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Oxford High School, England
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Oxford High School GDST |
| image | Oxford High School (England) Logo.svg |
| motto | Latin: Ad Lucem |
| (Toward the light) | |
| established | 1875 |
| type | Private day school |
| head_label | Headmistress |
| head | Marina Gardiner Legge |
| chair_label | Chairman of governors |
| chair | Katherine Haynes |
| address | Belbroughton Road |
| city | Oxford |
| county | Oxfordshire |
| country | England |
| postcode | OX2 6XA |
| local_authority | Oxfordshire |
| urn | 123310 |
| staff | 120 |
| enrolment | 952 |
| gender | Girls |
| lower_age | 4 |
| upper_age | 18 |
| website |
(Toward the light)
Oxford High School is a private day school for girls in Oxford, England. It was founded by the Girls' Day School Trust (GDST) in 1875, making it the City of Oxford's oldest girls' school.
History
Oxford High School was opened on 3 November 1875, with twenty-nine girls and three teachers under headmistress Ada Benson, at the Judge's Lodgings (St Giles' House) at 16 St Giles', Oxford. It was the 9th school opened by the Girls' Public Day School Company. Pupils were given a holiday when the Assize Judge visited. The school moved to 38 St Giles' in 1879 and then to 21 Banbury Road at the start of 1881, in a building designed by Thomas Graham Jackson, just south of the location of another Jackson building, the Acland Nursing Home. By this time, the headmistress was Matilda Ellen Bishop.
Rapid expansion led to the ultimate removal of the school to Belbroughton Road in 1957. It became a direct grant grammar school in 1945 under the Education Act 1944 and chose to become independent in 1976 after the scheme was abolished. It absorbed two preparatory schools, Greycotes and The Squirrel, which meant girls could now be educated at Oxford High School from age 3 to Sixth Form.
Examination results
Oxford High School regularly ranks as one of the country's highest achieving independent schools in terms of examination results. The school was ranked first in the South East in a Sunday Times survey based on exam results and "value for money". In the 2011 examinations it was ranked amongst the top 20 independent schools nationwide for GCSE results and the best performing girls' school in the A Levels.
In 2006, the school became the first in Oxfordshire to make Mandarin a compulsory subject. Pupils will study it for at least a year accompanying French and can choose to either continue Mandarin or continue French.
Facilities and houses
As a day school, Oxford High does not have a boarding programme.{{cite web|url=https://oxfordhigh.gdst.net/admissions/overseas/|title= Overseas Applicants|publisher=Oxford High School|access-date=2024-09-18}} Pupils in the senior school are divided into four houses, each named after an Ancient Greek deity:
- Zeus (green)
- Ares (blue)
- Athena (yellow)
- Poseidon (red)
Headteachers
the head teacher is Marina Gardiner Legge
- Marina Gardiner Legge 2019-
- Philip Hills 2017–2019
- Judith Carlisle 2011–2016
- Felicity Lusk 1997–2010
- Joan Townsend 1981–1996
- Elaine Kaye 1972–1981
- Mary Warnock 1966–1972
- M.E. Ann Hancock 1959–1966
- Violet Evelyn Stack 1937–1959
- Rosalind Brown 1902–1932
- Margaret Gale 1932–1936
- Edith Marion Leahy 1898–1902
- Lucy Helen Soulsby 1887–1897
- Matilda Ellen Bishop 1879–1887
- Ada Benson 1875–1879
Notable alumni

- Josephine Barnes (1912–1999), first woman President British Medical Association
- Ursula Bethell (1874–1945), New Zealand poet and social worker
- Sarah-Jayne Blakemore, Professor of Neuroscience at the University of Cambridge
- Vicky Bowman, née Robinson, former British diplomat
- Emma Bridgewater, potter
- Jacintha Buddicom, poet and childhood friend of George Orwell
- Nancy Cadogan, artist
- Catherine Conybeare, academic and philologist
- Charithra Chandran, actress
- Gail Davey, professor of epidemiology
- Cressida Dick (b. 1960), former Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police
