Giggleswick School

☆ Save On Wikipedia ↗
Giggleswick School
The domed school chapel (1897–1901), designed by T. G. Jackson, is the school's most prominent landmark
Location
Giggleswick

,
North Yorkshire, BD24 0DE

England
Information
TypePublic school
Private school
Boarding and day school
Religious affiliation
Church of England
Established1499 (1499)
FounderJames Carr
121740 Tables
HeadmasterSam Hart
GenderCoeducational
Age range2 to 18
Enrolmentc. 460
HousesCarr, Morrison, Nowell, Paley, Shute, Style
ColoursRed and black
PublicationGiggleswick Chronicle
AlumniOld Giggleswickians
Websitewww.giggleswick.org.uk

Giggleswick School is a public school (a fee-charging independent boarding and day school) in Giggleswick, near Settle in North Yorkshire, England. It originated as a chantry school whose existence is documented by 1499, and was granted a royal charter by Edward VI in 1553, making it one of the older endowed schools in England.[1] It occupies a hillside site above the village and is coeducational, educating about 460 pupils aged 2 to 18.[2]

For much of its history the school sent a steady stream of pupils to Christ's College, Cambridge.[3] Its alumni include the theologian William Paley, the nonconformist educator Richard Frankland, the Star Wars actor Anthony Daniels, and the television presenter Richard Whiteley. The school's grade II* listed domed chapel, given by the local landowner Walter Morrison and designed by T. G. Jackson, is a noted architectural landmark.[4]

The school is a member of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference. In 2023 it was rated "excellent" in all areas by the Independent Schools Inspectorate.[5] Two of its masters made the first recorded round of the Yorkshire Three Peaks in 1887,[6] and its pupils have helped operate the manual scoreboards at The Open Championship golf tournament since 1987.[7]

History

Foundation

Giggleswick School began as a chantry school and, unusually among English grammar schools, existed before it was endowed.[8] Its founder was James Carr, chantry priest of the Rood Chantry at the parish church of St Alkelda, whose presence in the parish is documented from 1499.[9] Carr took boarders and taught alongside his chantry duties, and the educational historian A. F. Leach regarded the school as the only recorded example of a "private adventure school" of its kind.[10] On 12 November 1507 the Prior and Convent of Durham leased Carr half an acre of land near the churchyard, on which he undertook to build and maintain "one gramer scole" at his own expense.[11] The schoolhouse was completed in 1512, a date recorded by a Latin inscription later preserved in the school.[12] Carr died in 1518, having endowed the chantry with land, and the chantry priests carried on his teaching.[13]

Royal charter, 1553

When the chantries were dissolved under Edward VI, the school survived: the founder's nephew Richard Carr, described by the commissioners of 1548 as "well learned", was kept on as schoolmaster by a crown stipend.[14] On 26 May 1553, at the petition of the vicar John Nowell, Henry Tennant and other inhabitants, Edward VI granted the school a royal charter and endowed it with property formerly belonging to the dissolved St Andrew's College, Acaster. The charter named it the Free Grammar School of King Edward the Sixth of Giggleswick and provided for one headmaster and one usher.[15] "Free" denoted exemption from fees rather than freedom from ecclesiastical control.[16] The first surviving statutes, drawn up at the instance of the vicar Christopher Shute and confirmed by the Archbishop of York in 1592, vested government in eight local governors, required instruction in Latin, Greek and Hebrew, and set out the duties of master, usher and scholars.[17]

A series of early seventeenth-century bequests — by William Clapham, Henry Tennant and, in 1616, Richard Carr — endowed scholarships and fellowships at Christ's College, Cambridge for boys from the school.[18] For about a century and a half Giggleswick sent a steady stream of pupils to Christ's, most of whom entered the Church.[3] Among them was Richard Frankland, later founder of the Rathmell Academy, the earliest dissenting academy in the north of England.[19]

