Welcome To Weltby:-
Weltby is a small town in the rural county of Leicestershire in the
United Kingdom. With approximately 10,000 residents there, it is more like
a very large village, and maintains to this day a weekly market on Thursdays.
Situated some seventeen miles south west of Leicester itself, Weltby is home
to numerous commuters that work within the cities of Leicester, Coventry
and Birmingham.
Weltby served as an important stop over point for pre railway age
stagecoaches, and it littered with several old English style coaching inns
and hotels. Today though, the town is used mostly as a commuter housing estate
to cater for middle class families and their offspring.
Weltby School dates back to 1888 and began as a facility to educate
the local gentry male offspring, it’s first title being,
“Weltby Grammar School For Boys Aged Between 11 and 18 Years.” It’s strict
discipline regime and the quality of the education received (the teachers
being mostly ex army Colonels and Brigadiers) soon earned it unofficial accolade
of being Leicestershire’s finest school. The school motto at Weltby was “Attend,
Be Attentive and Prosper.” This was translated into Latin script and adorned
the famous Weltby School badge.
The number of families wanting to send their male offspring to Weltby
soon expanded and as the railways served nearby towns, the school was extended
and refurbished to take on a number of boarding pupils.
Things developed nicely at Weltby School, the boys gaining some creditable
qualifications over the years, and their achievements were matched on the
sporting field. Year after year, Weltby dominated the school football and
rugby football leagues. They even did well in hockey, the teaching of which
introduced the first female member of staff in 1920. Her name was Miss Dorothy
Wright.
The feminist uprising of the 1960s and 1970s soon heralded an end
for Weltby and it’s all male school. The first female pupils were allowed
to attend the school from September 1978. To help the girls settle down in
the previously all male school, several female teachers were employed to
look after their needs. Boys and girls were schooled in mixed classes for
the first time.
Discipline of the sexes changed dramatically in the autumn of 1980
when the first female deputy head joined the staff. She recommended that
the girls be spared the cane and slipper, in a move that was intended to
pioneer the relaxing of corporal punishments on female students. Her name
was Miss Hillary Delaney, and hailed from an all girls school in Wales. She
also stated that corporal punishment for boys should remain, on the bare
bottom and on the spot of the offence.
This differential in the discipline of girls and boys brought pandemonium
to the school and pupil discipline took a serious downturn, particularly where
girls were concerned. The rules had to change, and so the cane and slipper
as a means of corporal punishment was re-introduced for female pupils in
autumn 1982. Miss Delaney promptly left the school.
The academic achievements of both sexes continued to dazzle as Weltby
School continued it’s County dominance. Female boarding pupils were allowed
for the first time in 1985 after the construction of a new female dormitory
block. These rooms had en-suite showers and toilets, as opposed to the communal
offerings in the male building.
In 1992, Weltby school had it’s first female head teacher. With the
school for ten years, Miss Anne Greer was a radical practitioner of the education
system. Making an immediate impact with the school, Greer changed the uniform
from it’s traditional two tone blue scheme, to a more balanced maroon and
dark blue scheme. She terminated the contracts of teachers (all male) that
she thought were not up to her high standards and replaced them with female
members of staff. That left just ten males on the teaching staff, as opposed
to thirty females.
Teaching methods altered to a more pupil friendly regime, but discipline
remained the same. The cane had been outlawed in the mid 1980s, but the slipper
was still used to full effect, bringing unruly or disobedient boys and girls
into line. The new set up was aimed at bringing female academic performance
at the school into a state of equilibrium with the male performances. Girls
had been steadily improving and following the introduction of the GCSE in
1990, girls had actually been outperforming boys in some subjects. The performance
of boys appeared to be on the wane.
What Greer actually didn’t reckon with in her own estimations was
that in the summer of 2001, girls outperformed boys academically in all subjects.
This was a nationwide trend it had to be said, but Greer took a lot of credit
for it. She retires in June 2002 and the school awaits it’s next appointment
to head teacher. Similar academic female supremacy is also expected this year
despite Government intervention to find a reason why boys had fallen behind
girls and improve their grades.
Such was Greer’s joy, she decided to change the school badge and
motto to the one that can be seen elsewhere in the web site.
