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Bishop Wordsworth's School

Bishop Wordsworth's School is a Church of England boys' grammar school in Salisbury, Wiltshire for boys aged 11 to 18. The school is regularly amongst the top-performing schools in England, and in 2010 was the school with the best results in the English Baccalaureate.[2][3] It was granted academy status in March 2011 and is an Additional Member of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference. It is within the grounds of Salisbury Cathedral, adjacent to the Cathedral School.

Bishop Wordsworth's School
Address
The Close

, ,
SP1 2EB

England
Coordinates51°03′53″N 1°47′51″W / 51.0647°N 1.7975°W / 51.0647; -1.7975
Information
TypeGrammar school;
academy
MottoVeritas in Caritate
Truth in Love
Religious affiliation(s)Church of England
Established1889
FounderJohn Wordsworth
Department for Education URN136500 Tables
OfstedReports
HeadmasterStuart Smallwood
GenderBoys (mixed sixth form)
Age11 to 18
Enrolment1050 As of 2021
HousesJewell, Martival, Osmund, Poore, Ward[1]
Colour(s)Dark blue and silver/white
   
PublicationWordsworth magazine
Former pupilsOld Wordsworthians/BoBs
Websitewww.bishopwordsworths.org.uk

Sixth form teaching was in collaboration with South Wilts Grammar School for Girls until June 2020; from September 2020 the school admitted girls direct to its sixth form, with 45 joining Year 12.[4]

The school's full name is Bishop Wordsworth's Church of England Grammar School, shortened to BWS. It is known colloquially as Bishop's, and its students as Bishop's Boys. The school's motto is Veritas in Caritate, taken from the Latin text of Ephesians 4:15: "(Speaking the) truth in love."[5]

History edit

 
Bishop Wordsworth's School, No. 11 The Close. The cathedral spire is visible in the background.

The school was founded in June 1889, when the bishop of Salisbury, John Wordsworth, announced to his friend Canon Woodall, "I should like to see Salisbury a great educational centre. I should like to found a school which shall be equal to the greatest and best of our public schools."[citation needed] His initial desire that working class boys were not to be admitted caused much controversy. Fees were initially set at £1.10s.0d, and boarding fees were £2 per term; however, the fees were raised to £9 in 1894 to meet the unexpected costs of the school. During the first year, classes were taught in the bishop's palace of Salisbury itself. Bishop Wordsworth personally donated £3000, which was used to purchase an area of land in the cathedral close and to build the school's first buildings. After Wordsworth's death, the school was renamed Bishop Wordsworth's School, having been previously known as "The Bishop's School".

In 1905, the school became a grammar school, its buildings consisting of the current Chapel Block and Bishopgate. Between 1905 and 1927 the school also used buildings in the Friary and also on New Street in Salisbury. Until 1928 the school admitted both boys and girls, but from 1927, with the founding of a girls' grammar school in the city called South Wilts Grammar School, the school admitted boys only.

In 1931 a hall, science laboratories and a library were built. By the 1930s, the school had achieved a reputation for pioneering educational work,[citation needed] and in 1936 became a public school. During the Second World War, pupils from the Priory School in Portsmouth moved to BWS to avoid the bombing of the city. In 1948 the governors accepted voluntary controlled status, which meant being funded by Wiltshire County Council as local education authority and accepting its supervision. Boarding at the school in the Bishopgate buildings ended in the 1950s, and the buildings were used for teaching thereafter.

The school now educates boys aged 11 to 18 in years 7–13 and girls aged 16 to 18 in years 12–13.

In 2002, a major redevelopment of the school's site and buildings commenced. A new classroom block and drama studio were followed by an extensive sports hall and physical education facilities, and a sixth form block was finished in July 2010. The old sports hall was converted to house the art department, and the design technology block has been expanded. In 2011 a new cookery room was completed with the reception moved from The Close to Exeter Street and in 2017 the new Maths Block was completed.

