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Devonport High School for Boys

Coordinates: 50°22′27″N 4°09′44″W / 50.374071°N 4.162273°W / 50.374071; -4.162273
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Devonport High School for Boys

School badge

Devonport High School for Boys from Stonehouse Creek
Address
Map
Paradise Road

Devonport, Plymouth
, ,
PL1 5QP

England
Coordinates50°22′27″N 4°09′44″W / 50.374071°N 4.162273°W / 50.374071; -4.162273
Information
Type11–18 boys Grammar school
Academy
MottoLatin: Prorsum Semper Honeste
(Forward always honest/proud)
Established1896
FounderAlonzo Rider
Department for Education URN136496 Tables
OfstedReports
Head teacherDan Roberts
StaffOver 100
GenderBoys (Mixed sixth form)
Age11 to 18
Enrolment1,150 (2011)[1]
Houses  Turing
  Leslie
  Windsor
  Scott
  Attenborough
  Fleming
  Johnson
Colour(s)  
Former pupilsDHSB Old Boys[2]
WebsiteDevonport High School for Boys

Devonport High School for Boys is an 11–18 boys grammar school and academy in Plymouth, Devon, England. It has around 1,150 boys, and its catchment area includes southwest Devon and southeast Cornwall as well as Plymouth. Pupils are accepted on the basis of academic aptitude.

The school catchment area draws boys from a wide area extending beyond Plymouth, with the numbers of boys being entitled to free school meals being well below average. The proportion of boys attending the school from minority ethnic groups is below the national average, although there are a number who speak English as an additional language.[3]

School history

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The school was founded by Alonzo Rider on Albert Road, Stoke, Devonport, on 16 January 1896 to meet the needs of boys in Devonport and the surrounding area who sought a career in the Royal Navy, as engineers and civil servants. In 1906, the Devonport Borough Council took over the school and over the next thirty years it continued to teach boys who came from the city or in by train from the Tamar Valley and Cornwall. Old Boys went on to careers both locally and nationally – and especially in the MoD.

In 1941 the school was evacuated to Penzance because of World War II and in 1945 returned to the present site, the former Stoke Military Hospital on Paradise Road, which had been built in 1797.[4] A book by former student and teacher Henry Whitfeld called A Torch in Flame, chronicles the history of the school from its founding to the death of headmaster Dr Cresswell in 1974. Since 1904, there has also been an annual school magazine made by pupils with the purpose of keeping students, parents and Old Boys informed about developments and information concerning the school, although this has never been well-publicised or documented.

The school has held specialist Engineering status since 2002, and was awarded High Performing Secondary Schools for specialisms for languages in 2007 and Applied Learning in 2009.[5]

Overview

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Academic attainment

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In 2002, the Department for Education and Skills (DfES) designated the school as one of the first four specialist engineering colleges in England. In 2006, it was judged to be a High Performing Specialist School (HPSS) and rebid successfully for a second 4-year period of Engineering Specialism. In April 2007, it took up a second specialism in languages. After the OFSTED inspection in October 2007, the school successfully gained redesignation for Engineering and, with its HPSS status re-affirmed, successfully applied a third specialism "Applied Learning" which commenced during 2009. This specialism encouraged subject teaching to make reference to relevance in the world of work.

The school was inspected again in February 2011, and was designated as an "Outstanding" school, paving the way for the school's conversion to "Type Two" Academy Status in early March 2011, under the Coalition Government's Academy scheme. The school's academic performance can be assessed on the UK government's DfES website.[6]

The 2011 OFSTED report for Devonport High School for Boys concluded that attainment of boys across the school was "consistently high", further highlighting that "all groups of students, including those who have special educational needs and/or disabilities enjoy their learning and respond well to the varied learning activities offered to them.[7] Current achievement is excellent throughout the school for all groups of students. Most make much better-than-expected progress towards their personal targets". Pupils in the Sixth Form at the school were said to achieve "outstanding results", with teaching across the school being at least good and often outstanding.[8]

School houses

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Looking west along the Colonnade

Until the merger with Tamar High School at the end of the 1980s there were three 'forms' of pupils who were separate during their first three years, then began to mix as they opted into different subjects (North, South and West or N, S and W). Forms after O-Levels or GCSEs were also somewhat disrupted into new tutor groups each year. The merger with Tamar generated a new form of mixed pupils from both schools: East.

Actual 'houses' being more sport-oriented or social, took longer to coalesce. Before the 2009 changes these were Drake, Raleigh, Gilbert and Grenville. From 2009-2024 there were six: Campbell, Edison, Newton, Priestley, Smeaton and Winstanley. Since 2024, there has been seven: Turing, Leslie, Windsor, Scott, Attenborough, Fleming and Johnson.

The houses continue to compete each year for the St Levan's Shield, i.e. relating to west Cornwall, and also St Levan Road, which is the boundary between Stoke and the new working suburb of Devonport, Keyham, Plymouth which had been built of the reclaimed Keyham Creek.

School buildings

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Based within what was once the Stoke Military Hospital, the school buildings and blocks are all named after notable people with links to Plymouth. The names of these buildings are shortened to their initial for the designation of classroom numbers. Blocks A–E are all connected via an arched colonnade and balcony, while Blocks A and F are connected via an enclosed bridge.

