Circumstances of the foundation Since Saxon times the
Collegiate Churches of •
St Chad (traditionally founded in Shrewsbury when it was known as
Pengwern, either by the royal family of the
Kingdom of Powys in the 6th century, or by
Offa, king of Mercia in the 8th century); •
St Mary (established by
King Edgar in the 10th century); and • St Alkmund (founded by
Queen Æthelflæd before 918AD; endowed as a college by 975 by King Edgar, though reduced in the mid 12th century) were providing education in the town, complemented by the foundation of
Shrewsbury Abbey in the 11th century. These were broken up by the
Reformation, although there is a mention of a grammar school at Shrewsbury in a court case of 1439. Shrewsbury School was founded in response to those interruptions to the town's ancient traditions in education in the sixteenth century: the disruption caused significant local ill feeling, and by 1542, townspeople were beginning to petition
Henry VIII for remedy. They devised a scheme hoping to use the proceeds from the dissolution of
Shrewsbury Abbey for a renewed provision of education. They were not immediately successful. and was involved in the founding petitions. Also involved in the founding petitions was
Reginald Corbet (who married Hill's heiress, Alice Gratewood), a
justice of the peace for Shropshire and commissioner for
chantries in the county, who was paid ten shillings in 1548 "for a supplication exhibited to the
Lord Chancellor to obtain a free school". Significantly, there was also a receipt for 20 pence to bribe the
Lord Chancellor's servant to win his ear.
Foundation and early years , the founder of Shrewsbury School, by the circle of
William Scrots|198x198px Shrewsbury School was founded by charter granted by
King Edward VI on 10 February 1552. together with three rented half-timbered buildings, which included Riggs Hall, built in 1450. These are now the only remaining part of the original buildings occupied by the institution. Archaeological excavations of the sites of these first buildings in 1978 revealed finds going back to the Saxon period, along with relics of the school, now in the town collections. Ashton was a contemporary of
Roger Ascham at
St John's, Cambridge: Ascham was a writer on theories of education and served in the administrations of Edward VI,
Mary I, and Elizabeth I, having earlier acted as Elizabeth's tutor in Greek and Latin between 1548 and 1550. Early pupils were taught the catechism of
Calvin. The school attracted large numbers of pupils from Protestant families in Shropshire, North Wales and beyond, with 266 boys on its roll at the end of 1562. Early pupils lodged with local families. For example,
Sir Philip Sidney (who had a well-known correspondence with his father about his schooling) lodged in the
castle ward with
George Leigh, who had been Member of Parliament for
Shrewsbury. In this period Elizabeth I's favourite
Robert Dudley, 1st Earl of Leicester also visited the school to see his nephew Thomas Sidney and attended a service at St Mary's Church. was an early pupil of the school. Sidney attended the school along with his lifelong friend
Fulke Greville (later Lord Brooke), The literary output of these school-day associations became significant: in 1579
Francis Bacon joined their circle, which also included Mary Sidney (Philip's sister, by then
Countess of Pembroke). in 1571.|201x201px Ashton resigned his headmastership in 1568. From 1571, Ashton was in the service of
Walter Devereux, 1st Earl of Essex, was involved in the education of his son the
2nd Earl, and was employed in confidential communications with Queen Elizabeth I and the
Privy Council. Having achieved a reputation for excellence under Ashton, in 1571 the school was augmented by Elizabeth I. By 1581, the school had 360 pupils, and it was described by
William Camden in 1582 as "the best filled [school] in all England"; to set out the ordinances governing the school, which were in force until 1798. Under these regulations, the borough bailiffs (mayors after 1638) had the power to appoint masters, with Ashton's old
St John's College, Cambridge having an academic veto.