In 2004 the school was awarded its first specialism in languages. In 2008 the school achieved an additional specialism in science. As part of its specialist work the school has supported all of the city primary schools in Salisbury in languages, and many with science too.[citation needed]

The school converted to single academy status in 2011. It has five houses, named after bishops of Salisbury: Poore, Osmund, Jewell, Martival and Ward.

In 2016 the school was criticised for asking parents for money towards their sons' exam costs. One Bishop Wordsworth’s School parent said the school was not private and should not be "money grabbing". Headmaster Stuart Smallwood defended the school saying it did not receive enough government funding and that the payments were entirely optional.[6]

In October 2021, it was reported that Wiltshire Police had investigated drugs activity among a small number of pupils. The previous month, a 14-year-old boy had been arrested on suspicion of being involved in the supply of Class A drugs.[7]

In March 2023, it was reported that a student in Year 10 had been arrested on suspicion of sending social media messages threatening to perform a mass shooting at the school.[8]

Entrance edit

Entry to the school is regulated by the 11-plus.[9] Applicants sit the test in year 6, at the age of 10 or 11. The exams are held in September at the school itself. There are also limited twelve plus and thirteen plus admissions, similarly by examination. Sixth form admission is administered by the head of sixth form, and is granted on the basis of GCSE results. Pupils must achieve more than 48 points (including 5 in maths and English) in their GCSEs to continue their studies in sixth form, as well as a relatively high grade in the options they propose to take.[10][obsolete source]

Notable staff edit

 

Sir William Golding, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature, was a schoolmaster teaching philosophy and English in 1939, then English and religious education from 1945 to 1962. Lord of the Flies was Golding's first book, written in 1954, and it is widely believed that its main characters were based on Golding's students.

Golding also regularly sang with Bishop Wordsworth's School choir. He was known affectionately as "Scruff" by the pupils due to his sometimes unkempt hair and beard and his carefree dress sense.[11] After Golding's death in 1993, the school choir sang at his memorial service in Salisbury Cathedral. In March 2005 a plaque was placed at the school to commemorate Golding's time as a teacher.[12] Headmaster Happold was also noted for the foundation of the "Company of Honour and Service". Kenelm Foster wrote:

"[the company is] a sort of modernist Grail (for Boys) or Solidarity which Dr Happold founded in 1935 at Bishop Wordsworth's School, Salisbury. This is his nucleus, his 'order', his new aristocracy, which is to permeate England: a little cohort of leaders, of seers, of doers." (Cited in Happold, 1964, pp. 33).

Alan Harwood was a notable organ scholar and taught music at Bishop Wordsworth's School. After Harwood's death in 2003, composer Sam Hanson (organist/director of music at St Peter's Church, Bournemouth, formerly organ scholar at Jesus College, Cambridge), dedicated a requiem to him.

Former headmaster Clive Barnett (who left the school in 2002) is patron of the charity EdUKaid, a role he shares with Glenys Kinnock.

In 2009 a retired teacher who was being investigated for indecent assault killed himself by inhaling helium. Nicholas Bray was found dead at his home by police officers on 12 June 2009 after failing to attend an appointment at Salisbury Police Station. He had been arrested in 2007 for an assault dating back several years and was also being investigated for possessing indecent images.[13]

Headmasters edit

  • 1890–1928: Reuben Bracher
  • 1928–1960: Frederick Crossfield Happold
  • 1960–1964: Ernest Ethrin Sabben-Clare
  • 1964–1974: Robert Cabot Rowsell Blackledge[14]
  • 1974–1992: Glyn Evans
  • 1992–2002: Clive Barnett
  • 2002–present: Stuart Smallwood

Notable alumni edit

The "Old Wordsworthian" AGM and lunch is traditionally held after the cathedral service and Founder's Day celebrations in July.

