The Lower Primary School (Years reception –6) is on Holdenhurst Avenue, Iford; the Upper School (Years 7–13) is on St. Catherine's Road, Southbourne. The Upper School site includes the De La Salle Theatre, which seats 470 people.
History
Jesuits
St Peters was founded as a private boys' boarding school in Southbourne, Bournemouth on 29 September 1936 with 34 boys by the Jesuit as an independent boys' school. The founding headmaster was Father Bellanti and the school was run by Jesuit priests. The last Jesuit community consisted of nine fathers and two brothers. One of the Jesuit priests who was a housemaster at St Peter's was Father Gerard Hughes S.J., the author of God of Surprise in which he observed St Peter's boys were "affable and undemanding".
De La Salle Brothers
In the summer of 1947, the school was handed over to the De La Salle brothers and they began a long period of development for St Peter’s as a day and boarding school for boys. At the time of transition there were 145 boys in the school. The Catholic De La Salle brothers supported the ethos and ideals of Saint Jean-Baptiste de La Salle, the patron saint of teachers, and the founder of the Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools.
Independent Grammar School
From the time of the first De La Salle headmaster, Brother Bernard Brady in 1947, until 1980, under Brother Bernard Hayward, St. Peters was a fee-paying independent grammar school that, together with Boscombe Convent School, served the Bournemouth area, particularly the Catholic community. During this time, the De La Salle brothers improved, enlarged and ran the school; thirty years later numbers had increased to nearly 800 pupils across the school from 8–18 years of age.
In 1973 it sent nearly 14% of its graduating Sixth Form students to Oxford and Cambridge.
Under the headmastership of Brother Alan Maurice, the school became a member of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference (HMC) association of public schools. Boaters were allowed to be worn by Sixth Form students, and boarders wore grey suits instead of the normal weekday blue on Sundays when going to Mass and Benediction. One pupil, Robert Pidgeon, was recorded in the Guinness Book of Records for passing 13 O levels at grade A in one sitting in 1975; later passing three A levels at grade A and two S levels.[1]
Following a trend set by many independent boys' schools, girls were admitted, initially, into the sixth form only in 1970 and then in subsequent year groups from 1978 onwards. Those wishing to follow a mainly science-based course of study were admitted to A Level, beginning the trend towards co-educational teaching in the school. The school did not become fully co-educational until the Autumn of 1980.
After the reorganisation of local education and the changes made by the Labour government in 1974, St Peter's, St Thomas More and Boscombe Convent schools were combined and integrated, with a notice of intent published on 13 October 1978, followed in 1980 by the merging of Boscombe Convent and St Thomas More, and all schools combined on the one site with the name of St Peter's by 1986.
Comprehensive
In 1992, the Brothers withdrew from the day-to-day running of the school, though remaining trustees, and the first headmaster who was not a member of a religious order, Anthony McCaffrey, was appointed. He retired at the end of the 2011 academic year after 19 years of leadership of St Peter's. The Boarding Houses and Dormitories were later removed or converted into classrooms, and the swimming pool was demolished due to building problems, and the area given over to serving as the school's Sixth Form Centre after a refurbishment.[2]
Arts and Sports College status
St. Peter's School gained Arts College status in September 2000, and in September 2004 gained dual specialist status in Arts and Sport.
As an Arts College St Peter's was shortlisted, but not selected, for the 2008 Sky1 TV programme Hairspray: The School Musical, with students being interviewed and auditioned.
In 2008 St Peter's School made it to the National Theatre Connections final round, with Sixth Form student Oliver Biles directing the company.[3]
Academy status
The school was granted Academy status at the beginning of September 2011. Martyn Egan led the school throughout its first year as an academy. David Todd became headteacher in September 2012 and resigned in August 2019, replaced in an acting capacity by Ben Doyle.
From 1 September 2014 St Peter's became an "all-through" school, with the establishment of two Reception classes at the Iford site. In September 2016, Years 7 and 8 joined the main site at Southbourne, leaving the Iford site for the sole use of the primary school.
Headteachers
1936—1947: Father Bellanti
1947—1955: Brother Bernard Brady
Brother Alan Maurice
1974—1976: Brother Charles
1977—1979: Brother Bernard Hayward
1980—1980: Brother Ralph Sherwin
1980—1992: Brother Bernard Hayward
1992—2011: Mr Anthony McCaffery
2011—2012: Mr Martyn Egan
2012—2019: Mr David Todd
2019–Current: Mr Ben Doyle
Commemoration
A circular memorial to mark the motoring and aviation pioneer Charles Rolls, was unveiled in 1981 and is situated in the bottom corner of the lower playing field at the Southbourne site of St Peter's School. The school was built adjacent to Hengistbury Airfield where Rolls had a fatal accident in July 1910. A large air show was taking place as part of Bournemouth's centenary celebrations; Rolls' aeroplane crashed, the first air accident death in England.[4]
In 2010, St Peter's marked the centenary of the death of Charles Rolls by having a fair on the Headmaster's Lawn at the Southbourne site. The memorial was also refurbished. The Central Band of the RAF performed in the school hall and there was an exhibition of Rolls-Royce aviation memorabilia, including an aero-engine.
Notable former pupils
This article's list of alumni may not follow Wikipedia's verifiability policy. Please improve this article by removing names that do not have independent reliable sources showing they merit inclusion in this article AND are alumni, or by incorporating the relevant publications into the body of the article through appropriate citations.(February 2012)