Dover Grammar School for Boys (DGSB) is a selectivesecondary school located in Dover, United Kingdom, whose origins can be traced back to the Education Act 1902 (the 'Balfour Act'). Originally founded as the Dover County School for Boys and Girls with locations behind the Dover Town Hall and on Priory Hill, the co-educational arrangements were early on prohibited by the Kent Education Committee. Dover Grammar School for Boys now occupies a prominent position overlooking the town of Dover on Astor Avenue. Its sister school is located in Frith Road and known as the Dover Grammar School for Girls (DGSG).
History
The Dover County School for Boys (1905-1931)
The Education Act 1902 (the Balfour Act) laid the path to formal secondary education for 'able pupils' throughout the United Kingdom. In 1903 Frederick (Fred) Whitehouse M.A. (Oxon.) was appointed Dover's Director of Further Education and oversaw the transition of the local municipal school and School of Art into the new Dover County School for Boys and Girls which was formally founded in 1905. Initially, the boys' premises were in Ladywell and the girls' on Priory Hill, on the site of the private St. Hilda's School, whose headteacher was persuaded to become Head of the Girls' Department of the County School.[1]
Increasing numbers at both schools led to wrangling between the Board of Education, Kent County Council, and the Dover Corporation. Although Fred Whitehouse and the Dover Borough preferred a co-educational arrangement, the Kent Education Committee and Board of Education insisted on separate schools. A new site for the Boys' school was eventually found in Frith Road and plans agreed in 1913. Despite the outbreak of war, building on the new premises commenced and the school moved there in October 1916.[2]
Numbers at the School were ever-increasing and by the end of WWI there were 230 boys in the Senior school in Frith road and 77 in the Junior school on Priory Hill.[3]
The 'School on the Hill' and WWII (1931-1945)
Despite the severe economic circumstances of the depression, Whitehouse persuaded the authorities to provide the funds for a new building in Astor Avenue.
Whitehouse believed in the maxim often attributed to Winston Churchill that "we shape our buildings and our buildings shape us" and, architecturally, the school mixes both gothic and classical influences.
Opened by the Duke of York in 1931, the future King George VI of the United Kingdom, DGSB is one of few state school in Britain to have a working organ, which is housed in the Great Hall and leaves for Hamburg every 25 years for expert care and maintenance.
During World War II, the school building was requisitioned and used by the Royal Navy as a station for WRNS with pupils and staff evacuated to Ebbw Vale in south Wales.
A notable feature of the school building is a large stained glass window showing St. George and bearing the names of past students of the school who fell in World War Two with a separate memorial to students in World War One.
Post-war developments (1946-present)
Following funding cost pressures, in 1991, the school established a joint sixth form with Dover Grammar School for Girls (DGSG) which continues to this day.
In 1994, the school became Grant Maintained after warding off a series of reorganisation proposals from Kent County Council including a relocation to the ex-Castlemount School Site in 1990[4] as well as the amalgamation of the 2 grammar schools to a new modern construct in Whitfield in 1993.
In 2000, a second tower was erected that differed from the design of the existing tower (known as the Old Tower to pupils) to provide additional access to IT rooms built over the school workshops.
In 2006, as a result of its specialist status as a Business and Enterprise College, the school received additional funding from the government, part of which was invested into a new Business & Enterprise suite.
In 2019, plans were drawn to demolish the existing buildings and erect a new modern school on the adjacent playing fields with completion originally set for 2022.[6] Kier was appointed in August 2020 by The Department for Education (DfE) to construct the new facilities for the school.[7] Erection of the steel skeleton for the main building was completed by Mifflin Construction in mid-2021. The building was opened to students in spring 2022 with the whole project being completed in summer 2023.[8]
Combined Cadet Force
The school also has a Combined Cadet Force (CCF) which is open to anyone from Year 8 upwards.
House system
The School has operated a 'house system' since the First World War to the present time. On entry to the school pupils are allocated to a 'house' to which they owe allegiance throughout the entirety of their school career. These 'houses' primarily compete against one another in inter-house competitions. For example, in cross-country, athletics, cricket, football, or swimming.
The original four houses at the school were established in 1915, given colours (red, dark blue, light blue, and green), and named after their respective captains.[9]
From 1915 to 1919, the houses were Street's (red), Costelloe's (dark blue), Chase's (light blue), Bromley's (green). In 1919, the house names were changed to reflect different areas of Dover District in which the boys lived: Maxton (red), Buckland (dark blue), Town (light blue), Country (green).[10]
After the Second World War and the return of the School from Ebbw Vale, the house names were changed again. The old names were no longer relevant for the altered demographic situation of the town so the new houses were renamed to reflect the different locations occupied by the School (Park Street, Priory Hill, Frith Road, and Astor Avenue).[11] Thus, in 1949, the names became Astor (Red), Frith (Dark Blue), Priory (Light Blue), Park (Green).
In the early 1990s, the house names were changed again to reflect areas around the town and to create a stronger association with local heritage. These names were Castle (Red), Channel (Green), Port (Blue), Priory (Yellow)
In 2019 a fifth house was added to the four house system, Pharos, represented by the colour white. Meaning the current house names are Castle (Red), Channel (Green), Pharos (White), Port (Blue), Priory (Yellow).[12]
.
