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Haberdashers' Adams

Haberdashers' Adams Grammar School is a selective state grammar school for high-achieving boys and girls aged 11–18 with boarding for boys, located in Newport, Shropshire, offering day and boarding education.[1] Current (2021) boarding fees are £12,144 per year and £13,644 per year for overseas students[2] It was founded in 1656 by William Adams, a wealthy member of the Worshipful Company of Haberdashers (one of the Great Twelve Livery Companies of the City of London). In January 2018, in the face of opposition from significant stakeholders,[3] the school changed its name to Haberdashers' Adams, replacing the previous name, Adams' Grammar School. From 2024, Haberdashers' Adams has announced that it will be fully co-educational admitting girls into Year 7, the first time in its 400 year old history.[4]

Haberdashers' Adams
(Adams' Grammar School)
Coat of arms of the Haberdashers' Company
Address

, ,
Coordinates52°46′11″N 2°22′52″W / 52.7697°N 2.381°W / 52.7697; -2.381
Information
TypeGrammar school
Boarding school
Academy
MottoTraditional Values, Modern Approach'
Established1656; 368 years ago (1656)
FounderWilliam Adams
Department for Education URN137446 Tables
OfstedReports
Chair of GovernorsJames Penney
HeadmasterGary Hickey
GenderBoys and Girls (11-18)
Age11 to 18
Enrolment1050
Colour(s)     
PublicationThe Novaportan;
The Eighth-hour
Former pupilsOld Novaportans
School hymnsJerusalem
TrustHaberdashers' West Midlands Academy Trust
Websitewww.adamsgs.uk

History edit

Adams' Grammar School, Newport Act 1660
Act of Parliament
 
Long titleAn Act for the incorporating of the Master and Wardens of the Company of Haberdashers, London, to be Governors of the Free School and Almshouses at Newport.
Citation12 Cha. 2. c. 12
Dates
Royal assent13 September 1660
 
Oliver Cromwell, Lord Protector, granted permission to Alderman Adams for the school's foundation

Haberdashers' Adams was founded in 1656 by Alderman William Adams,[5] a wealthy City of London merchant and haberdasher, who was born in Newport. Adams had no children and never married, so therefore decided to leave a bequest for the foundation of the school, which was first opened on 25 March 1656, during the politically unstable and volatile period of the English Interregnum. Having received permission from Oliver Cromwell to found the school, Adams sought to further ensure the school's continued existence by appointing the Master and Wardens of the Haberdashers' Company as governors in perpetuity.[6] As one of the few schools founded during the Interregnum period, the school's articles of foundation were reconfirmed by Act of Parliament in 1660 (12 Cha. 2. c. 12), upon the Restoration of the Monarchy; a copy of which is held in the school archives.

Haberdashers' Adams endowed the school with a large agricultural 900-acre (3.6 km2) estate at Knighton in Staffordshire,[7] providing income for future generations; as a result of this, Knighton was exempt from all land taxes until 1990.[citation needed][8] The school was endowed with 1,400 books soon after its foundation, which at the time represented one of the largest school libraries in England. Only seven of these books are still in the school's ownership, with the rest having been sold at various times when the school has suffered financial hardship.[citation needed]

The Knighton estate was eventually sold off in several portions over the course of the twentieth century, and the proceeds of the final sale were used by the Haberdashers' Company to purchase Longford Hall as a boarding house for the school.[citation needed]

Haberdashers' Adams developed slowly, and did not expand beyond its original building, now known as Big School, until the turn of the last century, when Main School (also known as the S-Block) was built in the 1920s. Over the course of the next 90 years Adams' expanded rapidly, acquiring a number of buildings on Lower Bar in Newport for use as boarding houses; this in turn greatly expanded the school's town centre site. In the 1960s a new science block, connected to Main School was built, whilst a senior boarding master's house was created on land adjacent to Big School. During this period the school also built a new gymnasium, which was subsequently converted into a theatre in the mid-2000s. It has since been converted into a Sixth Form Common area following the construction of the New music block.

During the First World War, 362 Old Novaportans (former pupils) served in the Armed Forces, of whom 45 died and 77 survived wounded. After the War a memorial fund was set up to assist the sons of the deceased, and an appeal raised £1,000. A tablet listing those who died was unveiled in the Main School building in 1921. In 1948, the Old Boys' Club erected another tablet alongside this to those who died in the Second World War. Both memorials are now displayed in the School Library.[9]

In the modern era, the Haberdashers' Adams school's status has been expressed in a number of statutory arrangements. In 1950 the school became a voluntary aided school[10] then after a brief spell as a grant-maintained school in the 1980s, Adams again faced threat of closure or conversion to co-educational comprehensive status in the early 1990s; this was avoided by a successful campaign, organised by parents and governors, against the wishes of Shropshire County Council. In the late 1990s and 2000s Adams again enjoyed voluntary-aided status; throughout its history the Haberdashers' Company has been key in supporting the school's vision and offering financial support for some of the more ambitious construction projects.

