North London Collegiate School
Encyclopedia
North London Collegiate School is an independent day school for girls founded in 1850 in Camden Town
Camden Town
-Economy:In recent years, entertainment-related businesses and a Holiday Inn have moved into the area. A number of retail and food chain outlets have replaced independent shops driven out by high rents and redevelopment. Restaurants have thrived, with the variety of culinary traditions found in...

, and now in the London Borough of Harrow
London Borough of Harrow
The London Borough of Harrow is a London borough of north-west London. It borders Hertfordshire to the north and other London boroughs: Hillingdon to the west, Ealing to the south, Brent to the south-east and Barnet to the east.-History:...

.

The Good Schools Guide
The Good Schools Guide
The Good Schools Guide is a guide to British schools .- Overview :The guide is compiled by a team of editors, which according to the official website "comprises some 50 editors, writers, researchers and contributors; mostly parents but some former headteachers." The website states that it is...

called the school an "Academically stunning outer London school in a glorious setting which, in 2003, demonstrated its refusal to rest on its laurels by introducing the IB. Ideal for girls confident of their academic ability with an appetite for all the other opportunities too."

History

The North London Collegiate School now admits girls from the ages of 4 to 18 and was founded by pioneering girls' educator Frances Mary Buss in 1850. Frances Mary Buss is in the list of top ten greatest women of all time, according to The Times. It is generally recognised as the first independent girls' school in the United Kingdom
United Kingdom
The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern IrelandIn the United Kingdom and Dependencies, other languages have been officially recognised as legitimate autochthonous languages under the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages...

, as it was the first to offer girls the same educational opportunities as boys, although the Red Maids' School was established in 1634. It is situated at the ends of Canons Drive in Edgware
Edgware
Edgware is an area in London, situated north-northwest of Charing Cross. It forms part of both the London Borough of Barnet and the London Borough of Harrow. The area is identified in the London Plan as one of 35 major centres in Greater London....

 and has a rich history behind the location.

George Bernard Shaw
George Bernard Shaw
George Bernard Shaw was an Irish playwright and a co-founder of the London School of Economics. Although his first profitable writing was music and literary criticism, in which capacity he wrote many highly articulate pieces of journalism, his main talent was for drama, and he wrote more than 60...

's mother was a director of music at the school, followed in 1908 by J.B. Manson
J.B. Manson
James Bolivar Manson was an artist and worked at the Tate gallery for 25 years, being its Director 1930–1938. In the Tate's own evaluation he was the "least successful" of their Directors...

's wife, Lilian, whose ambitious revival of Purcell
Henry Purcell
Henry Purcell – 21 November 1695), was an English organist and Baroque composer of secular and sacred music. Although Purcell incorporated Italian and French stylistic elements into his compositions, his legacy was a uniquely English form of Baroque music...

's Dido and Aeneas in 1910 gained coverage in The Times
The Times
The Times is a British daily national newspaper, first published in London in 1785 under the title The Daily Universal Register . The Times and its sister paper The Sunday Times are published by Times Newspapers Limited, a subsidiary since 1981 of News International...

.

North London Collegiate is arguably the most academically successful school in England, having been placed in the top five in the Daily Telegraph exam league tables every year for over a decade. It has been an International Baccalaureate World School since October 2003. The first year that it offered the International Baccalaureate, it had the highest average mark in the country for five consecutive years and five of its girls were among only ninety students worldwide to score the maximum possible IB score of 45 marks. North London Collegiate School is now opening two schools in Korea, Jeju
Jeju-do
Jeju-do is the only special autonomous province of South Korea, situated on and coterminous with the country's largest island. Jeju-do lies in the Korea Strait, southwest of Jeollanam-do Province, of which it was a part before it became a separate province in 1946...

, as part of its franchising scheme. Alumnae of North London are called Old North Londoners, or ONL's. The school has a friendly and banterous rivalry with St.Paul's, but usually is on top on the tables.

