Sir William Robertson Academy

Sir William Robertson Academy (formerly Sir William Robertson High School) is a coeducational secondary school of around 1000 pupils, situated in Welbourn, near Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England. The school is sited on a former WWII munitions dump for the nearby Wellingore Aerodrome.

Sir William Robertson Academy
Address
Map
Main Road

, ,
LN5 0PA

Coordinates53°04′01″N 0°33′58″W / 53.067°N 0.566°W / 53.067; -0.566
Information
TypeAcademy
MottoASPIRE
Religious affiliation(s)None
Established1961
Department for Education URN138839 Tables
OfstedReports
HeadteacherMark Guest
Staff113
GenderMixed
Age11 to 18
HousesChitral  
Dragoon  
Lancer  
Simla  
Websitehttp://www.swracademy.org/

The school used to specialise languages and taught French, Spanish and German, but now only French is taught. From September 2012 the school has catered for students aged 11 to 18. The school also achieved its best ever GCSE results in 2008.[citation needed]

The school has four houses, each with a differently coloured tie: Simla (yellow), Dragoon (red), Chitral (blue) and Lancer (green). These are named after experiences in Sir William Robertson's life.

History edit

Secondary modern school edit

Sir William Robertson Academy is named after Field Marshal William Robertson, born in Welbourn, who served in the First World War.

The school was to open as Leadenham County Secondary Modern School. The name change to William Robertson took place on Wednesday 30 November 1960, at a meeting of Kesteven Education Committee in Sleaford.[1]

It opened on 5 January 1961, with HORSA buildings.[2] The first head was educated in Grantham, who was a flight lieutenant in the RAF during the war.[3] It was officially opened on Tuesday 17 October 1961 by Brian Robertson, 1st Baron Robertson of Oakridge.[4][5]

The school was to be three form entry. There were new buildings in the mid-1960s. The school was to cost £74,767.[6] The deputy headteacher, Mr Padgett, became the first headteacher of the new secondary modern at Billinghay, in 1963. From September 1964 it worked with Grantham College to teach commercial subjects for one day a week.[7]

Comprehensive edit

It became a comprehensive around 1975.

Notable former pupils edit

References edit

  1. ^ Grantham Journal Friday 2 December 1960, page 1
  2. ^ Grantham Journal Friday 21 October 1960, page 8
  3. ^ Grantham Journal Friday 24 June 1960, page 1
  4. ^ Newark Advertiser Wednesday 18 October 1961, page 16
  5. ^ Newark Advertiser Wednesday 19 July 1961, page 12
  6. ^ Grantham Journal Friday 11 May 1962, page 6
  7. ^ Grantham Journal Friday 6 March 1964, page 5