St George's College, Weybridge
Motto |
Amore et Labore (Love and work) |
---|---|
Established | 1869 |
Type | Independent day school |
Religion | Roman Catholic |
Headmistress | Rachel Owens |
Founders | Josephites |
Location |
Addlestone Surrey KT15 2QS England Coordinates: 51°22′34″N 0°28′41″W / 51.376°N 0.478°W |
DfE number | 936/6092 |
Staff | 100 |
Students | 941 |
Gender | Co-educational |
Ages | 11–18 |
Houses | Stirling, Southcote, Kilmorey, Petre |
Colours | Maroon and white |
Publication | Review |
Former pupils | Old Georgians |
Website |
www |
St George's Weybridge are independent mixed Roman Catholic co-educational day schools in Surrey, England taking pupils from 3-18.
History
St George's College was founded by the Josephites as a boys' boarding school. The first girls entered the 6th Form in the 1960s and the school decided to take girls at age 11 in 1998. It absorbed St Maurs, a girls' school run by the Congregation of the Holy Infant Jesus (IJ Sisters) in 2000. The schools are on two campuses, within 0.5 miles (0.80 km), in Addlestone and Weybridge. The former St Maurs campus houses the junior school.
Overview
There are approximately 900 pupils aged between eleven and eighteen, and four houses: Kilmorey, Southcote, Stirling and Petre named after the four owners of the building before it was converted to a school.
Its teachings are based on Josephite tradition (founded by the Belgian Constant van Crombrugghe), the order of priests that established the school.[1]
The Junior School to the College is in Weybridge proper, close to its high street and is a co-educational school with over 600 pupils for ages 3 – 11. In combination with the College, this makes St George's by far the largest provider of Catholic education in England and Wales in the independent sector. In their sports grounds they have three netball courts, two 11-a-side hockey pitches, and four rugby pitches. In the summer they have six rounders pitches and five cricket pitches. Two river Bournes flow through the grounds where they meet in the north eastern corner before flowing northwards into the River Thames at Addlestone. The River Bourne (Chertsey Branch) enters the grounds in the north west corner and the River Bourne (Addlestone Branch) enters the school grounds from the south east corner. The entire ground covers 100 acres (40 ha) of land and much of it is woodland. The College owns a boat house on the Thames in nearby Walton. The Junior School occupies 20 acres (8.1 ha) close to the high street of Weybridge. The previous name for the Junior School was Woburn Hill School and the grounds of what was Woburn Park here is a listed park and garden in the English Heritage protection register.
Notable alumni
The school has encouraged an Old Georgians' network, with numerous 'Reunite' events staged all over the United Kingdom and the world.
- Marcus Agius - Chairman of Barclays Bank
- David Atkinson - Conservative MP
- Sean Bobbitt - award-winning cinematographer
- David Laws - Liberal Democrat MP
- Stephen Lloyd - Liberal Democrat MP
- Adam Hollioake - England and Surrey cricket player
- Ben Hollioake - England and Surrey cricket player
- Daniel Kawczynski - Conservative MP
- Sir Simon Mayall - Middle East Adviser at the Ministry of Defence
- Monique Roffey - award-winning British writer
- Sir Clive Sinclair - British computer entrepreneur
- Anthony Watson - English Rugby Union player
- Marcus Watson - English Rugby Union player
- Isabel Webster - broadcaster
References
External links
- St George's College website
- Former students of St George's College and St Maur's School website
- St George’s College parents' website
- St George's College's Facebook page
- St George's Reunite Facebook page
- Old Georgians' HC website
- Profile on the ISC website