Wheatley_Park_School

Wheatley Park School

Wheatley Park School

Academy in Holton, Oxfordshire, England


Wheatley Park School (WPS) is a co-educational state secondary school of approximately 1,150 pupils situated in Holton, Oxfordshire, England about 8 miles (13 km) east of Oxford. The school has been an academy since May 2014. The school is most notable for producing the United Kingdom's former Prime Minister, Theresa May and the alternative rock band Supergrass.

Quick Facts Location, Coordinates ...

The school

A grammar school for east Oxfordshire, Holton Park Girls' Grammar School, was founded on the site in 1949.[1] In 1971 Wheatley Park Comprehensive School was opened at two sites with senior and junior divisions, one of which was situated in Wheatley. These two divisions consolidated in the early 1980s on the present site at Holton Park, although the school retained the name Wheatley Park School. The main complex of modern school buildings is located in the former parkland of a Regency house built about 1807.[2]

History of the site

Regency (or Georgian) manor house.

The site was used as a military hospital (specialising in brain damage related injuries) during the Second World War for the US and subsequently British military, but the huts housing the hospital were removed from the site in 2006. It was known as Holton Park Hospital or Wheatley Military Hospital. The US 97th General Hospital officially took command of the hospital on 22 April 1944 in preparation to treat casualties from D-Day and after. The first train of casualties arrived 6 days after D-Day. By 2 August 1944, 1,449 battle casualties had been treated at the hospital. The 97th departed Wheatley on 30 June 1945 and to set up a facility in France.[3]

On the site is an Oak Tree, thought to be up to 1000 years old. It was planted in Anglo Saxon times.[4]

Notable former pupils


Holton Park Girls' Grammar School


References

  1. Chipperfield, Joh (8 June 2009). "Girls were taught in idyllic surroundings at Holton Park". Oxford Mail. Oxford.
  2. Holton Park Archive accessed 13 July 2016
  3. "Wheatley Park School's 1,000-year-old tree 'significantly damaged' in fire". Oxford Mail. 10 January 2019. Retrieved 30 January 2022.
  4. "Notable Alumni". Wheatley Park School. Retrieved 30 January 2022.
  5. "Mallalieu, Baroness Ann, QC, Life Peer". International Year Book and Statesmen's Who's Who. Retrieved 30 January 2022.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Wheatley_Park_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.