Rotherham Grammar School

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Rotherham Grammar School
Rotherham Grammar School.jpg
Address
Moorgate Road

,
England
Information
Type Grammar school, becoming County school
Motto Latin: Ne Ingrati Videamur
(Lest We Should Seem Ungrateful)
Established1483 (1483)
Closed1967 (1967)
Local authority Rotherham
HeadmasterMr Arthur Prust (at closure)
GenderBoys
Age11to 18

Rotherham Grammar School was a boys' grammar school in Rotherham, South Yorkshire, England.

Contents

History

In 1482 Thomas Rotherham founded the College of Jesus in Rotherham, which was both a school and a religious institution. In March 1482 he began to build a brick building to house his college, on the site of his birthplace in Brookgate, and provided an endowment to fund a Provost and three Fellows. The college was expropriated about 1550 by King Edward VI, but was later re-founded as Rotherham Grammar School, taking the foundation by Rotherham as its origin. The school occupied a number of buildings in Rotherham before moving into a former Congregational ministers' training college on Moorgate Road in 1890. [1]

In 1967, the local education authority introduced comprehensive education in Rotherham, and the school was closed. Its buildings became a coeducational sixth form college, known as Thomas Rotherham College, which retains the old grammar school's coat of arms in its logo. [1]

Provosts' schoolmasters

source: [2]

Masters and Headmasters

source: [2]

Notable pupils

John D Brooks, Food Microbiologist Professor John D Brooks.jpg
John D Brooks, Food Microbiologist

See also

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References

  1. 1 2 "Rotherham Grammar School". Rotherham Unofficial. 2015. Archived from the original on 14 March 2016 via Internet Archive.
  2. 1 2 "History" (PDF). rgsoba.com. Archived from the original on 24 September 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  3. Proctor, History of the Book of Common Prayer, ed 1872, pp 262-7.