Alderman Blaxill School

Alderman Blaxill School
Established 1920
Closed 2014
Type Academy
Location Paxman Avenue
Colchester
Essex
C02 9DQ
England
Coordinates: 51°52′23″N 0°52′06″E / 51.872984°N 0.868431°E / 51.872984; 0.868431
DfE URN 115380 Tables
Ofsted Reports
Gender Coeducational
Ages 11–16
Website blaxill.net/Index.html

Alderman Blaxill School was a secondary school with academy status in Colchester, Essex, and was the town's smallest secondary school. It closed in 2014.

History

Alderman Blaxill Secondary Modern School in Walnut Tree Way, Colchester, was opened in 1955. It replaced the former Hamilton Road Central School (built in 1914, but used as a military hospital during World War I,not opening as a school until 1920. Following the Education Act 1944, it became a secondary modern school. In 1955, the secondary part of the school moved to the new building in Walnut Tree Way, Shrub End, and was renamed Alderman Blaxill after a former Mayor of Colchester and chairman of the education committee. The Hamilton Road building was used for infants and juniors. In 1976, Alderman Blaxill became a comprehensive school.[1] It became an academy in 2012, and closed in 2014. The majority of the students transferred to The Stanway School and Thomas Lord Audley School, with which Alderman Blaxill was federated.

Legacy

The school buildings are being maintained for educational purposes following the closure of the school in July 2014. In September 2014 two other schools were sharing the buildings; the Stanway Federation Learning Centre and Market Field School, whose own school building is being rebuilt.[2]

Temporary Use

As work in 2014-2015 was undergoing at the Market Field School in Elmstead Market, children from the school temporarily used Alderman Blaxill as a site for education. Market Field School specialises in disabled and disadvantaged students.

See also

References

  1. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=22013&strquery=Alderman Blaxill
  2. Brading, Wendy (9 September 2014). "Alas Smith and Jones - but we're getting on fine". Colchester Daily Gazette. Newsquest. Retrieved 27 November 2014.

External links

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