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Lincolnshire school to drop 95-year-old logo after JC points out antisemitic blood libel connection

St Hugh's School says it will change its insignia which represents the story of ‘Little Saint Hugh’

January 29, 2020 13:37
The St Hugh's insignia, as it appears on the school's website
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A Lincolnshire school is to drop its 95-year-old logo after the JC pointed out that it symbolised an antisemitic blood libel.

The St Hugh’s School insignia, which features a ball flying over a wall, represents the story of ‘Little Saint Hugh’ who, according to 13th century mythology, was murdered by a Jewish family after he lost his ball over their wall and was invited to retrieve it.

According to former staff member Hugh Martineau, Joan Forbes, one of the school’s founders, “was familiar with the myth while [her husband Ronnie] Forbes asserted that this story should remind his boys to maintain control, both of the ball and where they were allowed to play with it”.

The Forbes family established the school, in the village of Woodhall Spa, in 1925. Former pupils include television journalist David Frost.