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George Watson's College

George Watson's College is a co-educational private day school in Scotland, situated on Colinton Road, in the Merchiston area of Edinburgh. It was first established as a hospital school in 1741, became a day school in 1871, and was merged with its sister school George Watson's Ladies College in 1974. It is a Merchant Company of Edinburgh school and a member of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference.

George Watson's College
Address
Colinton Road (Merchiston)

,
EH10 5EG

Scotland
Information
TypePublic school
Co-educational, private
MottoEx Corde Caritas
(Love from the Heart)
Established3 April 1723; 301 years ago (1723-04-03)
(as George Watson's Hospital)
FounderGeorge Watson
PrincipalMelvyn Roffe[1]
Age3[1] to 18[1]
Number of pupils2,358[1]
Area50 acre[2]
Campus typeUrban parkland
HousesCockburn-Greyfriars, Lauriston, Melville-Ogilvie, Preston-Falconhall
Colour(s)    Maroon, white
SportsRugby, hockey, cricket, rowing, badminton, squash, football, sailing, rifle shooting, skiing, athletics, tennis, rock climbing, polo, surfing, fencing, curling, chess.
RivalGeorge Heriot's School
PublicationThe Watsonian, Caritas, Recorder, Tick Talk[3]
AlumniWatsonians
Websitegwc.org.uk

History edit

 
Engraving of the original George Watson's Hospital, Edinburgh c.1850
 
George Watson by William Aikman
 
The school pipe band at Sanix World Rugby Youth Invitational Tournament, Global Arena, Japan 2006

Foundation edit

The school was established according to the instructions of George Watson (1654–1723) who bequeathed the bulk of his fortune of £12,000 – a vast sum in 1723 – to found a school for the provision of post-primary boarding education. George Watson, since 1696, had been clerk to Sir John Dick.[4]

Unlike his father, John Watson, George was not a member of the Merchant Company of Edinburgh, but he was impressed by their co-founding and running of the Merchant Maiden Hospital (a girls school founded in 1707) and so he chose the Company to implement the terms of his will to create an equivalent facility for the sons of merchants. After some years, the Governors bought land known as Heriot's Croft, located off Lauriston Place in Edinburgh, close to the Meadows and opposite George Heriot's School, and engaged an architect. The foundation stone was laid on 22 May 1738, and the school opened as George Watson's Hospital on Whitsunday, 17 May 1741. The initial roll consisted of 11 boys, aged 9–10 years; by 1749 there were 30, while in 1842 pupils numbered 86, this figure being maintained until the end of the Hospital system in 1870.[5]

In accordance with Watson's will, the governors were responsible for former pupils up to the age of 25; they were helped to find apprenticeships and paid an allowance. Watson's stated preference was for allowing the hospital's charges to become skilled workers, though the governors also allowed boys who showed an ability to pursue medicine or academia.[6]

Transatlantic slave trade edit

Research in 2020 revealed that there is a strong likelihood that part of George Watson's fortune was acquired in the transatlantic slave trade.[7][8] The college states that they are "moving forward in the acknowledgement of aspects of our heritage which have previously been ignored",[7] and have conducted discussions with parents pupils and others on the "important and troubling questions about George Watson".[7]

Re-establishment as a day school edit

By the 1860s, the hospital school system had fallen into general public disrepute, while the Merchant Company was fearful both of government intervention in the schooling system. The solution was to re-found Watson's, and the three other hospitals under its governorship, as day schools. In July 1868 the Company applied to Parliament for powers to re-organise their schools and make different use of their endowments to as to make education more widely available. Watson's was thus completely transformed, reopening on 26 September 1870 as a fee-paying day school with a roll of 800 boys, initially called George Watson's College Schools for Boys.[9]

In 1869, the original hospital building was sold to the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh. When the infirmary sought to expand in 1871, the school moved a short distance west to the former Merchant Maiden Hospital building in Archibald Place. The original hospital building was incorporated into the infirmary, and the chapel remained in use as the hospital chapel until the infirmary was itself moved away. The remains of the building were demolished in 2004 during the redevelopment of the infirmary site by the Quartermile consortium.[6]

In 1902 the College was the first prestigious Scottish secondary school to appoint a woman head. The school's staff were mainly men and there were 930 pupils.[10] Charlotte Ainslie was an ex-pupil who had studied at Bedford College and now led George Watson's Ladies' College.[11]

1932 buildings edit

 
250th anniversary plaque in Edinburgh's Greyfriars Kirkyard

In the years following World War I, the Edinburgh Royal Infirmary needed to expand once more and was interested in the site then occupied by Watson's. At the same time, the Archibald Place building was cramped and in need of modernisation, as well as being distant from the school's playing fields at Myreside. In 1924 the Merchant Company announced that they had taken the decision to sell the Archibald Place building to the Infirmary.[12]

