Enfield County School

Summary

Enfield County is a girls' comprehensive school which was once created as Enfield Chace School in 1967, following the amalgamation of Enfield County School, which had been a girls' grammar school, with Chace Girls School, a secondary modern school. The amalgamated school readopted the name Enfield County School in 1987.

Enfield County School for Girls
Address
Map
Holly Walk

, ,
EN2 6QG

Coordinates51°39′15″N 0°05′01″W / 51.654167°N 0.083611°W / 51.654167; -0.083611
Information
TypeCommunity school
MottoLearning Today - Leading Tomorrow
Established1909
Local authorityEnfield
Department for Education URN102048 Tables
OfstedReports
Chair of GovernorsKeith Carrano
Head teacherJennie Gumbrell
GenderGirls
Age11 to 18
Enrolment1099
Colour(s)Bottle Green  
Former nameEnfield Chace School
Websitehttp://www.enfieldcs.enfield.sch.uk/

In 2018 the School adopted the name Enfield County School for Girls.

Admissions edit

It is situated directly in the middle of Enfield, slightly to the north of the town centre, equidistant between the two railway stations, near St Andrew's Enfield.

History edit

Former schools edit

The original Enfield County School had been opened in 1909, becoming Enfield County Grammar School for Girls, which had around 850 girls. It was administered by Middlesex County Council Education Committee (Borough of Enfield). Chace Girls School had been formed in 1962 as a girls' secondary modern school from the senior girls department at Lavender School. Both were well-established girls' schools, each with a long tradition of high achievement and academic excellence, according to the current Headteacher, Ms. J. Gumbrell.[1]

Comprehensive edit

It became the comprehensive girls' Enfield Chace School in 1967, changing to its current name in 1987. In 2005 the school was designated a specialist school for languages.

Former teachers edit

  • Jill Paton Walsh (nee Bliss) CBE, author (taught English from 1959 to 1962 at the grammar school)

Campus edit

The buildings are a blend of solid Edwardian, post war and 1990s "design-build". The lower school in Rosemary Avenue, which was the former Chace Girls School, houses years 7, 8 and 9; at fourteen years of age students transfer to the upper school in Holly Walk (former grammar school), about a mile away in the centre of the old town of Enfield, London. After Enfield Court in Baker Street was purchased to accommodate the lower school of Enfield Grammar School in 1942, the first year pupils of the previous girls' grammar school, Enfield County School, shared it with the first year pupils of Enfield Grammar for a few years.

Traditions edit

At first, the school motto, which was incorporated in the school badge, was Onward Ever, which had previously been the motto of the grammar school in the amalgamation. This was later changed to Learning: it's at the heart of everything we do.

Notable former pupils edit

Enfield County School edit

Enfield County Grammar School for Girls edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Headteacher Archived 2007-08-23 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2007-11-20
  2. ^ Lois Winstone at IMDb
  3. ^ "I'm proud my daughter took on Cambridge for its 'colonial curriculum'". Evening Standard. 27 October 2017. Retrieved 9 August 2020.
  4. ^ "Obituary: Nancy Tait". 23 February 2009.

Further reading edit

  • Onward ever: the story of Enfield County School for Girls, 1909-1967 by Joan Hinchcliffe Hart, 1999

External links edit

  • Enfield County School official site
  • A detailed history of Education in Enfield at British History Online
  • Moving Here - The immigration story of Grete Rudkin (born Glauber), who attended Enfield County School