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Croydon High School


FieldValue
nameCroydon High School
imageCroydon High School and playing fields (geograph 2694836).jpg
captionCroydon High School and playing fields
coordinates
mottoMay Her Character and Talents Inspire Others
established1874
typePrivate day school
head_labelHeadmistress
headMs A Davies
addressOld Farleigh Road
citySouth Croydon
countyGreater London
countryEngland
postcodeCR2 8YB
local_authorityCroydon
urn101845
enrolment700~
genderGirls
lower_age3
upper_age18
coloursBlue
websitehttp://www.croydonhigh.gdst.net/

Croydon High School is a private day school for girls located near Croydon, London, England. It is one of the original schools founded by the Girls' Day School Trust.

History

The school was founded in 1874 in Wellesley Road just north of the centre of Croydon, and the first Headmistress was Dorinda Neligan. The school was evacuated to Bradden, Northamptonshire during World War II. The present building in Old Farleigh Road, Selsdon, South Croydon, Surrey was opened in 1966. It has been an independent girls school aiming to educate young girls since its foundation in 1874.

Weekend programmes

The Japanese Saturday School of London, a weekend Japanese programme, uses the Girls' School as its Croydon Campus (クロイドン校舎 Kuroidon Kōsha).

Notable former pupils

  • Mary Baines (1932–2020), palliative care physician
  • Dame Lilian Braithwaite DBE (1873–1948), actress (née Florence Lilian Braithwaite)
  • Judy Buxton (b. 1949), actress
  • Elsa Gye (1881–1943), suffragette organiser with the Women's Social and Political Union
  • Helen Chadwick (1953-1996), artist
  • Catherine Christian (1901–1985), novelist and supporter of the Girl Guide movement
  • Dame Jane Drew DBE (1911–1996), architect and town planner (née Joyce Beverly Drew)
  • Jacqueline du Pré OBE (1945–1987), musician, cellist
  • Josephine Elder (1895–1988), children's author (née Olive Gwendoline Potter)
  • Clare Gilbert, professor and researcher who focuses on blindness in children
  • Jessie Gilbert (1987–2006), chess player
  • Barbara Jones (1912–1978), artist, writer and mural painter
  • Yootha Joyce (b. 1927), actress
  • Elizabeth Laird (b. 1943), children's author
  • Kate Evelyn Luard (1872-1962) Decorated 1st World War nurse
  • Sandra Howard (b. 1940), novelist, former model (under the name Sandra Paul), and wife of Michael Howard
  • Perin Jamsetjee Mistri (1913–1989), Indian architect
  • Susanna Reid (b. 1970), Good Morning Britain presenter
  • Anneka Rice (b. 1958), TV presenter (née Anne Rice)
  • Dame Marion Roe DBE (b. 1936), Conservative politician
  • Wendy Savage (b. 1935), obstetrician and gynaecologist
  • Hannah Schmitz(b. 1985), Principal Strategy Engineer at Formula One team Oracle Red Bull Racing
  • Henderina Klaassen Scott (1862–1929), pioneer of time lapse photography in botany
  • Beatrice Seear, Baroness Seear (1913–1997), known as Nancy Seear, social scientist and politician
  • Joanna Shapland (b. 1950), criminologist, forensic psychologist, and academic
  • Jill Tweedie (1936–1993), novelist and journalist
  • Charlotte Deane (b. 1975), bioinformatician and Head of the Department of Statistics at the University of Oxford
  • Gabrielle Bertin, Baroness Bertin (b. 1978), Conservative aide and life peer
  • Susan Ma (b. 1988), The Apprentice contestant and founder of Tropic Skincare
  • Kathryn Whaler OBE (b. 1956), Professor of geophysics at the University of Edinburgh, former president of the Royal Astronomical Society
  • Susan Wrigglesworth(1954-1996), British fencer who competed at the 1972, 1976 and 1980 Summer Olympics

Headmistresses

Past headmistresses

  • 1874–1901: Dorinda Neligan (1833–1914)
  • 1902–1924: Marion Leahy
  • 1925 (Spring term): Eleanor Roper (acting headmistress)
  • 1925–1939: Ella Ransford
  • 1939–1960: Margaret F. Adams
  • 1960–1974: Elsa Cameron
  • 1974–1979: Agnes McMaster
  • 1979–1990: Agnes Mark
  • 1990–1997: Pauline Davies
  • 1998–2007: Lorna M. Ogilvie
  • 2007–2010: Zelma Braganza
  • 2010–2016: Debbie Leonard
  • 2016–2022: Emma Pattison
  • 2022–present: Annabel Davies

References

References

  1. "Staff, Governors and Trustees".
  2. "[http://www.thejapaneseschool.ltd.uk/londonhoshuko/gaiyo/gaiyo-gakko%204kaitei.html <学校紹介>]" ([https://web.archive.org/web/20150413085845/http://www.thejapaneseschool.ltd.uk/londonhoshuko/gaiyo/gaiyo-gakko%204kaitei.html Archive]). [[The Japanese Saturday School of London]]. Retrieved 5 April 2015. – See "9.校舎 "
  3. Cowman, Krista. (2007). "Women of the Right Spirit: paid organisers of the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) 1904–18". Manchester University Press.
  4. "ASHA Women : Wendy Savage".
  5. Coleman, Madeline. (May 15, 2023). "'The linchpin': How F1 strategy expert Hannah Schmitz helps keep Red Bull on top".
  6. List of past headmistresses courtesy of the librarian, Croydon High School GDST
  7. [https://books.google.com/books?id=eIzLissZmscC&dq=The+Womes+Suffrage+Movement:+headmistress+Croydon+High+School&pg=PA444 The Women's Suffrage Movement]
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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