Headmistresses and dates of headship

  • Frances Mary Buss (1850 – December 1894)
  • Sophie Bryant
    Sophie Bryant
    Sophie Bryant was an Anglo-Irish mathematician, educator, feminist and activist.She was the daughter of Revd Dr William Willock DD, Fellow and Tutor of Trinity College, Dublin...

     (1895 – 1918)
  • Isabella Drummond (1918 – 1940, previously Head of Camden School
    Camden School for Girls
    The Camden School for Girls is a comprehensive secondary school for girls, with a co-educational sixth form, in the London Borough of Camden in North London. It has about one thousand students of ages eleven to eighteen, and specialist-school status as a Music College...

    )
  • Eileen Harold (1941 – 1944)
  • Kitty Anderson
    Kitty Anderson
    Kitty Anderson DBE BA PhD was Headmistress of North London Collegiate School from 1945-1965.-Early life and education:...

     DBE (1945 – 1965)
  • Madeline McLauchlan (1965 – December 1985, previously at Henrietta Barnett School
    Henrietta Barnett School
    The Henrietta Barnett School is a voluntary-aided grammar school for girls in Hampstead Garden Suburb in London The Good Schools Guide called the school "One of the best academic state schools in the country, providing a gentle, inspiring education in a wonderful setting for very clever...

    )
  • Joan Clanchy (1986 – 1997)
  • Bernice McCabe (1997 - present, previously at Chelmsford County High School)

Noted alumnae


  • Edith Aitken (first headmistress of Pretoria High School for Girls
    Pretoria High School for Girls
    Pretoria High School for Girls, also called Girls High or PHSG, is a public, fee charging, English medium high school for girls located in Hatfield, Pretoria, Gauteng, South Africa.-Second Anglo-Boer War:...

    )
  • Barbara Amiel
    Barbara Amiel
    Barbara Joan Estelle Amiel, Baroness Black of Crossharbour is a British-Canadian journalist, writer, and socialite. She is also the wife of former media baron and convicted felon Conrad Black.-Early life:...

     (journalist)
  • Peggy Angus
    Peggy Angus
    Peggy Angus was the popular name of Margaret MacGregor Angus. a 20th century artist and educator.-Early life:...

     (artist, tile and wallpaper designer)
  • Agnes Arber
    Agnes Arber
    Agnes Robertson Arber was a renowned British plant morphologist and anatomist, historian of botany and philosopher of biology. She was born in London but lived most of her life in Cambridge, including the last 51 years of her life...

     [née Robertson] (1879–1960) (botanist)
  • Alice Beer
    Alice Beer
    Alice Beer is an English television presenter, and was educated at the North London Collegiate School, a girls' independent school in Edgware, Middlesex.-Career:...

     (TV presenter)
  • Tina Brain (French horn player)
  • Alison Britton (ceramicist)
  • Eleanor Bron
    Eleanor Bron
    Eleanor Bron is an English stage, film and television actress and author.-Early life and family:Bron was born in 1938 in Stanmore, Middlesex, to a Jewish family of Eastern European origin...

     (actress)
  • Amy Maud Bull [née Hicks] (1877–1953) (suffragist)
  • Sara Burstall (teacher, headmistress) (headmistress of Manchester High School for Girls
    Manchester High School for Girls
    Manchester High School for Girls is an independent daytime school for girls and a member of the Girls School Association. It is situated in Fallowfield, Manchester, United Kingdom...

    )
  • Dame Elizabeth Mary Cadbury, [née Taylor](1858–1951)(welfare worker and philanthropist)
  • Edith Clegg opera singer
  • Clara Collet
    Clara Collet
    Clara Collet was pivotal in effecting many reforms which greatly improved working conditions and pay for women during the early part of the twentieth century...

     (civil servant and promoter of women's education and employment)
  • Charlotte Cory (novelist)
  • Gillian Cross
    Gillian Cross
    Gillian Cross is a children's author. She won the 1990 Carnegie Medal for her book Wolf and the 1992 Whitbread Children's Book Award for her novel The Great Elephant Chase....

