Plans for a boys' school in
Borden began in 1875, as a new way of using some of the accumulated funds from the Barrow Trust, established from the estate of William Barrow (d. 1707), a local farmer, for the benefit of the poorer inhabitants of the village. The trustees of the Barrow Trust became the new school's governors, and they began organising a suitable sum of money to allow the project to go ahead. Within a few years, they had amassed £9,500 and the building of the school began on a seven-acre site in Riddles Road, which belonged to the trust. The Barrow Boys' School, Borden, was to be an independent day and boarding school, designed to have some fifty boarders and some 150 day pupils. The school formally opened in October 1878, with just twenty-three pupils (nine of them from the village of Borden) and one full-time member of staff (the headmaster, Rev. William Henry Bond). A full-time assistant master was recruited in 1880, followed by a second full-time assistant master in 1883. In 1893, Rev. Bond left to become headmaster of
Churcher's College, and was replaced by James Williamson Thurnham, who was keen to increase the number of boarders at the school, which by now was known as Barrow School, Borden. Boarders came from all parts of the country and, indeed, the world, with some hailing from France, Spain, India and Jamaica. Thurnham left to establish
New College, Herne Bay in 1906, and took most of the 120 boarders and the majority of the school's staff with him, leaving the next headmaster, William Murdock, with the difficult task of building up numbers once more. Soon after Murdock's appointment, the school began to be referred to as Borden Barrow's Boys' School and was taken into the state education system in 1906. The school now became known as Borden School, a name that had appeared as part of the school badge since at least 1885, but, by 1910, there were six annual scholarships to 'Borden Grammar School', the name by which the school has been known ever since. Up until the 1914, there had still been a few boarders at the school but, after the First World War, it became a day grammar school. In the early summer of 1929, the school moved to its present site on the Avenue of Remembrance, Sittingbourne, not only because of the rising maintenance costs of the original premises and the fact that it was no longer possible to attract suitable numbers of boys with the school being so far from the centre of Sittingbourne. The new building was formally opened by
George, Lord Harris in October 1929, but the school retained its original name despite no longer being located in Borden. The old school building was used for a time as an agricultural college, and is now an
Adult Education Centre. In January 1931, work began on the construction of a cricket pavilion as a memorial to all those Old Bordenians who were killed in the
First World War, most of the money being provided by the Old Bordenian Association. The original pavilion was replaced by a modern structure in 2004, which continues to serve as a memorial to all those old boys who were killed in the First World War. In May 1940, the Government announced that a number of towns on the Southeast Coast were to have their children
evacuated:
Sheerness was one such town, and some sixty-five pupils from Borden, accompanied by three masters, were evacuated to
Pengam, South Wales, where the boys were to attend the
Lewis School. Meanwhile, air raid shelters were built on the east side of the school site in Sittingbourne and, later, to the north of the cricket pavilion. In May 1949, a clock tower was unveiled by the
Bishop of Dover as a memorial to all those Old Bordenians who lost their lives in the
Second World War, the funds once again being provided by the Old Bordenian Association. The word 'Grammar' was removed from the school's name in 1972, in accordance with a change in the local education system, and there were fears that Borden might be turned into a Sixth Form college. These fears were, however, not realised, and Borden remained a selective school, admitting pupils at thirteen rather than after the 11+ Examination. In 1982, the word 'Grammar' was restored to the school's name, and entry at eleven resumed in 1994. In 1979, a new teaching block, the Hardy Block (named for the school's fifth headmaster, George Hardy), was opened by
Commander John Bostock,
DSC,
RN, chairman of governors. The first phase of another new teaching block, the Short Block (named for the school's sixth headmaster, Bryan Short), was opened in 1995 and completed in 1998; the finished building was formally opened by
Robin, Lord Kingsdown, the great-grandson of the school's first chairman of governors, Sir
Edward Leigh Pemberton. One of the science laboratories, the Hooker Advanced Physics Laboratory, was named for and opened by Sir
Stanley Hooker, an Old Bordenian and aeronautical engineer. A further substantial teaching, sports and sixth-form block was opened in 2024 and dedicated as the Harold Vafeas Sports and Learning Block in honour of the school's eighth headmaster Harold Vafeas who, despite being taken ill in service, remained as headmaster until months before his passing in January 2014. The School looks forward to the 150th anniversary of its foundation, and the centenary of relocating to its present site, both in 2028. == Modern School ==