Hoe Bridge School

Coordinates: 51°18′29″N 0°32′12″W / 51.3081°N 0.5368°W / 51.3081; -0.5368
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Hoe Bridge School
Address
Map
Hoe Place, Old Woking Road

Mixed
Age3 to 13
Enrolment486 (as of 2014)
Websitewww.hoebridgeschool.co.uk

Hoe Bridge School is an independent co-educational, pre-prep and prep school in

Year 6
in 1999. The school is based in a seventeenth century house and is set in its own grounds in Woking, Surrey.

Site and facilities

Hoe Place is a former mansion which is home to the Hoe Bridge Prep department. It dates from 1680 and was a favourite retreat of Lady Castlemaine, a mistress of King Charles II.[citation needed]

The chapel, which houses teaching and music rooms, dates back to 1850 and has an original ice house in the gardens. The mansion remained a private residence until the 1920s, when Hoe Place Preparatory School was established in 1928 and in turn, became St. Michael's School in 1964.

Hoe Bridge School itself was formed in 1986 when St Michael's School merged with Allen House Preparatory School which had been founded at Box Grove near Guildford, then on part of the present Royal Grammar School site.[2] In 2019 the school opened a new performing arts facility.[3]

A Senior School building is planned to be opened by 2026[4] in order to expand the school to accommodate 13-16 year olds throughout GCSEs.

Activities

The school sponsors a girls' field hockey team.[5]

Notable alumni

References

  1. ^ ISL, Online (17 October 2014). "Hoe Bridge School ISL Inspection Report". isi.net/school. Retrieved 25 July 2020.
  2. ^ HoeBridge. "School Estate & Facilities". hoebridgeschool.co.uk. Retrieved 25 July 2020.
  3. ^ "Dermot O’Leary opens new centre at Hoe Bridge School". Woking News and Mail, October 17, 2019
  4. ^ "Estate Map and Senior School details". hoebridgeschool.co.uk, October 30, 2023
  5. ^ "Hoe Bridge School's hockey girls reach national finals". "Surrey Live, By Richard Spiller, 12 NOV 2015
  6. ^ "Comedian Rufus Hound on Surrey school days, theatre and politics". Surrey Life, 02 August 2017

External links