Science

Military

Sports

Business

Arts

Education

Legal

Politics

  • David Munro, Conservative police and crime commissioner for Surrey 2016–2020
  • Tom Copley, Labour Party London Assembly member

Religion

Journalism

Other

Sources edit

  • Happold, Frederick Crossfield, Bishop Wordsworth's School 1890 – 1950. Privately printed for Bishop Wordsworth's School, 1950, 124pp.
  • Happold, Frederick Crossfield, Religious Faith and Twentieth-Century Man. Pelican Original, 1964.
  • 'Roman Britain in 1954: I. Sites Explored: II. Inscriptions', The Journal of Roman Studies, Vol. 45, Parts 1 and 2. (1955), pp. 121–149.
  • United Kingdom Census 1901
  • British Army Medals & Honour Rolls 1914–1920

References edit

  1. ^ "The House System At BWS". School website. from the original on 26 August 2013.
  2. ^ "Performance tables 2010". Department for Education.
  3. ^ "Performance tables 2011". Department for Education.
  4. ^ "City's grammar schools end single sex tradition". Your Valley News. 26 April 2019. Retrieved 21 May 2019.
  5. ^ "Chapel and Cathedral Services". Bishop Wordsworth's School. Retrieved 2 December 2020.
  6. ^ Riddle, Joe (6 May 2016). "School asks parents to pay for pupils' exams". Salisbury Journal. Retrieved 1 October 2020.
  7. ^ Draper, Mike (23 October 2021). "Boy, 14, arrested after alleged drug supply at Salisbury school". Greatest Hits Radio (Salisbury). from the original on 23 October 2021. Retrieved 28 October 2021.
  8. ^ "Bishop's boy banned from school while police investigate online threats". Salisbury Journal. March 2023. Retrieved 27 March 2023.
  9. ^ "Admissions Overview". BWS website. from the original on 26 October 2020.
  10. ^ "Admissions – Sixth Form Entry". BWS website. from the original on 28 September 2020.
  11. ^ Ramtuhul, Claire (13 March 2012). "Preview: The Dreams of William Golding". Cultural Capital. New Statesman. Retrieved 5 August 2014.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h . School Website. Archived from the original on 18 October 2014.
  13. ^ "Former teacher overdosed on helium". Salisbury Journal. 19 October 2009. Retrieved 1 October 2020.
  14. ^ "Alumni Publications – The Record 2007" (PDF). Keble College, Oxford. p. 48.
  15. ^ "Dr Mark Oxborrow". www.imperial.ac.uk. Retrieved 8 October 2020.
  16. ^ Oxborrow, Mark; Breeze, Jonathan D.; Alford, Neil M. (2012). "Room-temperature solid-state maser". Nature. 488 (7411): 353–356. Bibcode:2012Natur.488..353O. doi:10.1038/nature11339. hdl:10044/1/13785.
  17. ^ "Memorable Manitobans: Walter Edward Maxfield (1877–1964)". The Manitoba Historical Society. 18 June 2011.
  18. ^ "Canadian Mounted Rifles – 'Pop'".
  19. ^ a b c (PDF). School Website. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 September 2011.
  20. ^ "Taukkyan War Cemetery". Roll-of-honour.org.uk.
  21. ^ Reading Room Manchester (24 July 1945). "Casualty Details". Commonwealth War Graves Commission.
  22. ^ . 27 September 2003. Archived from the original on 20 April 2005.
  23. ^ . The Victoria Cross. Archived from the original on 16 July 2012.
  24. ^ (PDF). School Website. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 September 2011.
  25. ^ "Lieutenant-Colonel George Woolnough obituary". The Daily Telegraph. 26 February 2012.
