The original school on our site was called St Peter's.
St Peter
St Peter's was the church of a parish split from St Alfege. The first reference is in an 1866 directory, which lists in Bridge Street, as that part of Creek Road was then, St Peter's Temporary Church and, next door, what is designated simply as Infant School. St Peter's was opened on 20 November that year, the Revd George Blisset having provided land (the site of the old Greenwich Fair, which had been abolished due to its poor reputation) and a substantial amount of money for the purpose of building a church and adjoining school. The buildings were designed by the architect Samuel Teulon. I suppose that as the school and church were all one project, the school may have been known from the start as St Peter's, but the first written references I have found are from directories of 1878, which lists St Peter's National School, and 1885, which lists St Peter's Girls' School. The church was bombed during World War Two, and was subsequently demolished. The parishes of St Alfege and St Peter were formally reunited in 1951.
During the Second World War, St Peter's Church was raised to the ground and the parish of St Peter's and St Alfege's were merged. As a result of this merger the school became affiliated to St Alfege's Church and the name was changed to St Alfege with St Peter's Church of England Primary School.
St Alfege
Alfege was born c. 954 AD. As a young man he gave up his family's wealth in order to live as a hermit at Deerhurst in Gloucestershire, where he attracted a following and became Abbott of a community at Bath.
In 984 he was appointed Bishop of Winchester, as a result of a vision sent to St Dunstan. At Winchester he was noted for restoring the church and the organ, which became ‘another wonder of the world’ according to ancient sources. In 1006 he became the 29th Archbishop of Canterbury, by which time he was known and loved for his gentleness, his knowledge of the scriptures and his courage in going among Norsemen to convert them.
At this time, the Kent coast was subject to raids from Danish pirates, and in 1011 they laid siege to the City of Canterbury. Alfege, betrayed by one of his own monks, was captured and taken in one of their ships round the Kent coast and up the River Thames to Greenwich. There he was held for six months and a ransom of £3,000 was demanded. Knowing that his people would be unable to afford this huge sum, Alfege refused to let them pay, and the captors carried out their threat to kill him. At a feast on Easter Day they bludgeoned him with ox bones and the hafts of their axes until one of the Danes, out of compassion, killed him by a single blow to the head with his axe.
Then, a miracle was reported: a wooden Danish oar dipped in Alfege's blood had sprouted! As a result, his body was taken to St Paul's Cathedral in the city of London. Eleven years later, on 15 June 1023, the body was moved by King Canute to Canterbury Cathedral and placed beneath the North side of the High Altar; a memorial slab now marks the spot where his tomb was. The anniversary of his martyrdom (St Alfege's Day) is 19 April. In 1078 Alfege was canonized; two churchmen, Archbishop Lanfranc and St Anselm agreed that sainthood had been achieved in the cause of divine justice. Possibly, they remembered his last known words; to the Danish cries of "Give us gold", he had replied, "The gold I give you is the Word of God". St Anselm said of him,
"He who dies for Justice dies for God"
These words are engraved on a slab just in front of the Sanctuary of St Alfege Church, at the very place where he was martyred.