St Mary's School Ascot

We are a leading Roman Catholic boarding school for girls aged between 11 and 18 years. We are a forty minute journey from London, and are set in 55 acres of beautiful grounds in the heart of Berkshire. We are a friendly, stable and caring community, proud of our academic and extra-curricular achievements and dedicated to bringing out the full potential of each of our 390 pupils.

Term Dates

If you have more than one daughter at St Mary’s please use the times appropriate for your eldest daughter at the beginning of the term and the times appropriate for your youngest daughter at the end of the term.

Examination Results

Congratulations to all of our Upper Sixth and Year 11 girls on the excellent results they have achieved in the 2022 public examinations.

Our UVI leavers achieved an impressive 44% A*s and 78% A*-As, while our I/GCSE pupils achieved 64% Grade 9s and 86% Grades 9-8. 

We are extremely proud of the way they have worked so hard and so cheerfully, and we are grateful also for the excellence and diligence of our teaching staff.

The full breakdown of results for this year can be viewed on the button below:

Ascot Alumnae Association

By the time girls leave St Mary’s, they have made some of the most important friendships of their lives, and the Association helps them to preserve, extend and deepen those friendships. It is a thriving network comprising nearly 3000 alumnae based in the UK and in 50 countries worldwide. All our Upper Sixth pupils are invited to join the Association, which then helps them to stay in touch with each other, both professionally and socially, after they have left the school.

History of the School

Mary Ward was born in 1585 into a wealthy recusant Catholic family near Ripon in Yorkshire. She received a good classical education, and then, at the age of 15, she decided upon the religious life, and entered the monastery of Poor Clares in St Omer. By 1609 she had gathered around her a group of companions determined to follow her guidance in founding an unclosed religious Order for women, along the lines of the Society of Jesus, which became known as the Institute of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Mary Ward believed that women were intellectually equal to men, and deserved an education that reflected that equality. The education of girls therefore remained central to her work, and for the next twenty years she travelled widely, often on foot, founding schools all over Europe.