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Bishop's Stortford College

Bishop's Stortford College is a private boarding and day school in the English public school tradition for more than 1,200 pupils aged 4–18, situated in a 130-acre (0.53 km2) campus on the edge of the market town of Bishop's Stortford, Hertfordshire, England.[1]

Bishop's Stortford College
Address
School House, Maze Green Road

, ,
CM23 2PQ

Information
TypePrivate day & boarding school
MottoSoli Deo Gloria (Glory to God alone)
Religious affiliation(s)Christian, non-denominational
Established1868; 156 years ago
FounderEast of England Nonconformist Schools Association
Local authorityHertfordshire
Chair of the GovernorsGE Baker
College headKathy Crewe-Read
GenderCo-educational
Age4 to 18
Enrolment1,300~
Houses10 (Senior)
1 (Prep boarding)
Former pupilsOld Stortfordians
Websitebishopsstortfordcollege.org

As an "all-through" school, it is a member of both the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference and the Independent Association of Preparatory Schools. It is also a founding member of the Bishop’s Stortford Educational Trust, a consortium of local primary and secondary schools, and currently the only such trust in the UK to involve both state and independent sectors.[2]

The college head is Kathy Crewe-Read.

History edit

The college was founded in 1868 by a group of prominent East Anglian Nonconformists who wanted to establish a public school "in which Evangelical Nonconformists might secure for their boys, an effective and Christian education on terms that should not be beyond the reach of the middle class generally".[3]

They approached the Bishop's Stortford Collegiate School, a non-sectarian school founded in 1850, and acquired the buildings, renaming it The Nonconformist Grammar School. It was inaugurated on 23 September 1868, with 40 pupils, including 17 boarders, under the headship of Rev Richard Alliott, who remained at the helm until his death in 1899.

Former star pupil Francis Young became second headmaster, in 1900. During his 31-year tenure the roll increased from just 90 pupils to nearly 400 and the school grew in reputation. Among Young's first acts were: renaming it the Bishop's Stortford College in 1901, to avoid confusion with the town's rival Grammar School; in 1902 taking over an existing school for boys aged 8–13 years, which became the new preparatory department; in 1903 introducing rugby; and in 1904 changing the school's status from private commercial ownership to publicly endowed. He also commissioned many of the campus's redbrick buildings designed in the arts and crafts style by architect and former pupil Herbert Ibberson, acquired the 100 acre sports fields and oversaw construction of the Memorial Hall, commemorating the Old Stortfordians who had died in the Great War.

The college changed status in 1945, from a direct grant school to fully independent public school. It celebrated its centenary in 1968 with a major building programme and a visit by HM Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother, followed in 1969 with a book, Bishop’s Stortford College: A Centenary Chronicle.

September 1977 saw the first four girls admitted, and the following year the first girls' house, Young, opened. In 1995 the college became fully coeducational, appointed its first female deputy head, Wendy Bellars, and opened a new co-ed Pre-Prep day school. Since 2013 large parts of the college have been substantially redeveloped and expanded, including new premises for Alliott, Collett, Trotman and Rowe Houses, and an extension to the Prep School (during which workers excavated 2.5 tonnes of Hertfordshire puddingstone, one of the rarest rocks).

In the early hours of 29 September 2015 Robert Pearce boarding house was devastated by fire.[4] Pupils and staff were evacuated safely but the building lost its roof and burned down to the bricks. It was renovated and reopened in January 2018,[5] in time for the college's 150th anniversary, which was commemorated in the book, Bishop's Stortford College: Celebrating 150 Years 1868-2018.

On 1 September 2020 Kathy Crewe-Read, formerly head of Wolverhampton Grammar School, became the first woman to lead the school and only the tenth head in its 152-year history.[6]

College heads edit

In its first century, the college had just five headmasters.

  • 1868–1899: Rev Richard Alliott
  • 1900–1931: Francis S Young
  • 1932–1943: H Leo Price
  • 1944–1957: AN Evans
  • 1957–1970: Peter Rowe
  • 1970–1984: Colin Greetham
  • 1984–1997: Stephen George Garnett Benson
  • 1997–2011: John Trotman
  • 2011–2020: Jeremy Gladwin
  • 2020–present: Kathy Crewe-Read

Present day edit

There are 1,307 pupils at Bishop's Stortford College: 674 in the Senior School (aged 13–18), including 271 in the Sixth Form, 506 in the Prep School (aged 7–13) and 127 in Pre-Prep (aged 4–7). Pupils board from the age of seven. The Senior School has 160 boarders, including full, weekly and flexi; the Prep School has 35 full, weekly or flexi-boarders. Most UK boarders come from Hertfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Essex and London, while most international boarders are Senior School pupils.

