ACKWORTH SCHOOL


'Ackworth School' is an independent school located at High Ackworth, near Pontefract, West Yorkshire, England.
The current headmaster is Peter Simpson. The previous headmaster was Martin Dickinson, who retired in 2004. The current deputy heads are Lorna Anthony and Jeffery Swales.
Today it still takes some boarders, although most of its 587 pupils are day pupils. About half of the boarding pupils are from overseas and are predominantly Chinese or Japanese. But there are an increasing number of boarders from elsewhere, including Germany, Morocco and other parts of Africa.
Although still a Quaker school, most of its pupils are no longer Quakers. However, pupils are expected to attend a Quaker meeting each morning for assembly, except for Wednesdays when pupils gather for house meetings or extended form period.
The school has four houses: Woolman, Gurney, Penn and Fothergill. They are all named after famous Quakers, and Fothergill house is named after the founder of Ackworth School, John Fothergill. Upon entering the school, each pupil is assigned to one of the four houses for inter-house events, such as football and drama. The winning house in any event gains that event's trophy, which is hung on the house's trophy board in the house dining hall.
Which house a pupil is in also determines which dining hall they have lunch in. The two dining halls are called Boys and Girls Dining Rooms, although the names are only representative of the past, when the boys and girls were divided. These days pupils in Gurney and Fothergill eat in Girls Dining Room and those in Woolman and Penn eat in Boys Dining Room—except at breakfast, where boys and girls are still segregated!
The school has a nursery that takes children aged 2 to 4, a Junior Department that takes children age 5 to 11, and the Senior School for students aged 11 to 18. The boarding facilities cater for Senior School pupils only.
The uniform is grey trousers, light blue shirt, navy school tie, and navy blue jumper for boys, and navy skirt, blue and white striped blouse, and navy jumper for girls. The Sixth Form boys wear a white shirt, grey trousers and either a burgundy jumper or black jacket. Sixth Form girls wear a white blouse, black dress and a burgundy jumper.
The school is a member of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference (HMC) and SHMIS

Contents
History
Alumni
Further reading
See also
External links

History


It was founded in 1779 as a boarding school for Quaker boys and girls. Prior to the school's foundation, the building had been a foundling hospital created by Captain Thomas Coram.

Alumni


Ackworth School's former pupils are called and include:

Elizabeth Robson (1771–1843), Quaker minister

Jacob Post (1774–1855), Quaker religious writer

William Darton (1781–1854), publisher

Thomas Hancock (1783–1849), physician and epidemiologist

Joseph Sams (1784–1860), bookseller and antiquities dealer

Samuel Tuke (1784–1857), philanthropist and asylum reformer

Susanna Corder (1787–1864), educationist and Quaker biographer

Thomas Edmondson (1792–1851), inventor of the first railway ticket printing machine

William Howitt (1792–1879), writer

Jeremiah Holmes Wiffen (1792–1836), poet and translator

Henry Ashworth (1794–1880), cotton master

Benjamin Barron Wiffen (1794–1867), biographer

George Edmondson (1798–1863), headmaster of Queenwood Hall

Sarah Ellis (1799–1872), writer and educationist

John Priestman (1805–1866), worsted manufacturer and pacifist

James Wilson (1805–1860), economist, founder of ''The Economist'', politician, and Financial Member of the Council of India, 1859–1860

Anna Richardson (1806–1892), philanthropist, slavery abolitionist and pacifist

Henry Richardson (1806–1885), philanthropist and pacifist

Thomas Thomasson (1808–1876), cotton master

Henry Doubleday (1810–1902), starch manufacturer and comfrey cultivator

Thomas Lister (1810–1888), poet and naturalist

Jane Procter (1810–1882), headmistress of Polam Hall, Darlington, and temperance campaigner

John Bright (1811–1889), politician

Thomas Harvey (1812–1884), philanthropist

William Allen Miller (1817–1870), chemist

Henry Tennant (1823–1910), General Manager, North Eastern Railway, 1870–1891

William Farrer Ecroyd (1827–1915), worsted manufacturer and politician

Francis Frith (ca. 1828–1838), photographer

John Howard Nodal (1831–1909), journalist and dialectologist

Sir James Reckitt (1833–1924), starch, blue and polish manufacturer

John Gilbert Baker (1834–1920), botanist

Henry Bowman Brady (1835–1891), naturalist and pharmacist

Sir Henry Binns (1837–1899), Prime Minister of Natal, 1897–1899

Alfred Darbyshire (1839–1908), architect

Henry Ashby (1846–1908), paediatrician

Wilson Worsdell (1850–1920), railway engineer

Joseph Southall (1861–1944), painter and pacifist

John Henry Salter (1862–1942), naturalist and diarist

Eva Gilpin (1868–1940), founder and headmistress of the Hall School, Weybridge

William Bone (1871–1938), chemist and fuel technologist

Basil Bunting (1900–1985), poet

Sir Joseph B. Hutchinson (1902–1988), geneticist and professor of agriculture

Kathleen Tillotson (1906–2001), literary scholar

Geoffrey Barraclough (1908–1984), historian

Peter Strevens (1922–1989), linguistic scholar

James Willstrop (born 1983), squash player

Further reading



★ ''Ackworth School Annual reports.''

★ ''Ackworth School, Then and now: Ackworth School bicentenary exhibition catalogue''. (Pub. 1979).

★ ''Alphabetical list of scholars 1779-1979''. Prepared by Arthur G. Olver, typescript.

★ ''The Cupola: the Ackworth School magazine'', West Yorkshire Archives, Wakefield.

★ Foulds, V.E. ''Ackworth School.'' (Pub. 1991).

★ Foulds, V.E. ''So numerous a family: 200 years of Quaker education at Ackworth.'' (Pub. 1979).

★ Thompson,H. ''A history of Ackworth School''. (Pub. 1879).

See also



List of Friends Schools

External links



Ackworth School website

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