St Paul's Girls' School is a private secondary school for girls in Hammersmith, London. It was started by the Worshipful Company of Mercers in 1904.
St Paul's Girls' School | |
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Address | |
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Brook Green London , W6 7BS England | |
Information | |
Type | Private day school |
Established | 1904 |
Founder | Worshipful Company of Mercers |
Local authority | Hammersmith and Fulham |
Department for Education URN | 100366 Tables |
Chairman of Governors | Simon Wathen |
High Mistress | Sarah Fletcher[1] |
Gender | Girls[1] |
Age | 10 to 19[1] |
Enrolment | 808 As of 2023[update][1] |
Capacity | 825 As of 2023[update][1] |
Former pupils | Old Paulinas |
Website | www |
High Mistresses
changeThe headmistress of St Paul's Girls' School is called the High Mistress.
- Frances Ralph Grey (d.1935), High Mistress 1903–1927
- Ethel Strudwick (1880–1954), High Mistress 1927–1948, daughter of the Pre-Raphaelite painter John Melhuish Strudwick
- Margaret Osborn (1906–1985), High Mistress 1948–1963
- Alison Munro (1914–2008), High Mistress 1964–1974[2]
- Heather Brigstocke, Baroness Brigstocke (1929–2004), High Mistress 1974–1989
- Helen Elizabeth Webber Williams (born 1938), High Mistress 1989–1992
- Janet Gough (born 1940), High Mistress 1993–1998
- Elizabeth Mary Diggory (1945–2007), High Mistress 1998–2006
- Clarissa Mary Farr (born 1958), High Mistress 2006–2017
- Sarah Fletcher, High Mistress 2017–present
Alumnae
changeArts
change- Gillian Ayres – artist
- Mischa Barton – actress
- Nicola Beauman – publisher, founder of Persephone Books
- Helen Binyon – artist
- Lesley Blanch – author
- Justin Blanco White – architect
- Celia Brayfield – author
- Sophie Hunter – theatre and opera director
- Brigid Brophy – dramatist
- Lucy Briers – actress
- Margaret Calvert – graphic artist
- Miranda Carter – biographer
- Edie Campbell – model
- Cecilia Chancellor – model
- Joan Cross – singer
- Emma Darwin – author
- Monica Dickens – author
- Suzi Digby – conductor and musician
- Flora Fraser – author
- Justine Frischmann – retired musician and artist
- Gluck (Hannah Gluckstein) – artist
- Francesca Gonshaw – actress
- Imogen Holst – musician
- Sarah Hobson – travel writer
- Ursula Howells – actress
- Celia Johnson – actress
- Rachel Johnson – journalist and editor
- Jane M. Joseph – musician and composer
- Amy Key Clarke – poet and author
- Marghanita Laski – author
- Nicola LeFanu – composer
- Amanda Levete – architect
- Alice Lowe – actress/author
- Jessica Mann – author
- Yvonne Mitchell – actress/author
- Emily Mortimer – actress
- Lucy Moss - playwright/director
- Santha Rama Rau – author
- Joely Richardson – actress
- Natasha Richardson – actress
- Georgina Rylance – actress
- Katherine Shonfield – architect
- Dodie Smith – playwright
- Catherine Storr – author
- Imogen Stubbs – actress
- Emma Tennant – author
- Angela Thirkell – author
- Mary Treadgold – author
- Salley Vickers – author
- Samantha Weinberg – author
- Rachel Weisz – actress
- Antonia White – author
Business
change- Isabel dos Santos – wealthiest woman in Africa as of 2020[3][4][5]
- Grace Beverley – founder of Tala and Shreddy
Culinary arts
change- Thomasina Miers – chef and founder of Wahaca restaurant chain
- Henrietta Lovell – founder of the Rare Tea Company
Education
change- Eleanora Carus-Wilson – economic historian
- Sheila Forbes – former principal, St Hilda's College, Oxford
- Henrietta Harrison – professor of Modern Chinese Studies, University of Oxford
- Jessica Rawson – warden, Merton College, Oxford
- Barbara Reynolds – scholar[6]
- Joan Robinson – economist
Humanitarianism
change- Myrtle Solomon – pacifist and former chair War Resisters' International
- Ruth Wyner – homeless charity director
Law
change- Sonia Proudman – High Court Judge
Journalism and media
change- Emily Buchanan – BBC World Affairs correspondent
- Clemency Burton-Hill – broadcaster and author
- Edie Campbell – model and socialite
- Victoria Coren Mitchell – presenter, poker player[7]
- Daisy Donovan – TV presenter
- Stephanie Flanders – BBC Economics editor
