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Perth Grammar School is a secondary school in
Perth Perth is the capital and largest city of the Australian state of Western Australia. It is the fourth most populous city in Australia and Oceania, with a population of 2.1 million (80% of the state) living in Greater Perth in 2020. Perth is ...
, Scotland. It is located in the Muirton district of Perth at the junction of Bute Drive and Gowans Terrace. The catchment serves the area to the north of Perth between
Murthly Murthly (Scottish Gaelic ''Mòrthlaich'') is a village in Perth and Kinross, Scotland. It lies on the south bank of the River Tay, southeast of Dunkeld, and north of Perth. Perth District Asylum, later known as Murthly Hospital, was opened in t ...
and Methven while a part of its catchment is urban, serving
Tulloch Tulloch may refer to: People with the surname *Alexander Bruce Tulloch (1838–1920), Major-general in the British Army, author *Bert Tulloch, English footballer *Bitsie Tulloch, American actress *Francis Tulloch (born 1940), Jamaican politician ...
, Muirton and North Muirton. Perth Grammar School is one of a small number of secondary schools in Scotland to have achieved the Eco Schools Green Flag for the past 4 years. Perth Grammar School is also a sports comprehensive, in partnership with a neighbouring secondary, St John's Academy.


Development

While a Grammar School of Perth had been founded in the 12th century, the modern Perth Grammar School was a product of the introduction of comprehensive education in 1970. The school opened at the start of the new term on Tuesday 24 August 1971 with 280 first year pupils, building up to full six-year status in the 1976/77 school year. By 1977/78 the school roll was 1,314 pupils. The school's first headmaster was Robert Heeps, formerly the headmaster of Goodlyburn Secondary School from 1969. The school took over prefabricated buildings on the Gowans Terrace/Bute Drive site of the former
Perth High School Perth High School is a six-year, non-denominational comprehensive secondary school in Perth, Scotland. Established in 1950 at Gowans Terrace in a post-war prefabricated structure of a type that had not previously been used for any large school ...
which had moved to new accommodation in the Oakbank district. This was intended as a temporary measure as the mobile huts, built in 1947 as part of the government's
HORSA Hengist and Horsa are Germanic peoples, Germanic brothers said to have led the Angles, Saxons and Jutes in their invasion of Great Britain, Britain in the 5th century. Tradition lists Hengist as the first of the Jutish kings of Kingdom of Kent ...
programme, had long outlived their projected lifespan of ten years. The hope was that a new school building would be constructed before it became a full sixth year facility in 1976, but political rows and funding difficulties on the part of the new Tayside Regional Council saw the completion date stretched through various building phases. In March 1972, for instance, the director of education warned that the county's share of government funding for school-building projects would not be sufficient to meet even a reasonable first instalment of a replacement building. The first phase, incorporating around ten new classrooms, including the English department and a large resources centre, was eventually opened at the start of the new term on Monday 16 August 1976, with the administrative heart of the complex following in October. Phase two of the building programme was given the go-ahead by Tayside Regional Council in April 1975. It included an open-plan technical department, 13 science laboratories, an open-plan home economics department and a small theatre. It was due to be completed by May 1977. The third phase incorporated a games hall, gymnasia, and the art and music departments. Costed at £850,000, it was agreed for 1979/80. In 1983, the rector, Robert Heeps, castigated the regional council for its "complacent attitude" towards the school's accommodation crisis, citing temperatures plunging to the lower 50s in temporary classrooms with pupils huddled in gloves and anoraks. Three years later, his successor, Douglas Bader, admitted that the school campus was not one of the most attractive and that the combination of clay soil, a wet year, and the mess caused on the site by the conversion of part of the school's heating to gas, had caused problems of mud and dirt being carried into the buildings. He added that the unfinished appearance of phase one, two and three block made the school look forward eagerly to a start on the construction of phase four. The fourth and final stage of the programme was originally approved by Tayside Regional Council in October 1986, but the plans were subsequently delayed and the final approval was not given until May 1990 at a total cost of £3.1 million — £400,000 more than previous estimates. This involved the construction of a three-storey extension at the south end of the school, connected to the existing three-storey block by a corridor, housing social studies, maths, business studies, languages and administration. In addition, a new single-storey block at the north end of the complex was home to the new music and art departments. Work started on 22 April 1991 and was completed in August 1992, three months earlier than expected. The following month, bulldozers moved in to demolish the UNISECO building and the huts were removed. Landscaping work was carried out to create a new car park and sports field. However, these works were delayed as a result of the Perth flooding of January 1993. The extension was officially opened on 22 September 1993 in the year of the school's 21st anniversary.


Key dates

In October 1978 the school launched a 'talking magazine' which was recorded on cassette by senior pupils and distributed among the blind and partially sighted in the Perth and Kinross district. The project started when two teachers at the school were looking for a community service role for pupils and, at the same time, the Perthshire and Kinross-shire Society for the Blind were looking for someone to start such a service. The first pilot cassettes, lasting 30 minutes, were distributed to around 30 listeners. Following his retirement in February 1985, Robert Heeps was succeeded as rector by Douglas Bader, formerly depute rector of Montrose Academy, who took up his new post on 3 June 1985. The school made history at the start of the 1986/87 term when it appointed the first male Home Economics teacher in Scotland: 22 year-old Alastair MacGregor, from Blair Atholl, who had recently graduated from Moray House College, Edinburgh. Following similar initiatives elsewhere in Scotland, in 1988 a Youth Enquiry Service for Perth was set-up in the school's community wing, run by young people for young people, with youth workers employed for guidance. The service offered information on benefits, housing, holidays, health and sex education, law, money and leisure. The facility moved to Perth city centre in July 1992. The school's first yearbook was published in April 1992. The flooding of January 1993 saw the Perth Grammar School Community Wing become a focal point for affected families in the affected North Muirton area, including the provision of emergency shelter for those washed out of their homes. A senior tie was introduced in the 2002/03 academic year, initially for sixth year pupils but later extended to S4–S6. In October 2005, a new athletics centre, The George Duncan Arena, was opened within the school grounds, and this is available for public use outwith school hours.


Head teachers

* Robert Heeps, 1971–1985Perth Grammar School rector to retire
, ''Press and Journal'', 22 January 1985, 5. * Douglas Bader, 1985– * Roddy Renfrew, 2002–2006 * John Low * Barry Millar * Fiona Robertson, 2016 - Present


References

{{reflist


External links


Perth Grammar School's page on Scottish Schools Online
Secondary schools in Perth and Kinross Grammar schools in Scotland Schools in Perth, Scotland