Jersey College for Girls
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Jersey College for Girls (JCG, Jèrriais: ''Lé collège jèrriais pour les fil'yes'') is a
government A government is the system or group of people governing an organized community, generally a state. In the case of its broad associative definition, government normally consists of legislature, executive, and judiciary. Government is ...
-run, fee-paying, academically selectiveEducation Journey in Jersey
''States of Jersey (gov.je)''. Retrieved 12 December 2022.
secondary school for
girls A girl is a young female human, usually a child or an adolescent. When a girl becomes an adult, she is accurately described as a ''woman''. However, the term ''girl'' is also used for other meanings, including ''young woman'',Dictionary.c ...
in Saint Saviour, Jersey. It was founded in 1880 in Saint Helier as Jersey Ladies' College. In 1887, the college moved to a purpose-built site on La Poquelaye and in 1999, it moved again to its present site, on Mont Millais, across from Victoria College, the government fee-paying school for boys. Despite being owned by the States of Jersey, JCG charges tutition fees – of £2,284 per term in the 2022/23 school year.


History


1880-1999

The situation for the education of girls in Jersey from the mid-19th century lagged behind provision for boys. Victoria College had been opened for boys, on the pattern of English public schools, in 1852. The well-to-do and the élite classes continued to employ governesses or to send their daughters to schools in France or England; other classes relied on the existing elementary schools in Jersey. Jersey people of influence gathered at the Grove Place Wesleyan Chapel in Saint Helier on 28 November 1879 and decided to set up a limited liability company to further a plan to provide a college for girls in Jersey. The then Bailiff of Jersey, Sir Robert Pipon Marett, became patron of the enterprise and an advertisement appeared in the ''British Press and Jersey Times'' in June 1880 to announce the forthcoming opening of the new college in September of that year: "It is designed to give to the daughters of residents and others, at an extremely moderate rate, an education of the highest order. Its promoters have long felt there is a pressing need for such an institution in Jersey". The school was opened in September 1880 as Jersey Ladies' College, located at Adelaide House in Roussel Street,
Saint Helier St Helier (; Jèrriais: ; french: Saint-Hélier) is one of the twelve parishes of Jersey, the largest of the Channel Islands in the English Channel. St Helier has a population of 35,822 – over one-third of the total population of Jersey – ...
. Girls were put in for Oxford and Cambridge Local Examinations and Matriculation of London University, and those who had studied in France were able to take the ''Brevet de capacité'' in Paris. In 1883 3 students achieved distinction in the Matriculation Examination of London University; the first ladies to have matriculated from Jersey.''British Press and Jersey Times'', 12 July 1883 In 1887, the Ladies' College acquired property at La Pouquelaye, fronting Rouge Bouillon, in Saint Helier. A new building was constructed (architect: Adolphus Curry (1848–1910)),''Buildings in the Town and Parish of Saint Helier'', Brett,
National Trust for Jersey The National Trust for Jersey is a charitable organisation which aims at preserving and safeguarding sites of historic, aesthetic and natural interest in Jersey. The trust held its first formal meeting, headed by the Dean of Jersey, Samuel Fall ...
1977
and the school moved to the new site in 1888. This building has been called "one of the most identifiable buildings in the island"."Old JCG Building"
BBC Jersey, 4 December 2006 (accessed 21 July 2010).
After the First World War the school acquired the neighbouring Mont Cantel site for use as a junior school. The school was purchased in 1928 by the Church of England Schools' Trust. The school changed its name to the Jersey College for Girls, and in 1935 was taken over by the States of Jersey. The Germans occupying Jersey during
World War II World War II or the Second World War, often abbreviated as WWII or WW2, was a world war that lasted from 1939 to 1945. It involved the vast majority of the world's countries—including all of the great powers—forming two opposing ...
used the school building first as a barracks and then as a naval hospital. Since the move of the college to a new site, the 1888 building has been used for other educational functions, but has fallen into disrepair; it has now been proposed for residential redevelopment, while maintaining the historical portions of the old building. The Mont Cantel site formerly occupied by the preparatory school was used by the Jersey Schools Instrumental Service and by Janvrin School, a States primary school for a number of years before being abandoned completely.


Move of the College

With increasing sixth-form collaboration between JCG and Victoria College and a need to provide new facilities, it was decided to move the college to a new site. The end of boarding provision at Victoria College meant that College House, built as a boarding house for Victoria College in 1901 (architect: Edmund Berteau (1861–1935)) and used as the ''Feldkommandantur'' by the German occupying forces 1940–1945, was available for redevelopment and re-use by JCG. A new wing was added behind the 1901 building with further facilities built in front on part of College Field. The transformation was designed by ArchitecturePLB (formerly Plincke, Leaman and Browning).Mark Dudek, ''Architecture of Schools: The New Learning Environments'' (Architectural Press, 2000), , p. 103.
Excerpt available
at
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.
In 1999, Jersey College for Girls moved to the new site.


Students

In its new location, the school now has approximately 712 students.


Notable former pupils

* Florence Baron, barrister and judge * Zoe Cameron, former Senator of the States of Jersey *
Adelaide Casely-Hayford Adelaide Casely-Hayford, MBE (née Smith; 2 June 1868 – 24 January 1960), was a Sierra Leone Creole advocate, an activist of cultural nationalism, a teacher and fiction writer and a feminist. Committed to public service, she worked to improv ...
, activist for cultural nationalism, educator, short story writer, and feminist * Helen Chambers, pathologist and cancer expert * Jenny Hill, journalist *
Nerina Pallot Nerina Natasha Georgina Pallot (born 26 April 1974) is an English singer, songwriter and producer, who has released six albums and over a dozen EPs. She was nominated for British Female Solo Artist at the 2007 BRIT Awards and nominated for an I ...
, nominated for British Female Solo Artist at the 2007 BRIT Awards and nominated for an Ivor Novello Award for "Sophia" in the category of 'Best Song' in the same year *
Marguerite Stocker Marguerite Ellen-Gaudin Stocker MBE (2 March 1901 – July 1992) was governor of HM Prison Askham Grange in Yorkshire from 1959 until her retirement in 1967. Early life Marguerite Stocker was born in Jersey to Walter Arthur and Louisa Jane Stoc ...
, Governor of
HM Prison Askham Grange HM Prison Askham Grange is a women's open category prison, located in Askham Richard village in North Yorkshire, England. The prison is run by His Majesty's Prison Service. History H.M. Prison Askham Grange was opened in January 1947 as a wo ...
, Yorkshire * Jude Terry, first woman to be promoted to rear admiral in the Royal Navy


See also

*
List of schools in Jersey This is a list of schools in Jersey. It includes non-fee paying schools, States' fee paying schools and private schools. Primary schools Non-fee paying primary schools *Bel Royal School *D'Auvergne School *Grands Vaux School *Grouville School * ...
*
Victoria College, Jersey Victoria College is a Government-run, fee-paying, academically selective day schoolSchools in Jersey Secondary schools in the Channel Islands Saint Saviour, Jersey Girls' schools in Jersey