In 1993, girls were admitted to the sixth form for the first time, bringing to an end Adams' long tradition of educating boys only. The 1990s also saw the construction of the Wood and Taylor Centres for the study of design technology and maths. The Maths block has since been changed to an English block following the construction of the new Paddock block. reflecting the school's status in the later 1990s as a technology college. In the early 2000s, the school began to raise funds for he construction of a new state-of-the-art sports hall and fitness suite to replace dilapidated facilities. The Paddock Block was constructed in 2019 to contain Maths, Art and a new hall was built to accommodate the expansion of the school to include the new Sa'adu house.

In 2002 a history of the Haberdashers' Adams school by former headmaster David Taylor and his wife, Ruth, was published.

 
Longford Hall
 
The oldest known sketch of Big School by Francis Perry (d.1765)

The late 2000s saw the school celebrate its 350th anniversary (in 2006), completion of a new science block and conversion of the former gymnasium into a performing arts centre (this, in turn, was converted into a Sixth Form Centre, which opened in 2013). The dilapidated music department was condemned for health and safety reasons in 2006; The Coach House, on Salters Lane, which backs onto the school grounds, was acquired by the Haberdashers' Company and converted into a new music department, which opened in 2013 alongside the new Sixth Form Centre.

In June 2008, a new funding agreement was signed, which provided that monies would be provided to Telford & Wrekin Council to build a new school on the Abraham Darby site under the Building Schools for the Future scheme. The Governors were heavily involved in the approval of the plans and selection of the builders and architects.[citation needed]

Following the passing of the Academies Act in 2010, the directors of the Adams' Federation, in conjunction with the Haberdashers' Company, agreed to apply to the Department for Education for Adams' Grammar School to be converted into a "new style" academy and to amend the Federation so that the two schools became combined into the ownership of the Haberdashers' Adams Federation Trust.

In 2011 Haberdashers' Adams became an academy in the Federation with another Haberdashers' school Haberdashers' Abraham Darby. As of 2018 the school changed its name from Adams' Grammar School to Haberdashers' Adams. This was reportedly done in order to reflect the school's historic links with the Worshipful Company of Haberdashers.[11]

Admissions and performance edit

Haberdashers' Adams is a selective school which admits both boarding and day pupils.

Academic performance edit

Haberdashers' Adams was rated by Ofsted as a Grade 1 outstanding school during 2013.[12] More recently, the school has been scored as average with a Progress 8 score of −0.02 by the Department for Education.[13] In 2022, Adams was downgraded from Outstanding to Good by Ofsted. Ofsted noted that the "effectiveness of leadership and management requires improvement";[14] the "management of complaints is weak";[15] staff "are not receiving effective regular supervision".[16] The school was not compliant with regard to a number of safeguarding principles, including failure to fulfil the basic safer recruitment of staff and volunteers.[17] In relation to the boarding provision, Ofsted noted that the school "does not meet the national minimum standards for boarding schools relating to staffing and supervision and complaints.[18]

School life edit

 
Big School and its front lawn as seen from the High Street, Newport

As of November 2016 the headmaster is Gary Hickey, who was previously deputy headmaster of the school.[19]

House system edit

Haberdashers' Adams operates an extra-curricular house system and is the basis of inter-house sports competitions, traditionally a source of pride for pupils of their respective houses (all named after Shropshire-born notables):

Throughout the academic year there are many house events at Haberdashers' Adams, revolving around the arts, sports or academic subjects. These include the House Music Competition; Dixon Cup, which covers drama and public speaking; Smedley Cup and House 7s, which are both rugby competitions; and other sports competitions such as House Cross Country and House Swimming. Intra-house geography, history, poetry and languages competitions also take place.

Boarding houses and student leadership edit

 
Adams' GS Longford Hall site viewed from the 1st XV rugby pitch

The school owns a number of dedicated boarding houses. The present junior hall (Longford Hall) is located by the school's playing fields about a mile away. In 2017 the Haberdashers' enabled the school to purchase and re-furbish Beaumaris Court, a former care home, to become the school's new senior boarding house, Beaumaris Hall. This new facility replaced the three senior boys' boarding houses which were situated in large Georgian townhouses facing the High Street.

Longford Hall was built in 1785 for Colonel Ralph Leeke, political agent to the British East India Company; the building was designed by Joseph Bonomi, who was an associate of Robert and James Adam.

 
AGS' Georgian-era senior boarding houses near Big School on Lower Bar (in use until September 2017)

The hall is located on top of a low rise and overlooks farmland towards the Lilleshall Monument. As with many such buildings, the first 100 feet in front of the hall comprises manicured grass, bordered by a ha-ha to prevent animals from entering; today the ha-ha is best known amongst pupils for forming a part of the school's annual house cross-country course. There are a small series of formal gardens, including a "Quad". Behind the hall is a selection of buildings around a central square including a dovecote, once part of the estate's home farm.

