Channing School, originally called Channing House, first opened in 1885 in Sutherland House under the Revd.
Robert Spears and was endowed by the
Misses Matilda and Emily Sharpe, the daughters of
Samuel Sharpe, primarily for the daughters of Unitarian ministers, and named after
William Ellery Channing. Robert Spears later became the first minister of Highgate Unitarian Church. There was assistance for six pupils by private benefactions. After a year, numbers had risen to about 90 pupils and by 1925 to about 125. Ivy House, higher up the hill, was leased for dormitories and offices in 1885. In the same year the school also leased the
semi-detached West View, immediately below Sutherland House and extended the frontage of both in 1887. In 1901 West View was bought, the other half of the semi-detached property, Slingley, was bought in 1921. This was done under the authority of
Robert Mortimer Montgomery, who had been a Governor of the school since 1906, and became its chairman in December 1920. The neighbouring building, Hampden House was acquired in 1925 and in 1930 the adjacent Arundel House; these two forming another pair of semi-detached houses. Fairseat, leased with two acres of land, was used from 1926. A hall was opened in 1927 and from 1931 the school became known simply as Channing School. Channing was badly damaged by a
parachute mine during
World War II. During the War, Montgomery oversaw the temporary relocation of the school and its pupils to the West Country, his last major effort before resigning from the chairmanship in 1944. == Buildings ==