Kent College, Canterbury
Location
Map
Whitstable Road

,
CT2 9DT

England
Coordinates51°17′36″N 1°03′19″E / 51.2934°N 1.0553°E / 51.2934; 1.0553
Information
TypePublic School
Private day and boarding school
MottoLux Tua Via Mea (Latin: Your Light is My Way)
Religious affiliationMethodist
Established1885
HeadmasterMark Turnbull
Age11 to 18
Enrolmentc. 750
HousesMarlowe, Augustine, Becket, Chaucer
Colours      Maroon, red, navy
PublicationKent College Times
Former PupilsOld Canterburians
HousesBoys: Elfick, Gamon, Guilford. Girls: Austen, Wesley
Websitewww.kentcollege.com

Kent College, Canterbury is a co-educational private school for boarding and day pupils between the ages of 3 months and 18 years. It was founded in 1885, and is a member of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference. Originally established as a boys' public school, it admitted girls into the sixth form in 1973 and since 1975 it has been fully co-educational.

The senior school occupies a semi-rural site of some 70 acres (280,000 m2) on the edge of the city of Canterbury, and also owns the nearby Moat Estate, where there is a farm, managed by staff and pupils, and sports pitches. These are adjacent to Blean Forest.

Its junior school is about a mile away, and provides day school education for boys and girls between the ages of 3 and 11, and boarding for children aged 7 and above.

Kent College Dubai is a secondary campus of the Canterbury school which is located in Meydan City. The college opened in September 2016. It was announced in 2018 that a further overseas campus was to be opened in Hong Kong.

History

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The school was founded in 1885 as the Wesleyan College, Canterbury. Built on land made available by Edward Pillow, a local farmer – recognition of which endures by way of the school's "Pillow Prize" – the foundation stone for the main building was laid in 1887. The architect was Charles Bell. In 1920 Kent College was acquired by the Board of Management for Methodist Residential Schools. Buildings forming a quadrangle were erected to the rear of the main building and the chapel. In 1945, the school became a direct grant grammar school.[1]

School

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Kent College is a Methodist school, although it accepts pupils of all religions. Originally established as a boys' school, it took girls into the sixth form in 1973, and since 1975 it has been fully co-educational. Kent College has thirteen independent "sister schools" in Great Britain, most of which are co-educational though three, including Kent College, Pembury, are girls' schools.

Inspection

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In 2009 the school was subject to an independent school inspection. The report[2] observed with regard to the Senior School that "the school provides an excellent quality of education"; "the school is able to adapt the curriculum to suit the learning needs of individual pupils"; "the school achieves its aims to enable pupils to maximise their potential and to attain high levels of achievement"; "the quality of teaching...is high"; "pastoral care and the provision for the welfare, health and safety of pupils are outstanding"; "links with parents and the community are excellent, as is the boarding education"; and "the school has no major weaknesses".

In 2015 the school was subject to another independent school inspection, in which all areas of the school were judged to be 'excellent in every aspect'.[3]

In 2011 boarding at Kent College was rated as outstanding by OfSted.[4]

List of headmasters

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Mark Turnbull joined the school as Head in January 2022.[citation needed]

Below are listed the former headmasters of Kent College from 1885 to 2021:

  • J. Deaville (1885–1888)
  • L.W. Posnett (1888–1893)
  • J. Smallpage (1893–1897)
  • F.M. Facer (1897–1911)
  • A. Brownscombe (1911–1934)
  • H.J. Prickett (1934–1960)
  • D.E. Norfolk (1960–1977)
  • P.E. Sangster (1977–1979)
  • R.J. Wicks (1980–1995)
  • E.B. Halse (1995–2002)
  • G.G. Carminati (2002–2007)
  • D.J Lamper (2007–2021)
  • M.M Turnbull (2022–present)

Junior School

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The Kent College Infant and Junior School in the village of Harbledown, was formerly the home of the Victorian artist Thomas Sidney Cooper R.A., and was purchased by the Senior School in 1945. It has approximately 220 pupils, and the head is Simon James.[citation needed]

Old Canterburians (notable students)

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References

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  1. ^ Ellen Wilkinson (15 November 1945). "Direct Grant and Independent Schools". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). Vol. 415. United Kingdom: House of Commons. col. 2498–2501.
  2. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 18 December 2010. Retrieved 20 March 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. ^ independent school Inspection
  4. ^ In 2011 OfSted report re boarding[dead link]
  5. ^ Wintle, Angela (16 March 2025). "Simon Scarrow: 'My ex-wife spent money like it was water'". The Telegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 17 March 2025.


Further reading

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  • The Kent College Centenary Book, written by Christopher Wright, a former head of history at the school, traces the 100 years from the founding of Kent College, through the two world wars, the "Great Fire" that destroyed part of the Main Building in 1938, evacuation to Truro, the building programme and the problems of the 1960s, to the co-educational school it was in 1985. ISBN 978-0-7134-4777-4
  • 10,001 Facts about Kent College was the official supplement to Christopher Wright's Centenary Book, and was published in the same year. It was compiled by A.P.L. Slater.
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