Upon entry into the school in year 7, boarders are assigned to dormitories; upon moving to Beaumaris Court boys are assigned to double or, in some cases, single rooms, when these are available.

Combined Cadet Force edit

The Haberdashers' Adams CCF is available to year 8 students and above, as a result of which the school sends many officer candidate students to Sandhurst and Royal Air Force College Cranwell.[citation needed] The CCF also plays a role in Newport civic life, parading every year on Remembrance Sunday. The CCF recruits each new school year in September or October from year 8 and, demand permitting, the Lower Sixth. Cadets generally pass out in May or June of the same year.[citation needed]

The CCF has its own building where its stores are housed and NCO meetings take place. The CCF occasionally holds Overnight Exercises where battle drills and fieldcraft are practised; these are held either at Longford Hall, Nesscliffe Training Area, ROF Swynnerton or Leak Military Base. In previous years CCF prepared for the Annual House CCF Competition, known as The Thompstone Trophy, named after the eccentric former leader of the CCF Lt-Col Brian Thompstone; this entailed a Drill Competition, Shooting, Command Tasks, Memory Games, Forces-related Quizzes, Section Attacks, CQB and an OBS course. This has not ran in recent years though. The CCF is inspected every two years (the Biennial Inspection) by a senior Army or RAF officer.

Both the Army and RAF sections of the CCF hold Summer Camps every year, visiting working military bases such as RAF Cranwell and Barry Buddon Training Area. Cadets can also attend Adventure Training Camps held annually at Llanbedr and Windermere, Easter Camps at RAF Akrotiri, Summer Camps at Ramstein Air Base and Leadership Courses at RAF Cranwell, Nesscliffe Training Area or at Frimley Park. Additionally, cadets also have the opportunity of attending special events such as the 65th D-Day Landing Commemorations and the Cadet 150 Celebrations.[22]

The CCF has recently undergone many changes and improvements such as the incorporation of a new front team position of responsibility within the school of the Senior Cadet in 2023.

Sport edit

Haberdashers' Adams has traditionally been a rugby school, and as such requires all boys play rugby through years seven and eight during the autumn and spring terms. Upon entry into year nine, pupils are presented with the option of continuing to play rugby, or switching to field hockey. Cricket and athletics are the main sports disciplines undertaken during the shorter summer term. In year 11 and the sixth form, boys are often presented with the opportunity to take part in any sport of their choice, provided they can receive permission for such an activity. With the exception of those activities not provided by the school, all sporting events, and training therefore takes place at the school's Longford Hall playing fields; for this reason, few visiting sports teams ever see the Main School site. Adams operates a system of games afternoons, a system by which each individual year group is assigned a specific day of the week to attend afternoon physical activity sessions at Longford (for this purpose the sixth Form is combined with year 11).

In the early 21st century, football was reintroduced to the school after an absence of almost 100 years.[citation needed]

Haberdashers' Adams organises biennial summer tours abroad for its senior rugby, hockey and girls netball teams. Recent tours have included rugby tours to South Africa, South America, Australia and Singapore, and a hockey and netball tour to Barbados. The school is reported to be keen on further developing its cricket provision, and widening opportunities for pupils.[citation needed]

International links edit

 
Lyceum No. 1 in Bydgoszcz is one of Adams' European partner schools

Haberdashers' Adams currently runs student exchange programmes with the following schools in France, Germany and Poland:

Haberdashers' Adams also corresponds with Ringwood Secondary College in Melbourne, Australia.

Old Novaportans edit

 
Coat of arms long-used by AGS and latterly adopted by the Old Novaportan Club (date unknown)

The School supports the Old Novaportans' Club which organises reunions, dinners and sporting events throughout the year to which its members are invited.

Former pupils are known as "Old Novaportans" (initialised as "ON").

