Coordinates: 53°22′57″N 2°54′03″W / 53.3825°N 2.9009°W / 53.3825; -2.9009

Calderstones School

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Calderstones School
Current school crest
Location
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Harthill Road

, ,
England
Information
TypeCommunity school
Motto"Ex Hoc Metallo Virtutem""Courage, Honour, Service"[1]
Local authorityLiverpool City Council
Department for Education URN104698 Tables
Chair of GovernorsRichard Blanchard[2]
HeadteacherLee Ratcliffe
Staff150
GenderCo-educational
Age11 to 18
Enrolment1,483
Colour   

Calderstones School is an English comprehensive school located opposite Calderstones Park on Harthill Road in the Liverpool suburb of Allerton.[3]

The school was founded in 1921 as Quarry Bank High School for Boys and its first intake of 225 pupils was on 11 January 1922.[1] The first headmaster of the school was R. F. Bailey (an old Etonian), who formed the school on the principles of public school houses. Subsequently, the first year boys' house was named Bailey.[1] The current headteacher is Lee Ratcliffe.[1]

The school has several notable former pupils, including music producer Guy Chambers, the architect Sir James Stirling, Count William-Alexander of Monpezat, a member of the Danish Royal family, and founding Beatles member John Lennon. Lennon's band with Paul McCartney and George Harrison, before settling on the name The Beatles, were earlier formed under the name The Quarrymen, inspired by a line from the Quarry Bank school song. Lennon, at age 16, had formed that group with several friends from the school.[4]

History

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In September 1967, Quarry Bank High School for Boys merged with neighbouring Calder High School for Girls (a girls' grammar school, also on Harthill Road) and nearby Morrison Boys' Secondary Modern, and adopted the name Quarry Bank Comprehensive School. The same year saw the abolition of the school's house system, whereby the pupils were divided between Mersey, Esmeduna, Wavertree, Sefton, Allerton, Childwall, Aigburth and Woolton houses.

In 1985, the school merged with Aigburth Vale High School, Aigburth, which led to the school operating at four sites with 1,800 pupils; it was also then that it adopted its current name. Aigburth Vale was previously a grammar school with around 600 girls. In 1989, the school divested itself of its Aigburth and Morrison facilities, retaining only the original Calder House and Quarry Bank estates. A new building to replace the Morrison wing was built within the existing school site. The former Morrison site is now home to a Tesco superstore on Mather Avenue in Allerton. The site of Aigburth Vale High School was redeveloped as flats.[1]

Refurbishment

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In 2001, the school underwent a major refurbishment as part of a Private Finance Initiative scheme. The entire site was overhauled, with the old Calder Wing largely demolished, leaving only Calder House which now houses the sixth form. An Arts Wing was built to house the English, MFL, Arts and Music departments. The former Quarry Wing was divided into two separate buildings. One is Quarry House which houses the ICT and History departments, and the main office for the school. The classroom core of Quarry Wing is now known as the Science Wing and houses a number of science labs. Also in 2001, the school was given Science College status under the Specialist Schools Programme (abolished in 2011).

File:Front of Quarry House, part of Calderstones School, Sep 2012.jpg
Front of Quarry House, part of Calderstones School, September 2012

Notable former pupils

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Quarry Bank High School for Boys

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Calder High School for Girls

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Aigburth Vale High School for Girls

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Quarry Bank Comprehensive School

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Calderstones Community Comprehensive School

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References

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