The County High School, Leftwich
| The County High School | |
|---|---|
| Location | |
Granville Road Northwich , Cheshire , CW9 8EZ England | |
| Coordinates | 53°14′30″N 2°30′24″W / 53.2416°N 2.5066°W |
| Information | |
| Type | Academy |
| Established | 29 April 1957 (1978) |
| Department for Education URN | 138743 Tables |
| Ofsted | Reports |
| Chair | Joanne Flower |
| Principal | Richard Warburton |
| Gender | Coeducational |
| Age | 11 to 16 |
| Enrolment | 1015 |
| Colours | Claret and blue |
| Website | Leftwich High |
The County High School, Leftwich, is a coeducational secondary school with academy status, for students between 11 and 16 years of age, in Leftwich, Cheshire, England.
History
Northwich County Girls' Grammar School
The school was established on Monday April 29, 1957 as the Northwich County Grammar School for Girls.[1][2][3] Three hundred girls arrived in red and navy uniform.[4] The school was officially opened on Wednesday 16 October 1957. The school cost £184,000.[5]
Miss Sybil Webster, the PE teacher, played hockey for Lancashire, in 1961,[6] and for the England women's national field hockey team from 1964.[7] 16 year old Gina Evans swam internationally for Wales in 1964.[8]
By 1974 there were 975 at the girls' school.[9]
Caning incident
In June 1976, a 14 year old girl was given three strokes of the cane for eating crisps in a Maths lesson, which attracted national newspaper attention, Lynne Simmonds of Sydney Street, who subsequently moved to Hartford Secondary School. Lynne's parents accused the headmistress, Janet Dines, of assault.
It was dismissed by Vale Royal Magistrates Court on November 12, 1976.[10] Headmistress Janet Dines had played for the Essex county female cricket team, in the late 1950s.
In May 1982, Lynne received £2,216 in compensation from the European Court of Human Rights, when her parents brought a private prosecution, which was not advocated by the National Association of Head Teachers [11][12] The incident also found its way as a plot device in episode four of Absolutely Fabulous series 1, broadcast in early December 1992.
Comprehensive
The school became a comprehensive in September 1978, with sixth form pupils from the school and the former Sir John Deane's Grammar School going to the new Sir John Deane's College. The school was later known as Leftwich High School until the early 1990s before becoming the County High School Leftwich.
Academy
The school converted to academy status on 1 September 2012. The school is in partnership with Sir John Deane's College as part of the Sir John Brunner Foundation.
Headteachers
- 1957 Miss Celia Barker, history graduate of the University of Manchester
- 1965 Miss Janet Dines,[13] who lived in Knutsford, formerly the head of Maths, and the deputy head, of Forest Lodge School in Essex, which became Bower Park School in 1989[14]
Former teachers
- Maths teacher David Reaper, from 1968, born in Sunderland in 1947, attended Robert Richardsons County Grammar School and Sunderland Teachers Training College;[15] he stood in the February 1974 and October 1974 general elections, for Northwich for the Liberals, and later in the 1992 general election for Halton, when teaching at Grange Comprehensive School in Runcorn,[16] and in the 1997 general election for Eddisbury; his wife taught at Wallerscote Junior School in Weaverham, where he lived[17]
Academic performance
The school gets good GCSE results, well above the England average, and slightly above the Cheshire average. Results have steadily improved over the last 6 years. The 2016 Ofsted inspection graded the school as "outstanding" (the highest rating available).[18] In the 2015/16 academic year the school achieved its highest ever result with 86% of students receiving at least 5 GCSEs at grades A*-C.[19] This result put the school as the top rated secondary comprehensive in Cheshire[20]
Notable former pupils
Northwich County Grammar School for Girls
- Sue Birtwistle, television producer of well-known BBC costume dramas such as the 1995 Pride and Prejudice and the 1996 Emma
- Angela Bostock, soprano with the English National Opera in the 1970s, she later married the bass opera singer Roderick Earle[21]
- Moira Buffini, playwright, film director and actress, who notably wrote the 2010 play Handbagged about Queen Elizabeth II and Margaret Thatcher, and the 2010 film Tamara Drewe
- Diana Johnson, Labour MP since 2005 for Hull North (in attendance from 1977 to 1982)[22]
- Jennifer Saunders, comedian, best known as half of French and Saunders and for the television series Absolutely Fabulous[23]
- Shirley Strong, Olympic hurdler, who won the silver medal in women's 100 metres hurdles at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles (attended 1970–75)
- Jennifer Lowe Summers, from Higher Whitley, won Miss United Kingdom on August 9, 1966 at the Locarno Ballroom in Blackpool, aged 20, winning £1,300, took part in Miss World 1966 on November 17, 1966 at the Lyceum Ballroom (won by Miss Yugoslavia, Nikica Marinović, who married film director Zdravko Šotra);[24][25][26] she came second in Miss Great Britain 1968 in March 1968, and won Miss England on April 26, 1968 at the Lyceum Ballroom in London,[27] and so took part in Miss Europe 1968 in September 1968
Leftwich High School
- Tim Burgess, lead singer of English alternative rock band The Charlatans.
