St Mary Redcliffe and Temple School | |
---|---|
Address | |
Somerset Square , BS1 6RT England | |
Coordinates | 51°26′47″N2°35′17″W / 51.4464°N 2.5880°W |
Information | |
Type | Voluntary aided |
Motto | A Christian Community Committed To Excellence |
Religious affiliation(s) | Church of England |
Established | 1571 |
Founder | Queen Elizabeth I |
Local authority | Bristol City Council |
Department for Education URN | 109327 Tables |
Ofsted | Reports |
Chair | Queen Elizabeth II |
Head teacher | Del Planter [1] |
Gender | Mixed |
Age | 11to 18 |
Enrolment | 1,669 |
Capacity | 1,530 |
Houses | Johnson, Franklin, Equiano, Liddell, Müller |
Colour(s) | |
Website | www |
St Mary Redcliffe and Temple School (informally referred to as 'St Mary Redcliffe', 'Redcliffe' or 'SMRT') is a Church of England voluntary aided school situated in the district of Redcliffe, Bristol, England. The school was formed by a merger of Redcliffe Boys School and Temple Colston school; the former was founded in 1571. It provides education for approximately 1,600 students aged 11 to 18. The school's church is St Mary Redcliffe. It is one of the many Church of England Schools in the Diocese of Bristol. The headteacher is Del Planter and the Director of Sixth Form is Richard Wheeler. [1]
St Mary Redcliffe school was founded as Queen Elizabeth's Free Grammar and Writing School by letters patent on 30 June 1571 when it was granted a Royal charter by Elizabeth I. The charter granted the parishioners of St Mary Redcliffe Church the Chapel of the Holy Ghost for the establishment of the school; the building had previously belonged to the Hospital of St John the Baptist, a religious foundation in Redcliffe, but had been confiscated by the Crown during the dissolution of the monasteries. [2] The building was located in the Churchyard of St Mary Redcliffe, near the south porch, and was sized 56 feet by 26 feet. The charter made the provision for one master and one under-master, supervised by twelve governors and for the 'education, teaching and instruction of boys and youth in grammar and learning'. [3] [4] It received an endowment from John Whitson in 1627. [5] In the 1760s the school building was torn down as it was felt it spoilt the view of the church, and with the acceptance of the Bishop of Bristol, Thomas Newton, the school moved into the Lady Chapel in the east end of the church. [6] [7] The school was recorded in 1839 as possessing a statue of its founder Elizabeth I. [8]
The 1828 Charity Commission report inspected the school and found that there had been no free scholars on the schools foundation, and not more than one private scholar, since the appointment of the then current master in 1813; and conclude that the school had been of little benefit to the parish for over thirty years. They recommended that the school should be revived. [9] The 1864 Schools Inquiry Commission, often known as the Taunton Report, inspected the school and reported that the Grammar School had ceased to have any visible existence, and the schools endowments from the Church and John Whitson were accumulating as there was no school or master for them to be given to. The report recommended that the funds allotted to the school instead be given to Bristol Grammar School. [7]
In the latter half of the 19th century The Redcliffe Endowed Boys School occupied a site on the east side of Redcliff Hill in a mixture of individual buildings of varying age.
Colston's Free School in Temple Street was founded by Arthur Bedford, the vicar of Temple Church in 1709. In 1711 Edward Colston endowed it with an annual fund of £80 for the education and clothing of forty boys of the parish and erected a schoolhouse. In an 1841 report of the Charity Commission the teaching provided was said to be in reading, writing, ciphering and the Church catechism. [10] [11] The school later opened to girls as well. [12]
Redcliffe Boys School merged with Temple Colston School in 1969, creating the co-educational St Mary Redcliffe and Temple school as a comprehensive voluntary aided school, and both moved to a new building at the current Somerset Square site.
In 2008, the school was awarded funding for a substantial rebuild of its main site, under the government's Building schools for the future programme. [13] The construction company Skanska began work on 1 May 2009 and the new school was formally opened to students on 5 November 2010. [14] [15] Over the course of the 18 months much of the existing site was demolished, with new facilities being built to house science, mathematics, English, design technology, music, art photography and physical education. [15]
The school's two mottos are "Steadfast in Faith" (historic) and "A Christian Community Committed To Excellence" (modern). Both reflect the partnership with St Mary Redcliffe Church, and also the official faith of the school. The earlier Redcliffe boys School used the motto "Prayer, Practice, Perseverance and Punctuality", known as the 4 P's.
This article's list of alumni may not follow Wikipedia's verifiability policy.(September 2023) |
SMRT has over 1,600 students, including approximately 580 in the Sixth Form (years 12–13). [16]
GCSE and 'A' level examination results are generally above the national average. [17] As well as achieving 'Specialist Humanities College' status, [18] SMRT became a Beacon School in 2000, [19] and has also been part of the 'Excellence in Cities' scheme, incorporating 'Gifted & Talented' programmes. [20]
The table below shows the percentage of students achieving the government's target of 5 A*-C including English and Mathematics. [21]
2009 | 2010 | 2011 | 2012 |
---|---|---|---|
76% | 70% | 77% | 68% |
Until 2005 SMRT's sixth form shared the main premises with the rest of the school. The Redcliffe Sixth Form Centre first opened in 2004, and is based in separate facilities on Redcliff Hill. However, some sixth-form lessons still take place in the main school, as this is where the main department rooms, such as the science labs, design technology rooms and music computer rooms and recording studio are.
