Bacup and Rawtenstall Grammar School

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Bacup and Rawtenstall Grammar School
Bacup and Rawtenstall Grammar School 02.jpg
Address
Bacup and Rawtenstall Grammar School
Glen Road

, ,
BB4 7BJ

England
Coordinates 53°41′36″N2°14′54″W / 53.6934°N 2.2482°W / 53.6934; -2.2482
Information
Type Grammar school;
Academy
MottoFide et Labore (through faith and labour)
Established1703;321 years ago (1703) (as Newchurch Grammar School)
1913 (modern) [1]
Local authority Lancashire County Council
Trust Star Academies
Department for Education URN 150261 Tables
Ofsted Reports
ChairDonna Rawding [2]
PrincipalJames L Johnstone [1]
Gender Coeducational
Age11to 18
Enrolment1,291 as of August 2023
Website http://www.brgs.org.uk/

Bacup and Rawtenstall Grammar School (BRGS) is a selective co-educational academy grammar school in Waterfoot, Rossendale, Lancashire, England. The school is named after the two main towns either side of Waterfoot, Bacup and Rawtenstall.

Contents

History

The school was founded in the 18th century as Newchurch Grammar School, opening in 1703 [1] on land bequeathed by John Kershaw in 1701. In the 19th century, records conflated Newchurch Grammar School with the National School of St Nicholas Church, also in Newchurch, suggesting that Kershaw (who died in 1701) bequeathed the land in memory of his wife, Anne, who died in 1709, and that it subsequently opened two years later in 1711. Records from the middle of this century, when Newchurch Grammar School was still in operation, clarified the 1703 date. The tombstone of the couple features two inscriptions about the endowment for the school. [3] [4]

The Kershaws' endowment formed a Trust for the education of local children, including building schools. The first school, built in 1701, was sited on Kershaw's Boothfold estate and was operational until 1787, when it was converted into cottages due to an expanded school for the Trust being built at a place called Bridleway nearby. This school itself was rebuilt on site twice, first in 1830 and again several decades later. The latter rebuild saw the 1830 structure demolished in 1889, but the new buildings would not open until 1890, with a temporary building used in the interim. The ambitious 1890 school, at a cost of £2200, was spearheaded by the headmaster, Rev. R. W. Hay, and considered a vast improvement both functionally (to deal with the hillside) and aesthetically (including a bell tower and collegiate architecture). [3] Two of Hay's sons were Military Cross-awarded flying aces: Hugh Hay (born at the school) and Roger Hay. [5] [6] [7]

In 1890, the management of the school formed a new plan to make it more popular and widen its intake, electing a twelve-member governing body comprising two members each selected by the Bacup and Rawtenstall town councils; one selected by the Newchurch School Board; one selected by Victoria University, to which the school was affiliated; and six local gentlemen. In July 1892, Mr. T. E. Jackson became headmaster. [3]

The school moved location again in the 20th century, to its current site in Waterfoot. The foundation stones for the current site were laid by the mayors of Bacup and Rawtenstall on 1 July 1911 and the buildings opened in 1913; the new name, Bacup and Rawtenstall Grammar School (BRGS), was thusly adopted. The school sits high in the Pennines, with the Edwardian buildings giving a view of the terraces below. It was turbulent in the later 20th century; with no new income following the Second World War, parents' associations at the school petitioned the Secretary of State throughout the following decades to give it control of its finances separate to the local authority, twice being awarded such. In 1989, on the second such occasion, the school accepted the reprieve, and used money to plan buildings for the Sixth Form. In 1988, Martyn Morris had been appointed headmaster; remaining in post into the 21st century, he was only the fifth headmaster over a span of three centuries at the school. [8] In the 1997 Birthday Honours, Martyn Morris, who had been a government adviser on education under four Secretaries of State during his time at BRGS, was made an OBE for services to education. [9]

Martyn Morris retired in December 2004, with Marc Morris (no relation) joining as headmaster in April 2005. Marc Morris then left to become headmaster of Sha Tin College in Hong Kong in July 2011 and the post was taken by Alan Porteous in 2012. Longstanding teacher Trevor Elkington served as interim headmaster.

In March 2023, BRGS made a choice to enforce all students to do RE GCSE and to cut double languages and drama. This was after the Year 10s chose them. This led to a protest and revolution under the organisation name BRGS FREEDOM creating a website [10] and a petition as well as sending numerous letters and emails into school to get their point across. They were successful in getting the Year 10 choices reverted however they have been pulled for the forthcoming students meaning they have to complete 11 GCSEs in total.

Previously a foundation school administered by Lancashire County Council, [11] in September 2012 Bacup and Rawtenstall Grammar School converted to academy status. [12] The school then became part of the Star Academies trust in September 2023. [13] [14]

Admissions

View of the school in 2006 Bacup and Rawtenstall Grammar School.jpg
View of the school in 2006

One of only four grammar schools in Lancashire following the mass closure under Margaret Thatcher, the school continues its initial aim to educate local children. Pupils applying from Rossendale area primary schools are given preference. The school, a highly popular state school, administers its own entrance examination, rather than the eleven-plus. Highly competitive, it still attracts students who commute from cities and towns around the north of England, including as far as Liverpool and Bradford in the 1990s. [8]

The school is attended by approximately 1,300 students, split between the lower school (Years 7 to 11), which has 180 pupils per year (in six form groups of thirty pupils each), and the sixth form (Years 12 and 13) with approximately 200 students per year in several tutor groups.

