Woolpit House was built
Woolpit House was built by Sir Henry Doulton of the Doulton pottery family in 1885. Sir Henry’s biographer, Edmund Gosse, wrote that he had been ‘permanently bewitched’ by the beauty of the spot in which he chose to build his house. ‘He announced, with a conviction which he maintained to the last, that there was more beauty of scenery in the parish of Ewhurst than was to be found, equally composed and combined, in any other parish in England. When gently reminded that he had not seen all the English parishes, he admitted it, and said that, after seeing Ewhurst, one would not want to see them.’
On this inspiring site, the Royal Air Force Benevolent Fund set out to create a new school with an enlightened approach to education. While scholarship was to be pursued, the School had an inclusive ethos from its earliest days and placed emphasis on personal and social, as well as academic, development. The job description for the first teachers stressed: ‘Music, Drama and Sport together with the rudiments of good manners, courtesy and sportsmanship will be the hallmark of the School.’