  26. ^ "Administration: Students To Celebrate Success At Degree Congregations". University of Leicester. 21–23 July 1999.
  27. ^ "ROM Communal Cemetery (Deux Sevres France)". In Memory by Pierre Vandervelden.
  28. ^ Thomas, Andrew (2003). Hurricane Aces 1941–1945. Osprey Publishing. p. 83. ISBN 978-1-84-176610-2.
  29. ^ . Bath Rugby official website. Archived from the original on 11 January 2012.
  30. ^ "John Coundley, racing driver – obituary". The Telegraph. 2 February 2016. Retrieved 29 March 2023.
  31. ^ "Channel Swimming Association".
  32. ^ "New Trade Envoys and Business Investment to Boost Trade Links". The National Archives. 12 November 2012. Archived from the original on 3 March 2013.
  33. ^ Berens, Jessica (26 April 2003). "Down to a Fiennes art". The Sydney Morning Herald. Sydney.
  34. ^ "Notable People". Inside Wiltshire.
  35. ^ Blake, Morwenna (21 March 2013). "Film producer dies at 65". Salisbury Journal. Retrieved 27 January 2022.
  36. ^ . Klitz Family History. Archived from the original on 18 March 2013.
  37. ^ (PDF). Salisbury Cathedral website. November 2010. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 March 2013.
  38. ^ Robinson, David (16 February 2005). "Otto Plaschkes obituary". The Guardian. London.
  39. ^ Hassan, Mamoun (5 March 2005). "Old-school film producer". The Independent. London.
  40. ^ Bones, James (7 March 2005). "Film producer whose 'Georgy Girl' helped to set the tone for Sixties Swinging London". The Times.
  41. ^ "Andy returns to his roots". Salisbury Journal. 30 April 2009.
  42. ^ "Nigel Shore Bio". naxos.com. Berlin.
  43. ^ Light, Vivienne (20 February 2011). "Peter Thursby obituary". The Guardian.
  44. ^ Nice, David (20 December 2016). "Crowe, La Nuova Musica, Bates, St John's Smith Square". TheArtsDesk.
  45. ^ . UCL Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience. London. Archived from the original on 19 April 2005.
  46. ^ "Professor Andrew Tym Hattersley FRS". The Royal Society.
  47. ^ . University of Exeter Peninsula Medical School. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 30 September 2013.
  48. ^ "Staff Profiles". University of Exeter – Medical School.
  49. ^ "Contact Us". Diabetes Research dept. and the Centre for Molecular Genetics at the Peninsula Medical School and Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital.
  50. ^ Vallis, David (19 April 2007). "Scientist helps find 'fat' gene". Salisbury Journal.
  51. ^ "Chis Sangwin". University of Edinburgh – School of Mathematics.
  52. ^ Vallis, David (4 January 2007). "New Years Honours For Local People". Salisbury Journal.
  53. ^ "Supplement to the London Gazette, 20 July, 1943 – Pg. 3270" (PDF).
  54. ^ "The Very Reverend Frank Curtis obituary". The Daily Telegraph. 30 May 2005.
  55. ^ Trim, Liam (22 October 2021). "Who is Mark Labbett? The Chase star's journey from Salisbury school pupil to TV star".
  56. ^ "Supplement to the London Gazette, 4 June, 1934 – Pg. 3559" (PDF).
  57. ^ Streat, Sir Raymond; Dupree, Marguerite (1987). Lancashire and Whitehall: The Diary of Sir Raymond Streat. Manchester University Press. p. 263. ISBN 0-719023-90-4.
  58. ^ McNeal, Peter (14 August 2002). "Sir Graham Smith obituary". The Guardian. London.