     (children's writer)
  • Anne Digby
    Anne Digby
    Anne Digby is a prolific British children's author best known for the Trebizon series, published between 1978 and 1994.She attended North London Collegiate School, before becoming a magazine journalist and lived in Paris for a time. She then worked as a press officer for Oxfam in Oxford. Her first...

     (novelist)
  • Carmen Joseph Dillon (film art director)
  • Jessica Duchen (writer)
  • Fenella Fielding
    Fenella Fielding
    Fenella Fielding — "England's first lady of the double entendre" — is an English actress, popular in the 1950s and 1960s. She is known for her seductive image and distinctively husky voice.-Family:...

     (actress)
  • Margaret Fingerhut
    Margaret Fingerhut
    Margaret Ruth Fingerhut is a British concert pianist who has performed in many different countries and has become well-known for her innovative and entertaining recital programmes which combine popular and unusual repertoire...

     (pianist)
  • Lorna Fitzpatrick (Labour
    Labour Party (UK)
    The Labour Party is a centre-left democratic socialist party in the United Kingdom. It surpassed the Liberal Party in general elections during the early 1920s, forming minority governments under Ramsay MacDonald in 1924 and 1929-1931. The party was in a wartime coalition from 1940 to 1945, after...

     Mayoress of Harrow 1996-97)
  • Jacky Fleming (cartoonist)
  • Lindsey Fraser (Olympic athlete)
  • Dame Helen Gardner (academic/writer)
  • Maisie Gay (music hall artist)
  • Margaret Ghilchik (surgeon)
  • Stella Gibbons
    Stella Gibbons
    Stella Dorothea Gibbons was an English novelist, journalist, poet, and short-story writer.Her first novel, Cold Comfort Farm, won the Femina Vie Heureuse Prize for 1933...

     (1902–1989) (novelist)
  • Eleanor Graham
    Eleanor Graham
    Eleanor Graham was a book editor and children's book author. She worked for Muriel Paget's aid mission in Czechoslovakia before becoming an editor for publishers Heinemann and Methuen Publishing and a reviewer of children's books at The Sunday Times, among others...

     (1896–1984) (publisher and children's writer)
  • Frances Hamer (scientist)
  • Hattie Harris (scientist)
  • Alice Maud Head (1886–1981) (journalist and businesswoman)
  • Noreena Hertz
    Noreena Hertz
    Professor Noreena Hertz is an English economist, author and campaigner.In her 2002 book The Silent Takeover: Global Capitalism and The Death of Democracy, Hertz warned that unregulated markets, corporate greed, and over-powerful financial institutions would have serious global consequences that...

     (b. 1967)(academic)
  • Dorothy Hewer (1888–1948) (herb farmer)
  • Edith How Martyn (1875–1954) (suffragist and advocate of birth control)
  • Mary Vivian "Molly" Hughes (1866–1956) (writer, educator)
  • Edith Ingold nee Usherwood(chemist)
  • Margaret Calkin James
    Margaret Calkin James
    Margaret Calkin James , was a calligrapher, graphic designer, textile printer, watercolour painter and printmaker, and is best known for her posters designed for the London Underground and London Transport between 1928 and 1935...

     (1895–1985) (graphic designer and artist)
  • Dilys Lloyd Glynne Jones [née Dilys Lloyd Davies] (1857–1932) (educationist)
  • Lilian Lindsay
    Lilian Lindsay
    Dr. Lilian Lindsay, C.B.E., LL.D., M.D.S., F.D.S. R.C.S., H.D.D., F.S.A. was a dentist, dental historian, librarian and author...

     [née Murray] (1871–1960) (first woman dentist - qualified 1897)
  • Sheila Ramsay Lochhead [née MacDonald] (1910–1994) (prison visitor)
  • Nan (Margaret Annie) Macdonald (radio producer and presenter)
  • Anna Madeley
    Anna Madeley
    Anna Madeley is a British actress. She has been described by the British Theatre Guide's Philip Fisher as one of the United Kingdom's "brightest and most versatile young actresses".-Biography:...

