Hill House School is a co-educational independent day school for pupils from the ages of 3 to 18 in South Yorkshire, England. In 2012, Hill House was named 'independent school of the Year' at the independent school awards.[2] It is a member of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference, The Society of Heads, The Independent Association of Preparatory Schools, and the Independent Schools Council.
Early history
Hill House School was founded in Doncaster as a preparatory school for boys in 1912 by Reginald Master. In 1959, Paula Haigh, the wife of the then Headmaster of Hill House School, Mr Hamilton Haigh, founded St Mary's School on Bawtry Road as a girls' school. In the early 1970s under a new head, Hill House began to accept girls, and by the early 1980s had become fully co-educational.
Hill House St Mary's School was born when the two schools merged in August 2002, with primary-age children being taught at the Rutland Street site, overlooking Doncaster's Town Fields, and with secondary-age children taught at the St Mary's site on Bawtry Road.[3]
Recent history
In September 2008, Hill House School, reverting to its former name, relocated to the Officers’ Quarters of former RAF Finningley, previous home to Britain's Vulcan bombers, adjacent to the modern Robin Hood Airport. In an £8 million project, led by Cadman Construction, the school now has numerous purpose-built classrooms allied to historic function rooms. In September 2011, Hill House opened its new Sixth Form and Music School in a £1.1 million development, and was accepted into membership of the Society of Heads.
Since 2010, Hill House has been home to the Robin Hood Music and Drama Festival, which takes place in April each year. In 2012, the school acquired 54 acres of land in nearby Blaxton, which has been developed into sports grounds.
In February 2015, the school renewed its RAF past by becoming the base of 558 Finningley Squadron of the Air Training Corps
In April 2017, the school's new dining hall was opened.
In October 2020, the school issued an apology in response to a satirical Tiktok video showing several Hill House students lip-syncing to a song as part of a popular Tiktok challenge.[4]
In August 2021, the school celebrated record examination results and Oxbridge admissions.[5]
In February 2023, the school's new £1 million sports pavilion was opened at Blaxton Sports Grounds by the international netball player Tracey Neville.[6]
In November 2024, the school opened New Court, including its Art School, Music School, Mathematics Department and Fitness Centre.
In December 2024, Hill House was named 'Independent Secondary School of the Year, North' for 2025 by the Sunday Times.[7]
Catchment
The main catchment area includes Tickhill, Bawtry, Epworth, Doncaster, Rotherham, Howden, Selby, Pontefract, Retford & Worksop, all of which are served by school transport.[citation needed]
Houses
The School has 4 Houses, School (Blue), Master (Red), Field (Green), New (Purple)
Awards
2012–13 Times Independent School of the Year; Winner
2012–13 Times Outstanding Strategic Initiative Award: Winner
2012–13 Times Outstanding Governing Body Award; Shortlist
2016–17 Times Outstanding Community Initiative Award; Winner
2021–22 Independent School of the Year for Sport; Shortlist
2023–24 Classic FM Music Teacher of the Year; Shortlist
2023-24 Education Business Awards; Shortlist
2024-25 Sunday Times Independent Secondary School of the Year, North
Successes
2016–17 North of England Hockey Champions, 5th in National Finals, at U13 Girls
2017–18 North of England Hockey Runners-up, 7th in National Finals, at U14 Girls
2021–22 North of England Tier 4 Hockey Champions at U18 Girls
2021–22 National Tier 4 Hockey Runners Up at U18 Girls
2021–22 U16 Boys Rugby Yorkshire Cup Winners
2021–22 U15 Boys England National Rugby Bowl Winners
2022–23 North of England Tier 4 Hockey Champions at U18 Girls
2022–23 National Schools' Rugby Sevens Champions at U14 Girls
2023-24 Yorkshire and North East Tier 3 Hockey Champions at U14 Girls
Notable former pupils
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.(September 2022)