In 685 AD St Cuthbert, Bishop of Lindisfarne, visited Carlisle and founded both a school and a church. For the next 900 years the school continued around the grounds of the cathedral.
In 1883 it became Carlisle Grammar School and moved to Strand Road, into what is now the Carliol Building of the school, housing the Sixth Form Centre. Since that time, governors continue to be appointed by the Cathedral Foundation. The analogous girls' school was Carlisle County School for Girls, which became St Aidan's County High School.
Comprehensive
As the movement towards comprehensive schools took shape, in 1968 the grammar school amalgamated with two local schools, the Margaret Sewell School (for girls) and the Creighton School (for boys), to become Trinity School, a Church of Englandcomprehensive school, with all of the sites along Strand Road.
Recent developments include the Uganda Project,[2] the USA Exchange Scheme, and overseas visits and links.[3]
The school became a Church of England converter academy in September 2011.
Facilities
A rebuilding scheme of the 11-16 school was completed in September 2012 at a reported cost of £20 million, of which £1.8 million was spent on a new sports hall.[citation needed]
The Armstrong Building
This new building was opened in 2011 as the new Science and Technology centre of the school, the major part of the rebuild programme. It was officially opened by the Duke of Kent in October 2012.[citation needed]
The Chapman Library
This purpose-built Library is the main school library. It was opened in 2001 and is named after the former Chair of Governors, Canon Rex Chapman. It has a stock of over 10,000 items including fiction, non-fiction and reference books, as well as networked computers.[citation needed]
Ofsted and academic performance
In 2009 the Ofsted inspection concluded, "Trinity School provides its students with a good education... the quality of the teaching and learning is good". In its February 2012 inspection, Trinity was judged to be "good" in all categories.[4]
Former Masters
Cyril Broom, Headmaster of Emanuel School from 1928 to 1953 (taught classics from 1911 to 1913)