is in the distance.
General history The school now known as King's Ely is the result of over a millennium of history which originally began with the education of child
oblates on the site now occupied by
Ely Cathedral in 673 AD at the abbey founded by
St Etheldreda. In 840 the site was burned down by the
Danes. In 970 the monastery in Ely was restored by
Æthelwold,
Bishop of Winchester and
St Dunstan,
Archbishop of Canterbury, and with it the school was re-established, and has existed continuously since then (The school therefore states its establishment as being in 970 as it has operated continuously since then). Following the
Dissolution of the monasteries in 1541, many schools connected to monasteries were at risk of abolition, however the school was re-endowed and renamed to ''The King's School, Ely'', by
King Henry VIII as one of the seven
King's Schools. In 1562
Queen Elizabeth I issued the school its second
royal charter. The name was not retained for long however as in 1653, under
Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell the school was renamed
Ely Cathedral Grammar School. In 1666 the school was awarded its third royal charter by
King Charles II. In 1702, upon the accession of
Queen Anne the school became known as ''Queen Anne's School
. This was due to the fact that the country now had a queen, and was an exception in this time period as no other queen has resulted in a name change. In 1720 the name The Kings School, Ely
returned, until it was shortened in March 2012 to King's Ely'' as to distinguish the school from the six other
King's Schools established or renamed by
King Henry VIII in 1541. When
Hereward the Wake led the last Saxon rebellion against
William the Conqueror in 1071, the monks of Ely, and therefore the teachers at the school, gave William access to a secret passageway that led to the defeat of the Rebellion and the capture of
Ely.In his
memoirs from 1955, the Reverend
Christopher Campling described the school's state when he became chaplain. "Academic standards were not high, but a few boys gained admission to
Oxbridge each year. The music in the school was especially good, because the choristers of the cathedral choir stayed on after their voices had broken." The first girls were admitted in 1970 and the school has since become fully coeducational. In 2004, Susan Freestone was appointed its first
female Head, taking over from Richard Youdale who had been headmaster for 12 years. In 1973,
Queen Elizabeth II came to the school to celebrate the anniversary of the monastery, and also attended the school's Visitor's Feast The school keeps a strong link with the
cathedral by which it is overshadowed, forming a key part of school life with pupils attending services in the Cathedral at least once per week in Acremont and the Prep School, and twice per week in the Senior School, and being the venue for Start of Term, End of Term, Admission of Scholars, and Prize Giving services, alongside purely religious services. A
Roll of Honour in School House lists 24 Old Eleans who were killed during
World War I. Another Roll of Honour is located outside of the Hayward Theatre and features the names of 89 Old Eleans killed while in service of the British Armed Forces during
The First World War,
Second World War, and
The Troubles.
Kidnapping In November 1999, a 14-year-old pupil was
kidnapped as he left the school premises, and held by three men. Police were able to stop the kidnappers' vehicle as the victim was being driven away from a hotel in Essex three days later; it is thought the boy was about to be drowned in the
River Thames, as a 20 ft length of cable, ropes ties, handcuffs and a 56 lb weight were found in the gang's vehicle. The parents of the boy received mobile phone calls demanding £250,000, which the police were able to trace. The men were found guilty of false imprisonment and blackmail and sentenced to custodial terms of 11–12 years.
Abolition and later reintroduction of Rugby Union In June 2002, the Principal Richard Youdale aroused media interest and criticism with an announcement that the school would be phasing out
rugby which had been introduced in the place of football in the early 1950s. Youdale cited, among other reasons, the increasing popularity of football. The school reinstated rugby in 2005.
Saturday School In 2015 the school scrapped Saturday School, instead lengthening the regular working week, and leaving Saturday morning free for non-academic, non-compulsory activities.
List of known Headmasters and Principals 15th Century • John Douham (c. 1448)
16th Century • Ralph Holland (c1541 - 1562) • James Speight (1562 - 1596) • John Lucke (1596 - 1598) • Hubert Ward (1970 - 1992)
21st Century • Richard Youdale (1992 - 2004) • Sue Freestone (2004 - 2019) • John Attwater (2019 - ) ==Notable buildings==