The Paleys and the eighteenth century

The mastership passed in 1744 to William Paley of Langcliffe, who held it until his death in 1799 while also serving as vicar of Helpston.[20] His son, the theologian William Paley, was educated at the school before going up to Christ's College.[21] Rising estate revenues allowed the staff to be enlarged and new statutes obtained in 1795; the medieval schoolhouse was demolished and a second school built on the site in 1790.[22]

Nineteenth-century reform

Rowland Ingram was headmaster from 1799 to 1844, the Charity Commissioners recording 63 boys in 1825.[23] Under his successor George Ash Butterton (1845–1858) the governors adopted a new scheme of management and the school was rebuilt from its foundations in 1851.[24]

Under John Richard Blakiston (1858–1866) pupil numbers fell sharply — from over ninety in the 1850s to about thirty-seven by 1864 — and the school's difficulties exposed the unworkable 1844 scheme, under which the headmaster could neither admit nor exclude boys nor appoint his own staff.[25] A reconstituted governing body in 1864 brought in Sir James Kay-Shuttleworth and the local landowner Walter Morrison, who drove a wider reform; the governors resolved to build a boarding house, the Hostel, and to lay out playing fields.[26] The Hostel, completed in 1869, together with classrooms built beside it from the 1870s, drew the school from its cramped site by the parish church up the hill to its present position.[27]

A new era: George Style

Stone school buildings and a domed chapel spread along a green hillside
The school's buildings and chapel on the hillside above Giggleswick

George Style, headmaster from 1869 to 1904, presided over the school's transformation.[28] Following the Endowed Schools Act 1869, a new scheme of management in 1872 ended the headmaster's freehold and the vicar's ex-officio governorship, removed the Archbishop of York's jurisdiction, and ended free tuition, substituting fees while creating the Shute Exhibitions for local elementary-school boys.[29] Natural science was introduced under Dr W. Marshall Watts from 1872 and a chemical laboratory built; the school became noted nationally for its science teaching.[30] Pupil numbers, which had never previously reached a hundred, passed that mark in 1873 and exceeded two hundred by 1894.[31] By the late nineteenth century the school was well established among the country's endowed schools, and it was among those listed in the Public Schools Year Book from its first edition in 1889.[32] Morrison's gift of a domed chapel, built between 1897 and 1901, completed the hillside campus (see Chapel).

Twentieth century onwards

A stone gateway and Victorian school buildings beside a road
The main entrance to the school

William Wyamar Vaughan succeeded Style in 1904 — the first permanent headmaster not in holy orders — and reorganised teaching around the study of English; in 1910 an Officers' Training Corps contingent was formed, the origin of the school's later cadet force.[33] Vaughan's wife, Margaret ("Madge"), was a daughter of John Addington Symonds and a cousin of Virginia Woolf, who stayed with the Vaughans at Giggleswick and wrote some of her earliest published articles there.[34] Vaughan was followed as headmaster in 1910 by the cricketer Robert Noel Douglas.[35]

In 1927 the school grounds near the chapel were chosen as the official observation post for that year's total solar eclipse, from which the Astronomer Royal, Sir Frank Watson Dyson, observed the corona.[36] A preparatory school, Catteral Hall, was added in 1934.[37] The school became coeducational in the 1980s.[37] In the 2000s the senior school, Catteral Hall and a pre-preparatory department were reorganised into Giggleswick Junior School (ages 2–11) and Giggleswick School (ages 11–18) under a single identity. The school marked its quincentenary in 2012.[38] Sam Hart became headmaster in January 2022, succeeding Mark Turnbull.[39]

Chapel

Looking up into a dome lined with gold mosaics of robed angels holding musical instruments
Inside the dome, with mosaics of sixteen angels and the Four Evangelists in the pendentives

