OUR HISTORY
Although most of the prospectus looks to the
future, it is only right that we first acknowledge our debt to the past.
As you might expect
in a town with a long ecclesiastical history, Tain has been an important
educational centre for many centuries. There are references, for example, to an
"old" schoolhouse adjacent to the collegiate Church of St.
Duthus in the late 16th century.
But Tain
Royal
Academy
owes its origins to a meeting in Richardson's Coffee
House in London
on June 6th 1800
when a number of "noblemen and gentlemen" resolved to establish an
academy in their home area. Funds were raised and a Royal Charter was granted
in 1809 establishing the right to build the first Academy on the Scottish
mainland north of Inverness.
A rector and an assistant were charged with the teaching of "reading and
writing the English language grammatically and correctly, the Latin and Greek
languages to such as require it, Arithmetic, Book-keeping, Algebra, Geometry,
Navigation, and the elements of Fortification and Gunnery." By the time
the school opened in 1813 the staff had doubled to four and the curriculum
extended to include natural philosophy, mathematics, geography, drawing, French
language, history and elocution. The school ran into financial difficulties in
the 1840s but a public appeal was launched with subscriptions payable in
locations as far apart as Jamaica
and Bombay
and TRA survived this setback to flourish once again.
Other schools existed in Tain
during the 19th century but after the 1872 Education Act only TRA and the
Parochial School (now Knockbreck
Primary School)
survived. TRA continued as a fee-paying school run by directors until the 1918
Education Act when it was taken over by Ross and Cromarty County Council. In
1937 both local schools united.
By
the time Rev. Robert Begg compiled an entry for the
Third Statistical Account in the 1950s it was evident that there was
considerable dissatisfaction with the state of the buildings, the over-crowded
classrooms "and, most lamentable of all, a total lack of playing
fields." Rev. Begg noted that a site for a new
school had been identified on the Burgage Farm
between Scotsburn Road
and Hartfield Road but added,
"When it will materialise no man knows."
A
new school did materialise in the next decade and was opened in 1969 with an
extension added in 1978 as the school roll rose to 840. The school is
determined to maintain the excellence which has always been the hallmark of
Tain
Royal
Academy.