St Michael's College (the College of St Michael and All Angels) at Tenbury Wells, Worcestershire, England, was founded by Sir Frederick Ouseley in 1856 as a boys' preparatory school. Ouseley created the school to provide a model for the performance of Anglican church music. Choral services were performed daily in term time. The college possessed a library that contained rare books of international importance. Financial difficulties forced its closure in 1985.
The buildings were reopened as an independent international boarding school under the name of King's College Saint Michael's in 1990, before closing in June 2020 as a consequence of the COVID-19 pandemic.
In August 2024, the site was bought by SIAS Education Group and Anglo Independence School. It re-opened as St Michael Abbey School in September 2025.
History
The school was founded in reaction to the decline of Anglican church music in the Victorian period. Ouseley sited it in a remote location so as to insulate it from the influence of London. A recording of the final Evensong sung at the school in 1985 is found on the Archive of Recorded Church Music site
The school chapel is now the parish church for the surrounding village of St Michael's which was created to support the creation of the school.
<blockquote>"……..the unique atmosphere of St. Michael’s College, Tenbury. I shall never forget my first impression of the place. There was the climb up from the little market town of Tenbury whence some of the lay clerks make their twice daily journey to Mattins and Evensong to lend men’s voices to the boys’ choir, and there before me stretched an enormous common. In the far corner, in a land of blossoming orchards and backed by the blue distance of Clee Hill, rose a chapel, seemingly as large as Lancing.
Attached to it were Warden’s house, school buildings, cloister and dining hall, all in a style of the fourteenth century, re-interpreted in local materials for the nineteenth century by architect, Henry Woodyer. - 1907
- M. Gordon Burgess 1907 - 1910
- J.P. Davis 1910 - 1911
- Norman Charles Woods 1911 - 1912
- Arthur Baynon 1913 - 1916
- Carlton Borrow 1917
- Vivian Stuart 1918
- Ernest Bullock 1919
- Heathcote Dicken Statham 1920 - 1926
- Stanley Thorne 1926 - 1931
- Laurence Crosthwaite 1931 - 1935
- Maxwell Menzies 1935 - 1952 (duties undertaken by Sir Sydney Nicholson from 1940 and C E S Littlejohn from 1941 while Maxwell Menzies was away in the armed forces)
- Kenneth Beard 1952 - 1959 (afterwards rector chori at Southwell Minster)
- Lucian Nethsingha 1959 - 1973 (afterwards organist of Exeter Cathedral)
- Roger Judd 1973 - 1985 (later Assistant Organist St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle)
Alumni
The St Michael's College Society, an active Old Boys and Girls society, from the original Frederick Ouseley foundation, and which in 2006 celebrated its centenary, holds a reunion meeting each year. Membership is open to all those with a connection to the 1856 -1985 College days.
Notable alumni include:
- Harold "Barehands" Bates, Royal Navy officer
- John Blashford-Snell, Explorer
- Stephen Glover, Journalist
- Jonathan Harvey, Composer
- Christopher Robinson, Choirmaster and organist
- Clifford Rose, Actor
- George Robertson Sinclair, organist at Truro and Hereford cathedral, friend of Edward Elgar
- Jolyon Jenkins, journalist and broadcaster
- Martin Stokes, ethnomusicologist
- Roger Brock, classicist
More recent history of the buildings
The year after the college closed the school buildings were used as the set for the 1986 film, The Worst Witch based on the novel by Jill Murphy, starring Diana Rigg, Tim Curry and Fairuza Balk.
From 1990 to 2020 the buildings were occupied by King’s Saint Michael’s College which was an international boarding school with students from many countries. It closed in 2020. That school specialised in providing education to international students by providing an intensive English language course alongside the traditional curriculum of GCSEs and A Levels. The school also ran a University Foundation Course. During the months of July and August, Saint Michael's ran an English language summer school for students from around the world.
The buildings were bought in 2024. The newly formed St Michael Abbey School opened in September 2025.
References
External links
- St Michael's College Society official website, specific to the original College
- St Michael Abbey School website
