Bury Grammar School


Bury Grammar School is a 3–18 private day school for boys in Bury, Greater Manchester, England, that has existed since c.1570. It is now part of a group of schools for preschool, junior, senior and sixth form studies.
Since 2017, when Bury Grammar School and Bury Grammar School (Girls) amalgamated, Jo Anderson has been the first principal of the School and is a member of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference.

History

Establishment

There is evidence that a grammar school attached to Bury Parish Church existed as early as 1570 but the school was certainly well established by 1634 with Henry Dunster as its fourth recorded headmaster. Former headmaster, Rev'd Henry Bury, who was by then "aged eighty nine yeares or thereabout", wrote his will in that year. In it, he not only left the sum of twenty shillings to Dunster but also an endowment of £300 to the "free school" at Bury "for and towards the yearlie mentayninge of a school maister there, for to teach their children."
Rev'd Roger Kay had gained his BA in 1688, his MA in 1691 and had become a Fellow of St John's College, Cambridge. He also later became Rector of Fittleton in Wiltshire and was a prebendary of Salisbury until his death. In 1726, he left money in his will to support the library at St John's College, but also a substantial part of his estate to re-founding his alma mater in his home town of Bury. The building in which Kay's newly re-founded school educated the boys of Bury still stands today, known as Blackburn Hall, in the Wylde behind the Parish Church.

Expansion

The school outgrew its premises and, in 1903, the boys moved into the completed half of a new building on Tenterden Street, with playing fields across Bridge Road. The new buildings, of Accrington brick, were designed in a simple Neo-Renaissance style by William Venn Gough. (The playing fields were a bone of contention from the first. One writer noted in an early edition of "The Clavian" that "the young folks of Bury refused to recognize our right to the ground".
The boys were soon joined by the girls of the Bury Girls' High School, newly re-founded as Bury Grammar School for Girls. The two schools, whilst remaining separate entities, shared the same building until the erection of a more modern facility for the boys across Bridge Road in the 1960s. This new boys' school was built on the playing fields, so the Governors purchased of land at Buckley Wells for new playing fields. When a new courthouse was completed on Tenters Street, the Magistrates' Court and County Court vacated their former building on Tenterden Street. The Prep Department of the boys' school moved across the road from the 1960s building into the refurbished old courthouse.

Direct grant grammar school

The school was a direct grant grammar school from 1944 until the abolition of the direct grant system in 1976, when it became fully independent once again. The school celebrated the 250th anniversary of its re-founding by Roger Kay with a visit from Prince Philip on 19 November 1976.
Bury Grammar Schools celebrate their Founders' Day on the Friday closest to 6 May, the date on which Roger Kay specified the Trustees should meet annually to inspect the schools. The Eucharist is celebrated in the Parish Church and, later in the morning, a procession leads from the school through the main streets of Bury to the Parish Church, led by the Combined Cadet Force. Since the CCF is attached to the Lancashire Fusiliers, a regiment with the Freedom of the Borough, the cadets are permitted to march with "swords drawn, drums beating and colours flying". After a commemoration service, the pupils are awarded a half-holiday. Services for younger pupils are held simultaneously in the boys' school hall, the boys' preparatory school and the Roger Kay Hall.

Headmasters

Recorded Headmasters of Bury Grammar SchoolRecorded Headmasters of Bury Grammar SchoolRecorded Headmasters of Bury Grammar SchoolRecorded Headmasters of Bury Grammar SchoolRecorded Headmasters of Bury Grammar School
Rev'd Henry BuryMA16001600
Rev'd Mr JohnsonMA16171622
Rev'd Mr HoyleMA16221630
Rev'd Henry DunsterMA16301640
Rev'd William InghamMA16401649
Rev'd James LivesyMA16491650
Rev'd Peter BradshawMA16501653
Rev'd William AspinwallMA16531656
Rev'd Thomas LawtonMA16621668
Rev'd William RichardsonMA16691677
Rev'd James KayMA16771678
Rev'd John DuckworthMA16781680
Rev'd Timothy DobsonMA16801684
Rev'd Thomas BoardmanMA16941716
Rev'd Thomas RiderMA17161724
Rev'd William SmithMA17251727
Rev'd James AndrewMA17281730
After Kay's Re-FoundingAfter Kay's Re-FoundingAfter Kay's Re-FoundingAfter Kay's Re-FoundingAfter Kay's Re-Founding
Rev'd John ListerMA17301749
Rev'd Richard BartonMA17491768
Rev'd Francis HodgsonMA17681818
Rev'd Edward BushbyMA18181819
Rev'd Richard HoodMA18201823
Rev'd Henry Crewe BoutflowerMA18231858
Rev'd Charles Frederick HildyardMA18581876
Rev'd Edward Hale GulliverMA18771879
Rev'd William Henry HowlettMA18791919
Leonard Ralph StrangewaysMA
Scholar of New College
19191936
Lionel Cornwallis LordMA
Scholar of Emmanuel College
19371946
Richard Lionel ChambersMA
Scholar of Pembroke College
19461951
John Robertson Murray SeniorMA
Scholar of Christ Church
19511956
Charles Lionel HallBSc Econ FRGS19561960
John Talbot HansfordMA
Scholar of St John's College
19601969
John Hurlston RobsonMA
Scholar of St John's College
19691990
Keith RichardsMA PGCE
Scholar of Sidney Sussex College
19902006
Rev'd Steven C HarveyMA20062013
Richard N MarshallMSc NPQH20132017
Devin Cassidy20172023

Notable masters

Overview

Crest

The school's crest dates from c.1840. It depicts a swan holding a key in its beak, under which is the motto in . Both are considered to have been created by Rev'd Henry Crewe Boutflower, headmaster 1823–58. The tenacious swan was used by John, Duke of Berry in the manuscripts known as the Très Riches Heures. Berry may have been an ancestor of Henry Bury, but was more likely chosen due to the similarity in their names, whilst the key is believed to be a play on the name of the re-founder, Roger Kay.
In a letter to the editor in the first edition of the Bury Grammar School Magazine of September 1881, a correspondent asked:
The following edition carried a reply:
Thus began references to the tenacious swan of Bury as The Irwell Duck.

