Grammar school Tupton Hall was founded as a
Tupton Hall Grammar School in 1936 as a secondary school in the
Clay Cross area on a site purchased by the Derbyshire Education Committee in 1929. In 1936, the school moved to its present site, formerly occupied by the mansion
Tupton Hall. The original building was designed by G.H. Widdows, the county architect, and it was opened by
Oliver Stanley, the
Secretary of State for Education.
Comprehensive school From 1967 to 1969, many new buildings were constructed to prepare for the transformation to becoming a much larger comprehensive school (750 pupils at the grammar school became 1,800 at the new comprehensive). The new school opened in 1969. The remodelled school was well regarded as an architectural achievement using the
CLASP system which allowed standard components for school construction.
Nikolaus Pevsner described it as "one of the best uses of the CLASP system for school buildings in the country ... creating a village type atmosphere". Architects were George Grey & Partners in association with D.S. Davies (county architect). The school has been twinned with a school in
Nigeria to further aid relations between Tupton and its twin village in Nigeria. It has also gained the full International Schools Award. Previously a
community school administered by
Derbyshire County Council, in September 2019 Tupton Hall School converted to
academy status. The school is now sponsored by the
Redhill Academy Trust. ==About Tupton Hall School==