Academia edit

Clergy edit

Media and arts edit

Politics & business edit

Military edit

Sports edit

Former staff edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 29 August 2017. Retrieved 17 September 2015.
  2. ^ "StackPath".
  3. ^ https://www.shropshirestar.com/news/local-hubs/telford/newport/2017/12/06/petition-launched-against-school-name-change/
  4. ^ Tooley, David. "Here come the girls: 400 year old grammar school in Shropshire decides to go fully co-educational". shropshirestar.com. Retrieved 29 January 2023.
  5. ^ www.british-history.ac.uk
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 11 July 2016. Retrieved 17 September 2015.
  7. ^ www.haberdashersarms.com
  8. ^ Taylor, David & Ruth (2002). Mr Adams' Free Grammar School. Phillimore & co Ltd. p. 15. ISBN 1860772218.
  9. ^ Francis, Peter (2013). Shropshire War Memorials, Sites of Remembrance. YouCaxton Publications. p. 67. ISBN 978-1-909644-11-3.
  10. ^ . Haberdashers.co.uk. 1 September 2011. Archived from the original on 25 September 2015. Retrieved 22 July 2016.
  11. ^ "Haberdashers' Adams". Archived from the original on 26 February 2022. Retrieved 17 January 2018 – via Facebook.
  12. ^ Ofsted Report
  13. ^ "Adams' Grammar School – GOV.UK". compare-school-performance.service.gov.uk. Retrieved 22 December 2016.
  14. ^ https://files.ofsted.gov.uk/v1/file/50186891
  15. ^ https://files.ofsted.gov.uk/v1/file/50186891 p. 4
  16. ^ https://files.ofsted.gov.uk/v1/file/50186891 pp. 3-4
  17. ^ https://files.ofsted.gov.uk/v1/file/50186891 p. 5
  18. ^ https://files.ofsted.gov.uk/v1/file/50187410
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on 17 November 2016. Retrieved 17 September 2015.
  20. ^ "Newport Haberdashers' Adams School to drop Clive House name". BBC News. 8 July 2020. Retrieved 18 July 2020.
  21. ^ Daily News of Open Water Swimming (25 December 2013). "Landmarks, Monuments, Memorials of Open Water Swimmers".
  22. ^ AGSNewsletter 21 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  23. ^ www.ac-grenoble.fr
  24. ^ www.independent.co.uk
  25. ^ "Blue Peter's Radzi goes back to school in Newport". Shropshire Star. 5 December 2013. Retrieved 15 July 2014.
  26. ^ Tooley, David (25 January 2024). "How drumming with spoons put a Market Drayton lad on the road to Oscar nomination". shropshirestar.com. Retrieved 2 February 2024.
  27. ^ Jones, Megan (9 January 2024). "From Newport grammar school to Golden Globes: Former Shropshire schoolboy nominated for blockbuster score". shropshirestar.com. Retrieved 2 February 2024.
  28. ^ "Jeremy Corbyn congratulated by former Shropshire school". Central – ITV News. 12 September 2015. Retrieved 27 January 2021.
  29. ^ "My first million – Nick Jenkins". Financial Times. London. 10 July 2015. Archived from the original on 10 December 2022.
  30. ^ Jones, Ted (2000). "The Story of Lord and Lady Ashburnham Part II". The Officers' Quarters. 16 (1 & 2): 23–26.
  31. ^ Percival, Tony (1999). Shropshire Cricketers 1844-1998. A.C.S. Publications, Nottingham. p. 32. ISBN 1-902171-17-9.
  32. ^ a b "Kitchener Lords it at Sixways". BBC News. 1 November 2007. Retrieved 27 January 2021.
  33. ^ "Dan Redfern | England Cricket | Cricket Players and Officials". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 22 July 2016.
  34. ^ www.bbc.co.uk