- Amelia Gentleman – journalist
- Bridget Harrison – journalist
- Bronwen Maddox – senior journalist at 'The Times' newspaper
- Veronica Pedrosa – Al Jazeera English correspondent
- Sophie Raworth – news reader
- Susanna Reid – news presenter
- Anne Scott-James – journalist and editor
- Alexandra Shulman – editor-in-chief, Vogue 1992–2017[8]
- Carol Thatcher – journalist
- Erica Wagner – author, critic, and literary editor of The Times
- Eirene White, Baroness White – journalist and Labour politician
- Petronella Wyatt – journalist
Politics
change- Jane Bonham Carter – Liberal Democrat peer
- Vicky Ford, Conservative MP and formerly MEP
- Harriet Harman – Labour MP, former Acting Leader of the Labour Party, former Leader of the Opposition and former Cabinet minister[9]
- Susan Kramer – former Liberal Democrat MP
- Mavis Tate – Conservative MP and women's rights campaigner[10]
- Anne-Marie Trevelyan, Conservative MP
- Jo Valentine, Baroness Valentine – member of the British House of Lords
- Eirene White, Baroness White – Labour Minister of State then life peer
- Shirley Williams – former Labour Education Secretary and co-founder of the Social Democratic Party[11]
Science
change- Kate Bingham – venture capitalist
- Ruth Bowden – anatomist
- Caroline Deys – doctor
- Rosalind Franklin – scientist, research led to discovery of the structure of DNA
- Jean Ginsburg – physiologist, endocrinologist
- Christine Hamill – mathematician
- Kathleen Kenyon – archaeologist
- Irene Manton – botanist
- Sidnie Manton – entomologist
- Onora O'Neill – philosopher
- Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin – astronomer
- Catherine Peckham – doctor and scientist
- Joan Beauchamp Procter – zoologist, herpetologist
Sport
change- Kitty Godfree – tennis player
- Lara Prior-Palmer – equestrian
- Cecilia Robinson – cricket
- Zoe de Toledo – rowing
Notable former staff
change- Margaret Cole – socialist politician, former Classics teacher
- Gustav Holst – composer, pioneer of music education for girls
- Nicola LeFanu – director of music during the 1970s
- Clara Taylor – chemist and science teacher, 1913-1921
Controversy
changeThe school was in the news in November 2017 because of allegations of sexual abuse that happened from the 1970s to the 1990s.[12] In November 2017, One teacher resigned vecause of the allegations.[13]
References
change- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 "St Paul's Girls' School". Get Information about Schools. Gov.UK. Retrieved 25 September 2023.
- ↑ Janet Gough, 'Munro , Dame Alison (1914–2008)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Jan 2012; online edn, May 2012 accessed 31 Dec 2016
- ↑ "From Colonization to Kleptocracy: A history of Angola". International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ). January 2020. Retrieved 27 January 2020.
- ↑ Garside, Juliette; Burke, Jason (19 January 2020). "Isabel dos Santos: president's daughter who became Africa's richest woman". The Guardian. Retrieved 19 February 2021.
- ↑ Burgis, Tom. "Lunch with the FT: Isabel dos Santos". The Financial Times. Retrieved 19 February 2021.
- ↑ [1][permanent dead link]
- ↑ "EPT10 Sanremo: Salute Victoria Coren Mitchell – the EPT's first two-time champion". Pokerstars.com. 21 April 2014. Retrieved 14 October 2017.
- ↑ Alexandra Shulman Archived 6 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine Vogue UK, 22 April 2008
- ↑ Harriet Harman: I dropped my cut-glass accent to fit in with Labour - Telegraph
- ↑ [2][permanent dead link]
- ↑ "FindArticles.com – CBSi". Findarticles.com. Retrieved 14 October 2017.
- ↑ Weale, Sally (14 November 2017). "St Paul's Girls' School in London at centre of sexual abuse claims". The Guardian. Retrieved 4 December 2018.
- ↑ Weale, Sally (23 November 2017). "Teacher at London girls' school resigns after claims of sexual abuse". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 December 2018.
Other websites
changeWikimedia Commons has media related to St Paul's Girls' School (London).
- Official School Website
- ISI Inspection Reports
- Profile on the ISC website
- Profile at The Good Schools Guide
- Profile at Tatler Schools Guide