Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
society/education

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

The Mount School, York

School for girls in North Yorkshire, England


School for girls in North Yorkshire, England

FieldValue
nameThe Mount School
former_namesTrinity Lane (York) Quaker Girls' School
imageThe Mount School - geograph.org.uk - 1183034.jpg
image_size240px
captionThe Mount School York
coordinates
motto
motto_translationFaithfulness in small things
established1785
typePrivate day and boarding school
religious_affiliationReligious Society of Friends
(Quaker)
head_labelHead
headAnna Wilby
foundersQuakers
addressDalton Terrace
cityYork
countyNorth Yorkshire
countryEngland
postcodeYO24 4DD
urn121726
enrolment~290
genderGirls
lower_age3
upper_age18
houses
affiliations
website

(Quaker)

The Mount School is a private Quaker day and boarding school for girls ages 3–18, and a co-ed Junior School, located in York, England. The school was founded in 1785, and the current Head is Anna Wilby. The Mount School is one of seven Quaker schools in England. In 2020, it was the first girls' school in the North of England to become an All-Steinway School. The school is also a member of the Girls' Schools Association and the Independent Schools Council.

History

The school, under the name Trinity Lane (or York) Quaker Girls' School, was founded in 1785 by Yorkshire Quaker, Esther Tuke, wife of William Tuke.

In 1831, Esther and William's grandson Samuel Tuke, along with William Alexander, Thomas Backhouse and Joseph Rowntree, moved the school to Castlegate House with Hannah Brady registered as the superintendent (1831–42). She was followed by Elizabeth Brady (1842–47), Eliza Stringer (1847–1853), and Rachel Tregelles (1853–1862), who oversaw the move of the school to its current premises, The Mount, in 1856.

In 1866, Lydia Rous returned from her work with the Underground Railroad during the American Civil War to become the new superintendent, eventually retiring in 1879.

From 1890 to 1902, Lucy Harrison was identified as the headmistress of The Mount; Harrison endeavoured to bring many of the conventions of the school in line with contemporary norms at the time, particularly those surrounding health and wellbeing.

From 1946 to 1966, Margery Willoughby was the head teacher.

Traditions

The Mount School has many long-standing traditions, including a game event called Games in the Dark which takes place on Bonfire Night. Year 11 students arrange a treasure hunt challenge for the younger students to take part in and it often involves many pranks. College-aged pupils traditionally present two events to the school, one at the end of each term, respectively, the College I Pantomime and the Leavers' Play, at which previous head girls are presented with gifts by their successors.

Curriculum

In 2012, the school introduced the PeaceJam Ambassadors programme into the school curriculum. The school has "pillars of excellence" in the subject areas of sciences, maths, history, music, sports, art, drama and foreign languages.

Sports

The Mount has yearly activities in orienteering and fencing, netball, hockey and swimming in the winter, rounders, tennis and athletics in the summer. College girls are able to choose the sports, lacrosse and whether or not to use a fitness suite.

Creative arts

The Mount is an All Steinway School Extracurricular creative art groups include both Senior and Junior Orchestra, Senior and Junior Choir, a Wind group and a Swing Band for woodwind and brass instruments. The school follows the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art (LAMDA) syllabus and there is usually a school and college play performed every year.

Accolades

In The Times League Table, the school is ranked 2nd by A-level results in the York area. In the Yorkshire Post, the school was ranked in the A-level results table for Yorkshire in 2012.

Notable alumnae

  • Isobel Barnett, Scottish radio and television personality
  • Virginia Beardshaw CBE, Founder Fellow of the King's Fund Institute
  • Dame Jocelyn Bell Burnell, astrophysicist
  • Kate Bellingham, BBC technology presenter and engineer
  • Laura Busson, BBC Radio 2 Commissioning Executive
  • Dame A. S. Byatt, author
  • Ruth Cadbury, politician
  • Margaret Crosfield, palaeontologist, one of the first 13 female fellows of the Geological Society of London in 1919.
  • Dame Judi Dench, actress
  • Dame Margaret Drabble, author
  • Audrey Evans, paediatric oncologist, co-founder of the Ronald McDonald House Charities
  • Professor Ruth Finnegan, social anthropologist
  • Mary Sturge Gretton, historian and magistrate
  • Jean Henderson, lawyer and Liberal Party politician
  • Rachel Howard, artist
  • Noni Jabavu, South African writer and journalist
  • Dame Elaine Kellett-Bowman, former Conservative MP
  • Rose Neill, BBC Broadcaster
  • Nuzo Onoh, British-Nigerian writer
  • Helen Osborne, journalist and critic
  • Tessa Rowntree, aid worker in Czechoslovakia
  • Winifred Sargent, mathematician
  • Anna Southall, director of the National Museums and Galleries of Wales
  • Nicola Spence, biologist
  • Cheryl Taylor, controller of CBBC
  • Kathleen Mary Tillotson, literary scholar
  • Mary Ure, actress
  • Elfrida Vipont, children's author
  • Hilary Wainwright, feminist and Guardian writer
  • Anna Walker, BBC Tomorrow's World and Sky presenter
  • Frances Wilson, English author, academic and critic