External links edit

bishop, wordsworth, school, church, england, boys, grammar, school, salisbury, wiltshire, boys, aged, school, regularly, amongst, performing, schools, england, 2010, school, with, best, results, english, baccalaureate, granted, academy, status, march, 2011, ad. Bishop Wordsworth s School is a Church of England boys grammar school in Salisbury Wiltshire for boys aged 11 to 18 The school is regularly amongst the top performing schools in England and in 2010 was the school with the best results in the English Baccalaureate 2 3 It was granted academy status in March 2011 and is an Additional Member of the Headmasters and Headmistresses Conference It is within the grounds of Salisbury Cathedral adjacent to the Cathedral School Bishop Wordsworth s SchoolAddressThe CloseSalisbury Wiltshire SP1 2EBEnglandCoordinates51 03 53 N 1 47 51 W 51 0647 N 1 7975 W 51 0647 1 7975InformationTypeGrammar school academyMottoVeritas in CaritateTruth in LoveReligious affiliation s Church of EnglandEstablished1889FounderJohn WordsworthDepartment for Education URN136500 TablesOfstedReportsHeadmasterStuart SmallwoodGenderBoys mixed sixth form Age11 to 18Enrolment1050 As of 2021 update HousesJewell Martival Osmund Poore Ward 1 Colour s Dark blue and silver white PublicationWordsworth magazineFormer pupilsOld Wordsworthians BoBsWebsitewww wbr bishopwordsworths wbr org wbr uk Sixth form teaching was in collaboration with South Wilts Grammar School for Girls until June 2020 from September 2020 the school admitted girls direct to its sixth form with 45 joining Year 12 4 The school s full name is Bishop Wordsworth s Church of England Grammar School shortened to BWS It is known colloquially as Bishop s and its students as Bishop s Boys The school s motto is Veritas in Caritate taken from the Latin text of Ephesians 4 15 Speaking the truth in love 5 Contents 1 History 2 Entrance 3 Notable staff 4 Headmasters 5 Notable alumni 6 Sources 7 References 8 External linksHistory edit nbsp Bishop Wordsworth s School No 11 The Close The cathedral spire is visible in the background The school was founded in June 1889 when the bishop of Salisbury John Wordsworth announced to his friend Canon Woodall I should like to see Salisbury a great educational centre I should like to found a school which shall be equal to the greatest and best of our public schools citation needed His initial desire that working class boys were not to be admitted caused much controversy Fees were initially set at 1 10s 0d and boarding fees were 2 per term however the fees were raised to 9 in 1894 to meet the unexpected costs of the school During the first year classes were taught in the bishop s palace of Salisbury itself Bishop Wordsworth personally donated 3000 which was used to purchase an area of land in the cathedral close and to build the school s first buildings After Wordsworth s death the school was renamed Bishop Wordsworth s School having been previously known as The Bishop s School In 1905 the school became a grammar school its buildings consisting of the current Chapel Block and Bishopgate Between 1905 and 1927 the school also used buildings in the Friary and also on New Street in Salisbury Until 1928 the school admitted both boys and girls but from 1927 with the founding of a girls grammar school in the city called South Wilts Grammar School the school admitted boys only In 1931 a hall science laboratories and a library were built By the 1930s the school had achieved a reputation for pioneering educational work citation needed and in 1936 became a public school During the Second World War pupils from the Priory School in Portsmouth moved to BWS to avoid the bombing of the city In 1948 the governors accepted voluntary controlled status which meant being funded by Wiltshire County Council as local education authority and accepting its supervision Boarding at the school in the Bishopgate buildings ended in the 1950s and the buildings were used for teaching thereafter The school now educates boys aged 11 to 18 in years 7 13 and girls aged 16 to 18 in years 12 13 In 2002 a major redevelopment of the school s site and buildings commenced A new classroom block and drama studio were followed by an extensive sports hall and physical education facilities and a sixth form block was finished in July 2010 The old sports hall was converted to house the art department and the design technology block has been expanded In 2011 a new cookery room was completed with the reception moved from The Close to Exeter