Rotherham Grammar School
Grammar school, becoming county school in Rotherham, South Yorkshire, England
Rotherham Grammar School Moorgate Road
, England
Type Grammar school , becoming County school Motto Latin : Ne Ingrati Videamur (Lest We Should Seem Ungrateful)Established 1483 (1483 ) Closed 1967 (1967 ) Local authority Rotherham Headmaster Mr Arthur Prust (at closure) Gender Boys Age 11 to 18
Rotherham Grammar School was a boys' grammar school in Rotherham , South Yorkshire , England.
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]
Edmund Carter, 1482–1483
John Bockyng, 1483 (died in office)
John More, from 1501
Robert Collier, from 1508
Richard Bradshaw, 1524–1525
William Drapour, from 1535
Thomas Snell, from 1548
Masters and Headmasters
source:[ 2]
William Beck, 1566–1567
Thomas Woodhouse, from 1568
Robert Sanderson, from 1583
Smith, from 1616
Barrow, from 1620
Bonner, ????–????
Charles Hoole Rayte, from 1633
Graunt, ????-????
Barton, ????
Withers, from 1704
Rev. Christopher Stevenson, from 1725
Rev. Davis Pennell, from 1746
John Russell, from 1763
Tennant, from 1776
Rev. Richard U. Burton, from 1780
Rev. Benjamin Birkett, from 1810
Rev. Joshua Nalson, from 1839
Edwin A. Fewtrell, from 1841
R. A. Long-Phillips, from 1863
Rev. John J. Christie, from 1864
Rev. George Ohlson, from 1878
Rev. Thos. Granger Hutt, from 1883
Rev. Hargreaves Heap, from 1884
W. A. Barron, from 1919
Frederick William Field, from 1924
Gilbert E. Gunner, 1949 – August 1966
Mr Arthur Prust, September 1966 – August 1967 (continued as principal of Thomas Rotherham College)
Notable pupils
John D Brooks, Food Microbiologist
Bishop Robert Sanderson (1587–1663), moderator of the 1661 Savoy Conference. Two of the prayers in the Church of England's Book of Common Prayer have often been attributed to Sanderson. These are the "general thanksgiving" and the "prayer for all conditions of men".[ 3]
Herbert Austin, 1st Baron Austin – founded the Austin Motor Company , and Conservative MP from 1918 to 1924 for Birmingham King's Norton
Sir Donald Bailey , inventor of the Bailey bridge
Prof Robert Auty, Professor of Comparative Slavonic Philology from 1965 to 1978 at the University of Oxford , and President from 1964 to 1967 of the British University Association of Slavists (became the British Association for Slavonic and East European Studies in 1989)
Prof George Bentley, Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery from 1982 to 2002 at the University College London Medical School
Sidney Brazier , bomb-disposal expert
Stanley Crowther , Labour MP from 1976 to 1992 for Rotherham
Sir Liam Donaldson , Chief Medical Officer from 1998 to 2010
Alfred Goldstein, civil engineer, responsible for designing the M23, the Belfast Transportation Plan , Clifton Bridge (A52) in Nottingham, Winthorpe Bridge (A1) at Newark , the Itchen Bridge in Southampton, and the Elizabeth Bridge in Cambridge
George Charles Gray , organist
John Harris (novelist)
Robert Jenkins, President from 1951 to 1953 and 1973–1975 of The Welding Institute
Walter Jenkins, Vice Chancellor from 1953 to 1958 of the University of Dhaka
Prof Harry Kay, Vice Chancellor from 1973 to 1984 of the University of Exeter , Professor of Psychology from 1960 to 1973 at the University of Sheffield , and President from 1971 to 1972 of the British Psychological Society
Donald McWhinnie , theatre director
John Rose (chemist)
Sgt. Ian McKay , VC, Falklands campaign (RGS 1964–1969)
Prof John Brooks, Professor of Food Microbiology from 2007 to 2014 at Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand
Prof. Alan Hedge, Professor of Human Factors and Ergonomics from 1987 to 2019 at Cornell University, Ithaca, USA.
See also
References
^ a b "Rotherham Grammar School" . Rotherham Unofficial . 2015. Archived from the original on 14 March 2016 – via Internet Archive.
^ a b "History" (PDF) . rgsoba.com . Archived from the original on 24 September 2017.{{cite web }}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link )
^ Proctor, History of the Book of Common Prayer, ed 1872, pp 262-7.
Secondary Special Further Education Defunct