Establishment Aylesbury Grammar School was founded in 1598 following a bequest from
Sir Henry Lee of Ditchley, the Champion of
Queen Elizabeth I, and its first home was in St Mary's Church in Aylesbury. In 1714, Henry Phillips left a sum of £5,000 for the purchase of lands of inheritance for the enlargement and further provision for the Free School in Aylesbury. The money left was to be used to admit a total of 120 boys to be taught gratis, with the school building to be furnished with books, pens, ink and paper. Ten trustees were appointed by the High Court in 1717, becoming the first trustees of what is now the Aylesbury Grammar School Foundation. The quality of education varied, and sometimes met stark criticism from the people of the town. Complaints heard at an enquiry in 1849 included boys being required to perform domestic service for the masters, including doing the headmaster’s laundry "all day", while exams were conducted with "much whispering and talking among the boys". By the mid-1880s, inadequacies on the school site were becoming more apparent, with a particular issue arising from the lack of games facilities. Additionally, the old buildings of the school were beginning to decay, and suggestions were made that fees of £4 to £6 might be charged with provision of scholarships for poorer boys on grounds of merit from public elementary schools of the district to assist in fundraising to deal with the inadequacies that school was facing. Accordingly, 1885 saw a plan to reform AGS as "a good day school in which boys of the middle class [...] may receive such education as will best suit them for the business of life".
Recent history The school was a boys' school from its foundation in 1598 until 1907, when the school relocated to a new site on Walton Road, where it remains to this day. A condition for receiving funding for the new premises was that the school should become co-educational. However, in the mid-1950s the school was rapidly outgrowing its site and so plans for a new school were made; the Council decided to reinstate AGS's single-sex status and in 1959 the girls of Aylesbury Grammar School moved into their new school on the opposite side of the road, now called
Aylesbury High School. The current Headmaster is Mark Sturgeon, who took over from Stephen Lehec at the start of the 2014–15 academic year. On 9 May 2014, boys at the school dressed up as the Jamaican bobsleigh team for their school-leaving celebrations and '
blacked up' as part of their costume. This came to public attention when an image of the schoolboys was tweeted by the then headmaster Stephen Lehec and was criticised for being racist. Lehec issued a formal apology, though in his analysis 'at no time was there an undertone of any act being of a derogatory or racist nature'. The matter was widely reported in local and national media. ==Background==