External links edit

  • Official website

haberdashers, adams, grammar, school, selective, state, grammar, school, high, achieving, boys, girls, aged, with, boarding, boys, located, newport, shropshire, offering, boarding, education, current, 2021, boarding, fees, year, year, overseas, students, found. Haberdashers Adams Grammar School is a selective state grammar school for high achieving boys and girls aged 11 18 with boarding for boys located in Newport Shropshire offering day and boarding education 1 Current 2021 boarding fees are 12 144 per year and 13 644 per year for overseas students 2 It was founded in 1656 by William Adams a wealthy member of the Worshipful Company of Haberdashers one of the Great Twelve Livery Companies of the City of London In January 2018 in the face of opposition from significant stakeholders 3 the school changed its name to Haberdashers Adams replacing the previous name Adams Grammar School From 2024 Haberdashers Adams has announced that it will be fully co educational admitting girls into Year 7 the first time in its 400 year old history 4 Haberdashers Adams Adams Grammar School Coat of arms of the Haberdashers CompanyAddressHigh StreetNewport Shropshire TF10 7BDUKCoordinates52 46 11 N 2 22 52 W 52 7697 N 2 381 W 52 7697 2 381InformationTypeGrammar schoolBoarding schoolAcademyMottoTraditional Values Modern Approach Established1656 368 years ago 1656 FounderWilliam AdamsDepartment for Education URN137446 TablesOfstedReportsChair of GovernorsJames PenneyHeadmasterGary HickeyGenderBoys and Girls 11 18 Age11 to 18Enrolment1050Colour s PublicationThe Novaportan The Eighth hourFormer pupilsOld NovaportansSchool hymnsJerusalemTrustHaberdashers West Midlands Academy TrustWebsitewww wbr adamsgs wbr uk Contents 1 History 2 Admissions and performance 2 1 Academic performance 3 School life 3 1 House system 3 2 Boarding houses and student leadership 3 3 Combined Cadet Force 3 4 Sport 4 International links 5 Old Novaportans 5 1 Academia 5 2 Clergy 5 3 Media and arts 5 4 Politics amp business 5 5 Military 5 6 Sports 5 7 Former staff 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory editAdams Grammar School Newport Act 1660Act of Parliament nbsp Parliament of EnglandLong titleAn Act for the incorporating of the Master and Wardens of the Company of Haberdashers London to be Governors of the Free School and Almshouses at Newport Citation12 Cha 2 c 12DatesRoyal assent13 September 1660 nbsp Oliver Cromwell Lord Protector granted permission to Alderman Adams for the school s foundation Haberdashers Adams was founded in 1656 by Alderman William Adams 5 a wealthy City of London merchant and haberdasher who was born in Newport Adams had no children and never married so therefore decided to leave a bequest for the foundation of the school which was first opened on 25 March 1656 during the politically unstable and volatile period of the English Interregnum Having received permission from Oliver Cromwell to found the school Adams sought to further ensure the school s continued existence by appointing the Master and Wardens of the Haberdashers Company as governors in perpetuity 6 As one of the few schools founded during the Interregnum period the school s articles of foundation were reconfirmed by Act of Parliament in 1660 12 Cha 2 c 12 upon the Restoration of the Monarchy a copy of which is held in the school archives Haberdashers Adams endowed the school with a large agricultural 900 acre 3 6 km2 estate at Knighton in Staffordshire 7 providing income for future generations as a result of this Knighton was exempt from all land taxes until 1990 citation needed 8 The school was endowed with 1 400 books soon after its foundation which at the time represented one of the largest school libraries in England Only seven of these books are still in the school s ownership with the rest having been sold at various times when the school has suffered financial hardship citation needed The Knighton estate was eventually sold off in several portions over the course of the twentieth century and the proceeds of the final sale were used by the Haberdashers Company to purchase Longford Hall as a boarding house for the school citation needed Haberdashers Adams developed slowly and did not expand beyond its original building now known as Big School until the turn of the last century when Main School also known as the S Block was built in the 1920s Over the course of the next 90 years Adams expanded rapidly acquiring a number of buildings on Lower Bar in Newport for use as boarding houses this in turn greatly expanded the school s town centre site In the 1960s a new science block connected to Main School was built whilst a senior boarding master s house was created on land adjacent to Big School During this period the school also built a new gymnasium which was subsequently converted into a theatre in the mid 2000s It has since been converted into a Sixth Form Common area following the construction of the New music block During the First World War 362 Old Novaportans former pupils served in the Armed Forces of whom 45 died and 77 survived wounded After the War a memorial fund was set up to assist the sons of the deceased and an appeal raised 1 000 A tablet listing those who died was unveiled in the Main School building in 1921 In 1948 the Old Boys Club erected another tablet alongside this to those who died in the Second World War Both memorials are now displayed in the School Library 9 In the modern era the Haberdashers Adams school s status has been expressed in a number of statutory arrangements In 1950 the school became a voluntary aided school 10 then after a brief spell as a grant maintained school in the 1980s Adams again faced threat of closure or conversion to co educational comprehensive status in the early 1990s this was avoided by a successful campaign organised by parents and governors against the wishes of Shropshire County Council In the late 1990s and 2000s Adams again enjoyed voluntary aided status throughout its history the Haberdashers Company has been key in supporting the school s vision and offering financial support for some of the more ambitious construction projects In 1993 girls were admitted to the sixth