In 2020, the college produced its best-ever GCSE results, with 79% of all grades at 9-7[7] (up from 76% in 2019).[8] At A Level, students achieved a 100% pass rate in 2020, with 86% of results graded A*-B and 62% at A*-A.[9] Most students go on to study at Russell Group universities, including Oxford and Cambridge.

The latest ISI Education Quality Inspection report, published in March 2017, found that "the quality of the pupils' academic and other achievements is excellent", with pupils displaying "excellent attitudes towards their learning and highly developed study skills". The report also stated that "the school is highly successful in creating an ethic of hard work and enthusiastic participation".[10]

The college maintains a Christian ethos but promotes matters of faith from a non-denominational perspective that is sensitive towards pupils of other faiths and none. Morning assemblies are led by the head and the school chaplain.

Since 2009 it has hosted an annual Festival of Literature, which is open to the public and includes events for local primary schools. Speakers and performers have included Poet Laureate Simon Armitage, former Children's Laureate Anthony Browne, broadcasters Robin Ince and Michael Portillo, author and illustrator James Mayhew, art critic Andrew Graham-Dixon and the bestselling novelist Rachel Joyce. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic restrictions, the 2021 festival was a virtual event.

Houses edit

The college has 14 houses, all named after prominent figures in its history. Each of the six, single-sex day houses in the Senior School is in the care of a housemaster or housemistress, while the five boarding houses all have resident house parents, a resident assistant and other resident staff.

Prep School pupils are split into four houses for competitions: Monk-Jones, Newbury, Westfield and Grimwade, but the latter is the only bricks and mortar house and is home to the boarders.

The Senior School has five houses for boys – Collett, Hayward and Sutton for day boys, and Robert Pearce and Rowe for boys' boarding; and five houses for girls – Alliott, Benson and Tee for day girls, and Trotman and Young for girls' boarding.

College facilities edit

The FS Young Library was built in 1936 as a memorial to FS Young, college headmaster from 1900 to 1931. Since 1992 it has been run by qualified librarians and is fully supervised for 70 hours a week to provide research and study facilities and assistance for pupils and staff. It has an archive of college records, publications, photographs, cuttings, and memorabilia including old uniforms from the college's early days.

Sports facilities include a sports hall, fitness centre and indoor pool, opened in 2002 by Olympian swimmer Duncan Goodhew. The playing fields cover more than 100 acres, including twelve rugby pitches, seven cricket squares and sixteen cricket nets, three grass hockey pitches, five football pitches and a grass running track. There are also two floodlit AstroTurf hockey pitches hockey, all-weather surface courts for netball and tennis and a multi-use games area.

The college has been included in The Cricketer magazine's guide to cricket's top 100 schools in England since 2017[11][12][13][14] and the Prep School is in the top 50 for the first time in the 2021 edition. In 2020 it became an MCC Foundation Cricket Hub, providing free cricketing facilities and coaching to state-educated young cricketers.[15]

The Grade II listed Memorial Hall has been used for assemblies, concerts and special events since it was formally opened in 1922 by Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch. Designed by architect Bertram Clough Williams-Ellis (creator of the Italianate village of Portmeirion in North Wales), it was built to commemorate the 62 former college boys who had died in the First World War. The doors were given in memory of EA Knight, a master killed on active service in Belgium in 1917. A second Roll of Honour was added in 1949, inscribed with the names of a further 92 former students who died while serving in the Second World War. Wooden chairs in the hall had names individually carved for dedication.

The Ferguson Building, opened in 2007 and named after Old Stortfordian Professor John Ferguson, who was a founding member of the Open University, provides a lecture theatre for up to 180 people, meeting room, ICT suite and sixth form social centre. It is built on the site of the old indoor swimming pool and retains some of its original features. It hosts the Ferguson Lectures, which focus on contemporary issues and are open to the public.

Other facilities include the purpose-built Charles Edwards Centre, which houses ICT, physics and design and technology, and the Walter Strachan Art Centre, which has a sculpture studio, workshop, gallery space, IT suite, sixth-form studio and departmental library.

Notable Old Stortfordians edit

 
Recent Old Stortfordian Charlotte Aitchison, aka singer-songwriter Charli XCX

Former pupils are known as Old Stortfordians. For a more complete list, see People educated at Bishop's Stortford College.