Harvard College and Henry Dunster Society

The Henry Dunster Society, an organisation inaugurated at Harvard University in September 2008, is intended to bring together former pupils of the Bury Grammar Schools and to support initiatives for the schools. Henry Dunster was a pupil of Bury Grammar School, and then a student at Magdalene College, Cambridge. He became the curate of Bury Parish Church, and then the fourth headmaster of the school. He emigrated to Massachusetts in 1640 and was appointed the first president of Harvard College, now Harvard University.

School fees

The school fees in 2021 were £10,992 p.a. for senior pupils and £8,193 p.a. in the junior school.

Houses

The school has four houses, whose colours are reflected in the colour of the badge and the stripes of the tie in the school uniforms. Three houses were created in 1905 by Rev'd W H Howlett to re-introduce some of the camaraderie of a boarding school into the academic and sporting life of what was, by this time, a day school. The three houses were:

Derby; named after Frederick Stanley, 16th Earl of Derby, donor of the land upon which the school stands and of considerable sums of money for the erection of the present girls' school building.

Hulme; named after the Manchester lawyer and landowners, William Hulme and his Hulme Trust which helped to fund the new building.

Kay; named after Rev'd Roger Kay, re-founder of the school.

In 1919, an additional house was introduced:

Howlett; named after Fr Howlett himself.

Curriculum and attainment

Boys in the prep school, housed in its own building across Tenterden Street, study the subjects of the National Curriculum – the core subjects of English, mathematics and general science, together with art, DT, geography, history, ICT, French, music, PSHEE and RS. In addition, all boys have PPE, Swimming and Games on their timetable.
All boys study English language, English literature, maths and chemistry, biology and physics as individual subjects. Boys must also take either French, German or Spanish. Latin used to be compulsory in the first, second and third forms. In addition to these compulsory subjects, boys opt for a combination of other subjects from a range including art, business studies, electronics, geography, history, ICT, music, PE and RS.
GCSE examinations are taken in the 5th Year, including French, German and Spanish. Pupils sit the IGCSE mathematics, English language and English literature examinations, administered by Edexcel. Subsequently, the media report the school as having a 0% pass rate at GCSE in maths and English, since IGCSEs are not counted as GCSE passes by the Office for National Statistics.
Having successfully completed their GCSEs in the 5th year, boys may opt to stay on into the 6th form for a further two years. Sixth form teaching offers study towards 'A' level in all of the subjects offered at GCSE, along with geology, economics, further maths, philosophy, politics and psychology.

Extra curricular

Sport

PE and games lessons are part of every boy's timetable, but there is a range of opportunities for extra curricular sport in the school. Sports offered include Association football, athletics, badminton, basketball, cricket, fencing, hockey, gymnastics, Rugby football and tennis. The school has a swimming pool and a large sports hall with weights room. Summer 2016 saw the addition of a series of all-weather playing surfaces between the sports hall and the river. Boys play competitively both in inter-house competitions and in extramural matches, as well as sending representatives to regional and national teams, such as the ISFA.

Performing arts

The school has a long tradition of musical and dramatic performance, with performances of Oliver Goldsmith's She Stoops to Conquer noted in The Clavian of 1912 whilst a "little musical programme was put together" for a "Kay House Social" in July of the same year. The 1974 production of Dry Rot, starring John Darling and Piggy Hyde, was the favourite of that decade. Today, the school has a full spectrum of musical groups including a brass ensemble, senior and junior choirs, a concert band, an orchestra and a percussion group. The CCF has a corps of drums. Dramatic productions include both junior and senior plays, and musical productions; such performances are often produced in conjunction with the girls' school, and in recent years have included Guys and Dolls, Les Miserables, Little Shop of Horrors and Jesus Christ, Superstar.

Clubs and societies

The first debating society was established at the school in 1907. There is a range of societies available to the Clavian of today including the ever-present chess club, photography club and debating society.

Publications and alumni activities

There are extant copies of a school magazine dating back as far as 1881. The current magazine began as a termly in-house pamphlet in 1906 and is now an annual publication. "The Key" is a magazine produced for Alumni and friends of the school by the Development Office.
There is an active alumni group run by the Development Office and membership of the Bury Grammar Schools' Alumni Group on LinkedIn is open to Old Clavians who are LinkedIn members.
The Old Boys' Society has long held an Annual Dinner; the first recorded such dinner took place on 12 September 1881, after the Old Clavians -v- 1st XI cricket match. The OBS today still organises an annual dinner, held at the school on Founders' Day each year. The Old Boys' Society organises an annual dinner in London for Home Counties-based Old Boys. Previously held on 6 May annually, in recent years it has moved to a Friday later in May.
The society also runs several sports teams for Old Clavians, including an association football club that fields four teams; 1st XI, Reserves, 3rd XI and Veterans.