form for the first time bringing to an end Adams long tradition of educating boys only The 1990s also saw the construction of the Wood and Taylor Centres for the study of design technology and maths The Maths block has since been changed to an English block following the construction of the new Paddock block reflecting the school s status in the later 1990s as a technology college In the early 2000s the school began to raise funds for he construction of a new state of the art sports hall and fitness suite to replace dilapidated facilities The Paddock Block was constructed in 2019 to contain Maths Art and a new hall was built to accommodate the expansion of the school to include the new Sa adu house In 2002 a history of the Haberdashers Adams school by former headmaster David Taylor and his wife Ruth was published nbsp Longford Hall nbsp The oldest known sketch of Big School by Francis Perry d 1765 The late 2000s saw the school celebrate its 350th anniversary in 2006 completion of a new science block and conversion of the former gymnasium into a performing arts centre this in turn was converted into a Sixth Form Centre which opened in 2013 The dilapidated music department was condemned for health and safety reasons in 2006 The Coach House on Salters Lane which backs onto the school grounds was acquired by the Haberdashers Company and converted into a new music department which opened in 2013 alongside the new Sixth Form Centre In June 2008 a new funding agreement was signed which provided that monies would be provided to Telford amp Wrekin Council to build a new school on the Abraham Darby site under the Building Schools for the Future scheme The Governors were heavily involved in the approval of the plans and selection of the builders and architects citation needed Following the passing of the Academies Act in 2010 the directors of the Adams Federation in conjunction with the Haberdashers Company agreed to apply to the Department for Education for Adams Grammar School to be converted into a new style academy and to amend the Federation so that the two schools became combined into the ownership of the Haberdashers Adams Federation Trust In 2011 Haberdashers Adams became an academy in the Federation with another Haberdashers school Haberdashers Abraham Darby As of 2018 the school changed its name from Adams Grammar School to Haberdashers Adams This was reportedly done in order to reflect the school s historic links with the Worshipful Company of Haberdashers 11 Admissions and performance editHaberdashers Adams is a selective school which admits both boarding and day pupils Academic performance edit Haberdashers Adams was rated by Ofsted as a Grade 1 outstanding school during 2013 12 More recently the school has been scored as average with a Progress 8 score of 0 02 by the Department for Education 13 In 2022 Adams was downgraded from Outstanding to Good by Ofsted Ofsted noted that the effectiveness of leadership and management requires improvement 14 the management of complaints is weak 15 staff are not receiving effective regular supervision 16 The school was not compliant with regard to a number of safeguarding principles including failure to fulfil the basic safer recruitment of staff and volunteers 17 In relation to the boarding provision Ofsted noted that the school does not meet the national minimum standards for boarding schools relating to staffing and supervision and complaints 18 School life edit nbsp Big School and its front lawn as seen from the High Street Newport As of November 2016 the headmaster is Gary Hickey who was previously deputy headmaster of the school 19 House system edit Haberdashers Adams operates an extra curricular house system and is the basis of inter house sports competitions traditionally a source of pride for pupils of their respective houses all named after Shropshire born notables Owen House named after Wilfred Owen one of the leading poets of the First World War born near Oswestry sports scarlet as its colours This house was called Clive House after Robert Clive of India until 2021 when it was renamed after criticism arose of Robert Clive in light of the George Floyd protests 20 Darwin House traditionally sports royal blue and is named after Shrewsbury born Charles Darwin the celebrated 19th century naturalist Talbot House the last of the three original Salopian houses traditionally displays black and white arranged in hoops e g on rugby jerseys as its sporting colours it is named after Whitchurch born Old Talbot Sir John Talbot later Earl of Shrewsbury of the famous local Talbot family and one of the foremost English military commanders of the French medieval wars Webb House was founded in 1994 by Robert Mulhern who is a proud member of the house to this day and assumed emerald green as its distinguishing colours it is named after Dawley born merchant naval officer and accomplished swimmer Captain Matthew Webb 21 Sa adu House the newest house being announced in 2020 and being formed in the school year starting 2021 named after NHS worker and Old Novaportan who died during the COVID 19 pandemic Alfa Sa adu assuming purple as its house colour Throughout the academic year there are many house events at Haberdashers Adams revolving around the arts sports or academic subjects These include the House Music Competition Dixon Cup which covers drama and public speaking Smedley Cup and House 7s which are both rugby competitions and other sports competitions such as House Cross Country and House Swimming Intra house geography history poetry and languages competitions also take place Boarding houses and student leadership edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message nbsp Adams GS Longford Hall site viewed from the 1st XV rugby pitch The school owns a number of dedicated boarding houses The present junior hall Longford Hall is located by the school s playing fields about a mile away In 2017 the Haberdashers enabled the school to purchase and re furbish Beaumaris Court a former care home to become the school s new senior boarding house Beaumaris Hall This new facility replaced the three senior boys boarding houses which were situated in large Georgian townhouses facing the High Street