Bootham School
Motto | Membra sumus corporis magni (We are members of a greater body) |
---|---|
Established | 1823 |
Type | Independent school |
Religion | Quaker |
Headmaster | Jonathan Taylor |
Deputy Head | Suzanne Hall |
Founder | Religious Society of Friends |
Location | Bootham York North Yorkshire YO30 7BU England |
DfE URN | 121722 Tables |
Students | circa 510 |
Gender | Coeducational |
Ages | 3–18 |
Houses | Firbank Pendle Brigflatts Swarthmore |
Publication | Bootham Magazine |
Boarding Houses | Rowntree Fox Evelyn |
Former Pupils | Bootham Old Scholars Association |
Website | www |
Bootham School is an independent Quaker boarding school in the city of York in North Yorkshire, England. It was founded by the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) and opened on 6 January 1823 in Lawrence Street, York. Its first headmaster was William Simpson (1823-1828). He was followed by John Ford (1828-c.1865).
The school is now on Bootham, near York Minster, in a building originally built in 1804 for Sir Richard Vanden Bempde Johnstone.
The school's motto Membra Sumus Corporis Magni means "We are members of a greater body", quoting Seneca the Younger (Epistle 95, 52). Well known former pupils include the 19th-century parliamentary leader John Bright, mathematician Lewis Fry Richardson ("father of fractals"), historian A.J.P Taylor, Sir Michael Rutter, the leading child psychiatrist, the Nobel peace prize winner of 1959 Philip John Noel-Baker, Cabinet Secretary Sir Jeremy Heywood and Stuart Rose, Chief Executive of Marks & Spencer.
Academics
Bootham was ranked at 43rd in the 2011 Independent Schools A-Levels League Tables.[1]
See also
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References
Further reading
- Bootham School Register. Compiled under the direction of a committee of O.Y.S.A., 1914, with revised eds. 1935, 1971, 2010.
- JS Rowntree, Friends' Boys' School, York a Sketch of its History 1829–1878 (1879)
- FE Pollard Bootham School 1823–1923 (JM Dent and Sons, 1926)
- SK Brown Bootham School York 1823–1973 (author, 1973)
External links
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