Latymer Upper School is a public school in Hammersmith, London, England, on King Street. It derives from a charity school, and is part of the same 1624 Latymer Foundation, from a bequest by the English merchantEdward Latymer. There is a junior school on site, but most students are admitted to the Upper School through examination and interview at the age of eleven. The school's academic results place it among the top schools nationally.
Having opened on its King Street site in 1895, the school spent a period of time in the mid-20th century as a direct grant grammar school, before becoming independent with the system's abolition in the 1970s. Remaining single-sex until 1996, when Sixth Form admissions were opened to girls, the school transitioned to full co-education in the first decade of the 21st century.
Latymer's alumni include members of both Houses of Parliament, winners of Olympic medals, actors, musicians, and many figures in the arts and sciences.
Latymer Upper School has its origins in the will of Edward Latymer, who left a bequest to educate "eight poore boyes" of Hammersmith.[1] This was intended "to keep them from idle and vagrant courses, and also to instruct them in some part of God's true religion".[5] He owned Butterwick Manor and the land round about in Hammersmith. Most of Butterwick Manor House was demolished in 1836, except for one wing of the building, Bradmore House. This had been converted into a separate house in 1736; it survives in rebuilt form[a] on Queen Caroline Street, Hammersmith.[7]
In 1628, a school, partially funded by the estate of Dr. Thomas Edwards, who had died in round 1618, was built for the Latymer boys in the churchyard in Fulham. In 1648, the school moved to a new building, paid for by a Mr. Bull and a Mr. Palmer, in Hammersmith. This served until around 1657, when a charity school for the parish was founded in the churchyard of St Paul's, Hammersmith. At around the same time, and certainly before 1689, a girls' school was created, perhaps in the same building.[1]
The charity school was replaced in 1755 with a new building. It accommodated 25 girls and 20 boys. The school was expanded in 1819 to 50 girls and 80 boys. The girls' school was later closed, and the boys' school increased to 100 pupils.[1][9] In 1863, the boys' school moved to a new building between King Street East (now Hammersmith Road) and Great Church Lane, a little to the east of Hammersmith Broadway.[1]
Painting of Latymer Charity School (right) in churchyard of St Paul's, Hammersmith, between 1756 and 1862
The Latymer Charity School was in the centre of Hammersmith, beside St Paul's church. The later Latymer Foundation School was to the east; the current school is to the west.[1][10]
In 1878 it was agreed to build a new school in Hammersmith, with three of the governors to be appointed by the local borough council, and two by the London School Board.[11]
The bishop of London, Frederick Temple, opened Latymer Upper School on its new site on King Street in 1895. The old buildings were used for Latymer Lower School, an "elementary" or primary school[1] The school taught boys aged up to 16; the fees were £5,[c] and boys from local schools could apply for scholarships.[11] The range of subjects taught included practical mechanics and experimental chemistry.[11] The school quickly grew to 300 pupils by 1880. The school was extended in 1901, allowing the total number of pupils to rise to 450.[1]
Latymer was further enlarged in 1930 by extending the main building to the south. The buildings at the Weltje Road and King Street corner were purchased and adapted, with the addition of a biology laboratory and the arrangement of a top floor room as a chapel; this was consecrated in 1938.[1] The school grew substantially in 1951 to over 1000 boys with the acquisition of Rivercourt House, beside the River Thames, extending the Latymer site southwards.[1] In 1957, the Industrial Fund for the Advancement of Science in Schools provided a grant which enabled the school to add new physics laboratories, completed in 1961; the school had grown to 1,150 by 1964.[1]
In 1945, Latymer became a direct grant grammar school, meaning that it took both state-funded and fee-paying pupils. Its head joined the Headmasters' Conference.[1][13]
The Direct Grant system was abolished in 1976, removing government funding,[14][15]
Latymer became a public school, meaning that students normally paid fees.[3][16] and the school switched to the Assisted Places Scheme, retaining a mix of partly or wholly funded places and fee-paying pupils.[17]
Latymer Prep School is a junior school for pupils from age 7 upwards on the same site, in Rivercourt House, by the River Thames. It was founded in 1951 to prepare pupils for Latymer Upper School.[18][19]
In 1996, the Sixth Form became co-educational.[20] In 2004, the main school started on the same path, with the introduction of girls into Year 7; as those pupils moved up the school, it became fully co-educational by 2008.[21]
In 2018, the school won three Times Educational Supplement awards, for "Independent School of the Year", "Independent-State School Partnerships", and "Senior School of the Year".[22]