1600s In 1608 the town and the school were in fierce dispute about who should be appointed second master. The headmaster, John Meighen, wished to promote the third master, Ralph Gittins; the town wished to appoint Simon Moston on the recommendation of St John's College, whose fellows had a say in the appointment of new masters. When the town's bailiffs came to install their preferred candidate on 31 August 1608, the building had already been occupied by about 60 women from the town (including three spinsters, two widows, the wives of mercers, tailors, weavers, butchers, shoemakers, tanners, glovers, carpenters and coopers) taking the headmaster's side and preferring Gittins on the basis that only the son of a burgess could serve as second master. Jamming the school benches against the doors, they barricaded themselves in the school until the following Saturday, passing a "great hammer" between themselves which had been used to gain entry to the school. The authorities sought to read the Statute on Rebellion, but the women made such a noise nobody could hear it. The incident provoked a mass of litigation in the courts of
Chancery and
Star Chamber in Westminster. A house (today called Stone Grange) was built for the school in 1617 in the nearby village of
Grinshill as a retreat in times of plague. The stone buildings on Castle Gates, including a chapel, dormitories, library and classrooms, were completed by 1630, with Ashton's successor, John Meighen, founding a
chained library in 1606, though the library had begun making acquisitions by 1596, with a terrestrial globe by the first English globe maker
Emery Molineux being its first acquisition. The bookcases in the library (with the books chained to them) projected from the walls between the windows on both sides of the room forming alcoves for study: an arrangement that may still be seen in
Duke Humphrey's Library in Oxford. The completion of this room was celebrated by the masters and Bailiffs on 1 October 1612 by taking cake and wine in the new space. A council of war was appointed for the whole district, of which
Lord Capel was president. This council held its meetings in the school library, and some of the school's books were damaged during this time. Around September 1642 a contentious "Royal Loan" was made to Charles I of £600 (around 75% of the money in the school exchequer at the time); a further £47 was lent to the corporation of the town. The loan was acknowledged under seal by the king in the following terms: Charles Rex Trusty and well beloved we greet you well. Whereas ye have, out of your good affection to our present service and towards the supply of our extraordinary occasions, lent unto us the sum of £600, being a stock belonging to your school founded by our royal predecessor King Edward the Sixth, in this our Town of Shrewsbury. We do hereby promise that we shall cause the same to be truly repaid unto you whensoever ye shall demand the same, and shall always remember the loan of it as a very acceptable service unto us. Given under our Signet at our Court at Shrewsbury this nth of October, 1642. To our trusty and well beloved Richard Gibbons, late Mayor of our Town of Shrewsbury, and Thomas Chaloner, Schoolmaster of our Free School there.This was considered a misappropriation of the school's funds. This was litigated in the
Court of Chancery and before the
Lords Commissioners of the Great Seal by the corporation of the town after the end of the civil war. The record of the royal loan appeared in the school register at the time of the November audit of 1642, but was torn out by the time the matter was before the courts. The borrowed funds were never recovered. In the early eighteenth century,
Daniel Defoe also visited the school, noting: "Here is a good Free-school, the most considerable in this Part of England; founded by King Edward VI and endowed by Queen Elizabeth, with a very sufficient Maintenance for a Chief or Headmaster, and three Under-masters or Ushers. The Buildings, which are of Stone, are very spacious, particularly the Library, which has a great many Books in it. The School-masters have also very handsome Houses to dwell in; for that the Whole has the Face of a College." in the former school building|alt=|150x150px A wing was added to the buildings on the original site during the Georgian period, connected to Rigg's Hall and spanning the old town wall. Although this building was listed at grade two it was demolished around 100 years after the school had vacated the building when Shropshire County Council, who operated the buildings as a public library were engaged in major restorations works in the 1980s because the structure was by then unsound. was passed for the better government of the school. The act contains an oath to be taken by the governors, and confirmed
Lord Chancellor as
visitor (as for all Royal foundations). This statutory scheme was later amended by the
Court of Chancery, in 1853.
1800s The school had just three headmasters during the 19th century.
Samuel Butler was appointed headmaster in 1798. Writing at this time he observed: "This school was once the Eton or the Westminster of
Wales and all Shropshire", In 1839 an incident known as the "Boiled Beef Row" took place, where the boys walked out of the school in protest at the food, and the praepostors were all removed from office. , Shrewsbury School erected a statue of
Charles Darwin.|181x181px Butler was succeeded by his pupil
Benjamin Hall Kennedy (of
Latin Primer fame) in 1836, Under Butler and Kennedy, Shrewsbury was one of three provincial schools among the nine studied by the
Clarendon Commission of 1861–64 (the schools considered being
Eton,
Charterhouse,
Harrow,
Rugby,
Westminster, and
Winchester, and two day schools:
St Paul's and
Merchant Taylors). Shrewsbury went on to be included in the
Public Schools Act 1868, which ultimately related only to the boarding schools. The school continued in the 1600s buildings on its original site, until it was relocated in 1882, when Moss moved the school from its original town centre location to a new site of in Kingsland (an area of land which at one time belonged to the Crown and granted to the Corporation at "a rather remote period, the exact date of which appears not to be known", but apparently before 1180), on the south bank of the
River Severn overlooking the town. A legacy of this move can be seen in the school premises being referred to as "The Site". and before In the later
Renaissance, this land had been devoted to elaborate performances, with grand arbours being built by the guilds. Some of the arbours survive, such as the for the Shoemakers (now in the
Quarry Park). over the course of the 20th century the library purpose gradually took over the whole building, to which major restoration was done in 1983. The new Riggs Hall (which had existed from Tudor buildings at the old site) was also built at this time, as was Churchill's Hall and Moser's Hall: these buildings are the work of
William White. A
gothic chapel was built for the school (also by Blomfield) in 1887, though it has been noted that "Christian religion played only a very small part in the life of the Public Schools... [and] at Shrewsbury the Governors refused to allow Butler to address the school at a service" prior to this increased focus in the Victorian period. Other buildings have since grown up around the edge of the site, with sports pitches in the centre, with diverse buildings being added to the new site over the last 130 years.
