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Rydal Penrhos - Wikipedia

Private day school in Colwyn Bay, Conwy, Wales

Rydal Penrhos School

Pwllycrochan Avenue


Colwyn Bay , Conwy ,

LL29 7BT

Wales

Type Private day school Motto Veritas Scientia Fides
(Truth, Knowledge, Faith) Religious affiliation(s) Methodist Established 1880 (Penrhos) and 1885 (Rydal Mount)
1999 (mergers) Founder Frederick Payne (Penrhos)
Thomas Osborn (Rydal Mount) Department for Education URN 401972 Tables Chair Deborah McKinnel Principal Tom Hutchinson Chaplain Reverend Rob Beamish Gender Co-educational Age 2 to 18 Enrolment 325 Houses Morgan
Osborn
Payne
Wesley Colour(s) Black, amber & cyan Alumni Old Rydalians Website www.rydalpenrhos.com

Rydal Penrhos School is a private day school in Colwyn Bay, North Wales. It is the only Methodist school in the independent sector in Wales.[1] It is located on multiple sites around the town with a site in the neighbouring village of Rhos-on-Sea where it keeps its watersports equipment for easy access to the beach.

The school started life as five separate institutions:

In 1887, Payne founded St John's Methodist Church on Pwllycrochan Avenue, which was used regularly by both Rydal and Penrhos.[2] In 2010, the stewardship of St John's was passed to Rydal Penrhos, which needed more space for school worship and special events.

In 2020 it was announced that the school would no longer offer a boarding option from 2021 and would operate as a day school only.[3]

A degree of uniformity of design in central Colwyn Bay owes much to a single architect, Sidney Colwyn Foulkes, whose concept has been followed by other architects. His father designed St John's Methodist Church, and he was responsible for many of the school's buildings, as well as others in the vicinity, and further afield in North Wales. This led to the area that includes the school being designated as Colwyn Bay's first conservation area.

Evacuation of Rydal School[edit]

During the Second World War, the main campus of Rydal was occupied by the Ministry of Food. The school was evacuated to Oakwood Park, a small country estate two miles (three kilometres) west of the town of Conwy. The school returned to Colwyn Bay in 1946.

Evacuation of Penrhos College[edit]

During the Second World War, the Penrhos College site was taken over by the government for Ministry of Food use. The Duke of Devonshire, anticipating that schoolgirls would make better tenants than soldiers, offered Chatsworth House for the use of the school. The contents of the house were packed away in eleven days and 300 girls and their teachers moved in for a six-year stay. The whole of the house was used, including the state rooms, which were turned into dormitories. Condensation from the breath of the sleeping girls caused fungus to grow behind some of the pictures. The house was not very comfortable for so many people, with a shortage of hot water, but there were compensations, such as skating on the Canal Pond. The girls grew vegetables in the garden as a contribution to the war effort.

Rydal Preparatory School merged with Penrhos Junior School in 1995 to become Rydal Penrhos Preparatory School, which, in 2003, underwent a further merger with Lyndon School, which retained its name until 2010. The former Penrhos Junior and Lyndon campuses were disposed of and staff and students were relocated to the larger existing Rydal Preparatory School campus.

In 1999, Rydal School and Penrhos College agreed to merge as Rydal Penrhos School. Initially they were run as three separate divisions: "preparatory", "girls" and "co-educational", reflecting the three formerly separate incarnations. The Penrhos College campus was eventually closed down and sold for redevelopment, and its pupils moved to the main Rydal campus, the divisions being amalgamated into a single entity. The merger and integration was not without controversy, not least over the sale of the former Penrhos site and the restructuring of the staff.

Introduction of the International Baccalaureate[edit]

In 2004, the school began to offer the International Baccalaureate programme of study in its sixth form years, as a parallel alternative to the A-level programme that was already being offered. This led to an increase in the number of pupils attending the school from overseas countries such as Ukraine, Belgium, Canada, Germany, France, Kenya, Nigeria, Peru, Russia and the Czech Republic. The school stopped teaching the International Baccalaureate programme when it ceased to offer boarding, and currently offers A-levels and Cambridge Technical courses to its sixth-form students.[4]

First-class cricket[edit]

The school's cricket pitch was used as the venue for a first-class match between Wales and the touring South Africans in 1929.[5] The three-day match, played on 10–12 June 1929, resulted in a 10-run victory for the South Africans and saw Bob Catterall of South Africa (117) and William Bates of Wales (102) record centuries.[6] Denbighshire later played a single Minor Counties Championship match against Northumberland at the ground in 1934.[7]


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