In 1897 Walter Morrison offered to fund a school chapel as a Diamond Jubilee memorial, commissioning the architect T. G. Jackson to build a Gothic structure crowned by a dome — an experiment inspired by the domes Morrison had seen in the East.[40] Built between 1897 and 1901, with the foundation stone laid by the Duke of Devonshire in October 1897, it was opened in October 1901 by Edmond Warre, headmaster of Eton.[41] The chapel, of banded millstone-grit sandstone and limestone on a Latin-cross plan, is a grade II* listed structure.[4] Its pews, choir stalls and pulpit are of Argentine cedar imported from Tucumán, the floor inlaid with marble, and the interior decorated throughout with Italian sgraffito work.[42][4] Above the west entrance stand bronze statues of Edward VI and Queen Victoria by George Frampton; the west window was designed by Jackson and the chancel glass is by Burlison and Grylls.[4] The dome, of interlocking terracotta blocks covered externally in copper and capped by an octagonal lantern, is lined inside with mosaics of sixteen angels playing instruments, with the Four Evangelists in the pendentives.[43][4] The organ was the last instrument built under Henry Willis;[43] it was rebuilt in 2005.[44] The copper dome, which had weathered to a green verdigris, was returned to a bronze colour during restoration around 1990.[4]

Academic

The senior school teaches GCSEs followed by A-levels, BTECs and the Extended Project Qualification in the sixth form.[2] The three sciences are taught separately, mathematics and science are set from the first year of the senior school, and French, Spanish and German are offered among the modern languages.[2] In its 2023 inspection the Independent Schools Inspectorate judged the quality of pupils' academic achievement and their personal development to be "excellent", the highest grade under the framework then in use; the previous full inspection, in 2015, had rated the school "good" with areas of excellence.[45][5] The Good Schools Guide describes the school as a small, close-knit all-through boarding and day school in which outdoor life and academic ambition are given comparable weight.[2]

Houses

Pupils belong to a house system that forms the basis of pastoral care and internal competition.[46] Four of the houses take their names from benefactors and figures in the school's history — Carr (after the founder, James Carr), Nowell (after John Nowell), Paley (after the master William Paley) and Shute (after Josias Shute) — while Morrison commemorates the donor of the chapel and Style the reforming headmaster.[46] The four senior dormitories had been renamed after Paley, Nowell, Carr and Shute in 1907.[47] A junior boarding house, Catteral House, accommodates younger pupils.[46]

Co-curricular activities

Music and drama

Music and drama have a long place in the school's life; Bell records music as one of its distinguishing features under Style, with a resident director of music from 1886.[48] The assembly hall known as Big School, built in 1884, long served as the principal performance space.[49] A bequest from the broadcaster and former pupil Richard Whiteley, a governor of the school who died in 2005, helped fund the Richard Whiteley Theatre, a professional-standard venue on the school site that opened in 2010; the actress Judi Dench became its patron.[50][51]

Sport

The school's grounds extend to around 250 acres and include rugby, cricket, hockey, netball and football pitches, an all-weather floodlit pitch, tennis, Fives and squash courts, cross-country and mountain-bike routes, and access to the adjacent Settle and Giggleswick golf course.[52] Indoor facilities include a sports hall, a swimming pool, a climbing wall and a fitness centre, the last opened in 2018 by the Olympic triathlon medallist Jonny Brownlee.[52] Pupils from the school have helped operate the manual scoreboards at The Open Championship golf tournament since 1987.[53][7]

Outdoor education

The school makes extensive use of its Yorkshire Dales setting for outdoor pursuits. Two of its masters, J. R. Wynne-Edwards and D. R. Smith, are generally credited with the first recorded round of what became the Yorkshire Three Peaks walk — Pen-y-ghent, Whernside and Ingleborough — which they completed in about ten hours in 1887.[6] The route later developed into a popular endurance walk and, from 1954, the annual Three Peaks Race.[6]

Cadet force

The school has a Combined Cadet Force contingent with Army, RAF and Royal Marines sections.[54] It descends from the Officers' Training Corps contingent formed in 1910.[55]