Street and in 2017 the new Maths Block was completed In 2004 the school was awarded its first specialism in languages In 2008 the school achieved an additional specialism in science As part of its specialist work the school has supported all of the city primary schools in Salisbury in languages and many with science too citation needed The school converted to single academy status in 2011 It has five houses named after bishops of Salisbury Poore Osmund Jewell Martival and Ward In 2016 the school was criticised for asking parents for money towards their sons exam costs One Bishop Wordsworth s School parent said the school was not private and should not be money grabbing Headmaster Stuart Smallwood defended the school saying it did not receive enough government funding and that the payments were entirely optional 6 In October 2021 it was reported that Wiltshire Police had investigated drugs activity among a small number of pupils The previous month a 14 year old boy had been arrested on suspicion of being involved in the supply of Class A drugs 7 In March 2023 it was reported that a student in Year 10 had been arrested on suspicion of sending social media messages threatening to perform a mass shooting at the school 8 Entrance editEntry to the school is regulated by the 11 plus 9 Applicants sit the test in year 6 at the age of 10 or 11 The exams are held in September at the school itself There are also limited twelve plus and thirteen plus admissions similarly by examination Sixth form admission is administered by the head of sixth form and is granted on the basis of GCSE results Pupils must achieve more than 48 points including 5 in maths and English in their GCSEs to continue their studies in sixth form as well as a relatively high grade in the options they propose to take 10 obsolete source Notable staff edit nbsp Sir William Golding winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature was a schoolmaster teaching philosophy and English in 1939 then English and religious education from 1945 to 1962 Lord of the Flies was Golding s first book written in 1954 and it is widely believed that its main characters were based on Golding s students Golding also regularly sang with Bishop Wordsworth s School choir He was known affectionately as Scruff by the pupils due to his sometimes unkempt hair and beard and his carefree dress sense 11 After Golding s death in 1993 the school choir sang at his memorial service in Salisbury Cathedral In March 2005 a plaque was placed at the school to commemorate Golding s time as a teacher 12 Headmaster Happold was also noted for the foundation of the Company of Honour and Service Kenelm Foster wrote the company is a sort of modernist Grail for Boys or Solidarity which Dr Happold founded in 1935 at Bishop Wordsworth s School Salisbury This is his nucleus his order his new aristocracy which is to permeate England a little cohort of leaders of seers of doers Cited in Happold 1964 pp 33 Alan Harwood was a notable organ scholar and taught music at Bishop Wordsworth s School After Harwood s death in 2003 composer Sam Hanson organist director of music at St Peter s Church Bournemouth formerly organ scholar at Jesus College Cambridge dedicated a requiem to him Former headmaster Clive Barnett who left the school in 2002 is patron of the charity EdUKaid a role he shares with Glenys Kinnock In 2009 a retired teacher who was being investigated for indecent assault killed himself by inhaling helium Nicholas Bray was found dead at his home by police officers on 12 June 2009 after failing to attend an appointment at Salisbury Police Station He had been arrested in 2007 for an assault dating back several years and was also being investigated for possessing indecent images 13 Headmasters edit1890 1928 Reuben Bracher 1928 1960 Frederick Crossfield Happold 1960 1964 Ernest Ethrin Sabben Clare 1964 1974 Robert Cabot Rowsell Blackledge 14 1974 1992 Glyn Evans 1992 2002 Clive Barnett 2002 present Stuart SmallwoodNotable alumni editSee also Category People educated at Bishop Wordsworth s School The Old Wordsworthian AGM and lunch is traditionally held after the cathedral service and Founder s Day celebrations in July Science Mark Oxborrow professor at Imperial College London 15 co discoverer of the room temperature solid state maser 16 Military Walter Edward Maxfield lieutenant colonel 1st Battalion Canadian Mounted Rifles CEF The Bishop s School 1890 1892 17 18 William Sholto Thesigerwst Douglass colonel Royal Engineers 19 20 21 Tom Adlam