Notable teachers have included:

References edit

  1. ^ "Welcome". bishopsstortfordcollege.org. Retrieved 20 January 2020.
  2. ^ "Vision and ethos". Bishop's Stortford Educational Trust. Retrieved 30 July 2020.
  3. ^ John Morley, Norman Monk-Jones (1969). Bishop's Stortford College 1868-1968 Centenary Chronicle. London: JM Dent & Sons. p. 4.
  4. ^ "Pupils evacuated in school blaze". BBC News. 29 September 2015. Retrieved 30 July 2020.
  5. ^ Corr, Sinead (25 January 2018). "Boarding house devastated by fire reopens at Bishop's Stortford College". Bishop's Stortford Independent. Retrieved 30 July 2020.
  6. ^ Paul Winspear (12 June 2019). "Bishop's Stortford College appoints first female head in its 150-year history". Bishop's Stortford Independent. Retrieved 29 October 2019.
  7. ^ Winspear, Paul (24 August 2020). "GCSE results: Bishop's Stortford College's 115 Year 11 students score three highest grades in 79% of exams". Bishop's Stortford Independent. Iliffe Media. Retrieved 8 September 2020.
  8. ^ Winspear, Paul (22 August 2019). "GCSE results 2019: How schools in the Bishop's Stortford area fared". Bishop's Stortford Independent. Retrieved 20 January 2020.
  9. ^ "A level results by subject". Bishop's Stortford College. 20 August 2020. Retrieved 8 September 2020.
  10. ^ "Educational Quality Inspection, Bishop's Stortford College". Retrieved 20 January 2020.
  11. ^ "Os news issue 135 pdf for website etc". Issuu. Retrieved 29 July 2020.
  12. ^ "The College is voted a top school for cricket". bishopsstortfordcollege.org. 27 November 2017. Retrieved 29 July 2020.
  13. ^ "The Cricketer Schools Guide 2019". thecricketer.com. Retrieved 29 July 2020.
  14. ^ "The Cricketer Schools Guide 2020 - UK best cricket schools list | The Cricketer". thecricketer.com. Retrieved 29 July 2020.
  15. ^ "The Cricketer Schools Guide 2020". Issuu. Retrieved 8 September 2020.

Further reading edit

  • John Morley and Norman Monk-Jones (1969), Bishop's Stortford College 1868-1968 Centenary Chronicle (JM Dent & Sons Ltd, London)
  • John Ferguson (1970), Cricket at Bishop's Stortford College Essex 1868-1968
  • Bob Kisby (2017), Bishop's Stortford College 1968-2018: Fifty Years On
  • Bishop's Stortford College (2018), Bishop's Stortford College: Celebrating 150 Years 1868-2018

External links edit

  • Bishop's Stortford College Prospectus: History
  • Profile in the Good Schools Guide
  • Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI) reports
  • The Cricketer Schools Guide 2020

