St Andrew's School, Pangbourne

St Andrew's School
Motto Altiora Petimus
(Latin: "We seek higher things")
Established 1934
Type Independent preparatory school
Day and boarding
Religion Church of England
Headmaster Jonathan Bartlett
Founder R. W. Robertson-Glasgow
Location Pangbourne
Berkshire
RG8 8QA
England
Coordinates: 51°27′56″N 1°08′00″W / 51.465634°N 1.133214°W / 51.465634; -1.133214
DfE number 869/6001
Staff 50
Students ~300
Gender Coeducational
Ages 3–13
Houses 4
Colours Green and white          
Publication The Chronicle
Former pupils OSA's
Website standrewspangbourne.co.uk

St Andrew's School is an independent preparatory school in the hamlet of Buckhold, near Pangbourne, Berkshire, England. Together with its 'Pre-Prep – Early Years' department, the school now educates girls and boys aged between three and thirteen. In 2011, there were 266 children at the school, of whom 155 were boys and 111 were girls. The school has a Christian ethos, and its chapel services are reported to be "broadly Anglican in style". The most important religious event of the school year is the Advent Carol Service, which because of the numbers attending is held not at the school but in the larger chapel of nearby Bradfield College.

Scholarships are awarded to some children above the age of eleven, based on merit. St Andrew's has a School Council to involve its children in decisions affecting them.

In March 2011 an Independent Schools Inspectorate report endorsed the school's success. [1]

History

The school was founded in 1934 as a boarding school for boys, and consisted of just two staff and eight boys.[2] Historically, as the school grew, boys would leave to go onto schools such as Eton, Harrow and Winchester, however its ties with these schools slowly deteriorated after it first admitted girls in 1971, going on to become fully co-educational.[1] The school's main building is a listed Victorian Gothic country house called 'Buckhold', designed by Alfred Waterhouse set in fifty-four acres of woods and playing fields.[1]

Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge

Following her family's return from Amman in 1986, Catherine Middleton was enrolled at the age of four at St Andrew's. Middleton boarded part-weekly at the school in her later years.[3] It was at St Andrew's in 1991 that Middleton first saw her future husband Prince William when he was part of a Ludgrove School hockey team that came to play a match at Middleton's school.[4]

The school today

Now consisting of just under three-hundred pupils, the school is fully co-educational with a range of facilities including newly refurbished boarding houses, three science laboratories, music school, art studio and carpentry workshop, and a private chapel. The school also boasts extensive sporting facilities such as a 25 metre pool, all-weather astro playing field, sports hall, climbing wall, 9 hole golf course, 3 tennis courts (including one grass court) and multiple rugby/football/cricket/lacrosse pitches.

Although boarding houses are strictly single sex, pupils are divided up into four co-ed houses called 'sections'. These sections compete in both academic and extra-curricular competitions such as sports, singing and the hallowed 'progressive games'.

Notable former pupils

Former students of the school are called "Old St Andrew's", and there is an OSA Association.[5]

Notable staff

Headmasters

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 ISI Report, March 2011, online
  2. Donald P. Leinster-Mackay, The Rise of the English Prep School (1984), p. 340
  3. "Duchess of Cambridge returns to St Andrew's School". BBC. 30 December 2012. Retrieved 29 February 2016.
  4. Daily Telegraph Reporter, Kate Middleton 'first laid eyes on Prince William as a 10-year-old schoolgirl' dated 27 November 2010 at telegraph.co.uk
  5. OSA page of St Andrew's School web site
  6. LIDDELL HART, Adrian John (1922-1991) at aim25.ac.uk, accessed 3 May 2011
  7. Harold Bloom, John le Carré (Chelsea House, 1987), p. 165
  8. St Andrew's Celebrates the Royal Wedding at standrewspangbourne.co.uk
  9. Julian Knight, The Royal Wedding for Dummies (2011), p. 10
  10. Nick Curtis, Everything you never knew about Pippa Middleton dated 10 May 2011 at thisislondon.co.uk/lifestyle, accessed 29 April 2012
  11. Middleton, Pippa. "Pippa Middleton's favourite mascarpone and rocket penne recipe". UK Daily Telegraph, 13 September 2013 to 29 March 2014. Retrieved 15 February 2015.
  12. Patrick W. Montague-Smith, Debrett's Peerage and Baronetage (Debrett's Peerage Ltd., 1980), p. 200: "William Anthony Nugent, 13th Earl... Assist. Master, St Andrew's Sch., Pangbourne".
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