lieutenant colonel Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire Regiment Victoria Cross recipient 22 23 24 George Woolnough lieutenant colonel The Wiltshire Regiment Duke of Edinburgh s 25 Chris Moon captain Royal Anglian Regiment 12 26 Richard Crisp lieutenant Special Air Service Regiment executed by enemy forces during SAS SOE Operation Bulbasket 19 27 F N Robertson flight sergeant No 261 Sqn Hurricane fighter ace with 11th most kills of any Commonwealth pilot 28 in World War II 19 Dudley Cockle flight sergeant Royal Air Force airman recipient of the British Empire Medal Percy Morfill squadron leader a flying ace of the Royal Air Force during World War II Sports Dudley Cockle cricketer David Egerton England rugby international player 12 Richard Anthony Hill former Saracens and England international rugby union flanker player captain winner RWC 2003 12 Richard John Hill coach and former Bath and England international rugby union scrum half player captain 12 John Shaw England XI hockey captain and Olympian 12 Tom Heathcote Bath Rugby fly half 29 John Coundley racing driver 30 Jonathan Copp BWS 1969 1977 England and Great Britain Olympic hockey squad coach 12 James McIntosh English Channel swimmer 31 Business Colin Sharman Baron Sharman chairman of Aviva Group and former chairman of KPMG International Prime Ministerial Trade Envoy to Morocco 32 Arts Ralph Fiennes actor 33 Joseph Fiennes actor 34 Tim Hampton film producer 35 Anthony Robert Klitz major Middlesex Regiment artist 36 Hamish Milne concert pianist and professor of piano at the Royal Academy of Music David Oakes actor 37 Otto Plaschkes movie producer 38 39 40 Andy Sheppard jazz musician 41 Nigel Shore principal oboist with the Komische Oper Berlin 42 Peter Thursby sculptor 43 David Bates conductor 44 Barney Norris novelist and playwright James Marriott musician Education Basil Chubb professor of Irish history at Trinity College Dublin author and interned during the Second World War in Stalag Luft III Andrew Copp neurobiologist 45 Andrew Tym Hattersley 46 head of the Exeter Diabetes Genetics Centre 47 professor of molecular medicine Peninsula Medical School University of Exeter 48 49 consultant physician Royal Devon and Exeter NHS Foundation Trust great grandson of John Wordsworth the bishop of Salisbury who founded BWS 50 Prof Chris Sangwin mathematician University of Edinburgh 51 Legal Ken Macdonald warden of Wadham College Oxford director of public prosecutions DPP head of the Crown Prosecution Service CPS from 2003 to 2008 52 Politics David Munro Conservative police and crime commissioner for Surrey 2016 2020 Tom Copley Labour Party London Assembly member Religion Mervyn Alexander the 8th bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Clifton from 1974 to 2001 Wilfred Frank Curtis major Royal Artillery 53 Anglican priest 54 Journalism Andrew Harvey BBC newsreader 12 Anthony Hayward journalist and author Other Cecil Chubb last private owner of Stonehenge Mark Labbett born 1965 quizzer 55 Frank Noyce member of the Governor General of India s Executive Council from 1932 to 1937 56 57 and member of the Indian Public Schools Society IPSS Sir Graham Smith HM chief inspector of probation from 1992 to 2001 58 Ralph Whitlock farmer broadcaster conservationist journalist and authorSources editHappold Frederick Crossfield Bishop Wordsworth s School 1890 1950 Privately printed for Bishop Wordsworth s School 1950 124pp Happold Frederick Crossfield Religious Faith and Twentieth Century Man Pelican Original 1964 Roman Britain in 1954 I Sites Explored II Inscriptions The Journal of Roman Studies Vol 45 Parts 1 and 2 1955 pp 121 149 United Kingdom Census 1901 British Army Medals amp Honour Rolls 1914 1920References edit The House System At BWS School website Archived from the original on 26 August 2013 Performance tables 2010 Department for Education Performance tables 2011 Department for Education City s grammar schools end single sex tradition Your Valley News 26 April 2019 Retrieved 21 May 2019 Chapel and Cathedral Services Bishop Wordsworth s School Retrieved 2 December 2020 Riddle Joe 6 May 2016 School asks parents to pay for pupils exams Salisbury Journal Retrieved 1 October 2020 Draper Mike 23 October 2021 Boy 14 arrested after alleged drug supply at Salisbury school Greatest Hits Radio Salisbury Archived from the original on 23 October 2021 Retrieved 28 October 2021 Bishop s boy banned from school while police investigate online threats Salisbury Journal March 2023 Retrieved 27 March 