14 special courts for the game. At the end of the Lent Term, students compete in national championships.
Minor sports
Other sports played at the school include shooting, fencing, basketball, golf, equestrian activities, badminton, swimming, hockey, rugby, and squash.
Performing arts
Heritage
Early flowerings of English drama in the Tudor period
Before big changes happened, the school was a place for special shows.
By the time of old kings and queens, this tradition grew and several outdoor stages were built.
Under Thomas Ashton, acting became important. He made a rule that older students had to perform a funny play every school day before they could go home. The school often performed plays for special holidays and big stories from the Bible and history. In 1565, they performed Julian the Apostle and another play that many people loved. Queen Elizabeth I planned to visit Shrewsbury to watch one of these plays, but she arrived too late and had to go back to London. The Quarry park in town was a favorite spot for these performances.
The school also put on shows for important visitors. In 1581, when a high-ranking leader, Sir Henry Sidney, was leaving town by boat, students dressed up as forest spirits and recited poems for him. He was very moved.
Originating ballet and pantomime
John Weaver, who helped start English ballet and pantomime, was a teacher at the school in the 1600s. In 2023, the school held its first “John Weaver Festival of Dance,” with dance competitions and an exhibition showing his old papers and items from Soulton Hall.
Contemporary Offer
Orchestras, ensembles and choirs
The school has many music groups, including:
- The Symphony Orchestra
- The Wind Orchestra
- Big Band
- Concert Band
- Brass Ensemble
- String Ensemble
- The Chamber Choir
- The Chapel Choir
- The Community Choir (with local people who are not students)
- Jazz Band
- String quartets
- Junior and Senior string ensembles
- Clarinet and sax groups
- Tuba and horn quartets
Musicals
Every two years (and sometimes more often), Shrewsbury performs its own musical shows, which are taken to the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. Some of these shows have included:
- Rebecca the Drowned Bride
- What You Will
- Bubble
- Jekyll!
- Gatsby: A New Musical
- The Traitor's Wife
Performances
Famous musicians and performers also visit the school. Some of these guests have included:
- Jacques Loussier
- The Swingles
- Cristina Ortiz
- Tenebrae Choir
- Joe Stilgoe
- Jason Rebello
- Jenny Agutter
- Voces8
- Peter Donohoe
Culture
The school has special carvings on its buildings. These carvings show two figures who love learning. One figure is called Philomathes, and the other is Polymathes. These carvings date back to 1630 and have a message about studying.
The school has many houses where students live, each with its own colors and teams. There are competitions between the houses in sports like football. The school also has its own song, called “Carmen Salopiense,” written in 1916. In 1952, a special performance celebrated the school’s 400th anniversary.
Grants and prizes
Shrewsbury School gives out many prizes, some for a very long time. One important prize is The Sidney Gold Medal, first given in 1838. It used to be for the best student in classics who would go to Oxbridge. The medal stopped for a while but started again in 1899. Later, it was opened to all subjects, and many winners have been good at science.
Another prize is The Arand Haggar Prize, which began in 1890. It is for math, and the contest happens almost every year. There is also The Bentley Elocution Prize, started in 1867, where students recite a long poem. Famous winner Sir Michael Palin once won this prize.
Other prizes include the Richard Hillary Essay Prize, begun in 2013, and The Miles Clark Travel Award, started in 1994, for students who have traveled around the world.
Coat of arms and flag
The school's coat of arms and flag belong to King Edward VI. It shows three lions from England's coat of arms and a fleur-de-lys from France's coat of arms. The school uses this design for its flag too.
Royal visits
Many important members of the royal family have visited Shrewsbury School over the years.
Some notable visits include:
- The Duchess of Kent and Princess Victoria visited in 1832.
- Princess Louise stopped by for coffee in 1898.
- George V laid the foundation for a new library in 1914.
- The future Edward VIII, then Prince of Wales, visited in 1932.
- Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh celebrated the school's 400th anniversary in 1952.
- The Princess Royal opened a new club in 1974.
- Princess Margaret had lunch at the school in 1984.
- The Queen Mother visited in the 1990s.
- King Charles III, when he was Prince of Wales, opened a new music school in 2001.
Praepostors
The school’s prefects are called præpostors. This word comes from old Latin and means “placed before.” Older boys were chosen to help lead and guide the younger students.
Being a præpostor comes with special privileges, like wearing a tie with the school’s emblem and being allowed to ride a bike to classes. In 1821, Dr. Butler described a præpostor as one of the top eight students who help the teachers keep things running smoothly and make sure everyone behaves well.
Main article: prefects
Main articles: prior, Latin, Middle Ages
Awards
Students at Shrewsbury School get special ties and scarves for doing well in activities outside of regular lessons. These awards show their success in different hobbies and sports.
Scholarships, exhibitions and bursary support
Shrewsbury School helps students who need money by offering scholarships and bursaries. These can lower school fees by up to 30%, and some come with extra benefits like free music lessons.
