Henry Mellish School and Specialist Sports College

Henry Mellish School and Specialist Sports College was a small, non-denominational secondary school in Bulwell, Nottingham, England, situated in an area of high social deprivation.

The Henry Mellish School & Sports College
Address
Map
Highbury Road

, ,
NG6 9DS

Coordinates52°59′36″N 1°11′18″W / 52.9934°N 1.1882°W / 52.9934; -1.1882
Information
TypeSecondary
MottoTenax Propositi (Firm of purpose)
Established1929; 95 years ago (1929)
ClosedJune 6, 2009; 15 years ago (2009-06-06) (Now The Bulwell Academy)
Local authorityCity of Nottingham
SpecialistSports and ICT
Department for Education URN122878 Tables
OfstedReports
ChairR. Ogier
Head teacherTony Bond (acting)
GenderCoeducational
Age11 to 16
Enrolment539
Colour(s)Black and gold   
PublicationMellish Mercury
Replaced byThe Bulwell Academy

History

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Grammar school

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The school was founded as a boys' county grammar school in 1929 - the Henry Mellish Grammar School, and named after Eton-educated Henry Mellish, a British Army colonel and local councillor, who died two years prior to the opening. The school was sited near the Highbury Vale tram stop and opposite the Highbury Hospital on Highbury Road (B682).

The County Secondary School opened on Tuesday 17 September 1929, being officially opened on Friday 4 October 1929 by the sister of Henry Mellish, who had died in February 1927, the first Chairman of Notts Education Committee in 1903.

There were 214 at the school, with 91 in the first year. The headteacher was T O Balk. The school and equipment cost £50,000.

In the 1950s there would be around 2-3 hours of homework per night. The school was for Nottinghamshire, up to places such as Kirkby-in-Ashfield. There were many clubs and a Debating Society. Many went to prestigious universities.

The school competed in the radio series Top of the Form in Heat 2 for England on Monday 8 October 1956 at 7.30pm on the Light Programme. The recording took place on 1 October. It lost against a grammar school team from the West Midlands.[1] The team appeared on the front page of the Nottingham Evening Post on 21 September 1956.

The captain was David Leivers, 17, the head boy of 4 Upper Canaan in Ruddington, Bill Buxton (November 1943 - 14 September 2016) who studied Mechanical Sciences at St. John’s College, Cambridge, aged 12, of Attenborough,[2] Michael Carson (c.1943 - 12 July 2018), aged 13, of 15 Meadow Close in Hucknall, who studied Geography at Cambridge, later Professor of Geography, at McGill University in Canada, and Roger S Hursthouse, 15 of 34 Little Green Road in Woodborough, who became a local businessman.[3][4]

The team lost 34-48[5] against Brenda Emery, aged 17, and head girl and captain, Angela Clifton aged 14, Diana Herd aged 13, and Margaret Scaife aged 12. This team would win the whole competition, the first English team to do so.[6]

David Leivers became a doctor, who went to University College Oxford, and trained in London.[7][8]

Comprehensive

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Labour rushed through comprehensive plans in September 1972, before the county would take over in April 1974.[9] The school became a 11-16 coeducational comprehensive in 1974, so lost the 6th form, and had women teachers from 1974. The school only had women teachers in the war.

In 1974 the first year was 75 girls and 75 boys. The rest of the school had over 500 boys.[10]

School specifics

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Towards the end of its lifespan the subjects taught at the school were:

  • English
  • Maths
  • Science
  • Geography
  • Textiles
  • Art
  • ICT
  • PE
  • Workshop

Closure in 2009

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The school was closed on 6 June 2009 in preparation for the opening of The Bulwell Academy. This merged the school with the other major educational institute in the local area, River Leen (formerly Alderman Derbyshire). Originally the merge of these two school was deemed unthinkable by local residents due to the overwhelming rivalry between the two schools.

Former Head Teacher, Mr. Graham Roberts has notably gone on to also be the head of the merged Bulwell Academy.

The close of the school came a shock to many current and former students, being one of the fastest improving schools in the city. Improvements such as the relatively new refurbished community sports college in which lessons would often take place.

During the transition into the new academy building, both of the yet unclosed school took temporary new names. Henry Mellish being chiefly renamed "Bulwell Academy Highbury".

Academic performance

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In November 1997, the school was the joint-18th worst school in England, with 6% getting 5 good GCSEs. William Crane Comprehensive School came joint-second worst in England with 2% having 5 good GCSEs, being joint-worst in England in 2003.[11] In November 2000, the school came joint-27th worst school in England, with 9% having 5 good GCSEs. In November 2001 it came joint-17th worst in England, with 10%; William Crane had come joint-worst in England with 4%.[12]

Henry Mellish School was judged to require special measures in 2005, but had since vastly improved - the school gained its specialist sports college status with information and communication technology (ICT) as a second specialism in March 2005. The schools GCSE results had improved dramatically over the previous six years, going from 13% of students achieving 5 A*-C grades in 2003 up to 65% in 2008 which made the school the 5th highest achieving secondary school in the city of Nottingham at the time.

Alumni

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As Henry Mellish Grammar School

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Former teachers

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  • James Boyden, Labour MP from 1955 to 1979 for Bishop Auckland, taught History for two years in the mid-1930s
  • Wilfred Lawson, Director of Education of Nottinghamshire from 1963-71, and deputy director from 1948-63[13] (taught 1937-42)

References

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  1. ^ Top of the Form October 1956
  2. ^ Nottingham Evening News Tuesday 9 October 1956, page 8
  3. ^ Nottingham Evening Post Friday 21 September 1956, page 1
  4. ^ Nottingham Evening Post Thursday 20 September 1956, page 12
  5. ^ Nottingham Guardian Tuesday 9 October 1956, page 5
  6. ^ Birmingham Weekly Post Friday 5 October 1956, page 7
  7. ^ Nottingham Evening Post Monday 23 December 1963, page 4
  8. ^ Nottingham Guardian Tuesday 24 December 1963, page 5
  9. ^ Nottingham Evening Post Thursday 28 September 1972, page 8
  10. ^ Nottingham Evening Post Monday 16 July 1990, page 27
  11. ^ Times Tuesday 18 November 1997
  12. ^ Times Thursday 22 November 2001, page 10
  13. ^ Nottingham Evening Post Thursday 25 February 1971, page 1
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