The Oratory School | |
Coordinates: | 51.5326°N -1.0584°W |
Motto: | Latin Cor ad cor loquitur |
Established: | 1859 |
Type: | Public School Private day and boarding |
Head Label: | Head |
Head: | Julian Murphy |
Chair Label: | Chairman of the Governors |
Chair: | Pascale Lo |
Country: | England |
Postcode: | RG8 0PJ |
Urn: | 123282 |
Dfeno: | 931/6034 |
Enrolment: | 373 |
Gender: | Boys and Girls |
Lower Age: | 11 |
Upper Age: | 18 |
Colours: | Oratory gold & black |
Publication: | The Oratorian The Buzz |
Free Label 1: | Former pupils |
Website: | https://www.oratory.co.uk/ |
The Oratory School [1] is an HMC[2] co-educational private Catholic boarding and day school for pupils aged 11–18 located in Woodcote, north-west of Reading, England. Founded in 1859 by John Henry Newman, The Oratory has historical ties to the Birmingham Oratory and the London Oratory School.
Although a separate entity from the nearby Oratory Preparatory School, it shares a common history. Newman founded the school with the intention of providing boys with a Catholic alternative to Eton College.[3] Until 2020, when it first admitted girls, it was the only boys’ Catholic public school left in the United Kingdom. According to the Good Schools Guide (last review: Oct 2021), the school is “an active choice for families looking for a small, nurturing environment."[4]
The Oratory has received the highest grade of 'Excellent' for both Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI Report: Nov 2021) categories: pupils’ academic & other achievements and pupils’ personal development.[5]
The Oratory School was founded in 1859. The first boys arrived before work began on 1 May that year.[6] The objective was to provide a Roman Catholic alternative to other schools, particularly for the sons of converts from Anglicanism who considered existing Catholic schools culturally and socially inferior.[3]
The school was originally located in Edgbaston, Birmingham, attached to the Birmingham Oratory Fathers' House and the Oratory Church. In 1923, under pressure for additional space, it moved to Caversham Park, a Victorian stately home near Reading. Following the outbreak of the Second World War, that property was requisitioned by the government, initially with the intention of being used as a hospital, but in the event being purchased in 1941 by the BBC as a base for its Monitoring Service. The school acquired a new site not far away in Woodcote, where it has remained ever since.[7] According to a Freedom of Information Request the school withdrew from the Teachers Pension Scheme on the 31st December 2020.[8]
The school's youth choir is the Schola Cantorum; it releases recordings and is known for its Tudor music.[9]
The Oratory is one of four schools in the United Kingdom with a real tennis court (others being Radley, Canford, and Wellington College), and plays the sport, hosting championships and international tournaments. It was the first location in the United Kingdom to construct a real tennis court for 80 years, finishing the building in 1990.
The UK Professional Singles Tournament has been held at the court, and in April 2006 the World Championships were held there in which world no. 1 Robert Fahey (Australia) beat USA player Tim Chisholm.[10] In January 2020 the World Championship Eliminator match took place between Camden Riviere and Old Oratorian, Nicky Howell.. The Oratory School hosted the Ladies Real Tennis World Championship in 2023, in an event won by Claire Fahey.
The school's head of racquets and games coach is Claire Fahey, Women's Real Tennis Champion. Robert Fahey is head professional of the school's Real Tennis Club (ORTC).
The head master, Julian Murphy, is a member of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference.
In February 2013, it was discovered that Jonathan O'Brien, a former teacher, had been involved in sexually abusing boys aged ten to sixteen while working at The Oratory in the 1980s. O'Brien was sentenced to thirteen years imprisonment.[12]
In February 2014, there were allegations that older pupils had been beating younger students and killing animals outside school - including the skinning of a cat. A teacher resigned and alleged that she had done so because her concerns over the pupils' behaviour had been repeatedly ignored.[13] [14] She then filed a claim against the school for "forced dismissal" but the claim was thrown out by the Reading employment tribunal as she had voluntarily resigned and was not "forced to quit". The then-headmaster Clive Dytor stated that the incidents she mentioned had already been dealt with.[15]
See main article: List of Old Oratorians.