from its foundation in 1953 until 2005.|alt=
Foundation Recognising a decline in the number of cadets passing to
Royal Military Academy Sandhurst (RMAS), particularly from the north of England, in
1951, the
Army Council appointed a committee to consider ways to attract young boys to take
commissions in the army. The committee concluded that either a system of
scholarships should be established to encourage boys to stay at school until they were 18 before graduating to Sandhurst, or that the army should open a school of its own. The second method was preferred by the council, who appointed a second committee which selected
Welbeck Abbey; previously an army college for adults, as the site for the new school. The report was approved by the council, and in the autumn of
1952, work commenced to convert the abbey, which was let by the
Duke of Portland to the
Ministry of Defence, into a teaching facility. Following several meetings throughout September 1953 to finalise some last details, Welbeck College, The Army Sixth Form, was officially opened on .
Expansion and re-opening In 1992, female students were permitted to join the school for the first time. In 2002, the Defence Training Review resulted in a decision to expand the school to accommodate candidates for the engineering branches of the
Royal Navy (RN) and the
Royal Air Force (RAF), starting from 2004. Having operated from Welbeck Abbey for half a century, The school officially re-opened as Welbeck – The Defence Sixth Form College, on 7 December 2005. In a
parliamentary debate called by then-Conservative MP
Nicky Morgan on 30 April 2019, Defence minister
Mark Lancaster said that "the scheme as it stands has consistently failed to deliver the required number of engineers and technical officers to Defence since its establishment in 2005", and that, "on average only 53 per cent of entrants have completed [the scheme] successfully, and a proportion of those have not achieved STEM degrees". He also noted that "the scheme has cost the Ministry of Defence and the taxpayer some £200,000 per student who has become a STEM graduate". The site has been retained by the Ministry of Defence, and in September 2021, converted to a military establishment, renamed as
MOD Garats Hay. In January 2023, a regional medical centre was opened on the site, for use by serving personnel. The site is currently being used by the military for military training and conference purposes, along with sports events and general classroom learning. Civilian emergency services, including the police also make use of the site, including 'blue light' training, pyrotechnics and simulated gunfire, and canine training. ==Governance==