Educational Establishments
Royal Grammar School
Old school - new school
Maintaining the grounds at the Royal Grammar School Worcester holds unique pressure, not just due to the acreage but because the school is the sixth-oldest in the world. Jake Barrow meets Sean Lloyd, Head of Grounds and Gardens at the long-established school
T
he Royal Grammar School Worcester (RGS) traces its founding to the year 685, when Bosel, the first Anglican Christian Bishop of Worcester, set up a college with the aim of preparing children to follow the principles of monasticism, although it has been described as ‘secular’ in nature.
Lands in Herefordshire still belong to the school, but its main sites in Worcester have been in its possession since 1562. These were purchased by ‘The Six Masters’, a consortium of wealthy and powerful school managers who were formed due to the Royal Charter bestowed
76 I PC APRIL/MAY 2018
the year before by Queen Elizabeth I. This was followed by another charter, from Queen Victoria in 1869, which officially dubbed the school ‘Royal’.
Henry VIII, in typically rebellious fashion, founded a rival Worcester school in 1541 - and named it after himself. The King’s School continues to be a fierce sporting and academic competitor for RGS. One of RGS Worcester’s ex-properties in the city is the Pitchcroft, which is now the local racecourse, whilst the current grounds spread over five sites at three constituent schools, comprising 76 acres.
These are maintained by a team of seven (just four of these being groundspersons),
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