Block Name Purpose Named after
Astor Biology, Engineering, Media Studies & ICT block Nancy Astor, Viscountess Astor, the first woman to be seated as an MP, representing the Plymouth Sutton ward
Astor Annexe Additional Maths & Engineering classrooms
Brunel Mathematics, Modern Foreign Languages & English block Isambard Kingdom Brunel, who engineered the Great Western Railway, and the Royal Albert Bridge
Burrows' Art Studio Art Studio & classroom Clive Burrows, a late English and Drama teacher at the school. Note, this block was previously a drama classroom but was changed to an art room in 2021.
Cookworthy Classics, History & Geography block William Cookworthy, discoverer of Cornish China-clay and founder of the Plymouth porcelain factory
Drake Biology, Chemistry, Physics & Astronomy block Sir Francis Drake, notable Naval officer who also served as Mayor of Plymouth and as MP for Plymouth
Edgcumbe Administrative block, also housing the Learning Commons, Changing Rooms & Gym The Earls of Mount Edgcumbe, whose ancestral seat is Mount Edgcumbe House
Edgcumbe Theatre 234-seat Auditorium
Foulston Sixth Form Centre & ICT suite John Foulston, a prominent architect who designed the original Plymouth Athenaeum, Union Street, the Devonport Guildhall, and the Devonport Column
Foulston Gym Sports Hall & Changing Rooms
Gibbons Refectory, and Food Technology block Edward Stanley Gibbons, a Plymouth-born stamp collector, and founder of the Stanley Gibbons Group
Hansom Sports Hall Multi-use Sports, Assembly & Examination Hall Joseph Hansom and Charles Francis Hansom, two brothers, who were the architects for Plymouth Cathedral
Ingle 1 & 2 Modular classrooms used by the Air Training Corps Wing commander Michael Roscoe Ingle-Finch, a second world war fighter pilot
Jervis Music Suite & Rehearsal rooms Admiral of the Fleet John Jervis, 1st Earl of St Vincent, who commissioned the building of the Plymouth Breakwater
Kingsley Cottages Student Support Centre Reverend Charles Kingsley, a novelist, best known for The Water Babies, who was born in Holne, Dartmoor

Uzel House

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The school had a residential centre in the French town of Uzel in Brittany. This offered pupils the opportunity for work experience with local companies as well as the chance to improve their French and enjoy activities like horseriding and canoeing. The house was bought for the token amount of 1 Franc in 1991, from the Mayor of Uzel. From its opening in 1992, until its closure in 2009 over 250 boys visited the house each year. The Friday Choir also took pupils from two other Plymouth grammar schools, Plymouth High School for Girls and Devonport High School for Girls, to Uzel for an opportunity to sing to the locals. These, and many other Friday Choir tours, were organised by music teacher Trefor K Farrow. Mr Farrow joined DHSB in 1965 and completed his fortieth and final year in 2006. In 2010 there were concerns about the House's long-term sustainability as a result of the recession. Ownership of the house was lost during the tenure of Kieran Earley.

Head Teachers

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Devonport High School staff and pupils at Penzance in July 1945
  • 1896–1906: AJ Rider
  • 1906–1932: AF Treseder
  • 1933–1941: HAT Simmonds
  • 1942–1948: WH Buckley
  • 1949–1953: SB Barker
  • 1953–1974: JL Cresswell
  • 1975–1993: JGW Peck
  • 1993–2008: NM Pettit (Nic Pettit)
  • 2008–2015: KJ Earley
  • 2015–present: DJJ Roberts

Notable former pupils

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Notable alumni include:

References

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  1. ^ "Devonport High School for Boys". OFSTED. Retrieved 17 November 2023.
  2. ^ "DHSOB Inaugural dinner". Dhsob.wordpress.com. 30 July 2012. Retrieved 8 March 2016.
  3. ^ "Devonport High School for Boys". OFSTED. Retrieved 17 November 2023.
  4. ^ "Devonport High School for Boys". National Heritage List for England. Historic England. Retrieved 16 August 2016.
  5. ^ "Devonport High School for Boys". OFSTED. Retrieved 17 November 2023.
  6. ^ "Devonport High School for Boys". Archived from the original on 26 September 2007. Retrieved 2 December 2006.
  7. ^ "Devonport High School for Boys Inspection report". Ofsted. OFSTED. Retrieved 18 November 2023.
  8. ^ "Devonport High School for Boys Inspection report". Ofsted. OFSTED. Retrieved 18 November 2023.
  9. ^ 'DAVIES, Roger Oliver', Who's Who 2011, A & C Black, 2011; online edn, Oxford University Press, December 2010 (accessed 24 September 2011).
  10. ^ 'DYSON, John Alva', Who's Who 2011, A & C Black, 2011; online edn, Oxford University Press, December 2010 (accessed 24 September 2011).
  11. ^ 'EDDY, Prof. Alfred Alan', Who's Who 2011, A & C Black, 2011; online edn, Oxford University Press, December 2010 (accessed 24 September 2011).
  12. ^ 'FELWICK, Wing Comdr David Leonard', Who's Who 2011', A & C Black, 2011; online edn, Oxford University Press, December 2010 (accessed 24 September 2011).
  13. ^ 'FOSTER, Richard Scot', Who's Who 2011, A & C Black, 2011; online edn, Oxford University Press, December 2010 (accessed 24 September 2011).
  14. ^ 'HAMLEY, Donald Alfred', Who's Who 2011, A & C Black, 2011; online edn, Oxford University Press, December 2010 (accessed 24 September 2011).
  15. ^ 'HARRIS, Prof. Sir Martin (Best)', Who's Who 2011, A & C Black, 2011; online edn, Oxford University Press, December 2010 (accessed 24 September 2011).
  16. ^ 'HISCOCK Stephen John', Who's Who 2011, A & C Black, 2011; online edn, Oxford University Press, December 2010 (accessed 24 September 2011).
  17. ^ Matthew D'Arcy (28 April 2011). "Admiral defends carriers amid rising costs". Defence Management. Archived from the original on 15 February 2013. Retrieved 7 January 2013.
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