Rose Hill School was originally established in Royal Tunbridge Wells, Kent in 1832. In 1903 the then Headmaster, Mr Browning, founded a second Rose Hill School in Banstead, Surrey, taking the vast majority of the original school with him. Following the outbreak of World War II, this second Rose Hill School re-located to the small village of Alderley, near Wotton-under-Edge in Gloucestershire in 1939.[1][7] The then Headmaster, T G Hughes, bought the 20-acre site of Alderley House,[7] a Grade II Listed[8] neo-Elizabethan 19th century manor house[9] designed by Lewis Vulliamy[9] and built for Robert Blagden Hale[10] between 1859 and 1863.[11] The house was built on the site of a previous Jacobean property,[12] and the cellars from the original building remain to this day under the house.[7] On the ground floor of the house were located the dining room, the library, the Headmaster's study, two classrooms, the school office, a billiards hall, a small laundry, the staff room, the staff dining room and the kitchens, whilst the upper floors (including the former servants' quarters on the top floor) provided the Sick-Bay and all dormitory accommodation and washing facilities for boarding pupils, as well as living quarters for the matrons and some teachers. All of the dormitories were named after local villages, including Alderley, Badminton, Hawkesbury, Hillesley, Kingswood and Stinchcombe.
The sizeable grounds in which the school was situated included a number of spinneys, two grass tennis courts, a hard court, an outside swimming pool and a large playing field,[7] and it adjoined St Kenelm's Church.[13][14] The grounds directly to the west of the house were dominated by a mature Wellingtonia tree, a very tall specimen of the Giant Sequoia family, while on the other side of the house towards St Kenelm's Church were two Monkey-Puzzle trees.
Closure of the School
After 70 years at the Alderley site, Rose Hill School closed on 2 September 2009[2] when it merged with Querns Westonbirt School (formerly Querns School, Cirencester until its acquisition by Westonbirt School in 2002[15]). Together the two schools formed Rose Hill Westonbirt School[4][5][6][7] which is co-located with Westonbirt School[4] in nearby Tetbury.[4] Weston Birt School Limited (Company Registration No. 230224, Registered Charity No. 311715) acquired the undertakings, assets and liabilities of Rose Hill School Alderley Limited (Company No. 911698, Registered Charity No. 311708) for £1.798 m on 29 August 2008.[16] The property at Alderley was put on the market at the end of 2009 for £3m[7] and subsequently sold for use as a private residence. After purchasing the house the new owners employed Humphrey Cook Associates to refurbish the property back to its original state in 1860.[17]
In September 2009 the property was used as one of the filming locations for a Season 24 episode of BBC1's hospital drama Casualty[18][19] which aired in early 2010.
In documents filed since the sale of the property the house has been referred to as "Alderley Manor",[20] whereas the Land Registry still refers to it as "Alderley House".[21] There also appears to be a reference to the property as "Alderley Manor" in the National Archives, in the context of R. H. Blagden Hale's purchase deeds.[22]
^ abcdLiza-Jane Gillespie (20 January 2008), School celebrates 175 years, The Gloucester News, archived from the original on 9 March 2012, retrieved 9 February 2011
^ abCharlotte Shepherd (9 July 2008). "Private schools to merge". Gazette Series. Archived from the original on 26 July 2011. Retrieved 9 February 2011.