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Merchant Taylors' Boys' School, Crosby

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Established
  
1620

DfE URN
  
104973 Tables

Phone
  
+44 151 928 3308

Number of students
  
737

Head Master
  
Mr D Cook

Staff
  
~80 (full-time)

Founded
  
1620

Merchant Taylors' Boys' School, Crosby

Type
  
Independent school; Day school

Location
  
186 Liverpool Road Great Crosby Merseyside L23 0QP England

Address
  
186 Liverpool Rd, Crosby, Liverpool L23 0QW, UK

Motto
  
("Small things grow in harmony" - Sallust)

Founder
  
Worshipful Company of Merchant Taylors

Local authority
  
Metropolitan Borough of Sefton

Similar
  
St Mary's College, Sacred Heart Catholic, Holy Family Catholic, Chesterfi High School, Great Crosby Catholic

Merchant Taylors' Boys' School, Crosby is a British independent school for day pupils, located in Great Crosby on Merseyside.

Contents

The school's motto is that of the Worshipful Company of Merchant Taylors: Concordia Parvae Res Crescunt. (Small things grow in harmony.)

History

The school was founded in 1620 under the instruction of the estate of John Harrison, a citizen and Merchant Taylor of London, who was born in Great Crosby, and was run under the auspices of the Merchant Taylors' Company until 1910. In 1878, the school moved to its present site, some 1,000 yards from the previous, which now forms part of the Merchant Taylors' Girls' School, with whom the school shares a Governing Board and Bursar.The first Headmaster was the Revd John Kidde who was also at the time the ‘Minister of Crosby’ and a farmer of 3 acres (12,000 m2) to support his family of eight children. Kidde was apparently sacked from the post in 1651 on the grounds of mismanagement although it is thought he was forced out by Roman Catholic Sympathizers on account of his Puritan/Presbyterian ways.

Present day

Until the 1970s, Merchant Taylors' was also a boarding school. It currently caters for over 700 day pupils between the ages of 11 and 18 (with an additional 120 in the Junior School). Lessons run Monday-Friday, 08:40-16:00 (A Saturday working day was abolished in 1981). As a result of these longer school days, holidays are frequently several weeks longer than local education authority dates.

The school is independently run, and, as such, charges tuition fees. Fees were partially subsidised by the Government under the Assisted Places Scheme until the closure of that scheme in 2001. The Schools now run their own means tested Assisted Places Scheme under which about 20% of pupils benefit from free, or reduced-fee places. The schools offer around £1 million a year in bursaries. About 17 per cent of pupils at the two senior schools receive assistance, worth up to 100 per cent of the £10,119 annual fees.

The School continues to perform very well in public examinations at both GCSE and A-Level, with around 60% of grades awarded at A* and A at GCSE and, consistently excellently at A-Level, where 80% and above of grades have been recorded at A*-B. 2012 saw record results at A Level, with the percentage of grades awarded at A* and A 62.3%. The School also enters students for a range of other public examinations, including Extended Project Qualifications, which have been offered since 2011.

In 2013, Merchant Taylors’ was Crosby’s best performing school with 98% of pupils at the boys’ school achieving five Cs or above in any subject at GCSE.

Sports and extracurricular activities

The primary sports played by the school are rugby union, field hockey and cricket, however association football as well as samoan cricket have both recently been introduced as an 'official' school sport and looks set to challenge the more established sports over the coming years.

The school also has a boat house which is currently on loan to Southport Dragon Boat Club, in the nearby town of Southport for its rowing team. The rowing team compete in national races with a number of boys competing at national level every year.

The rugby coaching staff includes Mike Slemen, former England and British and Irish Lions international and England team selector, and former Scottish international Ian McKie.

The school also has a Combined Cadet Force, run in conjunction with Merchant Taylors' Girls' School, headed by Contingent Commander, Major (CCF), Mike Slemen. His predecessors were Squadron Leader RAFVR(T), Mark Stanley and Lieutenant Colonel (CCF), Paul Irvine. The Army section of MTS CCF is badged as Duke of Lancaster's Regiment (King's Regiment until July 2006). In 2015, Merchant Taylors' CCF celebrated its centenary year. A new banner was presented in the nearby St. Faith's Church, with The Duke of York in attendance.


In December 2011, the £5.5m Ian Robinson Sports Centre was opened. Facilities include a climbing wall, fitness suite, sports hall and dance studio. The Sports Centre is named after ex Head of Rugby, Ian Robinson, who died on a school sports tour in Australia after a white water rafting accident in 2007.

Other facilities include a heated indoor swimming pool on site, a language laboratory, extensive playing fields, fully equipped science laboratories, an art and design suite, cricket nets, a self-contained music block and a share of Northern Club's facilities.

Notable pupils

Alumni of MTS Crosby are known as "Old Crosbeians"

  • James Allen, (Formula One commentator)
  • Tony Barrow, Beatles' press officer 1962-8
  • Matthew Baylis, author and critic
  • Alan Blackshaw, mountaineer
  • James Burnie, Liberal MP, Bootle
  • John Culshaw, record producer and television executive
  • George Kruger Gray, designer
  • Dick Greenwood, rugby international and Captain of the England team
  • Professor Anthony Heath (1942-) Sociologist and fellow of Nuffield College
  • Simon Jack, BBC finance reporter
  • Ben Kay, of the England Rugby World Cup winning side of 2003
  • Bruce Kenrick, founder, Shelter housing charity
  • Sir Hardman Lever, accountant
  • Charles James Mathews, actor
  • Thomas Eric Peet, Egyptologist
  • Nigel Rees, broadcaster and author
  • Samuel Roukin, actor, appeared in Harry Potter films VI and VII, TV drama Appropriate Adult, and John Gill's production of An Inspector Calls.
  • Robert Runcie, Archbishop of Canterbury from 1980 to 1991
  • Phil Sayer broadcaster
  • Sir John Walton, barrister and politician
  • Sir Charles Kingsley Webster, historian
  • Barrie Wells, insurance entrepreneur and sports philanthropist
  • Donald J. West, Emeritus Professor of Clinical Criminology, University of Cambridge
  • Bertie Wilson, Second Engineer on RMS Titanic
  • The Witty brothers – Arthur Witty and Ernest Witty footballers
  • Notable teachers and staff

  • Dame Jean Davies, Director of the Women's Royal Naval Service
  • John Pugh, Liberal Democrat MP for Southport
  • Mike Slemen, former England and British and Irish Lions international and England team selector
  • References

    Merchant Taylors' Boys' School, Crosby Wikipedia