The school offers scholarships for good grades, art, music, and many talents. There are also special awards for drama, sports, and design and technology, plus help for older students in their last years.
Ancient library
Shrewsbury School has a very old library with many important and historic books and items.
The library has special items like Charles Darwin's school atlas, books, and letters. It also has Newton’s Principia, bought when it was first published in 1687. There are around forty old manuscripts, including a beautiful one from Haughmond Abbey near Shrewsbury and the Lichfield Processional, which has unique English plays and music. The library also holds a death mask of Oliver Cromwell, a first edition of the King James Bible, a 1534 Tyndale Bible, and a French Geneva Bible.
Art collection
The Moser Gallery, in the library buildings, shows some of the school's art collection. It has paintings, including works by famous artists like J. M. W Turner and important watercolours from the nineteenth century. The gallery also shows art made by a former student, Kyffin Williams.
Co-curricular and extension
Shrewsbury School invites interesting people to talk to students. Some of these speakers are well-known writers, leaders, and thinkers.
Students can join many different groups, called societies. These groups help students learn about topics they like. In societies, students can talk about ideas, listen to talks, and sometimes meet special guests. Some societies are about art, science, languages, sports, and more. There is even a group where older students help younger children with reading. Students can also join a group to learn about leadership and working together.
Headmasters
Shrewsbury School has had many leaders over the years. Some recent headmasters are Leo Winkley, who has been in charge since 2018, and Mark Turner, who led from 2010 to 2018. Other past headmasters include Sir Eric Anderson, John Wolfenden, Baron Wolfenden, and Dr Samuel Butler, who later became the Bishop of Lichfield. The school’s leadership has changed many times since it began.
Notable masters
Shrewsbury School has had many famous teachers. Some later led other schools. Others became well-known in writing or religious work. These teachers helped form the school's traditions.
Affiliate schools
Shrewsbury School has several schools connected to it around the world.
These include schools in Bangkok near the Chao Phraya River, Hong Kong, and Phnom Penh, as well as Packwood Haugh School in Shropshire, which joined Shrewsbury in 2019.
Fees and admission
Students join Shrewsbury School at age 13 after taking a special test. For some students, English is not their first language. In the 2023/24 school year, the school cost up to £15,194 each term for students from the UK who stay at the school, and up to £16,004 each term for students from other countries. There are three terms in each school year.
Notable alumni
See also: List of Old Salopians
Former pupils are called Old Salopians, from the old name for Shropshire.
Contemporary Old Salopians
1930s
- Sir William Adams (born 1932), ambassador to Tunisia and Egypt
- Christopher Booker (1937–2019), journalist, founder of Private Eye
- Peter Brown (born 1935), historian and Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford
- Paul Foot (1937–2004), journalist
- Michael Heseltine, Baron Heseltine (born 1933), politician
- Brian Hutton, Baron Hutton (born 1931), Law Lord
- Christopher Gill (born 1936), politician
- Richard Ingrams (born 1937), journalist, founder of Private Eye
- Sir Colin Hugh Verel McColl (born 1932), head of the Secret Intelligence Service
- Julian Orchard (1930–1979), actor
- Air Marshal Sir Michael Simmons (born 1937), Royal Air Force Officer
- John Peel (1939–2004), broadcaster
1940s
- Richard Best, Baron Best (born 1945), politician
- Piers Brendon (born 1940), writer
- Major General Sir Robert John Swan Corbett (born 1940)
- Athel Cornish-Bowden (born 1943), biochemist
- Sir Peter Davis (born 1941), businessman and chairman of Sainsbury's
- Martin Ferguson Smith (born 1941), scholar and writer
- Edward Foljambe, 5th Earl of Liverpool (born 1944), politician
- Robin Hodgson, Baron Hodgson of Astley Abbotts (born 1942), politician
- Stephen Jessel (born 1942), BBC correspondent
- David Lamb, 3rd Baron Rochester (born 1944), nobleman
- David Lovell Burbidge (born 1943)
- Christopher MacLehose (born 1940), publisher
- Terry Milewski (born 1949), journalist
- Sir Mark Moody-Stuart (born 1940), businessman
- Nick Owen (born 1947), TV presenter
- Sir Michael Palin (born 1943), actor and TV presenter
- Richard Passingham (born 1943), neurologist
- Sir Nicholas Penny (born 1949), art historian
- Martin Rees, Baron Rees of Ludlow (born 1942), Astronomer Royal
- Clyde Sanger (born 1928), journalist and author
- Sir John Stuttard (born 1945)
- Sir Francis John Badcock Sykes, 10th Baronet (born 1942), businessman
- Thomas Townley Macan (born 1946)
