Bedales School

{{Short description|Public school in Hampshire, England}}

{{More citations needed|date=February 2025}}

{{Use British English|date=February 2023}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2020}}

{{Infobox school

| name = Bedales School

| logo = Bedales School.svg

| logo_size = 120px

| image = Bedales Memorial Library.jpg

| image_size = 250px

| caption =

| motto = Work of Each for Weal of All

| established = 1893

| closed =

| type = Private boarding and day school
Public school

| president =

| head_label = Headmaster

| head = Will Goldsmith

| r_head_label =

| r_head =

| chair_label =

| chair =

| founder = John Haden Badley

| specialist =

| address = Church Road

| city = Steep

| county = Hampshire

| country = England

| postcode = GU32 2DG

| local_authority =

| urn = 116527

| ofsted =

| staff =

| enrolment = 761

| gender = Co-educational

| lower_age = 3

| upper_age = 18

| houses =

| colours =

| publication =

| annual_tuition =

| website = {{URL|http://www.bedales.org.uk/}}

}}

Bedales School is a coeducational boarding and day public school, in the village of Steep, near the market town of Petersfield in Hampshire, England. It was founded in 1893 by Amy Garrett Badley and John Haden Badley in reaction to the limitations of conventional Victorian schools and has been co-educational since 1898.

History

File:JHB.jpg

The school was started in 1893 by Amy Garrett Badley and John Haden Badley. John had met Oswald B Powell when they were introduced to each other by Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson, whom they both knew from their Cambridge days. John said that Oswald and his wife, Winifred Powell, were as important as Amy and him.{{Cite web |title=Amy Badley |url=https://spartacus-educational.com/Amy_Badley.htm |access-date=2023-07-13 |website=Spartacus Educational |language=en}} A house called Bedales was rented just outside Lindfield, near Haywards Heath. In 1899 Badley and Powell (the latter borrowing heavily from his father, the Vicar of Bisham) purchased a country estate near Steep and constructed a purpose-built school, including state-of-the-art electric lighting, which opened in 1900. The site has been extensively developed over the past century, including the relocation of a number of historic vernacular timber frame barns. A preparatory school, Dunhurst, was started in 1902 on Montessori principles (and was visited in 1919 by Maria Montessori herself), and a primary school, Dunannie, was added in the 1950s.

File:Amy Badley 03.webp

The Badleys took a non-denominational approach to religion and the school has never had a chapel: its relatively secular teaching made it attractive in its early days to nonconformists, agnostics, Quakers, Unitarians and liberal Jews, who formed a significant element of its early intake. The school was also well known and popular in some Cambridge and Fabian intellectual circles, with connections to the Wedgwoods, Darwins, Huxleys, and Trevelyans. Books such as A quoi tient la supériorité des Anglo-Saxons? and L'Education nouvelle popularised the school on the Continent, leading to a cosmopolitan intake of Russian and other European children in the 1920s.

Bedales was originally a small and intimate school: the 1900 buildings were designed for 150 pupils. Under a programme of expansion and modernisation in the 1960s and 1970s under the headmastership of Tim Slack, the senior school grew from 240 pupils in 1966 to 340, thereafter increasing to some 465.

Heads

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  • 1893–1935 John Haden BadleyWake, Denton 1993, p. 315
  • 1936–1946 F A Meier
  • 1946–1962 Hector Beaumont Jacks
  • 1962–1974 Tim Slack
  • 1974–1981 Patrick Nobes
  • 1981–1992 Euan MacAlpine
  • 1992–1994 Ian Newton
  • 1994–2001 Alison Willcocks{{cite news |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/1480942/Alison-Willcocks.html |title=Obituatry - Alison Willcocks |work=The Daily Telegraph |date=12 January 2005}}
  • 2001–2018 Keith Budge{{cite news |url=https://www.petersfieldpost.co.uk/news/education/change-at-the-top-for-bedales-next-summer-304718 |title=Change at the top for Bedales next summer |work=Petersfield Post |date=31 July 2017}}
  • 2018–2021 Magnus Bashaarat{{cite news |url=https://absolutely-education.co.uk/maida-vale-school-in-conversation-with-magnus-bashaarat/ |title=Maida Vale School – in conversation with Magnus Bashaarat |publisher=Absolutely Education |year=2023}}
  • 2021–present Will Goldsmith{{cite web |url=https://www.thesocietyofheads.org.uk/news-and-gallery/news/bedales-announces-new-head |title=Bedales announces new Head |publisher=The Society of Heads |year=2021}}

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The campus

Since 1900 the school has been located on a {{convert|120|acre|km2|adj=on}} estate in the village of Steep, near Petersfield, Hampshire. As well as playing fields, orchards, woodland, pasture, multiple sport pitches and a nature reserve, the campus also has two Grade I listed arts and crafts buildings designed by Ernest Gimson, the Lupton Hall (1911), which was co-designed, built and largely financed by ex-pupil Geoffrey Lupton, and the Memorial Library (1921).{{Cite web|url=https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1278033|title=BEDALES MEMORIAL LIBRARY, LUPTON HALL AND CORRIDOR, Steep – 1278033 | Historic England|website=historicengland.org.uk}}

There are three contemporary, award-winning buildings:

  • The Olivier Theatre (1997) by Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios
  • The Orchard Building (2005) by Walters & Cohen
  • The Art and Design Building (2017) by Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios{{cite web|url=http://www.bedales.org.uk/the-campus.html |title=Bedales School Campus |publisher=Bedales.org.uk |access-date=20 March 2012 |url-status = dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120308073757/http://www.bedales.org.uk/the-campus.html |archive-date=8 March 2012 }}

Notable Bedalians

{{See also|Category:People educated at Bedales School}}

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References

{{Reflist}}

Further reading

See also John Haden Badley bibliography.

  • Bedales School; A School for Boys. Outline of its aims and system. By J H Badley. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1892
  • A quoit tient la superiorité des Anglo-Saxons?. By Edmond Demolins. 1897
  • Notes and suggestions for those who join the staff at Bedales School. By J H Badley. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1922
  • Bedales: A Pioneer School. By J H Badley. London: Methuen, 1923
  • Bedales Since the War. By Geoffrey Crump. London: Chapman and Hall, 1936
  • John Haden Badley 1865–1967. By Gyles Brandreth and Sally Henry. Steep: Bedales Society, 1967
  • English Progressive Schools. By Robert Skidelsky. London: Penguin, 1969
  • The Public School Phenomenon. By Jonathan Gathorne-Hardy. London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1977
  • Irregularly Bold: A Study of Bedales School. By James Henderson. London: André Deutsch, 1978
  • Bedales 1935–1965 Memories and Reflections of Fifteen Bedalians. By H.B. Jacks. Steep: The Bedales Society, 1978
  • Bedales School – The First Hundred Years. By Roy Wake and Pennie Denton. London: Haggerston Press, 1993 {{ISBN|1869812107}}