In 1927, agreement was made to acquire the site of Merchiston Castle School – adjacent to the Myreside playing fields – and a competition was held to design the new school building. The new building, facing Colinton Road, was designed by James B Dunn, in the neo-classical style, built in sandstone and was opened Prince George (later Duke of Kent) on 22 September 1932.[9]

In October 1962, the school launched and appeal for £230,000 to meet the cost of building extensions.[13]

The Golden Jubilee of the creation of the 1932 buildings fell in 1982, and was marked by a number of celebrations. These culminated on 29 June with a visit from Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth. The Queen spent two hours touring the campus, including a short concert, and she unveiled a commemorative plaque.[6]

George Watson's Ladies College edit

 
George Square Melville House, built in 1871 on the site of Admiral Duncan's house, was the home of George Watson's Ladies College until sold to Edinburgh University in 1974.

In February 1871, the Company took over the lease of Melville House in George Square, Edinburgh and used it as the location of the nascent George Watson's College Schools for Young Ladies. It was renamed to George Watson's College for Ladies in 1877, and to George Watson's Ladies College in 1890.[6]

Amalgamation edit

 
George Watson's College, Colinton Road

In 1967, the Merchant Company announced its plan to combine the two Watson's Colleges to form a single co-educational campus in Colinton Road. Building work was required to house the combined school. The first joint assembly of the amalgamated school was held on 1 October 1974. The school found itself in the Guinness Book of Records as the largest co-educational school in Scotland, with a roll of over 2,400 pupils.[6]

Notable alumni edit

Former pupils are referred to at the school as Watsonians. According to the Sutton Trust, the school is placed first in Scotland and joint 29th in the United Kingdom for the number of the nation's leading people produced.[14]

Notable staff edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "George Watson's College". Scottish Council of Independent Schools. Retrieved 19 January 2015.
  2. ^ "Our School". George Watson's College. Retrieved 19 January 2015.
  3. ^ "School Publications". George Watson's College. Retrieved 19 January 2015.
  4. ^ Grant, James (1880). Cassell's old and new Edinburgh. Vol. 1. Cassell, Petter & Company. p. 378.
  5. ^ Waugh, Hector Liston (1970). George Watson's College. George Watson's College. ISBN 9780950183800.
  6. ^ a b c d e Howie, Les (2006). George Watson's College: An Illustrated History. George Watson's College. pp. 1–270. ISBN 978-0-9501838-2-4.
  7. ^ a b c "Heritage - George Watson's College". www.gwc.org.uk. Retrieved 11 October 2023.
  8. ^ "The Legacy of George Watson - George Watson's College". www.gwc.org.uk. Retrieved 11 October 2023.
  9. ^ a b Oldfield, Paul (2021). Victoria Crosses on the Western Front – Battles of the Scarpe 1918 and Drocourt-Queant Line 26 August - 2 September 1918. Pen and Sword Books. ISBN 978-1526788047.
  10. ^ Elizabeth L. Ewan; Sue Innes; Sian Reynolds; Rose Pipes (8 March 2006). The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women. Edinburgh University Press. p. 7. ISBN 978-0-7486-2660-1.
  11. ^ a b Lindy Moore, ‘Ainslie, Charlotte Edith (1863–1960)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 11 June 2017
  12. ^ Historic Environment Scotland. "Edinburgh, Archibald Place, George Watson's Hospital (123684)". Canmore. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  13. ^ "Reshaping Gorge Watson's. Appeal Launched for £230,000". The Glasgow Herald. 23 October 1962. p. 4. Retrieved 8 January 2022.
  14. ^ "The Educational Backgrounds of the Nation's Leading People" (PDF). Sutton Trust. Retrieved 31 July 2019.
  15. ^ University of Edinburgh Journal. Vol. 36. 1993. p. 57.
  16. ^ Rankin, R.A. (1983). "The first hundred years (1883–1983)". Proceedings of the Edinburgh Mathematical Society. 26 (2): 135–150. doi:10.1017/S0013091500016849. ISSN 0013-0915.
  17. ^ Biographical Index of Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783–2002 (PDF). The Royal Society of Edinburgh. July 2006. ISBN 0-902-198-84-X.
  18. ^ Biographical Index of Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783–2002 (PDF). The Royal Society of Edinburgh. July 2006. ISBN 0-902-198-84-X.
  19. ^ "New SNP MP Anum Qaisar-Javed taught at private school after vowing to fight inequality". Herald Scotland. 24 June 2021. Retrieved 13 January 2024.

