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  • Tudor Hall

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    Tudor Hall is unique in so many ways. It is a thriving, vibrant, full boarding and day school for girls aged 11 to 18, based in Wykham Park near Banbury, which definitely ‘punches above its weight.

    The academic results are excellent, produced by young women who have been selected for places at the school not just on their academic ability but also on their strengths. The girls are not of one type and this creates a community where everybody recognizes and celebrates its members as individuals.
    Staff work with pupils to ensure that each one is encouraged and supported to do her best. The girls are ambitious and determined to make the most of the many opportunities in school and further afield. The recent introduction of our Aim Higher program across the school year groups affords the girls a range of academic opportunities beyond the classroom, allowing them to pursue their intellectual curiosity whilst developing psychological and physical resilience.
    Founded by the Revd TW and Mrs. Todd in Salisbury in 1850, by 1865 it had moved to the Red House, a mock Tudor mansion in Forest Hill, south London. From the first, it offered an intellectually stimulating and challenging education with distinguished professors visiting the School as lecturers.
    In 1908, the School moved from London to more spacious, rural accommodation at Chislehurst in Kent. It was there, in 1910, that Nesta Inglis became a pupil. Years later, when the school nearly 'died' in 1935 (it closed down for one term), it was Nesta Inglis who came to the rescue, re-opening it on 1 October (the School Birthday). She began to nurse it back to life and health, moving it to Burnt Norton, near Chipping Campden, on the outbreak of war in 1939.
    The war years at Burnt Norton proved to be happy and successful, positively inspired by the problems and restrictions of wartime. The School grew roots in the area, and the family atmosphere – always a feature of Tudor Hall – was intensified by the fact that some of the girls, with their parents, remained at Burnt Norton during the holidays to escape the air raids so there was much 'bonding' between children, staff, and parents.
    Burnt Norton was too small to provide a permanent home for Tudor Hall. In 1943 Nesta Inglis came across Wykham Park, and in February 1944 the purchase was completed, though it was not until January 1946 that the School moved from Burnt Norton.
    As well as the main building and 'Old House', in 1943 Wykham Park comprised two lodges, a bungalow, and four other cottages, all set in 46 acres of attractive grounds rolling away towards the south and west.

    Tudor Hall
    Founding year: 1850
    Website: Visit Website
    Number of students: 325
    Genders Accepted: Girls
    Leadership: Ms. Wendy Griffiths (Headmistress)
    Address: Tudor Hall, Wykham Park, Banbury, Oxfordshire, OX16 9UR, United Kingdom



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