References

References

  1. "The Mount School: A Day in the Life of the Mount School Headgirl's Team". Living North Magazine, Late Winter / Early Spring 2013.
  2. (4 March 2020). "The Mount in York becomes North Yorkshire's first all-Steinway school". York Press.
  3. "Girls' Schools Association".
  4. "History & Heritage".
  5. "Tuke, William".
  6. (1888). "Biographical Catalogue: Being an Account of the Lives of Friends and Others Whose Portraits are in the London Friends' Institute". Friends Institute.
  7. "Records of The Mount School, York". Archives Hub.
  8. (2004). "Rous, Lydia (1819–1896), headmistress".
  9. (1916). "A lover of books : the life and literary papers of Lucy Harrison". J. M. Dent and Dutton.
  10. (14 June 2001). "Headmistress held in great respect". York Press.
  11. Living North, Spring 2013
  12. "A Day in the Life of The Mount Headgirls". Living North.
  13. Hayward, Jo. (28 August 2012). "Teaching peace in the classroom". [[The Guardian]].
  14. [https://www.history.org.uk/resources/secondary_resource_7519_283.html]"Quality Mark Case Study" [[Historical Association]]
  15. "Mount School York".
  16. (4 March 2020). "The Mount is North Yorkshire's First All Steinway School". Attain.
  17. "Mount School pupils achieve drama distinctions". UK Bioarding Schools.
  18. Roberts, John. (25 August 2012). "Praise as private school tops table on A-levels". [[Yorkshire Post]].
  19. "'Aunty' and The Mount: the BBC Centenary". The Mount School.
  20. (27 November 1976). "Virginia Beardshaw Is Bride of Andrew Cahn". The New York Times.
  21. (24 August 2021). "York Mount School's Jocelyn Bell Burnell gets Copley Medal". York Press.
  22. (24 September 2012). "Kate Bellingham visits The Mount School". The York Press.
  23. "Laura Busson". Unofficial Scott Mills.
  24. (2006). "The Oxford encyclopedia of British literature". Oxford University Press.
  25. "Ruth Cadbury MP". Bridge India.
  26. O'Donnell, Megan. (2019-06-18). "100 years of female Fellows: Margaret Crosfield".
  27. Billington, Michael. (23 March 1998). "Judi Dench: Nothing like the Dame". The Guardian.
  28. (5 June 2015). "Audrey 90th Birthday Event Video".
  29. "Professor Ruth Finnegan, FBA, Social and Cultural Anthropology, other branches, Elected 1996".
  30. (2020). "Gretton [née Sturge; first married name Henderson], Mary Gertrude Sturge (1871–1961), historian and magistrate".
  31. "Henderson; Jean (1899–1997); barrister and Liberal candidate, 1916–1993". London School of Economics.
  32. "International Women's Day Artists: Rachel Howard". The Mount School.
  33. (22 March 2023). "Noni Jabavu was a pioneering South African writer - a new book shows how relevant she still is". The Conversation.
  34. "Kellett-Bowman, Dame Mary Elaine (nee Kay), DBE". A Dictionary of Methodism.
  35. "Rose Neill". BBCi: Newsline.
  36. "Interview with Nuzo Onoh, author of Unhallowed Graves". Sumiko Saulson.
  37. (9 January 2004). "Helen Osborne". [[The Guardian]].
  38. (16 November 2023). "Tessa Rowntree, 1909–1999, Caring Humanitarian and 'Tough Girl'".
  39. (1981). "Winifred L. C. Sargent". Association for Women in Mathematics (U.S.).
  40. "Anna SOUTHALL".
  41. (15 September 2009). "Professor Nicola Spence appointed as Science City York's new chief executive". [[The Press (York).
  42. Conlan, Tara. (9 December 2012). "Cheryl Taylor interview: CBBC 'is where we want the BBC journey to begin". [[The Guardian]].
  43. "The Papers of Professors Geoffrey and Kathleen Tillotson". Royal Holloway Archives and Special Collections, University of London.
  44. (19 July 2017). "Eye on Millig: The Helensburgh link to tragic actress Mary Ure". Helensburgh Advertiser.
  45. "Elfrida Vipont". The Wee Web: authors and illustrators archive.
  46. "History and Heritage". The Mount School.
  47. (18 October 2014). "Olympians join the team at The Mount School". York Press.
  48. "Frances Wilson". The Booker Prizes.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about The Mount School, York — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report