1900s The main school building suffered a major fire in 1905. Moss was succeeded in 1908 by
Cyril Alington, then Master in College at
Eton. Alington, though a Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford, was a sportsman, evidenced by the 1914 appointment as his secretary of
Neville Cardus, the future cricket journalist who had joined the school in 1912 as the school's assistant cricket professional. At the time of his appointment as Headmaster, Alington was younger than any of the masters on the staff, so to bring in new blood into the teaching staff, he recruited several former Collegers from Eton, most notably
The Rev. Ronald Knox. Alington wrote the school song and commissioned its flag (a
banner of arms of its coat of arms), and he was an energetic builder; the school Alington Hall (assembly hall) is named after him. In December 1914 he wrote a poem, "To the School at War", which was published in
The Times. After leaving Shrewsbury, Alington went on to serve as
Chaplain to the King to
King George V from 1921 until 1933, and then
Dean of Durham, from 1933 to 1951. He appeared on the cover of
Time magazine on 29 June 1931. "An accomplished classicist, a witty writer especially of light verse, and a priest of orthodox convictions ..." During the Edwardian period Oldham's Hall was built (1911).
First World War and afterwards ,
Philip Bainbrigge and Malcolm White (killed in July 1916 on the first day of the
Battle of the Somme) The First World War saw 321 former members of the school die serving their country. A war memorial was added to the school in 1923 for these fallen. This memorial was added to after the
Second World War to include the 135 members of the school who fell in that conflict. The monument includes a statue of
Sir Phillip Sidney, the Elizabeth soldier, poet and courtier (who himself was an alumnus of the school and died of wounds sustained at the
Battle of Zutphen in 1586), and faces the Main School building down an avenue of
linden trees, known as 'central'. The current library building was added in 1916. , part of the 1924 Everest Expedition|188x188px Mountaineer
Andrew Irvine, who, with
George Mallory may have reached the summit of
Mount Everest in the
1924 British Everest Expedition attended Shrewsbury during the
First World War. During the 1920s the Georgian villa houses at Severn Hill and Ridgemount were acquired by the school and adapted into boarding houses. Severn Hill, the linear decedent of the house of which Irvine was captain, holds his ice axe from the expedition, discovered in 1933 by Wyn Harris.
Post Second World War Between 1944 and 1950
John Wolfenden (later Lord Wolfenden) was headmaster; he left Shrewsbury to become
Vice-Chancellor of the
University of Reading. He was appointed to various public body chairmanships by the
Privy Council, and also went on to be director of the
British Museum. His name is closely associated with the 1957
Wolfenden Report, which he chaired. given to the town of Shrewsbury by the school in 1952, replacing the lost medieval cross, to celebrate 400 years of relations between the two|200x200px In 1952, the school was 400 years old. It received a royal visit to mark the occasion, and presented the town with a new cross for the historic site of the town's
high cross (which had been removed in 1705) at the termination of the market street which was a starting point for civic and religious processions in the medieval town and a significant location (the place of execution of
Earl of Worcester and others after the
Battle of Shrewsbury in 1403, and of
Dafydd III, last native
Prince of Wales in 1283). The future
Deputy Prime Minister of the UK
Michael Heseltine attended the school immediately after the Second World War on a scholarship. A number of the founders and writers of the satirical magazine
Private Eye attended the school in the 1950s.
Willy Rushton was also at the school at this time. Between 1963 and 1975
Donald Wright served as headmaster.
The Times has called Wright a "great reforming headmaster". While there, working with the
Anglican Diocese of Liverpool, Wright took a leading role in the building of a new Shrewsbury House, the school's mission in
Liverpool, which was opened in 1974 by
Princess Anne. He secured many leading churchmen to come to preach in the school chapel, including
Donald Coggan,
Archbishop of Canterbury. After retiring as a headmaster in 1975, Wright became the Archbishop of Canterbury's Patronage Secretary, chaired the William Temple Foundation, and served as Secretary to the
Crown Appointments Commission. In the 1960s, Kingsland House, another 19th century gentleman's residence was acquired by the school and adapted for use for central catering for all pupils (previously food had been arranged in houses). A new science building was also added in the 1960s.
Sir Eric Anderson served as headmaster between 1975 and 1980. He went on to be Rector of
Lincoln College, Oxford, chairman of the
Heritage Lottery Fund and
Provost of Eton, among other roles. In 1988, another Georgian villa house, the Grove, was bought and adapted for use as boarding house. In 1996 a new IT building, the Craig Building, was added. A new music school, The Maidment Building, was opened by
King Charles III (when
Prince of Wales) in 2001. Girls were admitted to the school for the first time into the sixth-form in 2008, and the school became fully coeducational in 2015. Two new boarding houses have been built, one named after
Mary Sidney (completed 2006), and one after
Emma Darwin (completed 2011). Further additions to the site have been made: an indoor cricket centre (2006) and a new swimming pool (2007); the rowing facilities were extended with a new Yale Boat house, which was opened by Olympian
Matt Langridge in 2012; A new Computing and Design faculty building, "the Chatri Design Centre" was established in 2017, re-purposing and redeveloping a former humanities building; and in 2015 a new building, Hodgeson Hall, was built to house the humanities departments. A new theatre was opened in 2022. , who visited in 1952. In 2023 a new boarding house was opened, named to honour Elizabeth II. ==Sports==