The school was founded in 1615 at its original site in
Free School Lane, Cambridge. Its former buildings now house the
Whipple Museum of the History of Science. In 1890 it moved to a site on the corner of Gonville Place and Hills Road, in 1960 moving to the site it now occupies as its 'Upper' school on Hills Road. There have been multiple phases of expansion, particularly in the 21st century. Among notable developments is the Peter Hall Performing Arts Centre, a 400-seat theatre, exhibition and rehearsal space designed by architects Haworth Tompkins, which opened in 2018. An old prospectus lists the fees as £3 per term in 1890. From 1945 to 1976 it was a
direct grant grammar school, offering free places to 40% of pupils. Following the abolition of the
Assisted Places Scheme, The Perse no longer received any state funding and became independent. The school was ranked 13th in the
Sunday Times Parent Power league table in 2019 and 6th in the
Daily Telegraph national table of A Level, Pre-U and IB results with 83% A* and A grades from 175 candidates. In 2021, The
Sunday Times also named The Perse School as the top independent secondary school in East Anglia, as the school had the best performance in the GCE A Level Examinations in the region. In 2015, two boys from the school were convicted of stealing items found at Auschwitz while on a school trip. ==Motto==