Central Technology and Sports College

Last updated

The Central Technology and Sports College
Address
Central Technology and Sports College

Manthorpe Estate, Grantham
,
Lincolnshire
,
NG31 8ED

England
Coordinates 52°55′24″N0°38′35″W / 52.92335°N 0.64297°W / 52.92335; -0.64297 Coordinates: 52°55′24″N0°38′35″W / 52.92335°N 0.64297°W / 52.92335; -0.64297
Information
Type Foundation school
Established1920
Closed2010
Local authorityLincolnshire
Specialists Technology, sports
Department for Education URN 120722 Tables
Ofsted Reports
GenderBoys (1920-1978)
Mixed (1978-2010)
Age11to 16
Enrolment695
FateBecame part of the Priory Ruskin Academy

Central Technology & Sports College was a secondary school in the north of Grantham in Lincolnshire, England. It became part of The Priory Ruskin Academy in 2010.

Contents

History

The Central School has its origins in the Central and Day Continuation School built behind the Town Hall in 1920. In the late 1920s, the school burnt down from a fire that started in the boiler room.

There later followed two single sex secondary modern schools, the Boys' Central School on Sandon Road and the Girls' Central School on Castlegate, in the town centre. The Boys' Central School was built in 1928. For two years previously the school was at Middlemore House in Castlegate.

The Girls' Central School became Walton Girls High School in 1966 on Kitty Briggs Lane, next to the newly built bypass, off the A607. Walton Girls is now an 11-18 school, with boys in the sixth form. The former site of the Boys' Central School now houses the Little Gonerby Church of England Infant School, [1] which moved to the site in January 1986, from its site in Albion Street it had been at since 1863. The site on Sandon Road closed on 18 March 1978.

When a boys' school, it was not a secondary modern school because admittance to the school was only through achieving a reasonable score in the eleven-plus exam. This was also true for the Girls' Central School, which was not a secondary modern school. By this selective procedure, it was like a technical school, although not described in name as a technical school.

From April 1976 until April 1978, a new school was built on the Manthorpe estate next to Grantham and District Hospital, on land formerly owned by the foundation governors of the boys' grammar school. The site opened in April 1978, admitting boys only. The new building cost £850,000 (£5.19 million current value). When the new site opened again in September 1978, it admitted girls (in the first year) as a coeducational school. By 1982 was the school fully co-educational.

When the site moved to Manthorpe, it was then described as Grantham's only comprehensive school.

In the 1990s it had around 550 pupils.

It was situated directly north of the Grantham and District Hospital off Sandcliffe Road, between the A607 and the East Coast Main Line, which borders on to the western edge of the school's playing fields. The River Witham is around 330 yards (300 m) to the east.

In 2010 the school merged with the Grantham Church High School to form The Priory Ruskin Academy.

Fire in 1980

Fifth-year Simon Gilchrist Pickering [2] (born 11 April 1965) burned down the main teaching block, causing £450,000 damage. At Lincoln Crown Court he received three months at a youth detention centre in April 1981, and the school was fully operational by October 1981. The fire destroyed thirteen classrooms. [3] The individual had had a minor disagreement with a teacher, and he had wanted to cause a small amount of damage in teenage protest, but the fire took hold instead.

The fire took place at 8.20pm on Wednesday 29 October 1980 during the half term. Fire crews arrived from Brant Broughton and Corby Glen. There were 650 at the school. [4]

Notable former pupils

Boys' Central School

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References

  1. Little Gonerby
  2. Companies House
  3. Grantham Journal Friday 1 May 1981, page 1
  4. Grantham Journal Friday 31 October 1981, page 1
  5. Grantham Journal Friday 7 June 1968, page 3
  6. Grantham Journal Friday 8 October 1982, page 24
  7. Grantham Journal Friday 1 September 1989, page 8