Establishment To perpetuate the memory of his only son William, who had predeceased him in 1815,
Sir William Fettes (1750–1836), a former
Lord Provost of Edinburgh and a wealthy city merchant,
bequeathed the then very large sum of £166,000 to be set aside for the education of poor children and orphans. After his death the bequest was invested, and the accumulated sum was then used to acquire the 350 acres of land, to build the main building and to found the school in 1870. Fettes College opened with 53 pupils (40 were Foundation Scholars with 11 others boarding and two day pupils). Following serious fires, the swimming baths were rebuilt in 1890 and the chemistry laboratory was rebuilt in 1897. The cricket pavilion was completed in 1906.
War years In summer 1914 the school's summer camp at
Barry had to be abandoned when both the commanding officer and the
adjutant were called up for service in the
First World War. Of the 2,000 former pupils who had by then been educated at the school, 1,094 served in the armed forces, and 246 died during their war service. A central heating system was first introduced in the main building in 1920, In October 1939, early in the
Second World War, the school had its first experience of hostilities when a German
Junkers Ju 88 flew low over the school playing fields en route to bomb
Rosyth Dockyard. Kimmerghame House was requisitioned for use as a section of the mine research unit
HMS Vernon. A total of 118 former boys died in the Second World War. In the mid-1940s
Sean Connery, a
milkman with the
St. Cuthbert's Co-operative Society, delivered milk to the school in the mornings. The school chapel was enlarged by adding a chancel and a gallery in 1948. A new school running track was opened in 1954 giving a boost to athletics at the school, and
Queen Elizabeth II and the
Duke of Edinburgh visited the school in 1955.
Land and admission changes In the early 1960s the school was required to sell 18 acres of land to allow
Telford College to be built and to sell 14 acres for a new headquarters for
Lothian and Borders Police. Following a
public inquiry in 1965 the school was also forced to sell 15 acres of land to allow
Broughton High School to be re-built. A new dining hall was opened in 1966
The Queen Mother also opened a new science school in 1970. An all-boys school until 1970, when female pupils were first admitted for the final year, Fettes became fully co-educational in 1983. In 1988 the school sold 13 acres of land to
McCarthy & Stone for residential use for £3million: the proceeds were used by the school to finance the refurbishment of the boys' houses.
Recent history In the late 1990s the school performed particularly well academically: in 1998 Fettes was placed fourth in
The Daily Telegraph's league table of schools. In 1999 Fettes was placed fifth in the
Sunday Times list of top mixed independent schools in the UK and in 2001 Fettes was declared "Scottish School of the year" by the
Sunday Times. In March 2009 Fettes won the
Scottish Schools U18 Rugby Cup, at
Murrayfield Stadium, for the first time and in April 2009 Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Education (HMIE) published a report on Fettes that evaluated the school as "excellent" in four out of five Quality Indicators and "very good" in the other. It is said that Fettes "used to have a hearty, rugger-bugger, Caledonian image". Some journalists have described Fettes as "the Eton of the North". Former headmaster Michael Spens jokingly countered on a BBC documentary that "Eton College was the Fettes of the South!" In 2020 and 2021 six men accused Iain Wares, The
Scottish Crown Prosecution Service was initially reluctant to prosecute the alleged abuser because of difficulties in seeking his extradition from South Africa—he had moved there—and his advanced age, but South Africa approved the UK's extradition request, on six charges of lewd, indecent and libidinous practices and behaviour and one of indecent assault, and remained, free, in South Africa . In 2022 a former pupil, who attended Fettes Junior School and Fettes College as a day student in the 1970s and 1980s, claimed he was abused while at the junior school. Speaking to
Scotland Tonight the man said he was beaten and sexually abused by a teacher. He claimed he was targeted when he was aged 12 because he was "more developed, and reached puberty before lots of the other boys". The matter was discussed in the
BBC Radio 4 series
In Dark Corners with
Alex Renton, which spoke to dozens of former pupils who alleged they were abused by teachers at Fettes College and at
Edinburgh Academy. In 2023, the school was featured on the BBC
Panorama documentary "My Teacher the Abuser: Fighting for Justice". In the documentary boys spoke of sexual and physical abuse committed by Wares, which the former students claimed was covered up. One former student stated in the documentary that he had contacted the school and they were not interested in helping to locate the teacher. It was also claimed that the school provided an excellent reference for the abusive teacher. ==Overview==