The first head master was Albert Dakin. The first foundation stone of the school was laid on 1 July 1927. The building, built by
Lancashire County Council, cost £40,745. The boys' school opened on 12 September 1928, and was officially opened on 23 October 1928 by
Eustace Percy, 1st Baron Percy of Newcastle, and was on
Great Stone Road west of
Lancashire's cricket ground. The girls' grammar school, named Stretford Girls' High School, opened in 1923 on Herbert Street. In January 1941, the site of the girls' school was destroyed by the
bombing. Nearby
Trafford Park produced important war materials, including
Rolls-Royce Merlin engines made at
Ford's factory. A new girls' school was built on a different site near Longford Park and south of
Edge Lane (A5145); the former site was converted into playing fields. The school was administered by the Stretford Divisional Executive of the Lancashire Education Committee until April 1974, when it was taken over by Trafford Metropolitan Borough Council. Until its merger in 1986 with Stretford Grammar School for Boys, it had been known since 1960 as Stretford Grammar School for Girls (the schools changed their names at the same time). The site of the boys' grammar school then became
Stretford High School, a community secondary school. Plans to build a
CTC on the boys' school site in 1988 were dropped. At the time of the merger, six secondary schools closed in Trafford, resulting in the loss of 4,500 school places. ==Academic performance==