The school was founded in 1577 but, like many others, lapsed during the
English Civil War. It was re-established in 1662. The Free School, Woodbridge, was an expression of the new confidence in England following the restoration of the monarchy in 1660. Local citizens contributed to the founding of the school in 1662, appointing a
schoolmaster on an annual salary of £25 to teach, without charge, ten "sons of the meaner sort of the inhabitants of the town". Additional pupils paid an annual fee of £1. After a difficult start, including the ravages of the plague in 1666, the school flourished in the eighteenth century. By the mid-nineteenth century, the cramped School building was proving inadequate and in 1861 the school integrated with the
Seckford Trust, an almshouse charity, becoming a part beneficiary of an endowment left to the town of Woodbridge in 1587 by
Thomas Seckford,
Master of the Court of Requests to
Queen Elizabeth I. In 1864 the school moved from the centre of town on the site of the former
Augustinian house of
Woodbridge Priory to its present site with of wooded grounds overlooking
Woodbridge. At this time formally titled "Seckford Grammar School", the school became more commonly known as "The Woodbridge Grammar School" and then, from around 1895, simply "Woodbridge School". It joined the
Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference (HMC) in 1907. From 1945 the school was a
direct grant grammar school, opting to return to full independent status in 1976 when the scheme was phased out. ==The school==