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Welcome

To apply for a place at our Sixth Form please call: 07867 310 455 or email post16@enfieldcs.enfield.sch.uk

Welcome to Enfield County Sixth Form Centre, a vibrant and exciting learning community with a strong sense of direction and purpose.

I am privileged to be the Headteacher of our unique mixed Post 16 provision which transforms the life chances of young people, welcoming students from across the local authority of Enfield and beyond.

Our Sixth Form is mixed gender, focusing on academic progress, student outcomes and self-development. Our Sixth Form team are dedicated to providing a supportive, nurturing and inclusive environment with high expectations of what each student will achieve during their Sixth Form journey.

We welcome students of all genders, all faiths and none; we are proud of our truly comprehensive student intake which we view as a strength to be celebrated and a large part of what makes us distinctive, as encapsulated by our school values.

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LATEST NEWS FROM ECSfG

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The History of ECSfG

From the Archives

  • Pre-1900

  • 1895

  • 1909

  • 1909

  • 1909

  • 1909

  • 1914

  • 1917

  • 1919

  • 1926

  • 1931

  • 1937

  • 1939

  • c.1940

  • c.1940

  • 1941

  • 1948

  • 1948

  • 1949

  • 1950

  • 1950

  • 1951

  • 1953

  • 1954

  • 1962

  • 1963

  • 1963

  • 1966

  • 2008

  • Timeline Image
    Timeline Image

    Historical Enfield

    In the 1914 edition of ECS School Magazine student Hilda Obott writes a historical account of 'Old Enfielde'

    'Old Enfielde' cont.
  • Timeline Image 1895
    1895
    Timeline Image Pre-1900
    Pre-1900

    1895

    The site of Enfield County School, pre-1900. The railings are of the Garden of Rest, with Dairyman Hawkins' cattle shown in this early photograph.

  • Timeline Image
    Timeline Image

    1909

    Ms Emily Rose Broome is the first Headmistress when The Enfield County School opens on 25 September 1909, a site of five acres designed to accommodate 250 girls. Initially welcoming 111 pupils, by the end of 1910 the school had grown to 153 students.

    Lessons originally comprised of, "Holy Scripture, Reading, Writing, English Literature, Composition and Grammar, History, Geography, French, German, Latin, Mathematics, Botany, Physics, Nature Study, Art, Needlework, Singing, and Physical Exercises, with such other subjects as may be arranged from time to time."

    1909 Preliminary Prospectus
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    Timeline Image

    Onward Ever

    From 1909 Enfield County School use the Middlesex County badge featuring three 'Gurka Knives' in a shield garlanded with laurel leaves. Over time, the ECS school logo was modified to remove the laurel leaves but retain its essential design.

    In Sir Clifford Radcliffe's book Middlesex, the county arms are described as, "Three Seaxes (short notched swords) fesswise (horizontal) in pale (one above the other). Radcliffe writes, "The knives or seaxes, as they are usually termed, are similar to the duellist knife of the gladiators of Ancient Rome. A knife of the same type was used by the Saxons as a weapon of defence."

    Middlesex, Sir Clifford Radcliffe, new edition, Evans Brothers Ltd., 1950

  • Timeline Image
    Timeline Image

    Onward Ever

    Written by Ms E. R. Broome, ECS first Headmistress, the school motto was later used as inspiration for Daisy Wright's poem, 'Onward Ever'.

    Onward Ever, poem by Daisy Wright
  • Timeline Image 1909
    1909
    Timeline Image Present
    Present

    Rules & Values

    10 November 1909: A note to parents. Headteacher Ms Broome writes to parents. School rules are also distributed to all form rooms.

    ECS 1909 Rules in Full
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    WWI

    Writing in ECS Magazine, 1914, Nellie Biggs describes being on a school trip in Germany when Russia declares war on Germany.

    "We were allowed to cross the bridge two and two, escorted by a file of soldiers on each side, with jeering crowds looking on, and taken to the Criminal Police Office. Here we were told we might not leave Cologne until the end of the war, and that if we attempted to do so we would immediately be put in a fortress."

    'Experiences in Germany' ECS Magazine (1914 ed.)
  • Timeline Image 1917
    1917
    Timeline Image 2023
    2023

    1917

    Isa Spencer’s 1917 poem, ‘An Air Raid.’ A poignant description of an ECS student's first-hand experience of WWI.

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    Timeline Image

    1919

    Armistice Day

    "...the girls of Enfield County realised, with millions throughout the British Empire, the individual responsibility of each one of them to make the future better than the past."