51°52′12″N 00°09′07″E / 51.87000°N 0.15194°E / 51.87000; 0.15194

bishop, stortford, college, private, boarding, school, english, public, school, tradition, more, than, pupils, aged, situated, acre, campus, edge, market, town, bishop, stortford, hertfordshire, england, addressschool, house, maze, green, roadbishop, stortford. Bishop s Stortford College is a private boarding and day school in the English public school tradition for more than 1 200 pupils aged 4 18 situated in a 130 acre 0 53 km2 campus on the edge of the market town of Bishop s Stortford Hertfordshire England 1 Bishop s Stortford CollegeAddressSchool House Maze Green RoadBishop s Stortford Hertfordshire CM23 2PQUnited KingdomInformationTypePrivate day amp boarding schoolMottoSoli Deo Gloria Glory to God alone Religious affiliation s Christian non denominationalEstablished1868 156 years agoFounderEast of England Nonconformist Schools AssociationLocal authorityHertfordshireChair of the GovernorsGE BakerCollege headKathy Crewe ReadGenderCo educationalAge4 to 18Enrolment1 300 Houses10 Senior 1 Prep boarding Former pupilsOld StortfordiansWebsitebishopsstortfordcollege wbr org As an all through school it is a member of both the Headmasters and Headmistresses Conference and the Independent Association of Preparatory Schools It is also a founding member of the Bishop s Stortford Educational Trust a consortium of local primary and secondary schools and currently the only such trust in the UK to involve both state and independent sectors 2 The college head is Kathy Crewe Read Contents 1 History 2 College heads 3 Present day 4 Houses 5 College facilities 6 Notable Old Stortfordians 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory editThe college was founded in 1868 by a group of prominent East Anglian Nonconformists who wanted to establish a public school in which Evangelical Nonconformists might secure for their boys an effective and Christian education on terms that should not be beyond the reach of the middle class generally 3 They approached the Bishop s Stortford Collegiate School a non sectarian school founded in 1850 and acquired the buildings renaming it The Nonconformist Grammar School It was inaugurated on 23 September 1868 with 40 pupils including 17 boarders under the headship of Rev Richard Alliott who remained at the helm until his death in 1899 Former star pupil Francis Young became second headmaster in 1900 During his 31 year tenure the roll increased from just 90 pupils to nearly 400 and the school grew in reputation Among Young s first acts were renaming it the Bishop s Stortford College in 1901 to avoid confusion with the town s rival Grammar School in 1902 taking over an existing school for boys aged 8 13 years which became the new preparatory department in 1903 introducing rugby and in 1904 changing the school s status from private commercial ownership to publicly endowed He also commissioned many of the campus s redbrick buildings designed in the arts and crafts style by architect and former pupil Herbert Ibberson acquired the 100 acre sports fields and oversaw construction of the Memorial Hall commemorating the Old Stortfordians who had died in the Great War The college changed status in 1945 from a direct grant school to fully independent public school It celebrated its centenary in 1968 with a major building programme and a visit by HM Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother followed in 1969 with a book Bishop s Stortford College A Centenary Chronicle September 1977 saw the first four girls admitted and the following year the first girls house Young opened In 1995 the college became fully coeducational appointed its first female deputy head Wendy Bellars and opened a new co ed Pre Prep day school Since 2013 large parts of the college have been substantially redeveloped and expanded including new premises for Alliott Collett Trotman and Rowe Houses and an extension to the Prep School during which workers excavated 2 5 tonnes of Hertfordshire puddingstone one of the rarest rocks In the early hours of 29 September 2015 Robert Pearce boarding house was devastated by fire 4 Pupils and staff were evacuated safely but the building lost its roof and burned down to the bricks It was renovated and reopened in January 2018 5 in time for the college s 150th anniversary which was commemorated in the book Bishop s Stortford College Celebrating 150 Years 1868 2018 On 1 September 2020 Kathy Crewe Read formerly head of Wolverhampton Grammar School became the first woman to lead the school and only the tenth head in its 152 year history 6 College heads editIn its first century the college had just five headmasters 1868 1899 Rev Richard Alliott 1900 1931 Francis S Young 1932 1943 H Leo Price 1944 1957 AN Evans 1957 1970 Peter Rowe 1970 1984 Colin Greetham 1984 1997 Stephen George Garnett Benson 1997 2011 John Trotman 2011 2020 Jeremy Gladwin 2020 present Kathy Crewe ReadPresent day editThere are 1 307 pupils at Bishop s Stortford College 674 in the Senior School aged 13 18 including 271 in the Sixth Form 506 in the Prep School aged 7 13 and 127 in Pre Prep aged 4 7 Pupils board from the age of seven The Senior School has 160 boarders including full weekly and flexi the Prep School has 35 full weekly or flexi boarders Most UK boarders come from Hertfordshire Cambridgeshire Essex and London while most international boarders are