Admissions and transport

The school draws day pupils from a wide rural catchment across the Yorkshire Dales and into Lancashire and Cumbria, operating a daily bus network and lying close to Settle railway station on the Settle–Carlisle line and Giggleswick railway station on the Leeds–Morecambe line.[56]

Notable people

Headmasters

  • 1869–1904 George Style[57]
  • 1904–1910 William Wyamar Vaughan[58]
  • 1910–1931 Robert Noel Douglas[59]
  • 1931–1955 E. H. Partridge
  • 1956–1960 N. S. T. Benson
  • 1961–1970 O. J. T. Rowe
  • 1970–1978 R. C. Meredith
  • 1978–1986 Ian Watson
  • 1986–1993 Peter Hobson
  • 1993–2001 Anthony Millard[50]
  • 2001–2014 Geoffrey Boult
  • 2014–2022 Mark Turnbull
  • 2022–present Sam Hart[39]

(For masters before 1869, see Bell 1912, p. 283.)

Old Giggleswickians

Former pupils are known as Old Giggleswickians.[60] They include:

A fuller list is given at Category:People educated at Giggleswick School.

Staff

References

  1. Bell 1912, pp. 14, 26–27.
  2. "Giggleswick School". The Good Schools Guide. Retrieved 15 June 2026.
  3. Bell 1912, p. 66.
  4. Historic England. "Giggleswick School Chapel (1131724)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 15 June 2026.
  5. "School near Lancaster graded 'excellent' in all areas after recent inspection". Lancaster Guardian. 15 June 2023. Retrieved 15 June 2026.
  6. "How Pen-y-Ghent became part of Yorkshire's Three Peaks Challenge in 1887". The Yorkshire Post. 18 November 2019. Retrieved 15 June 2026.
  7. Tate, Lesley (5 August 2017). "Giggleswick School celebrates 30 years scoring The Open Championship". Craven Herald & Pioneer. Retrieved 15 June 2026.
  8. Bell 1912, pp. 13–16.
  9. Bell 1912, pp. 13–15.
  10. Bell 1912, p. 16.
  11. Bell 1912, pp. 16–17.
  12. Bell 1912, pp. 17–18.
  13. Bell 1912, pp. 16, 19.
  14. Bell 1912, pp. 22, 26.
  15. Bell 1912, pp. 26–29.
  16. Bell 1912, p. 27.
  17. Bell 1912, pp. 31–38.
  18. Bell 1912, pp. 49–57.
  19. Bell 1912, pp. 67–69.
  20. Bell 1912, pp. 80–81, 105–106.
  21. Bell 1912, pp. 82–84.
  22. Bell 1912, pp. 90–92, 95–96.
  23. Bell 1912, pp. 110–111, 118.
  24. Bell 1912, pp. 126–133.
  25. Bell 1912, pp. 151, 159–161.
  26. Bell 1912, pp. 155–156, 165–166.
  27. Bell 1912, pp. 169–170, 181–182.
  28. Bell 1912, pp. 172–173.
  29. Bell 1912, pp. 176–178.
  30. Bell 1912, pp. 180, 196.
  31. Bell 1912, pp. 179, 195.
  32. The Public Schools Year Book. London: Swan Sonnenschein. 1889. OCLC 1716992.
  33. Bell 1912, pp. 216–217, 223.
  34. Woolf, Virginia (1977). The Letters of Virginia Woolf, Volume One: 1888–1912. Hogarth Press. p. 158.
  35. Bell 1912, p. 228.
  36. "Eclipse archive". BBC News. Retrieved 20 August 2023.
  37. Mott, Judy, ed. (2016). Independent Schools Yearbook 2015–2016. London: Bloomsbury. p. 169. ISBN 978-1472924315.
  38. "Here's to the next 500 years as Giggleswick marks quincentenary". The Yorkshire Post. 20 June 2012. Retrieved 3 March 2022.
  39. Tate, Lesley (8 March 2022). "New Giggleswick School headteacher wants to build from 'a position of strength'". Craven Herald & Pioneer. Retrieved 20 August 2023.
  40. Bell 1912, pp. 198–199.
  41. Bell 1912, pp. 203, 205.
  42. Bell 1912, pp. 203–204.
  43. Bell 1912, p. 204.
  44. "Giggleswick School, Yorkshire". GO-Organ Builders. Retrieved 27 February 2018.
