Hurstpierpoint College Explained

Hurstpierpoint College
Motto:Latin: "Beati Mundo Corde"
(Blessed are the pure in heart)
Type:Public School
Independent School
Religious Affiliation:Church of England
Head Label:Principal
Head:Tim Manly[1]
Chair Label:Chairman of Governors
Chair:Tony Jarvis[2]
Founder:Canon Nathaniel Woodard
Address:College Lane
City:Hurstpierpoint
County:West Sussex
Country:England
Postcode:BN6 9JS
Local Authority:West Sussex
Dfeno:938/6206
Enrolment:c.1,337
Gender:Mixed
Lower Age:4
Upper Age:18
Houses:13
Colours:Red and White
Free Label 1:Former pupils
Free 1:Old Johnians
Free Label 2:Alumni Website
Free 2:www.theojclub.com
Free Label 3:Affiliation
Free 3:Woodard Corporation
Website:http://www.hppc.co.uk/

Hurstpierpoint College is a public school (English private boarding and day school), located just north of the village of Hurstpierpoint, West Sussex. The College was founded in 1849 by Canon Nathaniel Woodard and is a member of the Woodard Corporation.[3]

History and overview

The school was established in 1849 as St John's Middle School, based in Shoreham. Its first headmaster, Edward Clarke Lowe, had worked with Woodard at Lancing College and stayed at Hurstpierpoint for 22 years until 1872. The school moved to Mansion House in Hurstpierpoint and then, thanks to the local benefactors the Campion family, on 21 June 1853 made its move to the present site. Intended to resemble the collegiate system at Oxford and Cambridge, Nathaniel Woodard designed the College to have adjoining Inner and Outer quads and the chapel and dining hall adjacent to each other.

The school was inspected by the Independent Schools Inspectorate in 2019[4] and in January 2024.

Houses

In the early 70s, the senior school comprised just seven houses, named: Eagle, Martlet, Shield, Red Cross, Chevron, Fleur de Lys and Star. Each house had a housemaster and house tutor who were also teachers within the school.

Since then, the number of senior school houses has grown in size alongside the school's expansion. It now consists of 13 houses. 6 boys' houses (Star, Chevron, Crescent, Eagle, Red Cross and Woodard) and 6 girls' houses (Fleur de Lys, Wolf, Phoenix, Shield, Martlet and Pelican), with the 13th house being the co-educational day and boarding 'hall of residence', St John's House - which all students in their last year (Upper Sixth) join, whilst retaining affiliation to their former houses.

Traditions

The school preserves ceremonies, such as the 'Boar's Head Procession' and the 'Wolstonbury Service' which for the most part were taken from other schools such as Winchester College, in order to give the school a feeling of tradition back in its early Victorian days.

"Hurst" has performed a Shakespeare play every year since 1854, beginning with Richard III after the first headmaster, Dr Lowe inspired the first players onto stage. Hurstpierpoint College boasts the oldest Shakespeare society in existence,[5] older even than that of the Royal Shakespeare Company which was not formed until 1875.[6]

The Hurst Johnian, the school magazine, founded in May 1858 is a source for the School's history. Its policy has been to maintain the annals of the school, and it continues to publish current reports and articles on the past. Evidence from the national archives suggests that it is the oldest school magazine in the country.[7]

Notable Masters

Novelist and composer of hymns, the most notable being "Onward, Christian Soldiers". He was a Master of the College from 1855 to 1864. Baring-Gould had an eccentric reputation, and archives tell how he would teach with a bat on his shoulder and took weird holidays, bringing home a pony from Iceland, which lived for years in the North Field. Whilst the Hymn is thought to have been written in Yorkshire in 1865, a story recounts how Baring-Gould (known as "Snout") on one occasion gave a pupil of the College thirty-six (sic) cuts, and then washed his hands and sat down and wrote "Onward Christian Soldiers." A talented artist, he made and painted (well heraldically) the coat of arms of the Prince of Wales, which for many years appeared in the proscenium. Baring-Gould designed the cover of the Johnian (the College's publication), and designed the bookshelves and cases with their wrought iron, originally red and gold, in the Boys' Library. He also painted the window jambs with scenes from the "Canterbury Tales" and the "Faery Queen", and probably did work for the Fellows' Library. In 1860 he was one of the "Hurst Rifle Volunteers," who used to drill at the New Inn, which lead Hurst to be one of the founding Combined Cadet Forces schools.

He was a famous Director of Music at Hurst, Charterhouse and Fettes, as well as a noted pianist, and Professor of Pianoforte at the Royal College of Music for over 30 years.

Noted clergyman and teacher in England and later Western Australia.

Notable Old Johnians

See main article: List of people educated at Hurstpierpoint College.

Past students of Hurstpierpoint College are referred to as 'Old Johnians'.

Headmasters

Southern Railway Schools Class

The school lent its name to the nineteenth steam locomotive (Engine 918) in the Southern Railway's Class V of which there were 40.[8] This Class was also known as the Schools Class because all 40 of the class were named after prominent English Public Schools. 'Hurstpierpoint', as it was called, was built in 1934 and was withdrawn in 1961.[8] Its nameplate is now housed in the school's science block.

Coat of arms

Escutcheon:Per pale Argent and Ermine, dexter on a bend cottised Sable a cross couped between two martlets of the first, on a chief Gules an eagle, round the head a crown of glory, Or, sinister two wolves passant counterpassant also Gules; all within a bordure engrailed Azure.
Motto:'Beati mundo corde'
Notes:Granted 1 June 1931.[9]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Hurstpierpoint College | About Hurst - Staff .
  2. Web site: Hurstpierpoint College | About Hurst - Governors.
  3. Web site: Woodard Schools - Independent, State Maintained, Academies. Independent, Academy and Maintained Education - Woodard Schools. 26 September 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20120204133637/http://www.woodard.co.uk/woodard_education.htm. 4 February 2012. dead.
  4. Web site: Hurstpierpoint College :: Independent Schools Inspectorate. Isi.net. 2019-10-15.
  5. Web site: The Hurst Johnian Club - Old Boys & Girls of Hurstpierpoint College- Shakespeare Society . 2014-03-04 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20131210065000/http://theojclub.com/g_page.php?pageid=143&Pagetitle=Shakespeare+Society . 2013-12-10 .
  6. Web site: History of the RSC | A timeline | Royal Shakespeare Company . Rsc.org.uk . 2012-11-13 . 2016-10-04.
  7. Web site: S. John's College, Hurstpierpoint Archive. Nationalarchives.gov.uk. 2016-10-04.
  8. Web site: Southern Railway Schools Class. 2008-06-29.
  9. Web site: Hurstpierpoint College . 19 March 2019 . Heraldry of the World . 13 February 2023.