The original Harrogate College was a boys' school. Its headmaster,
George Mearns Savery, opened a girls' school in 1893, and developed it in collaboration with headmistress
Elizabeth Wilhelmina Jones. The boys' school closed after Savery's death in 1903 and the girls' school initially kept the name of Harrogate College. In 1904, the girls' school moved into the present accommodation on the west side of Harrogate. In 1907 the school acquired a panel by sculptor
Frances Darlington, depicting ''Sir Perceval's Vision of the Holy Grail'' which was fixed above the fireplace in the reading room. From 1939 to 1945, the school was evacuated to
Swinton Park, and after the
Second World War moved back. Additional extensions that housed a library, a science block and a gymnasium were built later in the 1950s. Later, more buildings were constructed (a sports hall in the 1980s, an art room, and the Highfield Prep School). Gradually, houses on each side of Clarence Drive were acquired and were used as boarding houses. The pre-prep department, known as Bankfield, was opened in 1997, whilst the junior school, Highfield, opened in 1999. Currently, the grounds, playing field, tennis courts, houses and gardens occupy about of the
Duchy Estate. The college now consists of three divisions: Highfield Pre-School (boys and girls aged 2–4), Highfield Prep (boys and girls aged 4–11) and the main school (day and boarding girls aged 11–18). ==Academic performance==