External links edit

  • George Watson's College

55°55′49″N 3°13′4″W / 55.93028°N 3.21778°W / 55.93028; -3.21778

george, watson, college, confused, with, john, watson, institution, educational, private, school, scotland, situated, colinton, road, merchiston, area, edinburgh, first, established, hospital, school, 1741, became, school, 1871, merged, with, sister, school, g. Not to be confused with John Watson s Institution George Watson s College is a co educational private day school in Scotland situated on Colinton Road in the Merchiston area of Edinburgh It was first established as a hospital school in 1741 became a day school in 1871 and was merged with its sister school George Watson s Ladies College in 1974 It is a Merchant Company of Edinburgh school and a member of the Headmasters and Headmistresses Conference George Watson s CollegeAddressColinton Road Merchiston Edinburgh EH10 5EGScotlandInformationTypePublic schoolCo educational privateMottoEx Corde Caritas Love from the Heart Established3 April 1723 301 years ago 1723 04 03 as George Watson s Hospital FounderGeorge WatsonPrincipalMelvyn Roffe 1 Age3 1 to 18 1 Number of pupils2 358 1 Area50 acre 2 Campus typeUrban parklandHousesCockburn Greyfriars Lauriston Melville Ogilvie Preston FalconhallColour s Maroon whiteSportsRugby hockey cricket rowing badminton squash football sailing rifle shooting skiing athletics tennis rock climbing polo surfing fencing curling chess RivalGeorge Heriot s SchoolPublicationThe Watsonian Caritas Recorder Tick Talk 3 AlumniWatsoniansWebsitegwc org uk Contents 1 History 1 1 Foundation 1 2 Transatlantic slave trade 1 3 Re establishment as a day school 1 4 1932 buildings 1 5 George Watson s Ladies College 1 6 Amalgamation 2 Notable alumni 3 Notable staff 4 References 5 External linksHistory edit nbsp Engraving of the original George Watson s Hospital Edinburgh c 1850 nbsp George Watson by William Aikman nbsp The school pipe band at Sanix World Rugby Youth Invitational Tournament Global Arena Japan 2006 Foundation edit The school was established according to the instructions of George Watson 1654 1723 who bequeathed the bulk of his fortune of 12 000 a vast sum in 1723 to found a school for the provision of post primary boarding education George Watson since 1696 had been clerk to Sir John Dick 4 Unlike his father John Watson George was not a member of the Merchant Company of Edinburgh but he was impressed by their co founding and running of the Merchant Maiden Hospital a girls school founded in 1707 and so he chose the Company to implement the terms of his will to create an equivalent facility for the sons of merchants After some years the Governors bought land known as Heriot s Croft located off Lauriston Place in Edinburgh close to the Meadows and opposite George Heriot s School and engaged an architect The foundation stone was laid on 22 May 1738 and the school opened as George Watson s Hospital on Whitsunday 17 May 1741 The initial roll consisted of 11 boys aged 9 10 years by 1749 there were 30 while in 1842 pupils numbered 86 this figure being maintained until the end of the Hospital system in 1870 5 In accordance with Watson s will the governors were responsible for former pupils up to the age of 25 they were helped to find apprenticeships and paid an allowance Watson s stated preference was for allowing the hospital s charges to become skilled workers though the governors also allowed boys who showed an ability to pursue medicine or academia 6 Transatlantic slave trade edit Research in 2020 revealed that there is a strong likelihood that part of George Watson s fortune was acquired in the transatlantic slave trade 7 8 The college states that they are moving forward in the acknowledgement of aspects of our heritage which have previously been ignored 7 and have conducted discussions with parents pupils and others on the important and troubling questions about George Watson 7 Re establishment as a day school edit By the 1860s the hospital school system had fallen into general public disrepute while the Merchant Company was fearful both of government intervention in the schooling system The solution was to re found Watson s and the three other hospitals under its governorship as day schools In July 1868 the Company applied to Parliament for powers to re organise their schools and make different use of their endowments to as to make education more widely available Watson s was thus completely transformed reopening on 26 September 1870 as a fee paying day school with a roll of 800 boys initially called George Watson s College Schools for Boys 9 In 1869 the original hospital building was sold to the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh When the infirmary sought to expand in 1871 the school moved a short distance west to the former Merchant Maiden Hospital building in Archibald Place The original hospital building was incorporated into the infirmary and the chapel remained in use as the hospital chapel until the infirmary was itself moved away The remains of the building were demolished in 2004 during the redevelopment of the infirmary site by the Quartermile consortium 6 In 1902 the College was the first prestigious Scottish secondary school to appoint a woman head The school s staff were mainly men and there were 930 pupils 10 Charlotte Ainslie was an ex pupil who had studied at Bedford College and now led George Watson s Ladies College 11 1932 buildings edit nbsp 250th anniversary plaque in Edinburgh s Greyfriars Kirkyard In the years following World War I the Edinburgh Royal Infirmary needed to expand once more and was