The Hemel Hempstead School

The Hemel Hempstead School
Motto Esse Quam Videri
(To be rather than to seem to be)
Established 1931[1]
Type Community school,[2]
Headteacher Neil Hassell[2]
Location Heath Lane
Hemel Hempstead
Hertfordshire
HP1 1TX
England
51°44′57″N 0°28′44″W / 51.74921°N 0.47884°W / 51.74921; -0.47884Coordinates: 51°44′57″N 0°28′44″W / 51.74921°N 0.47884°W / 51.74921; -0.47884
Local authority Hertfordshire
DfE URN 117500 Tables
Ofsted Reports
Students 1200
Gender Mixed
Ages 11–18
Houses Ashridge, Chalfont, Flaunden, Latimer, Nettleden, Pendley
Colours Blue & gold          
Website www.hhs.herts.sch.uk

The Hemel Hempstead School is a secondary school and sixth form located in the town of Hemel Hempstead, Hertfordshire, in the United Kingdom.

Admissions

The school has roughly 1200 students, including a sixth form, and over 115 members of staff.

Recent heads have been:

  • Alan Gray (left 2006)
  • Sandra Samwell
  • Patrick Harty (left 2017)
  • Sally Ambrose (left 2018)
  • Neil Hassell

History

Grammar school

The school was officially opened on 14 October 1931 as Hemel Hempstead Grammar School. It was opened by Lady Cicely Gore, the Marchioness of Salisbury and wife of James Gascoyne-Cecil, 4th Marquess of Salisbury. Another grammar school, the Apsley Grammar School, opened in the town in 1955.

Comprehensive

It became a comprehensive school in 1971, when schools in the town were reorganised.

Buildings

The original Hemel Hempstead School building (known as 'Main Block' today) opened in 1931, along with a canteen and gymnasium block to the west and north of it. In the early 1960s an outdoor swimming pool was installed. In the latter half of the 1960s a new assembly hall, canteen, sports hall and changing rooms, and technology block were constructed. Work was completed shortly before the school became comprehensive.

In 1974 a temporary languages block was opened, which had been built on the land of the old canteen building which had long since been replaced. The languages block (known colloquially as 'West Block') was only designed to be serviceable for 20 years or so, and is now increasingly decrepit with holes in the walls, shaky walls, and is overcrowded with students at peak times. It was renovated in 2015.

In the late 1960s, a 15th-century barn (called Heath Barn) to the south of the school fields was refurbished and put back into use as a Music block. The building has now been repartitioned into two floors and many original features have since disappeared as a result. However, because of the tight budget some original features remain, such as the floor tiles near the reception and brick arches for certain doorways.

In 1990 a new Technology block was built next to the former swimming pool.

In 1999 the swimming pool was demolished and replaced with a parking lot. In the same year a new block containing Maths, Geography and ICT classrooms was constructed next to the old Sports hall, with 12 classrooms.

In 2004 a new Sixth Form block was completed, essentially an extension to the Main Block (but east of West Block), that replaces storage space.

House system

The pupils are divided into six house groups (with the exception of Ashridge which is named after the Ashridge country estate), each named after local villages:

Ashridge (green) - Chalfont (purple) - Flaunden (orange) - Latimer (sky blue) - Nettleden (red) - Pendley (yellow).[3]

The houses compete against each other to win annual events such as sports day, house drama/house art, house music/house dance, house science and house Christmas decorating competitions, as well as a house book challenge for Years 7 and 8, and a reading challenge for Years 7 through 9.

When the school was a grammar school, there were four Houses - Dacorum (Yellow), Salisbury (Blue), Tudor (Green), Halsey (Red).

Notable former pupils

Hemel Hempstead Grammar School

Hemel Hempstead Comprehensive School

References

  1. Davis, Eve (1987). Hemel Hempstead In Camera. Quotes. p. 69. ISBN 0-86023-340-5.
  2. 1 2 "Details for The Hemel Hempstead School". Department for Children, Schools and Families. Retrieved 2008-07-03.
  3. http://www.hhs.herts.sch.uk/information/house-system/

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