The Manchester Central Grammar School for Boys was established on Whitworth Street in 1900.[1] While the Central High School for Girls remained at Whitworth Street, the Central High School for Boys moved to Kirkmanshulme Lane in Longsight in 1958.[1] It amalgamated with Victoria Park Secondary School to form the Central High School for Boys (as a comprehensive school) in 1967.[1] It then amalgamated with Ducie Technical College to form the Ducie Central High School for Boys in 1982.[1]
The school moved to Moss Side, where new buildings were built at a cost of £5 million (the old site is now occupied by Belle Vue Centre), in September 1995.[1]Iain Duncan Smith visited the school in October 2002.[2] After a £12 million new building had been completed, the school re-opened under the leadership of Dame Kathryn August as the Manchester Academy in September 2003.[3][4]
In 2009, the Manchester Evening News reported that the school had achieved an 'astounding transformation', with its predecessor once branded 'the worst in the country', it was now rated by Ofsted, the schools inspectorate, as 'outstanding'.[7] The fact that many pupils come from diverse and often economically impoverished backgrounds led experts to state that pupils at the academy performed much better than they would at most other schools.[7]
Awards
Pupils from the academy won the national Apax – Mosaic Enterprise Challenge 2009/10 Award,[8] with their 'virtual business' having generated profits of over £6.3 million online. Attending a ceremony at Atlantic House, London, in March 2010, they were awarded a trophy and a cheque for £3,000 from BBCDragon's Den and Radio FourToday presenter Evan Davis and Khawar Mann of Apax Partners.[9]
Having won the regional final of the Debate Mate competition, pupils from the academy competed as national finalists in the 2010 Richard Koch Cup Debating Final, chaired by Channel Four's Krishnan Guru-Murthy at the House of Lords.[10]
Notable alumni
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.(July 2020)
Prof. William Johnson, Professor of Mechanics from 1975 to 1982 at the University of Cambridge, and Professor of Mechanical Engineering from 1960 to 1975 at the University of Manchester
Brian Statham CBE, English cricketer (fast bowler). Played for England 1951–65. In 1962 he broke the record held by Alec Bedser for the most wickets taken by an English bowler.
James L. Tuck, physicist, member of the Manhattan project, shaped explosives expert
^Falconer, Isobel. ‘Chadwick, Sir James (1891–1974)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Sept. 2004; online ed., Jan/ 2009 accessed 26 June 2009