What good news......I have every respect for Waverley Grammar grubs...a couple of my school mates passed for there....and I would LOVE any pics of my hero Viv.......and just because I can.....here's a snippet from my memories of that wonderful building.......
CAMP HILL YEARS 1953 – 1956
In 1953 I miraculously passed the ‘eleven plus’ exam for the Grammar school - King Edward VI Grammar School for Boys, Camp Hill.
Excuse me? Say again? At the time we were notified of this academic epiphany, I had absolutely no idea who, what or where the hell King Edward’s Camp Hill was, let alone why I was selected. Nor cared much I have to confess, for it was at the beginning of the long, hot Summer holiday of 1953: I was eleven, and there was still lots of cricket to play and trains to spot.
Mother reputedly chose it on the eleven plus form because it sounded “nicer” than Saltley Grammar, the nearest establishment to home. Not to say that folk from Saltley Grammar were in any way inferior or anything like that, the hell no (my wife went there after all), but Saltley was synonymous with the Gasworks at the time, and Mom was perhaps leaned a little bit more towards Hyacinth Bucket than the rest of the family. Like me, Dad didn’t seem too bothered. To the point of complete indifference it has to be said. But his insouciance was at least consistent, for he never showed a rat’s ass of interest in anything I did thereafter for the whole of the seven years I was resident. I think Nan was quite proud though, she was the one who went to parents evening at Albert Road, and followed my progress, and for my sins I very quickly grew to be prouder still. In the event, I can never thank Mom enough for her foresight with this choice of school, or lady luck for my good fortune. Halleleujah.
Anyway, cometh the first day of my new term, the journey consisted of a shortish 54 bus ride to Bordesley Station, then a short trudge up the eponymous Camp Hill, and there it was - in all it’s gothic splendour. The academic cathedral of KEGS Camp Hill that shrieked one thing above all else - TRADITION. I loved it from the moment I clapped eyes on it. The fairy tale towers, the sloping playground, the bike sheds, the funny building at the bottom of the playground (later discovered to be the Fives Court), the Girl’s school next door… I loved every nook and cranny of it. Almost as much as I hated the new school we transferred to at King’s Heath three years later…
The venerable old lady is still there I’m glad to say, and now plies her trade as the Bordesley Centre for Muslim education and training, owned and operated by the Muath Trust. I revisited it fifty years later last summer with a crowd of old lags - pensioners all. The building was crumbling and badly in need of attention, but still just about hanging on to her dignity, but even as I write this, the cavalry is on it’s way I think, as scaffolding is currently sheathing the Girl’s school bit - someone must have successfully uncorked the lottery stash.
Once inside, the unique smell was still there. A mixture of chalk-dust, sweat and fear. Not much had changed architecturally, the window and door furniture barely altered, the assembly hall still magnificently vaulted. Only the wall bars and the black achievement shields, with the names of sporting legends beautifully lettered in gold, had been removed; the latter, thankfully, to adorn the new dining hall at Kings Heath. Thank God I thought, because I actually featured a few times on that indelible roll of honour.
Obviously not much money had been spent on its restoration or sanitation. And I noted on one wall in the main corridor someone had written ”F**k Jesus” in silver felt pen. I did ponder on dropping Salman Rushdie a line with that gem, but what the heck…
It was granted Grade II listed building status in1983, and long may it stand and serve as a classic example of Victorian splendour in this architecturally bland and sterile world.
The school was built in 1883 and formed part of the King Edward VI Foundation, but the charter from Edward to form free-grammar schools in his name was given in 1553, so it had a fair bit of history, a tremendous reputation for academic achievement, and some interesting surviving customs.....
more guff....