    Mary Jewell, 1919

  • Timeline Image 1926
    1926
    Timeline Image Present
    Present

    1926

    Enfield County Sixth Formers past and present

  • Timeline Image 1931
    1931
    Timeline Image Present
    Present

    1931

    1930s fashion reflected in ECS students' belted coats, gloves and buckle shoes

    A satirical account of 1930s fashion: ECS School Magazine (1931 ed.)
  • Timeline Image 1937
    1937
    Timeline Image Present
    Present

    1937

    Lower school students past and present

  • Timeline Image
    Timeline Image

    1939-45

    Queen Anne's Place, Bush Hill Park, Enfield, 1940

    Extracts from '1939-45: Enfield at War'
  • Timeline Image c.1940
    c.1940
    Timeline Image Present
    Present

    Early-Mid 1940s

    The diversity of clothes and untamed hair in this early 1940s photograph may be explained by war-time shortages, a relaxation in some minor rules due to war and pupils who transferred to ECS from other schools

  • Timeline Image c.1940
    c.1940
    Timeline Image 2023
    2023

    Ms Sharp with ECS Prefects, c.1940

    Ms Gumbrell with ECSfG Head Girl Team, 2023

  • Timeline Image July 1940
    July 1940
    Timeline Image April 1941
    April 1941

    WWII

    "The sun which, while we write, is beating down upon a peaceful Enfield, may shine upon a different scene by the time the magazine is printed."
    ECS Magazine, July 1940

    The Old Building war damage, April 1941

    Editorial Notes, ECS Magazine, July 1940
  • Timeline Image 1948
    1948
    Timeline Image Present
    Present

    Science lessons past and present

  • Timeline Image 1948
    1948
    Timeline Image Present
    Present

    1948

    Science lessons through the ages

    Scientific Society, ECS Magazine (1932 ed.)
  • Timeline Image 1949
    1949
    Timeline Image 2023
    2023

    1949

    ECS sporting event reported in local newspaper: Mrs Nightingale, mother of the Head Girl, presenting the senior individual championship cup to Pat Newby.

  • Timeline Image 1950
    1950
    Timeline Image Present
    Present

    1950s

    ECS Maths lesson. Lift-up lid desks with ink wells: each pupil stored her books in her designated desk in her form room. Students used fountain pens for best work, pencils for rough/draft work. In the early 1950s ball-point pens were not readily available and, even when they became so, they were not permitted at ECS because they didn’t promote good handwriting.

  • Timeline Image
    Timeline Image

    1950

    Lower school drama production of,
    'A Midsummer Night's Dream'

  • Timeline Image
    Timeline Image

    1951

    Visitors from local schools came to enjoy the comical antics of an irate chef during, "Spanish Afternoon."

  • Timeline Image 1953
    1953
    Timeline Image Present
    Present

    1953

    ECS Librarians pictured in 1953 as the library introduces,"Special borrowing privileges for the Sixth Form."

    Library Report, ECS School Magazine (ed. 1953)
  • Timeline Image 1954
    1954
    Timeline Image 2023
    2023

    1954

    In 1954 Dinah Barsham established a choir at ECS. After leaving County in 1956 Dinah went on to study conducting at the Royal Academy of Music, London.

    State Scholar, junior and senior Sports champion, Dinah specialised in conducting and choral training, lectured at Homerton and became a senior lecturer for the Open University.

    Dinah's older sister Eve was the first woman to gain a first in Music at Oxford University, subsequently winning a scholarship to research for her doctorate.

  • Timeline Image
    Timeline Image

    1962

    Rule Breaking Day

    Green and white summer dresses were optional for County students. Summers in the early 1960s were generally cool so students wore winter uniform all year round, as indicated by this photograph taken July 1962.

    The student on the extreme right is a Prefect, shown by the white braid on her blazer. At least two students are contravening school rules in this end of term tradition, with their peep-toe and backless shoes.

  • Timeline Image 1963
    1963
    Timeline Image 2024
    2024

    1963

    Sports Day 1963 had inclement weather with relentless drizzle throughout the day. Note Gillian's plastic rain hood, which folded concertina into a small pouch - extremely popular in the 1960s.

  • Timeline Image
    Timeline Image

    1963

    Painting the Prefects' Common Room vs breaktime in the Prefects' Common Room.

    In the 1960s GCE A levels took place in June. Term usually ended around 20th July so there were a few weeks when Sixth Formers had no formal lessons but were still required to attend school. There was usually plenty to do: supervising Preps (if they were Prefects); mending text books; stocking taking in the library; repairing sports items such as hockey sticks; assisting with Sports Day preparations; helping with the end of term concert and staff leavers' presentations. In the summer of 1963 there was also the re-painting of the Common Room.

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    1966

    Fashion conscious ECS students relaxing outside O block

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    2008

    ECS A level students make the local news