Treloar_School

Treloar School

Treloar School

School in Hampshire, UK for students with disabilities


51.163°N 0.9565°W / 51.163; -0.9565

Quick Facts Address, Information ...

Treloar School and College is a non-maintained residential and day special school and college for disabled children and young people, aged from 2 to 25 in Holybourne near Alton, Hampshire, UK.

Aims and governance

The school and college aims to provide enabling education to the disabled, using a combination of teaching, care, occupational therapy, physiotherapy, and speech and language therapy. They are administered by Treloar Trust,[2] a registered charity.[3] The school, college, and trust are often referred to singly or collectively as "Treloar's". The official motto is "Treloar's: Enabling Education".

History

In 1907, the then Lord Mayor of the City of London, Sir William Purdie Treloar, set up a 'Cripples' Fund' as his mayoral appeal. His aim was to build a hospital and school outside the city for children with non-pulmonary tuberculosis. On 13 June 1907 he wrote in his diary that Her Majesty Queen Alexandra 'came to Mansion House to open the Queen's Fete in aid of my Cripples' Fund'. In 1908, the boarding school and hospital were opened in Alton, as The Lord Mayor Treloar Cripples' Hospital and College.[4][5]

In 1948 the National Health Service took over the hospital, and the Lord Mayor Treloar College moved from Alton, to a new site bought by the Trust in 1949 in the nearby village of Froyle. In 1965 the Florence Treloar School for Girls was opened in the village of Holybourne. In 1978, the two schools were combined under the Lord Mayor Treloar College name, with the Lower School housed at Froyle and the Upper School at Holybourne.[5]

During the 1970s and 1980s, the boys' school offered specialist care for haemophiliacs. With the introduction of Factor VIII treatment, between 1974 and 1987 many were injected with Factor VIII imported from the United States and manufactured from contaminated non-heat-treated blood plasma, and were infected with HIV and hepatitis. 90 out of 122 have since died. In 2019, a public inquiry into the National Health Service's use of contaminated blood products began taking evidence from those affected, and in 2021, heard statements from former Treloar's pupils who were infected there.[6][7] In 2022, a lawsuit against the school was filed by survivors.[8]

In 1995 the Holybourne campus became the Lord Mayor Treloar National Specialist College of Further Education. In 2000 this was shortened to Treloar College. The Froyle campus became Treloar School.[5] After the launching of an appeal, Vision Treloar's, in 2010, the School, College, and Trust were consolidated on a new campus on the Holybourne site, that was opened in 2012 by Sophie, Countess of Wessex, who is the Trust's Royal Patron.[5][9][10]

In 2004, the College became the first specialist college to be awarded 'outstanding' for the quality of its provision, leadership and management by Ofsted.[citation needed] In 2017, it was awarded 'Beacon College' status by the Department for Education and Science.[11] The school received an 'inadequate' Ofsted assessment in 2011.[12] It was rated 'outstanding' in 2016[13] and 2018.[5]

Headteachers and principals

Headteachers have included :

  • 1953–1972: George Heywood
  • 1972–1974: Johnston Smith
  • 1974–1990: Alec Macpherson
  • 1990–1997: Hartley Heard
  • 1996–2006: Neil Clark
  • 2006–2007: Heather Boardman
  • 2007–2011: Harry Dicks
  • 2011–2014: Melissa Farnham
  • 2018–: Mia Dodsworth

College principals have included:

  • 1994–1995: Jane Lones
  • 1995–2006: Graham Jowett
  • 2006–2008: Pat Teague
  • 2014–2016: John Stone (Principal), School and College - Jo McSherrie
  • 2016–current: Martin Ingram

Sport

Treloar School has built a reputation of developing the sporting abilities of young people with physical disabilities. Many students continue their sporting progress at Treloar College and beyond. Particular strengths are in athletics,[14] with many students showing Paralympic potential, boccia, and swimming. Many former students represented Great Britain at the 2012 Paralympics in London. A sports facility accommodating basketball, chair football, hockey, and tennis was opened in 2014.[15]

Notable alumni


References

  1. "Accreditation". Archived from the original on 27 April 2009. Retrieved 23 March 2009.
  2. Treloar Trust, Charity Commission
  3. Chronology, Treloar's, retrieved 21 June 2021.
  4. "Infected blood scandal: ex-pupils and relatives sue Hampshire school". the Guardian. 23 January 2022. Retrieved 23 January 2022.
  5. "Countess opens campus", Alton Post Gazette, 28 May 2012.
  6. Hayley Todd, "Sophie, Countess of Wessex visits The Treloar Trust in Hampshire", The Crown Chronicles, 9 June 2019.
  7. Gareth A. Davies, "Charlotte Craddock shows the way in School Sports Matters Awards", Daily Telegraph, 2 March 2009, retrieved 21 June 2021.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Treloar_School, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.