- Sir Roderic Victor Llewellyn, 5th Baronet (born 1947), author
- Lieutenant General Sir Christopher Wallace (1943–2016)
- Selby Whittingham (born 1941), art expert
- Sir James William Vernon, 5th Baronet (born 1949), landowner and accountant
- Sir Stephen Wright (born 1946), diplomat
1950s
- Christopher Beazley (born 1952), Member of the European Parliament
- Bruce Clark (born 1958), author
- Stephen Glover (born 1952), journalist and columnist
- Timothy Edward Lamb (born 1959), cricketer
- Sir John Auld Mactaggart, 4th Baronet (born 1951), entrepreneur and philanthropist
- Jonathan Peter Marland, Baron Marland (born 1956), Treasurer of the Conservative Party
- Sir Andrew McFarlane (born 1954), Lord Justice of Appeal
- Sir Philip Montgomery Campbell (born 1951), astrophysicist
- Michael Proctor (born 1950), academic
- Nicholas Rankin (born 1950), writer and broadcaster
- Johnathan Ryle (born 1952), writer and professor
- Desmond Shawe-Taylor (born 1955), art historian
- Jonathon Shawe-Taylor (born 1953), Director of the Centre for Computational Statistics
1960s
- Simon Baynes (born 1960), politician
- Andrew Berry (born 1963), biologist
- Tim Booth (born 1960), musician
- Charles A. Foster (born 1962), writer and veterinarian
- Nick Hancock (born 1962), actor and TV presenter
- John Humphrey Arnott Pakington, 7th Baron Hampton (born 1964), landowner and photographer
- Vice Admiral Sir Clive Johnstone (born 1961), Royal Navy officer
- Jonathan Legard (born 1961), journalist and broadcaster
- Jonathan Lord (born 1962), politician
- Twm Morys (born 1961), poet and musician
- Mark Oakley (born 1968), Dean of Southwark Cathedral
- Angus Pollock (born 1962), cricketer
- Simon Shackleton (born 1968), DJ, musician
- James St Clair Wade (born 1962), architect
- Martin Wainwright (born 1960), journalist and author
1970s
- Charles Robertson-Adams (born 1976), athlete
- Christopher Hope (born 1972), journalist
- Alastair Humphreys (born 1976), adventurer and author
1980s
- Prince Omar Ali Bolkiah (born 1986), Bruneian royal
- Alexander Orlando Bridgeman, Viscount Newport (born 1980), businessman and landowner
- Freddie Fisher (born 1985), actor
- Richard Goulding (born 1980), actor
- Anthony Mangnall (born 1989), MP
- Ian Massey (born 1985), cricketer
- Joshua Sasse (born 1987), actor
- Will Tudor (born 1987), actor
1990s
- Ed Barnard (born 1995), cricketer
- Joe Leach (born 1990), cricketer
- David Lloyd (born 1992), cricketer
- Claas Mertens (born 1992), German rower
- Ed Pollock (born 1995), cricketer
- Ruaidhri Smith (born 1994), cricketer
- James Taylor (born 1990), cricketer
2000s
- Issy Wong (born 2002), cricketer
Victoria Cross holders
Harold Ackroyd and Thomas Tannatt Pryce, two former members of the school awarded the Victoria Cross
Two Old Salopians received the Victoria Cross, both in the First World War.
Old Salopian activities
The "Old Salopian Club", now known as the Salopian Club, was founded in 1886. A number of reunions, clubs and activities are arranged by the club. The post nominals OS are used to denote Old Salopians.
Sports
Former members of the school have various sporting clubs:
- Rowing is arranged by the "Sabrina Club"
- Cricket is arranged by the "Saracens"
- Old Salopian golf, yachting, fives cross country, tennis, football, squash and basketball are also provided for.
Careers, arts and activities
Arrangements for cultural engagement of former members if the school, for instance concerts and plays and art exhibitions are also put on, and there is a programme around careers.
Social action
Shrewsbury School has taken part in many community activities. In 1903, it started a youth and community center in Everton, Liverpool, called "Shrewsbury House" or "the Shrewsy." This center is linked to St Peter's Church Everton and helps local people.
The school also supports a charity called Medic Malawi. This charity runs a hospital, two orphanages, and an eye clinic, and the school community helps it regularly. During the coronavirus pandemic in 2020, the school donated protective equipment to the NHS. The school also offered rooms for NHS staff to use.
Steam locomotive
One of the Southern Railway steam trains, named "Shrewsbury," was built in 1934. It ran on railways until 1962. A name plate from this train is kept at the school's Admissions Offices.
Farm house
The school has a farmhouse in Talargerwyn in Snowdonia. It is used for outdoor learning and fun trips.
Controversy
In September 2005, Shrewsbury School was one of fifty schools that set the same school fees together. This broke the rules. The schools had to stop this, pay a fine of £10,000 each, and put three million pounds into a special fund to help students who attended during that time.
Images
Related articles
This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Shrewsbury School, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.
Images from Wikimedia Commons. Tap any image to view credits and license.
Safekipedia