Cokethorpe School is an independent school at Hardwick, West Oxfordshire, about south of Witney. It was founded in 1957 by Francis Brown. It is a member of HMC, IAPS and The Society of Heads. The school has about 660 pupils, ranging in age from four to 18. The Junior School and the Senior School are on the same site. At the heart of the school is an early 18th-century Grade II* listed Queen Anne stylecountry house. The school is set in of parkland and there is also a chapel in the grounds. The tower of the chapel was virtually destroyed in a fire in 1994 but it has since been demolished and rebuilt. The grounds have a number of rugby/football pitches along with the recently built astro pitches. An expertly carved 'giant' peacock stands at the central crossroads within the school grounds, a symbol of the school. The school has an outstanding recent sporting tradition with students playing national age grouprugby and also England women's hockey. The school also has numerous representatives in both regional and Oxfordshire rugby, football, cricket, hockey, athletics and tennis. Also the school has developed a reputation as a premier kayaking school as well as nurturing equestrian talents. The school operates a house system, with houses called Harcourt, Gascoigne, Swift, Queen Anne, Vanbrugh, Lower House and Feilden. The houses compete in sport such as house rugby and football for boys, hockey and netball for girls, and in field and track events at the annual school sports day. There are also competitions in the arts, such as house music, drama, photography and art. Inside the school, there is a theatre called the Shed, where they have drama productions, concerts and lectures.
History
The country house was used by Simon Harcourt, 1st Viscount Harcourt. When Major Percy Henry Guy Feilden and his wife, Dorothy Louisa Brand, moved there in 1908, they undertook extensive renovations. He died on 25 March 1944, and was buried there. His son, Major-General Randle Guy Feilden, who was later knighted, was his successor. In 1957, it was let with part of the grounds to Francis Brown, who opened the school as a secondary boys' boarding school with 14 pupils. In about 1960 Yarnton Manor was used as a dormitory of the school. In 1963 a charitable trust was formed, and in 1966 the school buildings and grounds were sold to the school trustees. The school is a joint Church of England and Roman Catholic foundation. The chapel is on the golf course in the school grounds. It is the former parish church of Hardwick, and was restored and extended in 1973. In 1985 the roof of the north-west wing was studied while the building was being repaired. In 1986 work began on the construction of further buildings. The school started admitting girls in 1992 and opened a junior school in 1994. The boarding facility was closed in 2003.