St Mary Redcliffe and Temple School has five houses. On entry to SMRT in year 7, students join Müller House (white), which is composed solely of Year 7 students. From year 8 to year 11, they are placed in one of the main four houses: Johnson (red), Franklin (blue), Liddell (yellow) and Equiano (green). These house names have been in use since September 2019.
The previous house names referred to William Canynges, local politician and benefactor of St Mary Redcliffe Church; Edward Colston, merchant, slave trader and founder of Temple Colston School; and J.T. Francombe, a former headmaster of the school and Lord Mayor of Bristol. [22]
In the January 2019 newsletter [23] the school announced the new house names as follows:
The changes were implemented in September 2019.
Academic subjects are taught either in the main school building or the Ikoba (formally Temple Colston [24] ) Building (opened 1987). SMRT's on-site sports facilities include an indoor swimming pool, a new sports hall, a gym, an outdoor astroturf 'arena', now containing floodlights, which can be used by years 8–11 at break and lunch, and a new basketball and tennis court outside, which can be used by year 7s at break and lunch. Double P.E. lessons used to be held at The Old Redcliffians fields in Brislington, where they were used for football, rugby, hockey and athletics. The school now uses the South Bristol Sports Centre, [25] in addition to holding some double lessons at school, in one of the sports facilities. The school's music facilities include a computer room dedicated to music, classrooms with 'pull out' keyboards and sound proof practice rooms with a piano/keyboard in each. The music department also has a recording studio, although mainly used by years 11–13, and a recital room, which is a big room with a grand piano, drum kit(s), other percussion, and is used as a rehearsal space by students and ensembles and for small concerts.
St Mary Redcliffe and Temple School is the only Church of England secondary school in the Diocese of Bristol. [26] It is a comprehensive state school and therefore does not select on academic merit. It is unusual, however, in that entry is not restricted by catchment area; the school serves both the city and the outlying communities of Greater Bristol, for which there are no alternative Church of England schools. It selects students on a range of criteria including church attendance, distance the student lives from school and if they have siblings who already attend the school. However, the school's administration also includes a small number of places for which no church link is required, which are intended for either those who are members of non-Christian religions, or who live within 500 metres of the school. [27]
Within the student body, 10% of students have a language other than English as their first language, and 8% are eligible for free school meals. [28]
The Church of St Mary the Virgin, widely known as St Mary Redcliffe, is the main Church of England parish church for the Redcliffe district of the city of Bristol, England. The first reference to a church on the site appears in 1158, with the present building dating from 1185 to 1872. The church is considered one of the country's finest and largest parish churches as well as an outstanding example of English Gothic architecture. The church is so large it is sometimes mistaken for Bristol Cathedral by tourists. The building has Grade I listed status, the highest possible category, by Historic England.
Thomas Chatterton was an English poet whose precocious talents ended in suicide at age 17. He was an influence on Romantic artists of the period such as Shelley, Keats, Wordsworth and Coleridge.
William II Canynges (c. 1399–1474) was an English merchant and shipper from Bristol, one of the wealthiest private citizens of his day and an occasional royal financier. He served as Mayor of Bristol five times and as MP for Bristol thrice. He was a generous patron of the arts in Bristol, particularly concerning the church of St Mary Redcliffe in Bristol, "The crown of Bristol architecture". Following the death of his wife Joan in 1467, he renounced civic and commercial life and was ordained a priest in 1468, in which capacity he remained until his death six years later. His tomb effigy in St Mary's later inspired the boy poet Thomas Chatterton to write the romantic poem "The Storie of William Canynge".
Bristol Cathedral, formally the Cathedral Church of the Holy and Undivided Trinity, is a Church of England cathedral in the city of Bristol, England. It is the seat of the Bishop of Bristol. The cathedral was originally an abbey dedicated to St Augustine, founded in 1140 and consecrated in 1148. It became the cathedral of the new diocese of Bristol in 1542, after the dissolution of the monasteries. It is a Grade I listed building.
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Edward Colston was an English merchant, slave trader, philanthropist, and Tory Member of Parliament.
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Redcliffe, also known as Redcliff, is a district of the English port city of Bristol, lying south-east of the city centre. It is bounded by the loop of the Floating Harbour to the west, north and east, together with the New Cut of the River Avon to the south. Most of Redcliffe lies within the city ward of Lawrence Hill, although the westernmost section, including the cliffs and hill from which the area takes its name, is in Cabot ward. Bristol Temple Meads station is located in Redcliffe.
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Bristol is the largest city in South West England, and as such is a centre for culture, research and higher education in the region. The city is home to a prestigious "red brick university" and a high-ranking "new university". The city is also noted for its investment in the sciences and engineering, particularly its ties to the aerospace industry.
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Whitefriars was a Carmelite friary on the lower slopes of St Michael's Hill, Bristol, England. It was established in 1267; in subsequent centuries a friary church was built and extensive gardens developed. The establishment was dissolved in 1538.
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The following is a timeline of the history of the city of Bristol, England.
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