Entry to the sixth form does not require an examination, but is conditional on the student having gained at least two grade 5 and two grade 6 GCSEs, and at least grade 4 in Maths and English Language. [15] Most of the lower school pupils stay on to become sixth form students, with more students taken from other secondary schools. [8]

Academic performance

In keeping with its grammar school status, BRGS has consistently produced strong academic results throughout its modern history, with GCSE and A-Level pass rates above 80% for the duration; in the 1990s, the success was credited to the majority of staff serving for decades having created stability in standards of teaching. [8]

The school ranks highly in British School league tables. In September 2013 it was rated as a 5 star school by Trinity Mirror. [16] The majority of students continue on to further education, and the school has a long history of sending students to the Russell Group and Oxbridge Universities. [8] [17]

In 2015, BRGS was academically ranked in the top 10 in the country for English Baccalaureate performance. [18]

School life

Extracurricular activities

Sport

BRGS has a long sporting history. [19] Pupils have flourished in a variety of sports, with many going on to play Lancashire League cricket at one point. The school produced six England international hockey players, including an England Schools captain, in the 1970s and 80s, [8] [20] and four England international handball players in the 2000s. [21] Still, BRGS is considered "traditionally a soccer school"; [8] it has seen routine success in the sport [22] and sent its boys' teams to train with Valencia CF in the 2010s. [23] [24] Into the 2020s one of its coaches, Mr. Baird, helps to organise the Rossendale Schools' football league. [22]

The school's 1920-21 hockey first team BRGS Hockey 1st team 1920-21 (cropped).jpg
The school's 1920-21 hockey first team

Pupils have taken part in athletics since the school's 1913 inception. It has had girls' hockey and netball teams, and mixed swimming teams, since at least the 1920s. Since at least the 1930s it has had boys' football and cricket, girls' tennis, and mixed gymnastics teams. Cycling, rugby, rounders, chess, cross-country and basketball were introduced in the 1940s and 50s, as were second teams and age-group teams for many of the established sports, with badminton coming in the 1960s. [19] During teaching disputes, boys' sport suffered, but recovered in the 1990s. [8] In the 1990s, sports began to be organised by year group, with orienteering added, as well as non-competitive clubs for table tennis and climbing. [19]

Sport, both against other schools and inter-form, had been covered in the school newspaper (The Squirrel) since at least 1930, but in the 1970s a separate school magazine dedicated to sport, "Penny Sports", was run. By the 1980s, BRGS sport coverage was again under the remit of The Squirrel. The 1980s also saw the introduction of boys' hockey. [19]

The Sports Hall, for extracurricular sports as well as PE, was opened by Prince Edward, Earl of Wessex in 2005. [25]

Duke of Edinburgh Award scheme

The school is a facilitator of The Duke of Edinburgh's Award. A merit board for gold award recipients hangs in the main hall and was unveiled during a school visit by Prince Edward (a son of the Duke of Edinburgh). [25]

School culture and Ofsted reports

In the 1990s, pupils at the school were said to be "unaffected, delightfully self-contained youngsters with accents stronger than Victoria Wood's". [8]

In 2016, BRGS was rated "outstanding" by education standards overseer Ofsted, the highest possible rating. It was rated outstanding in each sub-discipline, making it the best rating possible. [26] The sixth form also received the highest possible rating, with the report saying that the school's culture creates "well-rounded citizens". There were recommendations, however, to find ways to improve the secondary school pupils' verbal communication skills, and to ensure everyone could take part in extracurricular activities. [27]

In 2022, the school was rated overall "inadequate", the lowest Ofsted rating, and put under special measures with a demand for immediate safeguarding reform. The 2022 report said that while education standards remained high and pupils were successful in extracurricular activities, welfare was terrible. It said that at the school a culture of bullying, racism, misogyny, "harmful sexual behaviour", and homophobia prevailed, and that pupils, students and parents had given up on reporting issues due to staff inaction. One area of education was rated poorly: failings in social and sex education, including at the sixth form, which contributed to the harmful sexual behaviour becoming "an accepted feature of school life" at BRGS. Pupils also failed to recognise that peers different to themselves are their equals. The report concluded that despite good grades and high ambitions, pupils leaving the school and students leaving the sixth form "are ill-prepared to take up their roles as responsible citizens in a modern Britain". A local councillor said that "Young people will have been traumatised by what they have experienced during their time there. They may never get over it". [28] [29]

Notable former pupils and students

Arts and design

Sportspeople

Other

Former staff

Notable former teachers

Headmasters

Headmasters chronology
NameSchoolYears
Rev. Thomas Wright GreenallNewchurch1876–1879 [61] [62]
Matthias James StephensonNewchurch1879 [63]
Rev. Hubert Edwards ChapmanNewchurch1880 [64]
Rev. Reynell Wreford HayNewchurch ?–1892
Thomas E. JacksonNewchurch, BRGS1892–1921 [65]
Edmund H. HoldenBRGS1921–1948 [65]
William CopleyBRGS1949–1960 [65]
Philip ClarkBRGS1969–1987 [65]
Martyn R. Morris, OBEBRGS1988–2004 [65]
Marc MorrisBRGS2005–2011 [65]
Alan PorteousBRGS2012–2022

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