Sexey's School dates back to a trade school which opened on 6 April 1891 with 15 boys. The first Head Master was William Albert Knight. The Head Master and the boys moved into temporary premises in a house known as 'The Glen' on Quaperlake Street in Bruton. At the end of its first year there were 40 boys at the school learning basic subjects including practical mechanics, land measuring and elementary science. The school was moved to its current site in 1892 in new buildings designed by Norwich-based architect George Skipper. The new buildings were formally opened on 19 April 1892. Sexey's was a grammar school until the Education Act 1944, after which it became a Voluntary Controlled school. In 1991 it adopted Grant Maintained status and in September 1999 it became a Voluntary Aided school. It remained an all-boys school until 1977 when it became fully co-educational. Boarding facilities were expanded in the 1980s with the building of two new boarding houses — Lisbury House and Coombe House — making Sexey's one of the largest schools of its type in the country. The school has continued expansion with the introduction of a policy in 2003 to take day pupils from a local catchment area of 1.5 miles. Prior to this the last day pupil was admitted in 1983. In 2001 the school had 394 pupils. In 2007 there were 512 pupils. In 2013 the then Secretary of State for Education, Michael Gove, described Sexey's as "one of the most outstanding schools in the country," during an interview on the Andrew Marr Show on BBC One. As a state boarding school, Sexey's has complex funding arrangements with both state and independent income. In 2019 after a number of poor Ofsted results the school considered merging into the Sherborne Area Schools' Trustmulti-academy trust on the recommendation of the Regional Schools Commissioner, but following extensive parental engagement by Sexey's parents, governors and government representatives in opposition to the move, the Sherborne Trust decided not to proceed stating there was "not an alignment of values or partnership working with Sexey’s". The Regional Schools Commissioner is considering what next step to take.
Boarding
Around one fifth of the school are boarders. There are two boarding houses:
Macmillan House, Opened 2011, is a new £3.5 m installation replacing Walwin House. Its name is a tribute to Douglas MacMillan who was an old boy of the school and founded MacMillan Cancer Support.
Coombe House, opened 1983. Coombe has capacity for around 100 boarders in all year groups.
Former boarding houses include:
Walwin House was two houses built in the late 1930s. Walwin House used to accommodate year 7 boarders and had the capacity for 49 children - 30 boys and 19 girls.
Cliff House, a Grade II listed building built by Thomas Hannam in 1820 opened as a boarding house in 1892. It used to takes boarders in all year groups but is now used for teaching and holiday lets.
Lisbury House, opened 1983, is currently undergoing renovation.
In 2001, a group of pupils produced a glossy calendar as part of a Young Enterprise business project, sold for charity, called "Sexey's Hot Twelve", that featured 12 pictures of boys and girls in seductive poses. Child protection groups criticised the calendar for its potential attraction to adults who prey on vulnerable young people. The school reported that they had received no complaints, and that most of the 500 copies were bought immediately after going on sale.
Notable former pupils
Craig Alcock, professional footballer
L. J. F. Brimble, botanist and editor of Nature magazine