Designed by a sixth form prefect called Fiona Potterton – herself
a feminist, Greer managed to push the design quickly past the Governors (still
mostly male) before they had chance to fully scrutinise it. They were believed
to have been so impressed by the maroon and blue colour scheme and yellow
embroidery that they overlooked the symbols and Latin phrasing on the badge.
The badge was introduced for the autumn 2001 term.
The badge is known to promote feminism as indicated primarily by
the female symbolic device, picked out in yellow on the blue background.
In both top corners, the letters “G” and “P” appear symbolising the Millennial
uprising of “Girl Power.” The complicated Latin motto was written to approximately
read,
“Girl’s Superiority Over Boys.”
The following collections of tales depict the goings on within the
environs of Weltby and all that it has to offer as a town and more importantly
the school. I shall recount what I have been told or have been witness to
during my time as assistant deputy head at Weltby School – a position I have
been in for three years, specialising in geography.
As things stand at the moment, the uniform for the boys is black
trousers, light blue shirt, maroon tie and a dark blue jumper. An optional
maroon blazer may be worn. For P.E. the boys must wear a white sports shirt,
and dark blue shorts (dark blue football socks).
The girls must are required to wear a dark blue pleated skirt (due
to disciplinary reasons), no longer than knee length, a light blue blouson
shirt, maroon tie and a dark blue jumper. As for the boys, the girls may
wear the optional maroon blazer – a privilege for the more affluent families
of Weltby. For P.E. the girls must wear a dark blue pleated skirt (half knee
length to enable movement) and a white sports shirt. For hockey and other
outside sports, the girls are allowed to wear the dark blue football socks.
There are 550 pupils at the school, with perhaps one or two more
girls than boys in regular attendance. The school is open to both day and
boarding pupils from age 11 to 18 inclusive, with some 150 pupils now boarding.
The school can accommodate 50 female boarding pupils and 100 male pupils.
Discipline is carried out by both male and female teachers on both
sexes of pupil. Detentions, extra homework are commonplace at Weltby, with
the hand spanking being a useful tool of more stringent punishment.
However, most teachers prefer to use the slipper. Bare bottom spankings are
allowed, to create a feeling of humiliation in the mind of the offender so
as to prevent re-offence. Apart from a small hard-core of pupils, this system
actually works quite well.
The key teaching staff are as follows,
Miss Greer is the outgoing female head teacher, retiring in June 2002. She
is 53 years old, has grey hair and dark, almost black eyes. A distinct professional
with the slipper and her wit fuelled tongue. She will gladly put boys and
men down.
Mrs Gasser is the deputy head teacher, specialising in English Literature.
She is 49 years old and is expected to replace Miss Greer. She has greying
hair and dark green eyes. She treats the males at the school, boys and men
with utter contempt.
Mr Taylor (that is me) – the assistant deputy head. I think I am the token
male in the key positions at the school. I was fast tracked through the teacher-training
scheme as a good candidate for head teacher, but I am being held back. I am
27 years of age and I have brown hair and dark green eyes. I am a former pupil
of Weltby School having lived in Weltby all of my life.
Miss Clarke is the head of the geography department and is my competition
to become deputy head. She is also 27 years old and has dark blond hair and
blue eyes. She was an old classmate of mine some ten to fifteen years ago.
She believes that no man can be trusted and that they should be shot at birth.
I think she might have had a rough time with a past boyfriend.
The other characters you will see unfold here in due course, but
I think that you might get the picture that something is definitely wrong
with the hierarchy at Weltby School. The pupils even sense it, and during
the past few years, I have seen the girls become increasingly confident in
themselves to the extent that they are intimidating boys! I am aware of more
instances of bullying by girls and they don’t just pick on other girls like
tradition would have it.
Here you will see female domination at teacher and pupil level along
with in other parts of Weltby. I have tales to tell you of pupils interacting
sexually with each other, own gender (females only), with teachers and other
adults. Bondage, mild water-sports, humiliation, forced masturbation, stripping
and spanking also appear within my accounts.
There are also incidents for me to review where teachers sexually
interact with each other as well, including some very harsh female domination.
I have seen and experienced some strange shit since I became a teacher at
Weltby. Let me share those times with you.