Admissions
The school is selective and, in order to gain entry, the prospective student must first pass the 11+ examination, informally known as the "Kent Test". Alternatively they can pass the schools in-house 'Grammar Test', which is administered by the School.[13]
Headteachers
Mr Frederick Whitehouse MA (Oxon), (1910-1936)
Mr John C Booth MA (Oxon), (1936-1960)
Dr Michael G Hinton MA (Oxon), PhD (London), (1960-1968)
Mr TS Walker BSc (Manchester), (1968-1969)
Mr Reginald C Colman MA (Oxon) OBE,[14] (1969-1992)
Mr Neil A Slater MA (Cantab), (1992-2002)
Mrs Julia Bell BA (UEA), PGCE (London), (2002-2003)
Mrs Sally Lees MA (Oxon), (2003-2010)
Dr Richard Moxham BA, PhD (Manchester), (2010-2014)
This article's list of alumni may not follow Wikipedia's verifiability policy. Please improve this article by removing names that do not have independent reliable sources showing they merit inclusion in this article AND are alumni, or by incorporating the relevant publications into the body of the article through appropriate citations.(November 2019)
Former pupils are known as "Old Pharosians". The term is derived from the Latin word pharos ('lighthouse'), and refers to the famous lighthouse at Dubris built by the Romans shortly after the Claudian invasion of Britain, c. 46 CE.
Military
Major Ronald Bromley (1929-1936?), MC, British army officer, 9th Survey Regiment RA (9 SR). Awarded the MC.[16]
Major-General Eric Cole (1919-1923), OBE, CBE, CB, Royal Corps of Signals, first-class cricketer and amateur boxer[17]
Major General Reverend Coles Alexander Osborne (1907-1910), CIE, Director of Military Operations, GHQ, India, Commander of Kohat District.[18][19]
Politics, civil service, and the law
Professor Anthony Wilfred Bradley (1945-1952), QC, British barrister, known for expertise in UK constitutional law, social security, and human rights, Professor of Law at the University of Edinburgh.[20]
Sir William Fittall (1964-1972), private secretary to the Home Secretary (1985-1987) and Secretary of State for Northern Ireland (1992-1993). Secretary General of the Archbishops’ Council and General Synod (2002-2015)
Sir Clifford George Jarrett (1920-1928), KBE, CB, Permanent Secretary and Lord Commissioner of the Admiralty, Permanent Secretary of the Department of Health and Social Security
Sir John Frank Mummery (1949-1957), Lord Justice Mummery, a judge in the Court of Appeal
Business
Herbert Loebl (1938-1939), OBE, British businessman, philanthropist, co-founder of Joyce, Loebl & co., a manufacturer of scientific instruments
Charitable works
Lester Borley (1942-1949), CBE, director of the National Trust for Scotland.[24]
Professor Kenneth William Donald (1920-1930), OBE, DSC, FRCP, FRCPE, physician, surgeon, pulmonologist, cardiologist, professor of medicine, and leading expert on underwater physiology and exercise physiology[32]
Professor Henry Garland (1917?-1926), Professor of German, University of Exeter[34]
Professor Cecil Augustus Hart (1914-1919), CMG, Professor of Surveying and Photogrammetry at London, Vice Chancellor of Roorkee University, India; Rector and Principal of the Nigerian College of Arts, Sciences and Technology; Director of the London Master Builders’ Association[35]
Professor Arthur F. Holmes (1935-1941), Professor of Philosophy, Wheaton College
Ian Charles Jarvie (1949-1955), Professor of Philosophy, member of the Royal Society of Canada
Professor Robert Miles (1961-1968?), Professor of Sociology and International Studies at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, Associate Dean for Study Abroad and International Exchange
Professor Jonathan Philip Parry (1968-1975), Professor of Modern British History at the University of Cambridge
Herbert Schofield (1912-1915), MC, Senior Physics Master and Principal of the Technical Institute at Ladywell. A distinguished physicist.
Professor Robert Spicer (1961-1969), Professor of Earth Sciences at the Open University and Visiting Professor at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden, Yunnan, China[37][38]
^Kent County Council. Eleventh Annual Report of the Kent Education Committee 1913-1914, pp. 4, 19 (for loans raised against the schools); K. Ruffell (1987), The Dover County School 1905 to 1931, ch. 3.
^K. H. Ruffell (1981) 'A brief history' in Fifty Years On: 1931-1981, Dover, p. 10.
^Tutthill, Graham (3 March 1990). "Anger over Merger Bid". East Kent Mercury.
^Zendera, Yamurai (30 October 2008). "Plans to relocate grammar schools". Dover Express.
^Lennon, Sam (27 February 2019). "Plans to demolish and replace 1930s Dover Grammar School for Boys building, involving Department for Education". Kent Online.
^R. Ward (2003) 'Professor Clyde Binfield: A Critical Appreciation' in D. Bebbington and T. Larsen (eds.) Modern Christianity and Cultural Aspirations, London, Continuum, pp. 15-25
^See A.R. Myers (1976) 'George William Coopland: A biographical appreciation' in C. T. Allmand (ed.), War, Literature and Politics in the Late Middle Ages. New York, Barnes and Noble, pp. 1-11; obituary: The Times 1975.
^Grace's Guide to British Industrial History: Who's Who in Engineering (1939); obituary: Grace's Guide to British Industrial History: 1970 Institution of Civil Engineers: Obituaries
^"Sir James Menter". The Times. London. 3 October 2006. Retrieved 1 April 2022.
^"R. A. Spicer (1961-1969)". The Old Pharosians' Newsletter. New series. 23. February 1973.`
^R. Trahair (ed.) (2015) Behavior, Technology, and Organizational Development. Eric Trist and the Tavistock Institute.London, Routledge, 2-4
^"The textbook that changed my life". Times Higher Education. London: THE World Universities Insights Limited. 26 November 2004. Retrieved 1 April 2022.
^M. MacKay (2018) Ian Watt: The Novel and the Wartime Critic Oxford, Oxford University Press
^In 1988, Davey not only broke the Channel record but also the two-way Lake Windermere, and Cook Strait (New Zealand) records: C. Carter (1988) 'President's Report' British Long Distance Swimming Association Annual Report