Senior School pupils In 2020 the college produced its best ever GCSE results with 79 of all grades at 9 7 7 up from 76 in 2019 8 At A Level students achieved a 100 pass rate in 2020 with 86 of results graded A B and 62 at A A 9 Most students go on to study at Russell Group universities including Oxford and Cambridge The latest ISI Education Quality Inspection report published in March 2017 found that the quality of the pupils academic and other achievements is excellent with pupils displaying excellent attitudes towards their learning and highly developed study skills The report also stated that the school is highly successful in creating an ethic of hard work and enthusiastic participation 10 The college maintains a Christian ethos but promotes matters of faith from a non denominational perspective that is sensitive towards pupils of other faiths and none Morning assemblies are led by the head and the school chaplain Since 2009 it has hosted an annual Festival of Literature which is open to the public and includes events for local primary schools Speakers and performers have included Poet Laureate Simon Armitage former Children s Laureate Anthony Browne broadcasters Robin Ince and Michael Portillo author and illustrator James Mayhew art critic Andrew Graham Dixon and the bestselling novelist Rachel Joyce Due to the COVID 19 pandemic restrictions the 2021 festival was a virtual event Houses editThe college has 14 houses all named after prominent figures in its history Each of the six single sex day houses in the Senior School is in the care of a housemaster or housemistress while the five boarding houses all have resident house parents a resident assistant and other resident staff Prep School pupils are split into four houses for competitions Monk Jones Newbury Westfield and Grimwade but the latter is the only bricks and mortar house and is home to the boarders The Senior School has five houses for boys Collett Hayward and Sutton for day boys and Robert Pearce and Rowe for boys boarding and five houses for girls Alliott Benson and Tee for day girls and Trotman and Young for girls boarding College facilities editThe FS Young Library was built in 1936 as a memorial to FS Young college headmaster from 1900 to 1931 Since 1992 it has been run by qualified librarians and is fully supervised for 70 hours a week to provide research and study facilities and assistance for pupils and staff It has an archive of college records publications photographs cuttings and memorabilia including old uniforms from the college s early days Sports facilities include a sports hall fitness centre and indoor pool opened in 2002 by Olympian swimmer Duncan Goodhew The playing fields cover more than 100 acres including twelve rugby pitches seven cricket squares and sixteen cricket nets three grass hockey pitches five football pitches and a grass running track There are also two floodlit AstroTurf hockey pitches hockey all weather surface courts for netball and tennis and a multi use games area The college has been included in The Cricketer magazine s guide to cricket s top 100 schools in England since 2017 11 12 13 14 and the Prep School is in the top 50 for the first time in the 2021 edition In 2020 it became an MCC Foundation Cricket Hub providing free cricketing facilities and coaching to state educated young cricketers 15 The Grade II listed Memorial Hall has been used for assemblies concerts and special events since it was formally opened in 1922 by Sir Arthur Quiller Couch Designed by architect Bertram Clough Williams Ellis creator of the Italianate village of Portmeirion in North Wales it was built to commemorate the 62 former college boys who had died in the First World War The doors were given in memory of EA Knight a master killed on active service in Belgium in 1917 A second Roll of Honour was added in 1949 inscribed with the names of a further 92 former students who died while serving in the Second World War Wooden chairs in the hall had names individually carved for dedication The Ferguson Building opened in 2007 and named after Old Stortfordian Professor John Ferguson who was a founding member of the Open University provides a lecture theatre for up to 180 people meeting room ICT suite and sixth form social centre It is built on the site of the old indoor swimming pool and retains some of its original features It hosts the Ferguson Lectures which focus on contemporary issues and are open to the public Other facilities include the purpose built Charles Edwards Centre which houses ICT physics and design and technology and the Walter Strachan Art Centre which has a sculpture studio workshop gallery space IT suite sixth form studio and departmental library Notable Old Stortfordians editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message nbsp Recent Old Stortfordian Charlotte Aitchison aka singer songwriter Charli XCX Former pupils are known as Old Stortfordians For a more complete list see People educated at Bishop s Stortford College Sir Leonard Pearce 1873 1947 electrical engineer designer of Battersea Power Station Grantly Dick Read 1890 1959 obstetrician pioneer of natural childbirth Lieutenant Colonel Sir Brett Cloutman 1891 1971 VC MC KC awarded the last Victoria Cross of the First World War Wilfred Bion 1897 1979 psychoanalyst president of the British Psychoanalytical Society 1962 65 Malcolm Nokes 1897 1986 Olympic