     (actress)
  • Judy Mallaber
    Judy Mallaber
    Clare Judith Mallaber known as Judy Mallaber is a British Labour Party politician, who was the Member of Parliament for Amber Valley from 1997 to 2010.- Early life :She went to the North London Collegiate School....

     (MP)
  • Jane March
    Jane March
    Jane March is an English film actress and former print model.-Life and career:March was born Jane March Horwood in Edgware, London, England. Her father, Bernard Horwood, is a secondary school teacher of English and Spanish ancestry. Her mother, Jean, is Vietnamese and Chinese...

     (actress)
  • Jan Marsh (expert on pre-Raphaelites)
  • Katharine McMahon
    Katharine McMahon
    Katharine McMahon is a British writer born in north-west London. She is an historical novelist who, since 1990, has published seven books. McMahon is the best-selling author of The Rose of Sebastopol which was officially announced on 27 December 2007 as one of the ten titles for the Richard & Judy...

     (author)
  • Pamela Melnikoff (writer)
  • Valerie Mendes (author)
  • Margaret Theodora Meyer (1862–1924) (mathematician)
  • Jessie Millward (music hall artist)
  • Gillian Milton (gay rights activist)
  • Susie Orbach
    Susie Orbach
    Susie Orbach is a psychotherapist, psychoanalyst, writer, and social critic from London, UK.-Background:Orbach was born in London, in 1946, and was brought up in Chalk Farm, north London, the child of Jewish parents, British MP Maurice Orbach and an American mother...

     (psychologist/journalist)
  • Kate O'Toole
    Kate O'Toole (actress)
    Kate E. O'Toole is an Irish actress. She is the daughter of actors Peter O'Toole and Siân Phillips and was named after Katharine Hepburn....

     (actress)
  • Ruth Padel
    Ruth Padel
    Ruth Sophia Padel is a British poet, Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and Zoological Society of London. She also writes non-fiction and more recently fiction, broadcasts on wildlife, poetry and literature for BBC Radio 3 and 4, and is Writer in Residence at The Environment Institute,...

     (poet)
  • Pat Phillips (diplomat, ambassador)
  • Myfanwy Piper
    Myfanwy Piper
    Mary Myfanwy Piper was a British art critic and opera librettist.Myfanwy Evans was born into a Welsh family in London. She attended North London Collegiate School and read English Language and Literature at St Hugh's College, Oxford. She married the artist John Piper, with whom she lived in rural...

     [née Evans](1911–1997) (librettist)
  • Jessie Pope
    Jessie Pope
    Jessie Pope was an English poet, writer and journalist, who remains best known for her patriotic motivational poems published during World War I...

     (1868–1941)(poet)
  • Anna Popplewell
    Anna Popplewell
    Anna Katherine Popplewell is an English actress. She is best known for her role as Susan Pevensie in The Chronicles of Narnia film series since 2005.-Early life:...

     (actress)
  • Catherine Alice Raisin (1855–1945) (geologist and educationist)
  • Louie Ramsay
    Louie Ramsay
    Louie Ramsay was a British actress perhaps best known to television audiences for her portrayal of the wife of Chief Inspector Reg Wexford on the ITV television series, Ruth Rendell Mysteries...

     (actress)
  • Esther Rantzen
    Esther Rantzen
    Esther Louise Rantzen CBE is an English journalist and television presenter who is best known for presenting the BBC television series That's Life!, and for her work in various charitable causes. She is founder of the child protection charity ChildLine, and also advocates the work of the Burma...

     (television personality)
  • Dame (Mildred) Betty Ridley [née Mosley] (1909–2005) (church administrator)
  • Hannah Robertson (1862–1950) (educationist and promoter of higher education for women)
  • Ethel Sargant
    Ethel Sargant
    Ethel Sargant was a British botanist.She was the third daughter of Henry Sargant of Lincoln's Inn, and Emma Beale, and was educated at the North London Collegiate School and, from 1881 to 1885, at Girton College, Cambridge....

