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Leighton Park School

Leighton Park School is a co-educational private school for both day and boarding pupils in Reading in South East England. The school's ethos is closely tied to the Quaker values, having been founded as a Quaker School in 1890. The school's ethos is described as achievement with values, character and community. It is one of seven Quaker schools in England.

Leighton Park School/Reading

Private school
Public school
Day and boarding school

1890 (1890)

Matthew L S Judd

213 (approx.)

Co-educational

11 to 18

535

Blue, Copper, White      

The Park

65-acre (260,000 m2) parkland campus

Old Leightonians

leightonpark.com

Peckover Hall

History[edit]

Leighton Park was opened in 1890 by members of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers), as a public school for boys. It was founded after Grove House School, also a Quaker school, closed in 1877. Grove House School had educated notable personalities such as Lord Lister, Alfred Waterhouse and Thomas Hodgkin.


Leighton Park grew from four boys in 1890 to 103 in the 1920s. The junior school became the independent Crosfields School, making Leighton Park solely a senior school. By 1970 the school had 300 pupils, and in 1975 girls were admitted to the sixth form. In 1993 the school became fully coeducational. Today the school is home to around 520 pupils drawn from over 44 different countries.


In 2015, the school celebrated its 125-year anniversary.[7]


In March 2016, the school was granted planning permission to develop the main hall and music department into the Music and Media Centre (MMC) which will enhance the facilities for teaching Music and Media at the school. The building officially opened in March 2019. The school is currently redeveloping the historic Grove House to be a new Sixth Form Study Centre and School Library - due to open in early 2024.[8]

Press[edit]

Leighton Park appeared on the BBC One Show in 2020, featuring the school's production of PPE for health workers during the Covid-19 pandemic [9] Leighton Park was featured on the BBC Politics Show, which was hosted at the site in December 2010.[10]


In April 2005, Quaker-based Sunday Worship was broadcast live from Leighton Park on BBC Radio 4. Heard by an estimated 1.75 million listeners, the sequence of readings, music, ministry and silence "reflected the essence of Quaker values to the wider world."[11]


In November 2011 thieves stole Maverick the Harris hawk from a teacher's aviary. Maverick was used "to build a more adventurous curriculum for pupils" and helped students learn physics. Pupils were left distraught after the theft as a core team of pupils had been trained to handle him.[12]

Sir , former director of the GCHQ

John Adye

civil rights campaigner

Crispin Aubrey

Sir , former MP

Tony Baldry

poet and Bloomsbury member

Julian Bell

Bloomsbury member, artist and writer

Quentin Bell

actress

Eliza Bennett

composer and jazz pianist

Sir Richard Rodney Bennett

journalist

Michael Binyon

Sir , former ambassador

John Birch

Secretary and Chief Executive of Marylebone Cricket Club

Derek Brewer

Oscar winning actor

Jim Broadbent

poet

Basil Bunting

businessman in chocolate firms Fry's and Cadbury's and decorated First World War pilot

Egbert Cadbury

British pistol shooter, winner of Bronze Medal 2014 Commonwealth Games

Kristian Callaghan

Professor , cultural historian

Edward Chaney

(retail; founder of Soul of Africa), ex-CEO of Clark's Shoes

Lance Clark

Oscar-nominated art director in the film industry

Nathan Crowley

former MP, minister and life peer

Baron Davies of Stamford

geneticist

Leonard Doncaster

co-founder of Dorling Kindersley

Christopher Dorling

actor, Olivier Award nominee 2016

Phil Dunster

actor "Casualty"

Jason Durr

pioneer of Welsh TV broadcasting

Owen Edwards

former ambassador

Hugh Foot, Baron Caradon

former Labour Party leader

Michael Foot

artist and ornithologist

Robert Gillmor

an Under-Secretary-General at the United Nations

Martin Griffiths

Professor at York University

Hugh Haughton

anthropologist and Professor at Aberdeen University

Tim Ingold

Oscar award-winning film director

Sir David Lean

artist

Po Shun Leong

film director

Peter Litten

poet

Tom Lowenstein

businessman, first director of the Manchester Business School and social activist[13]

Professor Grigor McClelland

former Professor of Animal Behaviour, Oxford University

David McFarland

award-winning singer songwriter

Laura Marling

publisher and writer; former Chairman of Cape, co-founder of The Booker Prize; founder of The Book Bus

Tom Maschler

cricketer, Captain of England, and later Chairman of the England cricket selectors

Peter May

Foreign Secretary India, 1970s

Jagat Singh Mehta

musician and music producer

John Mitchell

poet and son of GE Moore, Cambridge Philosopher

Nicholas Moore

Sir , diplomat and ambassador

Oscar Morland

Prof. , Edinburgh University, awarded Polar Medal 2017, recognition for his pioneering glaciological work in the Arctic.[14]

Peter Nienow

award-winning actor

Nathaniel Parker

Professor of English, Reading University

Patrick Parrinder

psychiatrist, medical geneticist, paediatrician, mathematician and chess theorist, Galton professor of eugenics at University College London

Lionel Penrose

artist, historian and poet

Sir Roland Penrose

singer/songwriter (The Christians)

Henry Priestman

architect and author on Modern design

John Prizeman

Prof. , eye surgeon

Dan Reinstein

award-winning film director

Karel Reisz

Prof. , art historian, photographer and lecturer, Courtauld

Julian Stallabrass

missionary

Ian Stillman

actor

Richard Vernon

social epidemiologist, author and advocate

Richard G. Wilkinson

Wykeham Professor of Logic, Oxford University

Timothy Williamson

musician

Stuart Zender

writer, journalist[15]

Shyam Bhatia

Notable old pupils include:

List of Friends Schools

Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference

Old Leightonians Cricket Club

The Leightonian [school magazine] (pub. 1895).

The Park [school magazine] (pub. termly).

Old Leightonians Club. A list of names and addresses of the old boys of Leighton Park School (pub. 1945, 1957, 1973, 1990).

Brown, S. W. Leighton Park: A history of the school (pub. 1952).

Leighton Park School, Leighton Park: The first 100 years (pub. 1990).

School website

Old Leightonians Cricket Club website

ISBI entry

Welcome To GBS Swim School