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    Calderstones School is an English comprehensive school located opposite Calderstones Park on Harthill Road in the Liverpool suburb of Allerton.
    The school was founded in 1921 as Quarry Bank High School for Boys and its first intake of 225 pupils was on 11 January 1922. The first headmaster of the school was R. F. Bailey (an old Etonian), who formed the school on the principles of public school houses. Subsequently, the first year boys' house was named Bailey. The current headteacher is Lee Ratcliffe.
    The school has several notable former pupils, including founding Beatles member John Lennon, music producer Guy Chambers, the architect Sir James Stirling and Count William-Alexander of Monpezat, A member of the Danish Royal family.


    History


    In September 1967, Quarry Bank High School for Boys merged with neighbouring Calder High School for Girls (a girls' grammar school, also on Harthill Road) and nearby Morrison Boys' Secondary Modern, and adopted the name Quarry Bank Comprehensive School. The same year saw the abolition of the school's house system, whereby the pupils were divided between Mersey, Esmeduna, Wavertree, Sefton, Allerton, Childwall, Aigburth and Woolton houses.
    In 1985, the school merged with Aigburth Vale High School, Aigburth, which led to the school operating at four sites with 1,800 pupils; it was also then that it adopted its current name. Aigburth Vale was previously a grammar school with around 600 girls. In 1989, the school divested itself of its Aigburth and Morrison facilities, retaining only the original Calder House and Quarry Bank estates. A new building to replace the Morrison wing was built within the existing school site. The former Morrison site is now home to a Tesco superstore on Mather Avenue in Allerton. The site of Aigburth Vale High School was redeveloped as flats.


    Refurbishment


    In 2001, the school underwent a major refurbishment as part of a Private Finance Initiative scheme. The entire site was overhauled, with the old Calder Wing largely demolished, leaving only Calder House which now houses the sixth form. A new Arts Wing was built to house the English, MFL, Arts and Music departments. The former Quarry Wing was divided into two separate buildings. One is Quarry House which houses the ICT and History departments, and the main office for the school. The main classroom core of the Quarry Wing is now known as the Science Wing and houses a large number of science labs. The school was awarded 'Specialist Science Status' in 2001, which allows it to provide first class science facilities for its pupils.


    Notable former pupils




    = Quarry Bank High School for Boys

    =
    John Ashton, academic in public health, Regional Director of Public Health for North-West England
    Rt. Rev. Jonathan Bailey, Bishop of Derby from 1995 to 2005
    Clive Barker, film writer, director and producer (Hellraiser, Candyman), books (Weaveworld, The Hellbound Heart), comic books (Razorline) and video games (Clive Barker's Undying, Clive Barker's Jericho)
    Brian Barwick, chief executive of the Football Association from 2005 to 2008
    David Basnett, trade union leader
    Michael Batty, Bartlett Professor of Planning at University College London
    Stephen Bayley, architecture writer and chief executive of the Design Museum from 1986 to 1989
    Edmund (Ted) Bellamy, professor of Physics at Westfield College, London from 1960 to 1984
    Doug Bradley, actor, who played the 'Pinhead' character in Hellraiser
    Peter Cheeseman, theatre director, pioneer of theatre-in-the-round and documentary drama
    Steve Coppell, footballer and football manager
    Les Dennis, comedian and TV personality
    Alan Deyermond, professor of Spanish at Queen Mary and Westfield College, London from 1969 to 1997
    Peter Goldsmith (Lord Goldsmith of Allerton), who was appointed as the Labour government's Attorney General in 2001
    John Lennon, rock musician, singer/songwriter, author and peace activist, and one of the founding members of The Beatles (Lennon named his first band The Quarrymen, after the school's original name)
    John Lewis, archdeacon of North-West Europe from 1982 to 1993
    Derek Nimmo, actor
    Joe Royle, footballer and football manager
    Labour cabinet ministers Peter Shore and Bill Rodgers, who adopted the name "Quarry Bank" as part of his baronial title
    Leo Skeete, footballer in the 1970s and 1980s
    Sir James Stirling, architect


    = Calder High School for Girls

    =
    Margaret Ursula Jones, archaeologist
    Judith Kelly, artistic director of London's Southbank Centre and Master of St Catherine's College, Oxford from 2025
    Diana Walford, haematologist and Principal of Mansfield College, Oxford from 2002 to 2011


    = Aigburth Vale High School for Girls

    =
    Kate Ellis, crime fiction author
    Bel Mooney (briefly), journalist
    Elisabeth Sladen, actress (Doctor Who, The Sarah Jane Adventures)


    = Quarry Bank Comprehensive School

    =
    Susan Bickley, mezzo-soprano and opera singer
    Guy Chambers (Sixth Form), songwriter
    Andy Merrifield, urban theorist
    John Power, former member of the band the La's and founding member of Cast


    = Calderstones Community Comprehensive School

    =
    Marcus Holden, international rugby player, Cyprus Rugby National Team
    Geoff Rowley, skateboarder, co-owner of Flip Skateboards
    "Zombina" and "Doc Horror", musicians in Zombina and the Skeletones


    References




    External links


    Media related to Calderstones School at Wikimedia Commons

    Official website

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