Sir Walter St John's Grammar School for Boys
Sir Walter St John's was founded in 1700 for twenty boys of the village of Battersea. As the population and the English educational system changed, so did the school. The school was colloquially known as "Sinjuns" and was finally closed in 1978.
Early history
In September 1700, Sir Walter St John, 3rd Baronet, of Battersea and of Lydiard Tregoze, Wiltshire, signed a deed that established a charity to form a school to "teach twenty poor boys of said parish". This was the start of Sir Walter St John's School, which was to survive for 286 years. By 1750, 83 boys and 5 girls were given instruction at the school. Battersea at the start of the 18th century was a village of some 200 dwellings containing about 1500 inhabitants. The rapid expansion of the London area during that and the following centuries, meant that there was a need of education for many more boys.A document of 1800 shows that the operation was based on the rules laid down by the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, and much of the curriculum was centred on the Bible.
Development
During the first 150 years the name Sir Walter St John was seldom used and the school was called the "Battersea School" or the "Battersea Charity School". By 1832 the school had grown to hold 90 boys and 30 girls. In 1853 the Charitable Trust Act was enacted and the school passed under the control of the Charity Commissioners. The girls were soon transferred to the nearby Mrs Champion's School. The number of boys had increased to over 200, so the school was split into an Upper School and a Lower School. A new building was constructed in 1859 on Battersea High Street designed by William Butterfield. The entry arch of this building still exists.By 1860 the name "Sir Walter St John's School" was being used. The Elementary Education Act 1870 had the result of splitting off the Upper School to form the newly founded Battersea Grammar School and in 1880 the Elementary School was closed. The next change occurred in 1902, when the school was reorganised as a Secondary School.
Buildings
Little is known of the early buildings before the William Butterfield wing was built. Enlargement occurred in 1898 when the old science block was built. The Great Hall together with the West Block was opened in 1915, while the modified library and laboratory block started operation in 1926. Temporary classrooms were assembled in 1918 but remained in use until the north extension became available in 1938. A Luftwaffe bomb destroyed the west wing in 1941 but it was rebuilt in 1952. The final change in the school's buildings happened in 1961, when the Science Block was replaced.Operation in the first half of the 20th century
The school was organised by the start of the 20th century into six levels or forms. The Intermediate Degree Examination of the University of London being taken in the 6th form. To have competition in sports and to help tuition six houses were organised in 1910. An Army Cadet unit was also formed in 1910 which existed until 1969. An Air Training Corps Flight was started in 1941 and continued after the disbandment of the army cadets. The number of boys in the school grew from 320 in 1917 to 544 in 1928 and remained at approximately at this level until the start of the Second World War in 1939. During this war the school with about 320 boys was evacuated to Godalming in Surrey, where it shared classrooms with the Godalming County School and Charterhouse School, a public school.Houses
The six houses in the school were named after honours granted to members of the St John family. A colour was associated with each house, and students were required to wear a cap with the school badge on the front and a small button in the colour of their house on the crown. The colours were also used in sportswear, shirts for soccer and a sash for Fives and boxing. Both were used in other sports.- Beauchamp had blue as its colour. Oliver St John was also Baron Beauchamp.
- Bletsoe used Brown. Bletsoe Manor was also owned by the St John's family.
- Bolingbroke was the red house. Henry St John was made the first Viscount Bolingbroke in 1712.
- Grandison had yellow as its identifier. Commemorating Oliver St John, 1st Viscount Grandison
- Lydiard used the violet colour. Oliver St John was also created Baron St John of Lydiard Tregoze
- Tregoze had the green for its use. See above in Lydiard
Grandison Bletsoe, Beauchamp Bolingbroke and Lydiard Tregoze.
Post-war
After the return to Battersea, the school became Sir Walter St John's Grammar School. It was situated on Battersea High Street, next to the Thames, off the B305 and next to the Royal Academy of Dance. It had around 500 boys with a three-form entry. The school lay in the parish of St Mary's Church, Battersea.By the early 1970s falling birthrate and governmental pressure was causing the closure or amalgamation of many schools.
Comprehensive
Such an amalgamation was planned in 1978 with the lower school going with the William Blake School and the Upper School remaining in Battersea High Street. The combined school was designated the Sir Walter St John's Comprehensive School. There were about 500 students in the Upper School and 300 in the Lower.Former teachers
- George Rudé 1950–54
- , former leader of the Association of Teachers and Lecturers
- Mr.Tanner 1974-84
- Mr David Atcheson 1977-1980
Headteachers
- William Taylor, 1873–1907
- John George Taylor, 1907–32
- Rev John Edward Taylor, 1932–46
Closure
The School had an uncommon status, operated by the local authority but legally a charity, which led to its being mentioned by name in several Education Acts, a highly unusual procedure. This meant that when it closed the assets of the school, principally property, did not revert to the Education Authority upon closure. Instead the Sir Walter St John's Educational Charity was formed in 1992 and continues to support disadvantaged children in the former London Boroughs of Battersea and Lambeth.
An Old Boys Association continues, with a golf society, football and cricket clubs and a masonic lodge.
Notable Old Boys
See also- Martin Amis, British novelist
- Roger Glover, musician, Deep Purple
- Paul Bailey, writer
- Peter Black, Chairman from 1973–78 of the Thames Water Authority, and had a role on the development of the Thames Barrier
- Allan Brown, organist and Professor from 1931–64 at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama
- Clifford Chapman, Dean of Exeter
- Francis Cole, British zoologist
- Thomas Drakeley, Principal from 1932–55 and from 1958–61 of the Northern Polytechnic, and Director from 1948–55 of the National College of Rubber Technology
- Marcel Escudier, Harrison Professor of Mechanical Engineering from 1989–2008 at the University of Liverpool, co-author of A Dictionary of Mechanical Engineering, OUP, 2013
- Brigadier Sir Lionel Harris, Engineer-in-Chief from 1954–60 of the GPO, worked on early teleprinters in the 1930s resulting of a forerunner of the telex system in 1937, and Chief of Telecommunications from 1943–45 at SHAEF
- Geoffrey Haselden, Brotherton Professor of Chemical Engineering from 1960–86 at the University of Leeds
- Melvyn Hayes, British actor
- Basil Hone, cartoonist for the Peterborough column in the Daily Telegraph
- Maj-Gen Mervyn Janes CB MBE, Colonel Commandant from 1973-81 of the Royal Artillery
- Fred Landeg , Chief Veterinary Officer from 2007–8
- Buster Merryfield, actor, played Uncle Albert in Only Fools and Horses.
- John Nichols, Director from 1976–79 of the National Maritime Institute in Feltham
- David Phillips, Professor of Comparative Education since 2000 at the University of Oxford
- Albert Samuels, Chairman from 1958–59 of London County Council
- E.R. Thompson , the BBC's first parliamentary correspondent
- Michael Webb, Director-General from 1996–69 of the St John Ambulance in England
- Stanley Whitehead, British physicist
- Walter Wooldridge, President of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons from 1954–55
- Andrew Wetherall London Market Underwriter 1965-2020