Torquay Boys' Grammar School

Torquay Boys' Grammar School is an 11–18 selective boys grammar school in Torquay, Devon, England. , it had 1,087 students. The school was founded in 1904. It is situated in Shiphay, south of Torbay Hospital, not far from the A3022 and Torre railway station as well as being directly next to Torquay Girls Grammar School.

Torquay Boys' Grammar School is currently ranked within the top 20 boys schools in England, and the best in Southwest England.

History
The school was founded in 1904 and moved to its present location in 1983. As part of its centenary in 2004 the school opened a new hall known as the Cavanna Centenary Hall, which was officially opened in March 2008 by The Earl of Wessex. In September 2010, it gained Academy status.

A long-standing headteacher, Roy Pike, worked for 43 years at the school, 27 years as head. He retired in 2013, and was succeeded by Peter Lawrence.

Academic attainment
In 2022, GCSE examination pass rate between 9-4 stood at 97.6%, with the proportion of top grades 9-7 was 58.6%. The proportion of boys at the school achieving a strong pass in GCSE Level 9-5 in English and Maths stood at 93%. Torquay Boys' Grammar School boasts a 99% rate of boys staying in education after leaving the school, or entering employment after Year 11.

House system
Upon joining the school, every student is assigned to one of the school's six houses. The six houses were previously named after Elizabethan sailors, which had seen criticism in 2020 over their links to the slave trade, were renamed after locations in Devon in 2021.

Grammar School
The Head Teacher and Governors of Torquay Boys' Grammar School are committed to ensuring the school retains its grammar school status, advocating that pupils who learn in a selective environment excel in their learning and development. The school argues that pupils in selective grammar schools make more progress than those in non–selective schools.

The proportion of students attending Torquay Boys' Grammar School who are entitled to free school meals was well below average the national average in 2007, despite the school's catchment area not being a prosperous area. In 2007, very few boys from minority ethnic groups or with a first language other than English attended the school. The school has held specialist languages status for a number of years and has recently been awarded a second specialism in business and enterprise education.

Headteachers

 * William Jackson 1904-1936
 * John W. Harmer 1936 -1966
 * Gerald Smith 1966-1981
 * Barry K. Hobbs 1981-1986
 * Roy E Pike 1987-2013
 * Peter Lawrence 2014-present

Observatory
The school has its own astronomical observatory. Opened in 1989, it houses a 19.2" (0.5m) Newtonian reflector, and is used by the school itself, by the Torbay Astronomical Society, and is also regularly open to the public.

The astronomer and broadcaster Sir Patrick Moore was a patron of the school and maintained close ties – Ralegh House even performed the premiere of his operetta "Galileo" in the late 1990s. Current presenter of the BBC television programme "The Sky at Night" Chris Lintott, who lectures at Oxford University, was also a student of the school.

Notable members of staff

 * Retired teacher Carole Church was awarded the Ted Wragg Teaching Award for Lifetime Achievement in 2004.
 * This was followed by retired teacher Dave Berry who was also awarded the Ted Wragg Teaching Award for Lifetime Achievement in 2006.

Notable former pupils

 * Martin Turner, rock musician, Wishbone Ash
 * Raymond Cattell, psychologist Pioneer of psychometric testing
 * Neil Collings
 * Ben Howard, Musician
 * Chris Read, cricketer who played as wicket-keeper for the England cricket team
 * Hiley Edwards (1951–2009), cricketer who played for and captained Devon County Cricket Club
 * Richard Leaman, CEO of The Guide Dogs for the Blind Association and former senior Royal Navy officer
 * Ted Luscombe, Bishop of Brechin 1975–90, Primus of the Scottish Episcopal Church 1985-1990
 * Terence Frederick Mitchell (1919-2007), Professor of Linguistics and Phonetics, University of Leeds.
 * Harry Robinson, World War II veteran and Distinguished Service Order (DSO) recipient
 * Adrian Sanders, Liberal Democrat MP for Torbay, between 1997 and 2015.
 * Professor David Southwood, Science Director of the European Space Agency, President of the Royal Astronomical Society, Head of Physics Department Imperial College.
 * Bill Strang, Chief Engineer from 1960 to 1967, and Technical Director from 1967 to 1971 at the British Aircraft Corporation (BAC), and hence headed the design team of Concorde (with Lucien Servanty) as its UK Technical Director from 1966 to 1977
 * Roger Deakins, Academy Award-winning Cinematographer.
 * Doc Rowe, folklorist, author and film-maker, prominent lecturer on and advocate for folk traditions and folk music.
 * Yorick Wilks Pioneer Professor of Artificial Intelligence applied to language processing on a computer.
 * Chris Lintott Professor of Astrophysics in the Department of Physics at Oxford University and The Sky at Night presenter.
 * Alex Fletcher, professional footballer for Bath City.
 * Sam Skinner (rugby union), professional rugby union player for Edinburgh Rugby and Scotland national rugby union team.
 * Matt Hickey, first-class cricketer