  45. "Giggleswick School". Independent Schools Inspectorate. Retrieved 15 June 2026.
  46. "Houses". Giggleswick School. Retrieved 20 August 2023.
  47. Bell 1912, p. 219.
  48. Bell 1912, pp. 190–191.
  49. Bell 1912, p. 183.
  50. "Our History". Giggleswick School. Retrieved 15 June 2026.
  51. "Dame Judi Dench's part in school play". BBC News. 23 November 2011. Retrieved 15 June 2026.
  52. "Sport". Giggleswick School. Retrieved 15 June 2026.
  53. "Radcliffe is all ready for Open duty". Huddersfield Daily Examiner. Huddersfield. 12 January 1991. p. 36 via Newspapers.com.
  54. "CCF". Giggleswick School. Retrieved 15 June 2026.
  55. Bell 1912, p. 223.
  56. "Transport and bus routes". Giggleswick School. Retrieved 15 June 2026.
  57. Bell 1912, p. 283.
  58. "Mr. W. W. Vaughan". The Times. 5 February 1938. p. 14. ISSN 0140-0460.
  59. "Giggleswick School". The Times. 10 January 1931. p. 9. ISSN 0140-0460.
  60. "The Old Giggleswickian Club". Archived from the original on 30 June 2013. Retrieved 30 June 2013.
  61. Brown, Ivor (2004). "Agate, James Evershed". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/30346. (Subscription, Wikipedia Library access or UK public library membership required.)
  62. Annis, P. G. W. (2004). "Birch, Sir (James Frederick) Noel". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/31892. (Subscription, Wikipedia Library access or UK public library membership required.)
  63. "Notable Alumni". Giggleswick School. Retrieved 15 June 2026.
  64. "Obituary: Sir Duncan Cumming, KBE, CB 1903–1979". The Geographical Journal. 146 (1): 158. 1980. OCLC 173997104.
  65. "Giggleswick School". Retrieved 20 August 2023.
  66. Donnelly, Tom (2009). "Duckworth, (David) Keith". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/96253. (Subscription, Wikipedia Library access or UK public library membership required.)
  67. "Sarah Fox (soprano)". Hyperion Records. Retrieved 15 June 2026.
  68. Crowson, N. J. (2004). "Hacking, Douglas Hewitt, first Baron Hacking". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/59307. (Subscription, Wikipedia Library access or UK public library membership required.)
  69. "The Late Sir John Hare". The Times. 31 December 1921. p. 6. ISSN 0140-0460.
  70. Toczek, Nick (2015). Haters, Baiters and Would-Be Dictators: Anti-Semitism and the UK Far Right. Routledge. ISBN 9781317525882.
  71. "Dr Henry Maudsley". The Times. 25 January 1918. p. 9. ISSN 0140-0460.
  72. Bell 1912, p. 106.
  73. Budden, K. G. (1988). "John Ashworth Ratcliffe. 12 December 1902 – 25 October 1987". Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society. 34: 670–711. ISSN 0080-4606. JSTOR 770065.
  74. Bell 1912, p. 197.
  75. Bell 1912, pp. 60–61.
  76. Hancock, Gus (2018). "Ian William Murison Smith. 15 June 1937 – 8 November 2016". Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society. 64: 401–419. doi:10.1098/rsbm.2017.0033. ISSN 0080-4606.
  77. Whiteley, Richard (6 June 2001). "Private Passions". The Times. p. 55. ISSN 0140-0460.
  78. Bennett, Alan (2004). "Harty, (Fredric) Russell". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/40158. (Subscription, Wikipedia Library access or UK public library membership required.)
  79. Bell 1912, p. 218.

Bibliography

Further reading