interested in the site then occupied by Watson s At the same time the Archibald Place building was cramped and in need of modernisation as well as being distant from the school s playing fields at Myreside In 1924 the Merchant Company announced that they had taken the decision to sell the Archibald Place building to the Infirmary 12 In 1927 agreement was made to acquire the site of Merchiston Castle School adjacent to the Myreside playing fields and a competition was held to design the new school building The new building facing Colinton Road was designed by James B Dunn in the neo classical style built in sandstone and was opened Prince George later Duke of Kent on 22 September 1932 9 In October 1962 the school launched and appeal for 230 000 to meet the cost of building extensions 13 The Golden Jubilee of the creation of the 1932 buildings fell in 1982 and was marked by a number of celebrations These culminated on 29 June with a visit from Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth The Queen spent two hours touring the campus including a short concert and she unveiled a commemorative plaque 6 George Watson s Ladies College edit nbsp George Square Melville House built in 1871 on the site of Admiral Duncan s house was the home of George Watson s Ladies College until sold to Edinburgh University in 1974 In February 1871 the Company took over the lease of Melville House in George Square Edinburgh and used it as the location of the nascent George Watson s College Schools for Young Ladies It was renamed to George Watson s College for Ladies in 1877 and to George Watson s Ladies College in 1890 6 Amalgamation edit nbsp George Watson s College Colinton Road In 1967 the Merchant Company announced its plan to combine the two Watson s Colleges to form a single co educational campus in Colinton Road Building work was required to house the combined school The first joint assembly of the amalgamated school was held on 1 October 1974 The school found itself in the Guinness Book of Records as the largest co educational school in Scotland with a roll of over 2 400 pupils 6 Notable alumni editMain article List of people educated at George Watson s College See also Category People associated with George Watson s College Former pupils are referred to at the school as Watsonians According to the Sutton Trust the school is placed first in Scotland and joint 29th in the United Kingdom for the number of the nation s leading people produced 14 Notable staff editCharlotte Ainslie OBE first woman head at a prestigious Scottish school 11 William Dickson FRSE 1905 1992 Head of Science The only schoolteacher to have been elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry 15 Andrew J G Barclay and Alexander Yule Fraser Maths masters joint founders of the Edinburgh Mathematical Society 16 Peter Pinkerton FRSE maths master 1903 to 1913 17 Robert T Skinner FRSE taught mathematics in the school 1893 to 1899 18 Anum Qaisar MP for the SNP who taught Modern Studies 19 References edit a b c d George Watson s College Scottish Council of Independent Schools Retrieved 19 January 2015 Our School George Watson s College Retrieved 19 January 2015 School Publications George Watson s College Retrieved 19 January 2015 Grant James 1880 Cassell s old and new Edinburgh Vol 1 Cassell Petter amp Company p 378 Waugh Hector Liston 1970 George Watson s College George Watson s College ISBN 9780950183800 a b c d e Howie Les 2006 George Watson s College An Illustrated History George Watson s College pp 1 270 ISBN 978 0 9501838 2 4 a b c Heritage George Watson s College www gwc org uk Retrieved 11 October 2023 The Legacy of George Watson George Watson s College www gwc org uk Retrieved 11 October 2023 a b Oldfield Paul 2021 Victoria Crosses on the Western Front Battles of the Scarpe 1918 and Drocourt Queant Line 26 August 2 September 1918 Pen and Sword Books ISBN 978 1526788047 Elizabeth L Ewan Sue Innes Sian Reynolds Rose Pipes 8 March 2006 The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women Edinburgh University Press p 7 ISBN 978 0 7486 2660 1 a b Lindy Moore Ainslie Charlotte Edith 1863 1960 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 accessed 11 June 2017 Historic Environment Scotland Edinburgh Archibald Place George Watson s Hospital 123684 Canmore Retrieved 13 January 2024 Reshaping Gorge Watson s Appeal Launched for 230 000 The Glasgow Herald 23 October 1962 p 4 Retrieved 8 January 2022 The Educational Backgrounds of the Nation s Leading People PDF Sutton Trust Retrieved 31 July 2019 University of Edinburgh Journal Vol 36 1993 p 57 Rankin R A 1983 The first hundred years 1883 1983 Proceedings of the Edinburgh Mathematical Society 26 2 135 150 doi 10 1017 S0013091500016849 ISSN 0013 0915 Biographical Index of Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783 2002 PDF The Royal Society of Edinburgh July 2006 ISBN 0 902 198 84 X Biographical Index of Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783 2002 PDF The Royal Society of Edinburgh July 2006 ISBN 0 902 198 84 X New SNP MP Anum Qaisar Javed taught at private school after vowing to fight inequality Herald Scotland 24 June 2021 Retrieved 13 January 2024 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to George Watson s College George Watson s College George Watson s College page on Scottish Schools Online 55 55 49 N 3 13 4 W 55 93028 N 3 21778 W 55 93028 3 21778 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George Watson 27s College amp oldid 1223986319, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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