Each year, the school gathers in the nearby church of St Paul's, Hammersmith to celebrate "Founder's Day" in honour of Edward Latymer.[3][23]
The 1895 building
The north doorway, with Edward Latymer's crest and ornamental stonework
Tuition for 2024 was £8,633 per term,[d] plus other mandatory and optional fees.[25]
Latymer offers a bursary programme, with assistance ranging between a quarter and the whole of the fees, according to need. One pupil in five received a bursary in 2022. The school states that it intends to increase this to one in four and make the school "needs-blind", meaning that no applicant who passed the entrance exam would be prevented from joining the school through inability to pay fees.[26]
The school provides many clubs and societies, including in 2024 a variety of sports, literature, dance, singing, debating, various technologies, philosophy, and photography.[27]
The school participates in the Duke of Edinburgh Award scheme.[28] The school runs day trips during the school year, and it offers all students a trip from a choice of some 30 trips run every year in 'Activities Week'. These include outdoor activities such as camping and trekking, and cultural activities and sports.[29]
The Latymer Theatre and Arts Centre, opened in 2000, includes a 300-seat galleried box theatre named the Edward Latymer Theatre and an art gallery.[35]
The Latymer Performing Arts Centre contains a drama studio, rehearsal rooms, and a 100-seat recital hall.[36]
A new Science and Library building was completed in 2010.[37]
The Sports Centre was opened in March 2016; it has a six-lane swimming pool, basketball hoops, badminton markings, cricket nets, a fitness suite, and a bouldering wall, and serves as an area for pupils to take their examinations.[38]
The school's playing fields are about a mile and a half away, on Wood Lane. The playing fields were used for training by the England Rugby Team in 2020.[39][40]
The armorial bearings of the founder, Edward Latymer, included his Latin motto, Paulatim ergo certe ('Slowly therefore surely'). The motto puns on his surname, using an "i" in "(pau)latim er(go)", as Latin lacks the letter "y".[41] In 2004 the school badge was simplified, dropping the motto, and retaining only the chevron on a blue field, with a single crosslet symbol.[42] The crest was changed again to a form more like the original one in September 2020.[41]
Latymer Upper School was rated in 2012 by the Tatler Schools Guide as one of the highest academically performing schools in the UK.[43] Pupils sit an examination in English and mathematics to enter the school.[44] There were 29 Oxbridge places in 2021, and several pupils went to US universities such as Brown, Columbia, Dartmouth, Harvard, Princeton, Stanford, and Cornell.[45] GCSE and A-Level results over five years are summarised in the table.[46]
^Wheatley, William (1936). The History of Edward Latymer and his Foundations. Including the life of William Latymer, Dean of Peterborough. Cambridge University Press. OCLC811588851.
^"Latymer Foundation at Hammersmith Consolidated Report and Financial Statements". Charity Commission. 31 August 2018. Archived from the original on 7 December 2023. Retrieved 6 December 2023. The Head of Latymer Upper School is a member of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference, and the Principal of the Latymer Preparatory School is a member of the Independent Association of Prep Schools. The Governing Body is a member of the Association of Governing Bodies of Independent Schools.
^"September: House of Lords Dinner". Latymerian. January 2016. p. 6. Retrieved 18 March 2024. Speeches and toasts were given by our host, Lord WHITTY ([matriculated at Latymer] 1961)
^ abCrace, John (17 April 2001). "My Inspiration". The Guardian. I played cricket for Ealing and Middlesex juniors and was captain of the Latymer Upper School team. Hugh Grant was in the same side, but I rather had him down as a cardboard cutout cricketer.
^"Who's Who". Latymer-upper.org. Archived from the original on 14 March 2012. Retrieved 31 December 2011.
^"Home to Old Latymerians". Hale End Athletic Football Club. Archived from the original on 19 March 2024. Retrieved 19 March 2024. Based in Twickenham, our guests today represent the old boys association of the Latymer school in west London. ... It's alumni includes jazzer Cliff Townshend (Pete's dad)
^Rowland, Steve (30 August 2019). "RANELAGH HARRIERS E-NEWS # 555". Ranelagh Harriers. Archived from the original on 18 March 2024. Retrieved 18 March 2024. Part of his teaching practice was at Latymer Upper School, and he helped to introduce a number of Latymer boys to Ranelagh, including the 14 year-old Hugh Jones.
^Landwehr, Richard (2012). Britisches Freikorps: British Volunteers of the Waffen-SS 1943–1945 (3 ed.). Vermont: Merriam Press. p. 77. ISBN978-1-3127-6244-2.
^Wisby, Emma; Brown, Andrew (2020). "Geoff Whitty: A Biographical Note". Knowledge, Policy and Practice in Education and the Struggle for Social Justice(PDF). UCL Press. p. 279. ISBN978-1-78277-305-4. Geoff grew up in the outer suburbs of London. He won a Middlesex county scholarship to attend Latymer Upper School in Hammersmith, which was then a Direct Grant grammar school and among the most academically elite secondary schools in the country.