Purley High School For Boys
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Purley High School for Boys existed from 1914 to 1988. Originally located in Purley from 1914, in 1936 it relocated to Placehouse Lane, Old Coulsdon, London Borough of Croydon. The school was Purley County Grammar School from 1914 to 1969, becoming Purley Grammar School for Boys and then, in 1973, Purley High School for Boys after the abolition of the Grammar School system and the implementation of the Comprehensive System. As Purley High School for Boys it was a senior secondary school, for students aged 14 to 18. Purley High School had a reputation for strictness and for the frequent use of corporal punishment; records showing a peak in canings of 43.7 per 100 pupils in the year 1977/78.Se
"Top CP schools: Purley High School for Boys"
at ''World Corporal Punishment Research''.
Its record on
caning Caning is a form of corporal punishment consisting of a number of hits (known as "strokes" or "cuts") with a single Stick-fighting, cane usually made of rattan, generally applied to the offender's bare or clothed buttocks (see spanking) or ha ...
s came to the attention of
STOPP Campaigns against corporal punishment aim to reduce or eliminate corporal punishment of minors by instigating legal and cultural changes in the areas where such punishments are practiced. Such campaigns date mostly from the late 20th centur ...
during the 1970s and 1980s. This was because STOPP happened to be based in Croydon at the time, and managed to get the Local Education Authority to publish an analysis of statistics collated from school punishment books, the first time this had happened in the UK. This resulted in Purley High School for Boys being mentioned in numerous articles in the national press regarding what was criticised as its excessive corporal punishment record. However, statistics for the use of corporal punishment later appeared from other areas of England and Wales, suggesting that Purley's caning record, compared with some other boys' secondary schools, was not quite as extraordinary as STOPP had originally claimed, once the fact that Purley was a 14–18 school (and therefore had about twice the proportion of 14- to 16-year-olds as an 11–18 school) was taken into account, 14–16 being almost invariably the peak age group for getting into trouble at school. The school motto was ''Fas et Patria'', meaning Faith and Country. The Headmaster from 1968 to 1988 was Mr Derek Akers (Oxon). After 52 years at the Placehouse Lane location, the school was closed in 1988, being replaced by Coulsdon Sixth Form College. The 1930s Placehouse Lane school buildings were completely demolished during 2010–2011 and have been replaced by new college facilities.


Notable alumni

* Nigel Harman, actor * Simon Jordan, businessman, former Chairman of Crystal Palace football club * Jason Perry, politician, Mayor of Croydon


Purley County Grammar School

* Prof
Stanley Bertram Chrimes Stanley Bertram Chrimes (February 23, 1907 in Sidcup, Kent, EnglandMartin L. Brown, Professor of Mathematics at the Institut Fourier, France since 1992 See "Heegner Modules and Elliptic Curves", Springer Verlag (2004)
/ref> * Peter Cushing, actor, horror movies * Prof Gary Gibbons, Professor of Theoretical Physics since 1997 at the University of Cambridge *
Brian Hord Brian Howard Hord (20 June 1934 – 30 August 2015) was a British chartered surveyor and politician. He served for one term as a Member of the European Parliament (MEP) and maintained his involvement in the Conservative Party and in public life; ...
CBE, Member of the European Parliament for London West from 1979 to 1984 * Gordon Pirie, multi world track record holder and silver medal winner at 5000m at the 1956 Melbourne Olympic Games


See also

* Coulsdon Sixth Form College, which now occupies the school site.


External links

*
Fas et Patria – Purley Boys School 1914–1988


References

{{authority control Boys' schools in London Educational institutions established in 1914 Educational institutions disestablished in 1988 Defunct schools in the London Borough of Croydon 1914 establishments in England 1988 disestablishments in England