The Mail on Sunday

Roedean old girls ‘come to blows’ amid rumours that BOYS will be let in

‘She held her arm like a rounders bat and whacked me!’ Row over top school’s future sparks claims of fracas between ex-pupils

- By Mark Hookham and Valerie Elliott

IT IS a bastion of female learning, an elite boarding school perched dramatical­ly over the English Channel, that prides itself on nurturing the character of its girls as much as its enviable educationa­l achievemen­ts.

But Roedean’s reputation for gentility and decorum is now under threat because of a bitter squabble between its trustees and a group of former pupils that has – allegedly – spilled over into physical confrontat­ion.

At its core are said to be fears among some old girls that boys could be allowed into the school for the first time in its 135-year history – a prospect that has sparked a series of explosive rows that have led to high-level legal action between the factions.

Allegation­s have flown about questionab­le financial decisions at the school, where fees can be as much as £40,000. Such claims are strenuousl­y denied by those in charge.

Discontent apparently brewed after the arrival of head teacher Oliver Blond in 2013. A reforming character, he has been praised for improving results and almost doubling

‘It was appalling behaviour, the fisticuffs were extraordin­ary’

pupil numbers, but some fear he wants to overturn decades of history to make the school co-educationa­l.

Roedean, set on clifftops near Brighton, was founded in 1885 by the Lawrence sisters, Penelope, Dorothy and Millicent, to prepare girls for the newly opened women’s colleges at Cambridge University. Its traditions, enshrined in a 1938 Royal charter and encapsulat­ed in the school motto Honour The Worthy, are safeguarde­d by 3,300 governors, all old girls.

Former pupil Emily Campbell claims Mr Blond revealed his ambition to admit male students during a 2014 lunch with her at Claridge’s hotel in London. ‘ His eyes lit up and he said, “I want boys running all over the playing fields,” ’ she claimed. ‘ I said, “My one word of advice, Oliver, is don’t try to go around the governors.” The overriding thing is the headmaster is determined to get boys at Roedean.’ However, the school strenuousl­y denies having any plans to enrol boys.

In what they say was a bid to protect the school’s charter that dictates the make-up of the governing body six governors formed a breakaway group, which has clashed repeatedly with the board of trustees, known as the Council.

In 2018, the rebels sued trustees for defamation after a letter to all the governors suggested they posed a ‘threat’ to the school and had been passing themselves off, deceitfull­y, as an official group. The rebels instructed libel lawyers Carter Ruck while the Council recruited Schillings, another heavyweigh­t legal firm. The matter was settled out of court last year, and the Council’s then chairman, Roger Sanders, withdrew the previous claims in a letter.

Buoyed by their success, the rebels had three of their supporters elected as trustees at last year’s annual meeting of governors held at the Caledonian club in London. It wasn’t long, however, before the atmosphere soured. Another old girl accused Ms Campbell of knocking into her, which allegedly led to another altercatio­n as they filed into a formal dinner.

‘She was standing in the middle of the room shouting at me,’ claimed Ms Campbell. ‘I had already apologised for supposedly barging into her. So I just went “Anyway, it’s lovely to see you again”, cutting her off from her rant about how awful I am, and turned to face my table. At which point she shouted “You are awful” and with a straight arm and a flat hand put her arm back straight like a rounders bat and whacked me with her right hand on my left shoulder.’

The account was backed by another old girl, who says she recalled Ms Campbell being ‘slapped’, adding: ‘It was appalling behaviour. There was no outcry and the fight did not escalate. I told friends about the evening and the fisticuffs because it was so extraordin­ary.’ The woman involved denied slapping Ms Campbell.

The feud burst into the open last month when another of the rebels, Helen Jefferies, 60, a former City trader, posted two videos on YouTube in which she branded the school’s accounts ‘a disgrace’.

The focus of the latest round of acrimony is an alleged drop in the school’s profits and the circumstan­ces of a £300,000 loan made by Roedean to a nearby mixed prep school, which the rebel governors claim breaches Roedean’s charter.

Last night, Vivien Smiley, interim chairman of the Council, said the loan was made by Roedean’s trading subsidiary in an ‘entirely appropriat­e way’. She added: ‘To suggest that there is a strategic plan to turn Roedean co-educationa­l is simply not the case.’ Such a step was prevented by the charter, she said.

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 ??  ?? BITTER ROW: Roedean, perched on a clifftop. Right: Emily Campbell, who claims she was struck
BITTER ROW: Roedean, perched on a clifftop. Right: Emily Campbell, who claims she was struck

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