     (1863–1918) (botanist)
  • Roz Shafran (psychologist)
  • Evelyn Adelaide Sharp Baroness Sharp (1903–1985) (civil servant)
  • Stevie Smith
    Stevie Smith
    Florence Margaret Smith, known as Stevie Smith was an English poet and novelist.-Life:Stevie Smith, born Florence Margaret Smith in Kingston upon Hull, was the second daughter of Ethel and Charles Smith. Contemporary Women Poets...

     (1902–1971) (poet)
  • Marie Stopes
    Marie Stopes
    Marie Carmichael Stopes was a British author, palaeobotanist, campaigner for women's rights and pioneer in the field of birth control...

     (1880–1958)(palaeobotanist
    Paleobotany
    Paleobotany, also spelled as palaeobotany , is the branch of paleontology or paleobiology dealing with the recovery and identification of plant remains from geological contexts, and their use for the biological reconstruction of past environments , and both the evolutionary history of plants, with a...

     and birth control advocate)
  • Sarah Sultoon (CNN
    CNN
    Cable News Network is a U.S. cable news channel founded in 1980 by Ted Turner. Upon its launch, CNN was the first channel to provide 24-hour television news coverage, and the first all-news television channel in the United States...

     correspondent)
  • Amanda Swift (children's author)
  • (Janet) Netta Syrett (1865–1943) (novelist and playwright)
  • Eva Germaine Rimington Taylor
    Eva Germaine Rimington Taylor
    Eva Germaine Rimington Taylor was an English geographer and historian of science, the first woman to hold an academic chair of geography in the United Kingdom....

     (1879–1966) (geographer and historian of science)
  • Judith Tucker (artist)
  • Natasha Walter
    Natasha Walter
    Natasha Walter is a British feminist writer and human rights activist. She is the author of Living Dolls: The Return of Sexism and The New Feminism , and is the director of Women for Refugee Women ....

     (writer)
  • Enid Charis Warren (1903–1980) (medical social worker)
  • Marjory Warren (1897–1960) (geriatrician/doctor)
  • Susan Watkins (editor, New Left Review
    New Left Review
    New Left Review is a 160-page journal, published every two months from London, devoted to world politics, economy and culture. Often compared to the French-language Les Temps modernes, it is associated with Verso Books , and regularly features the essays of authorities on contemporary social...

    )
  • Frances Emily Webb-Peploe [née Hughes] (1855–1927) (principal of a women's university hall of residence)
  • Judith Weir
    Judith Weir
    Judith Weir CBE, is a British composer.-Biography:Her music has been appreciated by audiences and critics alike. She trained with John Tavener while still at school and subsequently with Robin Holloway at King's College, Cambridge, graduating in 1976...

     (composer)
  • Rachel Weisz
    Rachel Weisz
    Rachel Hannah Weisz born 7 March 1970)is an English-American film and theatre actress and former fashion model. She started her acting career at Trinity Hall, Cambridge, where she co-founded the theatrical group Cambridge Talking Tongues...

     (actress)
  • Barbara Ker Wilson (novelist)
  • Anna Wintour
    Anna Wintour
    Anna Wintour, OBE is the British-born editor-in-chief of American Vogue, a position she has held since 1988. With her trademark pageboy bob haircut and sunglasses, Wintour has become an institution throughout the fashion world, widely praised for her eye for fashion trends and her support for...

     (fashion journalist; editor of Vogue
    Vogue (magazine)
    Vogue is a fashion and lifestyle magazine that is published monthly in 18 national and one regional edition by Condé Nast.-History:In 1892 Arthur Turnure founded Vogue as a weekly publication in the United States. When he died in 1909, Condé Montrose Nast picked up the magazine and slowly began...

    .)
  • Mary Hay Wood (1868–1934) (educationist and college head)
  • Zarif
    Zarif
    Zarif Davidson, known professionally as Zarif, is a British singer-songwriter of Scottish-Iranian-Jewish descent whose music ranges from soul to funk to pop. She performs with a nine piece band and sometimes plays keyboard and guitar.-Biography:...

     (singer/songwriter)

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