Camden School for Girls
The Camden School for Girls is a comprehensive secondary school for girls, with a co-educational sixth form, in the London Borough of Camden in north London. It has about one thousand students of ages eleven to eighteen, and specialist-school status as a Music College. The school has long been associated with the advancement of women's education.
History
Founded in 1871 by the suffragist Frances Mary Buss, who also founded North London Collegiate School, the Camden School for Girls was one of the first girls' schools in England. Although not a fee-paying school by then, girls in the mid-20th century wore a traditional uniform of dark green, with blue and green striped ties. The blazer badge showed a type of ancient sailing ship called a 'buss' to commemorate the founder's surname, with the motto "Onwards and Upwards". In its pre-comprehensive era it was a grant aided grammar school, and girls needed to pass the 11plus exam and be interviewed by the headmistress.The grant aided status gave it independence, but it had no endowments, unlike its sister school the North London Collegiate.
Evacuation in the Second World War
352 girls were evacuated to Uppingham School in September 1939, but it did not work as hoped. So, on Thursday 19 October 1939 the girls were moved to Grantham in Lincolnshire to be educated at Kesteven and Grantham Girls' School, but 450 girls were intended to have been evacuated; Margaret Thatcher, Conservative prime minister from 1979–90, was one of the girls at the Grantham school. The music teacher Grace Williams, a Welsh composer, arrived with the Camden school, and composed pieces while at Grantham. Zoologist Hilda Mabel Canter, of the British Phycological Society, was one of the 352 girls evacuated. Girls from Grantham were taught in the classrooms in the mornings and the Camden girls were taught in the afternoon. The Camden school moved to Stamford High School, Lincolnshire in March 1941, having stayed in Grantham for five terms. The girls stayed in Stamford, Lincolnshire for seven terms, leaving in summer 1943. Stamford people were quite unaccustomed to city dwellers and local people noticed the distinctive green school uniform.Grammar school
One of its most formative headmistresses, Doris Burchell, took on the school in the post-war years and developed it in both science and music, overseeing new building on the site. The Sir John Cockcroft science wing was built from funds raised by many means, including a series of Celebrity Concerts held at the school and involving many eminent musicians. The school was damaged in the war but rebuilt in 1957, the architect being John Eastwick-Field OBE. In 1973, the assembly hall roof collapsed following deterioration of its roof beams due to problems with the high-alumina cement concrete used.Comprehensive
It became a comprehensive school in 1976, although only year by year. It was not fully comprehensive until 1981.Academic performance
A 1999 Office for Standards in Education report called it "a unique and very effective school in many ways". Another, written in March 2005, said it was an "outstanding school with excellent features", and the most recent report said that it "rightly deserves the outstanding reputation it has among parents and in the community". Its GCSE results are excellent, and its A-level results are the best in the Camden LEA outside the private sector.Notable former pupils
The following people were educated at the Camden School for Girls. Some of them only attended the sixth form.- Sally Beamish, composer
- Johnny Borrell, musician
- Sarah Brown, PR consultant, wife of Gordon Brown
- Sara Annie Burstall
- Bessie Carter, actress
- Julia Cleverdon, charity worker
- Charlotte Coleman, actress, Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit, expelled at the age of 16
- Athene Donald, Professor of Experimental Physics at the University of Cambridge
- Julia Donaldson, author
- Lily Donaldson, model
- Catching Flies, musician
- Nubya Garcia, jazz musician
- Georgia Gould, Labour Party politician, leader of Camden London Borough Council
- Eileen Greenwood, artist, printmaker, and art teacher
- Tamsin Greig, actress
- Geri Halliwell, singer, Spice Girls
- John Hassall, musician, The Libertines
- Julia Hobsbawm, PR, author and networking engineer
- Edith Humphrey, inorganic chemist, thought to be the first British woman to obtain a doctorate in chemistry.
- Daniel Kaluuya, Oscar-winning actor and comedian
- Kate Kellaway, journalist for The Observer
- Lucy Kellaway, writer and journalist for The Financial Times
- Beeban Kidron, former film director, and peer in House of Lords
- Sally Laird, editor, writer and translator
- Lilian Lindsay, first woman with a British qualification in dentistry, having graduated from the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh in 1895
- Jodhi May, actress
- Natascha McElhone, actress
- Fiona Millar, journalist and education campaigner
- Deborah Moggach, novelist and screenwriter
- Ellie Rowsell, lead singer and guitarist in Wolf Alice
- Anna Shaffer, actress
- Marianne Stone, actress, notably in Carry On films
- Cleo Sylvestre, actress, first black woman to play a lead at the National Theatre
- E. G. R. Taylor, geographer and historian
- Emma Thompson, actress
- Sophie Thompson, actress
- Arabella Weir, actress, comedian and author
Fictional pupils
- Prudence Harbinger, fictional character in The Sunday Telegraph, created by Laurence Marks and Maurice Gran
Notable former teachers
- Carol Handley née Taylor - Classics teacher, Headmistress
- Annie E. Ridley - governor