- Michelle Donelan MP[28]
References
- ^ "Female head to make her mark". Cheshire Live. 24 July 2013. Retrieved 14 February 2019.
- ^ "NORTHWICH COUNTY GRAMMAR SCHOOL FOR GIRLS". The National Archives. Retrieved 14 February 2019.
- ^ Winsford Chronicle Saturday 4 May 1957, page 16
- ^ Winsford Chronicle Saturday 11 May 1957, page 11
- ^ Liverpool Daily Post Thursday 17 October 1957, page 4
- ^ Winsford Chronicle Saturday 4 November 1961, page 2
- ^ Runcorn Guardian Thursday 16 January 1964, page 4
- ^ Liverpool Echo Thursday 18 June 1964, page 14
- ^ Liverpool Echo Wednesday 6 February 1974, page 22
- ^ Manchester Evening News Friday 12 November 1976, page 1
- ^ Daily Express Monday 31 May 1982, page 10
- ^ Corporal punishment
- ^ Winsford Chronicle Wednesday 22 March 1978, page 4
- ^ Winsford Chronicle Saturday 6 May 1961, page 14
- ^ Chester Chronicle Friday 15 February 1974, page 14
- ^ Runcorn Weekly News Thursday 24 October 1991
- ^ Chester Chronicle Friday 26 April 1974
- ^ Platt, Dawn; Chambers, Paul; Hollister, Claire; Harding, Marcia; Patterson, Annette; Birchall, Christine (25 April 2016). "Inspection report: The County High School Leftwich, 8–9 March 2016". ofsted.gov.uk. Office for Standards in Education, Children's Services and Skills. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 February 2019. Retrieved 2 February 2019.
- ^ "The County High School, Leftwich". Leftwichhigh.com. August 2016. Retrieved 27 November 2016.
- ^ "Where are Cheshire's top schools for GCSE results?". Chesterchronicle.co.uk. Retrieved 27 November 2016.
- ^ Winsford Chronicle Thursday 4 October 1973
- ^ Waller, Robert. The Almanac of British Politics. Routledge. p. 556. Retrieved 14 February 2019.
'Northwich County Grammar School for Girls'.
- ^ Hyams, Jacky (October 2012). Jennifer Saunders - The Unauthorised Biography of the Absolutely Fabulous Star. John Blake. ISBN 9781782190844. Retrieved 14 February 2019.
- ^ Daily Mirror Wednesday 10 August 1966, page 5
- ^ Chester Chronicle Friday 12 August 1966, page 1
- ^ Runcorn Guardian Thursday 2 May 1968, page 15
- ^ Liverpool Echo Saturday 27 April 1968, page 28
- ^ Anon (2017). "Donelan, Michelle Emma May Elizabeth". Who's Who (online Oxford University Press ed.). Oxford: A & C Black. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U283877. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)