- Sian Edwards, conductor
- Sos Eltis, author and academic
- Rebecca Flemming, classicist
- Amelia Fletcher economist, and indie band singer
- Diana Fox Carney, economist, climate policy expert and wife of Mark Carney
- Martha Lane Fox, entrepreneur lastminute.com
- Mel Giedroyc, actress/comedian
- Lucy Gordon, actress/model
- Emily Gowers, Professor of Latin literature at the University of Cambridge
- Sophie Grigson, cookery TV/writer
- Pippa Harris, film producer
- Ethel Hatch, British painter
- Mary Hockaday, journalist
- Margaret Hodge, Labour MP and minister
- Verena Winifred Holmes, engineer
- Harriet Hunt, chess International Master
- Elizabeth Irving, actress and founder of the Keep Britain Tidy Campaign
- Elizabeth Jennings (1926–2001), poet
- Ludmilla Jordanova, Professor of Modern History at the King's College London
- Frances Kirwan, mathematician
- Susan Lea, Professor at the University of Oxford
- Anna Lapwood, Director of Music at Pembroke College, Cambridge and television/radio presenter
- Rose Macaulay, novelist
- Serena Mackesy, journalist and author
- Miriam Margolyes, (b. 1941), actress
- Ghislaine Maxwell, (junior section, left age 9), socialite and convicted child sex trafficker
- Charlotte Mendelson (b. 1972), novelist
- Kate Ho, (b. 1972), economist
- Anne Mills, health economist
- Teresa Morgan, academic
- Eleanor Oldroyd, BBC Radio Sport presenter
- Ann Pasternak Slater, academic
- Eileen Power (1889–1940), economic historian and medievalist
- Rhoda Power (1890–1957), broadcaster and children's writer
- Liz Shore, former deputy chief medical officer
- Maggie Smith (1934–2024), double Oscar-winning actress, seven times BAFTA Film Awards winner, Triple Crown of Acting
- Barbara Strachey (1912–1999), broadcaster and writer
- Catherine Tucker, American economist
- Ayesha Vardag, Founder & President of Vardags, divorce lawyer
- Anna Walker, British civil servant
References
References
- [http://www.headington.org.uk/oxon/stgiles/tour/east/16.htm St Giles' House (Judge's Lodgings), 16 St Giles' Street, Oxford] {{webarchive. link. (15 July 2006 (where OHS was founded).)
- Sherwood, Jennifer, and [[Nikolaus Pevsner. Pevsner, Nikolaus]], ''The Buildings of England: [[Oxfordshire]]'', [[Penguin Books]], 1974. {{ISBN. 0-14-071045-0. Page 317.
- "School History".
- (28 August 2001). "Private schools make top grade". [[Oxford Mail]].
- (22 September 2008). "Oxford High School's A-Level results – 2008 – another stunning year". [[Oxford Mail]].
- (22 October 2001). "Oxford High named top of class in south east". [[Oxford Mail]].
- (26 January 2012). "New GCSE results show the difference in how youngsters improve at secondary school". [[Oxford Mail]].
- (2 September 2011). "Oxford schools top the league tables". [[Cherwell (newspaper).
- (28 February 2008). "School pupils to learn Mandarin". [[Oxford Mail]].
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20090322132542/http://www.oxfordhigh.gdst.net/aboutus/letters/letters.htm Headmistress's letters] on the school website.
- [http://www.isc.co.uk/schools/england/oxfordshire/oxford/oxford-high-school-gdst Profile] on the [[Independent Schools Council. ISC]] website
- "our staff".
- (7 September 2017). "Introducing the New Head for Oxford High School". oxfordhigh.gdst.net.
- (14 September 2017). "Male headteacher is historic first for city girls' school". [[Oxford Times]].
- "New Head for Oxford High School". oxfordhigh.gdst.net.
- (25 November 2009}}{{dead link). "No job for the boys as Abingdon School picks woman head". [[The Times]].
- (2004). "Brown, William Haig (1823–1907), headmaster headmistress".
- (2004). "Soulsby, Lucy Helen Muriel (1856–1927), headmistress".
- (2004). "Bishop, Matilda Ellen (1842–1913), college head".
- Anon. (2017). "Blakemore, Prof. Sarah-Jayne".
- (24 August 2010). "Famous Faces". [[Oxford Mail]].
- Anon. (2018). "Lea, Prof. Susan Mary".
- (5 October 2009). "Star attends Oxford High School 50-year reunion". [[Oxford Mail]].
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