Falkirk High School
Coordinates: 55°59′49″N 3°48′18″W / 55.997°N 3.805°W
Falkirk High School | |
---|---|
Location | |
Falkirk, Stirlingshire Scotland | |
Information | |
Type | Secondary |
Motto | Invicem Servite (Serve one another) |
Head teacher | Keith Webster |
Teaching staff | 90 |
Number of students | 1,200 |
School color(s) | maroon/black |
Athletics | gymnasium, swimming pool and rugby/football pitch |
Website | http://www.falkirk.falkirk.sch.uk/ |
Falkirk High School was founded in 1886.
It is a non-denominational six-year fully comprehensive school, situated in approximately 1 mile from the centre of the town. It serves a widespread catchment area and has six associated primary schools: Bainsford, Bantaskin, Carmuirs, Comely Park, Easter Carmuirs and Langlees Primary Schools.
There are four houses – Campbell, Robertson, Cameron and Mackay, which are named after the first four rectors of the school.
Former teachers
- James Martin, Scottish Public Services Ombudsman since 2009 (taught from 1975–79)
Roll
Alumni
- Craigie Aitchison, Lord Aitchison, Labour MP from 1929–33 for Kilmarnock
- novelist Alan 'Alvin' Bissett
- Dame Elizabeth Blackadder, Painter and Limner
- Rev Dr John Urquhart Cameron, athlete, theologian, journalist
- Prof George Stuart Gordon, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford from 1938–41, President from 1928–42 of Magdalen College, Oxford, and Professor of English at the University of Leeds
- Bob McGregor MBE, swimmer
- Iain Macphail, Lord Macphail
- David Marshall, Labour MP from 2005–08 for Glasgow East, and from 1979–2005 for Glasgow Shettleston
- Prof Gordon Marshall CBE, Vice-Chancellor from 2003–11 of the University of Reading, and Chairman since 2007 of the Higher Education Statistics Agency
- Craig Pollock, Formula 1 executive
- Alan Lawson, Rugby Union Scrum Half – 15 caps for Scotland. Bill McLaren's son in law.
References
- ↑ http://www.educationscotland.gov.uk/Images/FalkirkHighSchoolIns20050506_tcm4-693773.pdf
- ↑ Scotland. "Falkirk High School – Falkirk – Scottish Schools Online 2011/12". Educationscotland.gov.uk. Retrieved 2012-10-19.
External links
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