Campion School, Hornchurch

The Campion School is a Roman Catholic boys' secondary school and coeducational sixth form in Hornchurch, London, England. The school converted to academy status in August 2011, and has a specialism in science.

The Campion School
Address
Wingletye Lane

, ,
RM11 3BX

England
Information
TypeAcademy
Religious affiliation(s)Roman Catholic
EstablishedSeptember 1962 (1962-09)
Department for Education URN137040 Tables
OfstedReports
HeadmasterMr K Williams
GenderBoys
Age11 to 18
Capacity1200
Websitehttp://www.thecampionschool.org.uk

History

The Campion School was founded in September 1962 by the Society of Jesus as a grammar school for Roman Catholic boys from the ages of 11 to 18.[1] The first headmaster Fr Michael Fox SJ died that year. In 1965, after two successive headmasters, administration of the school was handed on to the Diocese of Brentwood.[1] On opening, some of the original second and third year intake were transferred from St Ignatius' College, which was then located in Stamford Hill. For the first couple of years, Jesuit teachers were in the majority. The Jesuit community lived on the school site in rooms with full facilities in The Community House, which later became the first of three Sixth Form Blocks. Later, only a single, non-residential, Jesuit chaplain was retained as a link to the order.

Pupils who attend the school are mainly Catholic and the school has a Catholic ethos. Around 1970, the first girls to attend Campion came from Ilford Ursuline School for specific sixth form classes such as Russian and Greek at the school, but there were not many. The school has an attached Sixth Form which admits a number of girls. The pupils that attend the Sixth Form do not have to be Catholic but have to respect the Catholic ethos that the school represents.

The school received an Ofsted report in May 2012. The inspection judgements were rated as 2 (good) in all five categories. The school was awarded Specialist Science College status before converting to an academy in August 2011. however the school continues to offer science as a specialism.[2]

Forms

Originally, when the school had around 660 all boys, it had three forms named after Fr Michael Fox SJ and Saints John Fisher and Thomas More.[3] However, each boy also belonged to a House named Gerard, Southwell and Garnet, denoted by a green, blue or red ribbon strip sewn the length of the top of the blazer pocket edge. The Houses met regularly, had a House Master and competed in sports. For a year or two school blazers even had a different crests for Fourth, Fifth and Sixth forms too.

The school currently has five forms:

  • Fisher
  • More
  • Fox
  • Garnet
  • Southwell

Sport

The school has an outstanding sporting reputation both locally in Havering and nationally with a tradition of rugby. In 2001, The 1st XV won the Daily Mail Cup, becoming the first comprehensive school to win the competition.

Headmasters

  • Fr Michael Fox, S.J. (1 March-27 October 1962)
  • Fr William Webb, S.J. (Deputy and Acting) (28 October 1962 – 6 April 1963)
  • Fr Peter Hackett, S.J. (7 April 1963 – 1965)
  • Philip J. Moloney (1965–18 July 1980)
  • Dr John F Rowbottom (2 September 1980 – 1993)
  • John Johnson (1993–2011)
  • Keith Williams (September 2011– )

Notable former pupils

Former pupils at the school include:[4]

gollark: What?
gollark: sed is Turing-complete, so if a computer can run your translation process, so can sed.
gollark: Just use sed.
gollark: How would you "use GPT" for this?
gollark: Doubtful.

References

  1. "The Campion School- Ethos". Archived from the original on 15 January 2013.
  2. "Ofsted Inspection Report 2012". Government of the United Kingdom. Retrieved 7 September 2013.
  3. Campion Handbook 1975–76 from TheCampionSchool.org.uk. Retrieved 7 August 2017
  4. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 June 2016. Retrieved 9 May 2016.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. http://www.bach-cantatas.com/Bio/McCreesh-Paul.htm
  6. https://royalsociety.org/people/fellowship/2014/alan-soper/
  7. http://www.archive.thecampionschool.org.uk/PastPupilsFamousHome.html

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