Longford Hall was built in 1785 for Colonel Ralph Leeke political agent to the British East India Company the building was designed by Joseph Bonomi who was an associate of Robert and James Adam nbsp AGS Georgian era senior boarding houses near Big School on Lower Bar in use until September 2017 The hall is located on top of a low rise and overlooks farmland towards the Lilleshall Monument As with many such buildings the first 100 feet in front of the hall comprises manicured grass bordered by a ha ha to prevent animals from entering today the ha ha is best known amongst pupils for forming a part of the school s annual house cross country course There are a small series of formal gardens including a Quad Behind the hall is a selection of buildings around a central square including a dovecote once part of the estate s home farm Upon entry into the school in year 7 boarders are assigned to dormitories upon moving to Beaumaris Court boys are assigned to double or in some cases single rooms when these are available Combined Cadet Force edit The Haberdashers Adams CCF is available to year 8 students and above as a result of which the school sends many officer candidate students to Sandhurst and Royal Air Force College Cranwell citation needed The CCF also plays a role in Newport civic life parading every year on Remembrance Sunday The CCF recruits each new school year in September or October from year 8 and demand permitting the Lower Sixth Cadets generally pass out in May or June of the same year citation needed The CCF has its own building where its stores are housed and NCO meetings take place The CCF occasionally holds Overnight Exercises where battle drills and fieldcraft are practised these are held either at Longford Hall Nesscliffe Training Area ROF Swynnerton or Leak Military Base In previous years CCF prepared for the Annual House CCF Competition known as The Thompstone Trophy named after the eccentric former leader of the CCF Lt Col Brian Thompstone this entailed a Drill Competition Shooting Command Tasks Memory Games Forces related Quizzes Section Attacks CQB and an OBS course This has not ran in recent years though The CCF is inspected every two years the Biennial Inspection by a senior Army or RAF officer Both the Army and RAF sections of the CCF hold Summer Camps every year visiting working military bases such as RAF Cranwell and Barry Buddon Training Area Cadets can also attend Adventure Training Camps held annually at Llanbedr and Windermere Easter Camps at RAF Akrotiri Summer Camps at Ramstein Air Base and Leadership Courses at RAF Cranwell Nesscliffe Training Area or at Frimley Park Additionally cadets also have the opportunity of attending special events such as the 65th D Day Landing Commemorations and the Cadet 150 Celebrations 22 The CCF has recently undergone many changes and improvements such as the incorporation of a new front team position of responsibility within the school of the Senior Cadet in 2023 Sport edit Haberdashers Adams has traditionally been a rugby school and as such requires all boys play rugby through years seven and eight during the autumn and spring terms Upon entry into year nine pupils are presented with the option of continuing to play rugby or switching to field hockey Cricket and athletics are the main sports disciplines undertaken during the shorter summer term In year 11 and the sixth form boys are often presented with the opportunity to take part in any sport of their choice provided they can receive permission for such an activity With the exception of those activities not provided by the school all sporting events and training therefore takes place at the school s Longford Hall playing fields for this reason few visiting sports teams ever see the Main School site Adams operates a system of games afternoons a system by which each individual year group is assigned a specific day of the week to attend afternoon physical activity sessions at Longford for this purpose the sixth Form is combined with year 11 In the early 21st century football was reintroduced to the school after an absence of almost 100 years citation needed Haberdashers Adams organises biennial summer tours abroad for its senior rugby hockey and girls netball teams Recent tours have included rugby tours to South Africa South America Australia and Singapore and a hockey and netball tour to Barbados The school is reported to be keen on further developing its cricket provision and widening opportunities for pupils citation needed International links edit nbsp Lyceum No 1 in Bydgoszcz is one of Adams European partner schools Haberdashers Adams currently runs student exchange programmes with the following schools in France Germany and Poland School City nbsp Oberschule zum Dom Lubeck nbsp College Roqua 23 Aubenas nbsp I Liceum Ogolnoksztalcace im Cypriana Kamila Norwida Bydgoszcz Haberdashers Adams also corresponds with Ringwood Secondary College in Melbourne Australia Old Novaportans editSee also Category People educated at Adams Grammar School nbsp Coat of arms long used by AGS and latterly adopted by the Old Novaportan Club date unknown The School supports the Old Novaportans Club which organises reunions dinners and sporting events throughout the year to which its members are invited Former pupils are known as Old Novaportans initialised as ON Academia edit Piers Corbyn born 1947 weather forecaster businessman activist anti vaxxer and conspiracy theorist Donald Court 1912 1994 James Spence Professor of Child Health at Newcastle University 1955 72 and former President of the British Paediatric Association 24 William Cureton 1808 1864 orientalist Dave Goulson born 1965 professor of biology evolution behaviour and environment at the University of Sussex expert on bumblebees and founder of the Bumblebee Conservation Trust Thomas Hollis 1720 1774 benefactor of Harvard University political propagandist patron of Canaletto among other artists Helmut Koenigsberger 1918 2014 professor of history King s College London 1973 84 later emeritus Sir Oliver Lodge 1851 1940 inventor amp first principal of Birmingham University Stuart Meeson born 1972 in Newport physicist in Electrical Impedance Tomography and Mammography James E