medalist teacher soldier chemist nuclear scientist H Leo Price 1899 1943 hockey and rugby international Bishop s Stortford College headmaster 1932 1943 Clifford Dupont 1905 1978 first President of Rhodesia Leader Stirling 1906 2003 missionary surgeon Health Minister of Tanzania 1975 1980 Sir Dick White 1906 1993 Director General of MI5 1953 1956 Chief of MI6 1956 1968 Alec Clifton Taylor 1907 1985 architectural historian Edward Crankshaw 1909 1984 expert and author on the Soviet Union and the Gestapo John Glyn Jones 1909 1997 actor Roger Hilton 1911 1975 painter pioneer of abstract art Denis Greenhill Baron Greenhill of Harrow 1913 2000 GCMG Permanent Under Secretary of the Foreign and Commonwealth Office and Head of the Diplomatic Service 1969 1973 Peter Wright 1916 1995 Assistant Director General of MI5 and author of Spycatcher Sir Arthur Bonsall 1917 2014 Director of GCHQ 1973 1978 Leslie McLean 1918 1987 cricketer General Sir Peter Whiteley 1920 2016 Commander in Chief of the Allied Forces in Northern Europe 1977 1979 Drummond Allison 1921 1943 Second World War poet Professor John Ferguson 1921 1989 Christian pacifist first Dean of Arts at the Open University John Rae 1931 2006 author headmaster of Westminster School 1970 1986 CIM Jones 1934 2016 Olympic hockey player 1960 1964 and coach Hertfordshire cricketer college head of geography 1960 1970 Headmaster of Bedford School Dick Clement born 1937 OBE television and screenwriter John Heddle 1943 1989 politician John Richard Patterson 1945 1997 founder of the Dateline computer dating service Sir Stephen Lander born 1947 Director General of MI5 1996 2002 and Chair of the Serious Organised Crime Agency 2004 2009 Robert Kirby 1948 2009 arranger best known for his work with Nick Drake Andy Peebles born 1948 broadcaster Alan Lyddiard born Michael Kent 1949 theatre and film director Bill Sharpe born 1952 keyboardist and founding member of jazz funk band Shakatak James Duthie born 1957 hockey player and Great Britain team coach James Baxter born 1967 British animator Guy Wilkinson born 1968 professor of physics at the University of Oxford Ben Clarke born 1968 England rugby union player 1992 1999 Alastair Lukies born 1973 entrepreneur and co founder of Monitise Iain Mackay born 1985 hockey international Olympian Charli XCX Charlotte Aitchison born 1992 multi award winning singer songwriter Elinah Phillip born 2000 Olympic swimmer Bobby Brazier born 2003 model and actor Notable teachers have included Percy Horton 1897 1970 painter College art master 1925 1930 Herbert Sumsion 1899 1995 Organist of Gloucester Cathedral College director of music 1924 1926 Brendan Bracken 1st Viscount Bracken 1901 1958 publisher politician First Lord of the Admiralty College master c 1920 1922 Bernie Cotton born 1948 England and Great Britain hockey player and coach college geography master 1960s 1970s 1990sReferences edit Welcome bishopsstortfordcollege org Retrieved 20 January 2020 Vision and ethos Bishop s Stortford Educational Trust Retrieved 30 July 2020 John Morley Norman Monk Jones 1969 Bishop s Stortford College 1868 1968 Centenary Chronicle London JM Dent amp Sons p 4 Pupils evacuated in school blaze BBC News 29 September 2015 Retrieved 30 July 2020 Corr Sinead 25 January 2018 Boarding house devastated by fire reopens at Bishop s Stortford College Bishop s Stortford Independent Retrieved 30 July 2020 Paul Winspear 12 June 2019 Bishop s Stortford College appoints first female head in its 150 year history Bishop s Stortford Independent Retrieved 29 October 2019 Winspear Paul 24 August 2020 GCSE results Bishop s Stortford College s 115 Year 11 students score three highest grades in 79 of exams Bishop s Stortford Independent Iliffe Media Retrieved 8 September 2020 Winspear Paul 22 August 2019 GCSE results 2019 How schools in the Bishop s Stortford area fared Bishop s Stortford Independent Retrieved 20 January 2020 A level results by subject Bishop s Stortford College 20 August 2020 Retrieved 8 September 2020 Educational Quality Inspection Bishop s Stortford College Retrieved 20 January 2020 Os news issue 135 pdf for website etc Issuu Retrieved 29 July 2020 The College is voted a top school for cricket bishopsstortfordcollege org 27 November 2017 Retrieved 29 July 2020 The Cricketer Schools Guide 2019 thecricketer com Retrieved 29 July 2020 The Cricketer Schools Guide 2020 UK best cricket schools list The Cricketer thecricketer com Retrieved 29 July 2020 The Cricketer Schools Guide 2020 Issuu Retrieved 8 September 2020 Further reading editJohn Morley and Norman Monk Jones 1969 Bishop s Stortford College 1868 1968 Centenary Chronicle JM Dent amp Sons Ltd London John Ferguson 1970 Cricket at Bishop s Stortford College Essex 1868 1968 Bob Kisby 2017 Bishop s Stortford College 1968 2018 Fifty Years On Bishop s Stortford College 2018 Bishop s Stortford College Celebrating 150 Years 1868 2018External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bishop s Stortford College Bishop s Stortford College Prospectus History Profile in the Good Schools Guide Independent Schools Inspectorate ISI reports The Cricketer Schools Guide 2020 51 52 12 N 00 09 07 E 51 87000 N 0 15194 E 51 87000 0 15194 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bishop 27s Stortford College amp oldid 1222034650, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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