Spratton Hall School | |
Established: | 1951 |
Type: | Preparatory school |
Head Label: | Head Master |
Head: | Simon Clarke |
Address: | Smith Street |
City: | Spratton |
County: | Northamptonshire |
Country: | England |
Postcode: | NN6 8HP |
Urn: | 122133 |
Gender: | Co-educational |
Lower Age: | 4 |
Upper Age: | 13 |
Website: | https://www.sprattonhall.com/ |
Spratton Hall School is a private preparatory school that welcomes girls and boys aged 4–13, located in the village of Spratton, 8 miles outside Northampton, England, on the A5199 Welford Road.
The main school building was built in the late 1700s on the site of an earlier farmhouse and owned by the Clark family as a private home.[1] It is mainly constructed from limestone from Kingsthorpe.
Ownership of the building passed through several hands until Kenneth C Hunter and his wife Joan bought it and opened it as a boys’ boarding school in 1951 with 20 boys. They chose the stag for the new school's crest. The stag was originated from a tale of Saint Hubertus' vision, Patron Saint of Hunters.[2]
In 1972 the Charitable Trust was established so the school was administered by a board of governors. The Hunters remained with the school until their retirements in 1975 and Mr Bickley became its first Head Master. In 1987 it became a day-only school and turned co-educational nine years later.[3]
The present-day campus consists of various buildings surrounding the historic Spratton Hall, now called "Main House", and subsequent buildings were added as the school expanded. The School has of grounds, including a wooded area designated for use as a "forest school".[4]
Pupils are prepared for entry into a private and public schools, which traditionally admitted pupils at age 13. As such, the curriculum of the prep school section prepares pupils to take the Common Entrance Examination at the end of Year 8.[5]