Quibell 1867 1935 archaeologist and leading British Egyptologist Maurice Stacey 1907 94 worked alongside Sir Norman Haworth to artificially synthesize vitamin C Clergy edit Robert Charnock 1663 1696 Dean of Magdalen College Oxford conspirator who planned to kill King William III Silvester Horne 1865 1914 MP for Ipswich Congregationalist Minister and father of Kenneth Horne Gerald Lander 1861 1934 Bishop of Victoria Hong Kong Thomas Percy 1729 1811 became Bishop of Dromore wrote Reliques of Ancient English Poetry in 1765 Media and arts edit M J Bassett film director and scriptwriter Simon Bates born 1946 radio disc jockey Barrington J Bayley 1937 2008 science fiction writer Tom Brown 1662 1704 satirist Radzi Chinyanganya born 1987 presenter of Blue Peter from 2013 to 2019 25 Jerskin Fendrix born 1995 musician and Academy Award nominee for best original score for the film Poor Things 26 27 Ewen Henderson 1934 2000 sculptor Eliot Higgins born 1979 investigative journalist founder of Bellingcat Norman Jones 1932 2013 Politics amp business edit Peter Butler born 1951 former Conservative MP for North East Milton Keynes from 1992 to 1997 and current chief executive of Flying Scotsman plc Jeremy Corbyn born 1949 Labour MP for Islington North since 1983 Leader of the Opposition and Leader of the Labour Party from 2015 to 2020 28 Nick Jenkins born 1967 chief executive of moonpig com former Glencore commodities trader 29 John Leveson Gower 1st Earl Gower 1694 1754 Lord Privy Seal 1742 54 and first senior Tory member of government since George I of Great Britain s coronation in 1714 Thomas Parker Earl of Macclesfield 1666 1732 Lord Chancellor and Acting Regent of Great Britain Military edit Captain Thomas Ashburnham 1855 1924 6th Earl of Ashburnham 30 General George Colt Langley 1810 96 General Royal Marines Matthew Smith ca 1665 ca 1723 17th century spy intriguer and writer Sir Charles Buckworth Herne Soame Bt 1864 1931 10th Baronet Major General Francis Ventris 1857 1929 General Officer Commanding British Forces in China Sports edit Cedric Boyns born 1954 cricket player for Shropshire and Worcestershire County Cricket Clubs 31 Peter Ranells born 1954 cricket player for Shropshire Graham Kitchener born 1989 rugby player for Worcester Warriors and England 32 Dan Redfern born 1990 cricket player for Shropshire Derbyshire and Leicestershire County Cricket Clubs 33 34 Peter Short born 1979 rugby player for Bath Rugby and England Saxons 32 Former staff edit Ryan Palmer born 1974 maths teacher and ex Jamaican national chess champion Agnes Miller Parker 1895 1980 former art teacher engraver and illustrator Alec Peterson 1908 1988 former headmaster founder of the International Baccalaureate Donald Fear history and government and politics teacher the sixth person ever to win 1 000 000 on Who Wants To Be a Millionaire in 2020See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Adams Grammar School Newport Longford Hall junior boarding house and sports fields owned by the school situated about one mile 1 6 km away from the Main School site in the village of Longford Grade II listed buildings in Telford and Wrekin Listed buildings in Newport ShropshireReferences edit adamsgs org uk Archived from the original on 29 August 2017 Retrieved 17 September 2015 StackPath https www shropshirestar com news local hubs telford newport 2017 12 06 petition launched against school name change Tooley David Here come the girls 400 year old grammar school in Shropshire decides to go fully co educational shropshirestar com Retrieved 29 January 2023 www british history ac uk haberdashers co uk Archived from the original on 11 July 2016 Retrieved 17 September 2015 www haberdashersarms com Taylor David amp Ruth 2002 Mr Adams Free Grammar School Phillimore amp co Ltd p 15 ISBN 1860772218 Francis Peter 2013 Shropshire War Memorials Sites of Remembrance YouCaxton Publications p 67 ISBN 978 1 909644 11 3 Haberdashers Company Haberdashers co uk 1 September 2011 Archived from the original on 25 September 2015 Retrieved 22 July 2016 Haberdashers Adams Archived from the original on 26 February 2022 Retrieved 17 January 2018 via Facebook Ofsted Report Adams Grammar School GOV UK compare school performance service gov uk Retrieved 22 December 2016 https files ofsted gov uk v1 file 50186891 https files ofsted gov uk v1 file 50186891 p 4 https files ofsted gov uk v1 file 50186891 pp 3 4 https files ofsted gov uk v1 file 50186891 p 5 https files ofsted gov uk v1 file 50187410 adamsgs org uk Archived from the original on 17 November 2016 Retrieved 17 September 2015 Newport Haberdashers Adams School to drop Clive House name BBC News 8 July 2020 Retrieved 18 July 2020 Daily News of Open Water Swimming 25 December 2013 Landmarks Monuments Memorials of Open Water Swimmers AGSNewsletter Archived 21 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine www ac grenoble fr www independent co uk Blue Peter s Radzi goes back to school in Newport Shropshire Star 5 December 2013 Retrieved 15 July 2014 Tooley David 25 January 2024 How drumming with spoons put a Market Drayton lad on the road to Oscar nomination shropshirestar com Retrieved 2 February 2024 Jones Megan 9 January 2024 From Newport grammar school to Golden Globes Former Shropshire schoolboy nominated for blockbuster score shropshirestar com Retrieved 2 February 2024 Jeremy Corbyn congratulated by former Shropshire school Central ITV News 12 September 2015 Retrieved 27 January 2021 My first million Nick Jenkins Financial Times London 10 July 2015 Archived from the original on 10 December 2022 Jones Ted 2000 The Story of Lord and Lady Ashburnham Part II The Officers Quarters 16 1 amp 2 23 26 Percival Tony 1999 Shropshire Cricketers 1844 1998 A C S Publications Nottingham p 32 ISBN 1 902171 17 9 a b Kitchener Lords it at Sixways BBC News 1 November 2007 Retrieved 27 January 2021 Dan Redfern England Cricket Cricket Players and Officials ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 22 July 2016 www bbc co ukExternal links editOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Haberdashers 27 Adams amp oldid 1219099947, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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