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►►►其它中学
Colston's
School
科斯顿中学,科斯顿学校
was founded in 1710 by the
Bristol
philanthropist, Edward Colston.
He entrusted
his school into the care of the Society of Merchant Venturers, which continues
to play an active and caring role in the school's affairs, nominating half the
governing body, including the chairman, from its members.
The school moved from the centre of the city to a former palace of the Bishop of
Bristol, at Stapleton, in 1857.
Together with the Lower School, which is situated on what used to be Stapleton
Court and the old Rectory, the school estate can boast over 30 acres of
beautiful grounds on the northern outskirts of Bristol, bordering the river
Frome.
Colston's was exclusively a boys' school until girls were admitted to the sixth
form in 1984. It became fully co-educational following its amalgamation in 1991
with the Collegiate School, Winterbourne, a school founded in Redland in 1902.
It became Colston's Collegiate, catering for boys and girls aged 3 to 18 years
and boarders from 11 years, and the name reverted to Colston’s School in 2004.
The latest
rolls at the start of the academic year 2005/6 show 837 pupils on roll, with 222
in
the Lower School to Year 6 and 615 in the Upper School including 160 in the
Sixth Form. The Upper School numbers also include 55 boarders.
It means that
Colston’s is well established as the third largest of Bristol’s 11 principal
independent schools.
The facilities
at Colston’s are upgraded and extended at regular intervals, and the school is
fortunate to have all its amenities, including sports grounds, on one site.
Recent additions include a classroom block extension, squash courts, sports
hall, fully equipped theatre, concert hall, re-furbished science laboratories, a
purpose-built Combined Cadet Force headquarters,
a floodlit Astroturf pitch
and newly-refurbished floodlit tennis and netball courts.
The Society of Merchant Venturers has recently published the history of
Colston's. Written by Dr John Wroughton, a Governor of Colston's since 1993,
this is the first history of the school.
This
is the remarkable story of the hospital school set up in the centre of Bristol
in 1710 for 100 poor boys by the philanthropist, Edward Colston. It describes
the school's chequered history throughout the 18th and 19th centuries - its
harsh conditions, brutal floggings, meagre diet, incompetent masters and brittle
finances - before charting its move to Stapleton in 1861 and its subsequent
transformation into one of the west country's leading independent schools.
The life of
the pupils is vividly portrayed - brought into focus by the series of personal
reminiscences - as is the vital contribution made by individual Headmasters and
the Society of Old Colstonians. Central to the book, however, is the crucial
role of the Society of Merchant Venturers which, as trustee of Colston's
endowment, has faithfully managed and supported the school for almost 300 years.
Copies of the book are available from The Bursary, Colston's Collegiate School,
Stapleton, Bristol BS16 1BJ at the special introductory price of £14.95 plus UK
postage and packing charge of £4.80 (cheques payable to Colston's Collegiate
School).
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