2023 Admissions Overview BWS website Archived from the original on 26 October 2020 Admissions Sixth Form Entry BWS website Archived from the original on 28 September 2020 Ramtuhul Claire 13 March 2012 Preview The Dreams of William Golding Cultural Capital New Statesman Retrieved 5 August 2014 a b c d e f g h Famous Wordsworthians School Website Archived from the original on 18 October 2014 Former teacher overdosed on helium Salisbury Journal 19 October 2009 Retrieved 1 October 2020 Alumni Publications The Record 2007 PDF Keble College Oxford p 48 Dr Mark Oxborrow www imperial ac uk Retrieved 8 October 2020 Oxborrow Mark Breeze Jonathan D Alford Neil M 2012 Room temperature solid state maser Nature 488 7411 353 356 Bibcode 2012Natur 488 353O doi 10 1038 nature11339 hdl 10044 1 13785 Memorable Manitobans Walter Edward Maxfield 1877 1964 The Manitoba Historical Society 18 June 2011 Canadian Mounted Rifles Pop a b c Old Wordsworthians killed in the Second World War 1939 1945 PDF School Website Archived from the original PDF on 28 September 2011 Taukkyan War Cemetery Roll of honour org uk Reading Room Manchester 24 July 1945 Casualty Details Commonwealth War Graves Commission Tom Edwin Adlam s family dedication 27 September 2003 Archived from the original on 20 April 2005 Tom Edwin Adlam s burial location The Victoria Cross Archived from the original on 16 July 2012 Old Wordsworthians killed in the First World War 1914 1918 PDF School Website Archived from the original PDF on 28 September 2011 Lieutenant Colonel George Woolnough obituary The Daily Telegraph 26 February 2012 Administration Students To Celebrate Success At Degree Congregations University of Leicester 21 23 July 1999 ROM Communal Cemetery Deux Sevres France In Memory by Pierre Vandervelden Thomas Andrew 2003 Hurricane Aces 1941 1945 Osprey Publishing p 83 ISBN 978 1 84 176610 2 Tom Heathcote Bath Rugby official website Archived from the original on 11 January 2012 John Coundley racing driver obituary The Telegraph 2 February 2016 Retrieved 29 March 2023 Channel Swimming Association New Trade Envoys and Business Investment to Boost Trade Links The National Archives 12 November 2012 Archived from the original on 3 March 2013 Berens Jessica 26 April 2003 Down to a Fiennes art The Sydney Morning Herald Sydney Notable People Inside Wiltshire Blake Morwenna 21 March 2013 Film producer dies at 65 Salisbury Journal Retrieved 27 January 2022 Tony Klitz Family History Archived from the original on 18 March 2013 Canon s son acts evil PDF Salisbury Cathedral website November 2010 Archived from the original PDF on 18 March 2013 Robinson David 16 February 2005 Otto Plaschkes obituary The Guardian London Hassan Mamoun 5 March 2005 Old school film producer The Independent London Bones James 7 March 2005 Film producer whose Georgy Girl helped to set the tone for Sixties Swinging London The Times Andy returns to his roots Salisbury Journal 30 April 2009 Nigel Shore Bio naxos com Berlin Light Vivienne 20 February 2011 Peter Thursby obituary The Guardian Nice David 20 December 2016 Crowe La Nuova Musica Bates St John s Smith Square TheArtsDesk Staff List Prof Andrew Copp UCL Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience London Archived from the original on 19 April 2005 Professor Andrew Tym Hattersley FRS The Royal Society Head of The Exeter Diabetes Genetics Centre University of Exeter Peninsula Medical School Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 30 September 2013 Staff Profiles University of Exeter Medical School Contact Us Diabetes Research dept and the Centre for Molecular Genetics at the Peninsula Medical School and Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital Vallis David 19 April 2007 Scientist helps find fat gene Salisbury Journal Chis Sangwin University of Edinburgh School of Mathematics Vallis David 4 January 2007 New Years Honours For Local People Salisbury Journal Supplement to the London Gazette 20 July 1943 Pg 3270 PDF The Very Reverend Frank Curtis obituary The Daily Telegraph 30 May 2005 Trim Liam 22 October 2021 Who is Mark Labbett The Chase star s journey from Salisbury school pupil to TV star Supplement to the London Gazette 4 June 1934 Pg 3559 PDF Streat Sir Raymond Dupree Marguerite 1987 Lancashire and Whitehall The Diary of Sir Raymond Streat Manchester University Press p 263 ISBN 0 719023 90 4 McNeal Peter 14 August 2002 Sir Graham Smith obituary The Guardian London External links editOfficial website nbsp Old Wordsworthians Association Statistics from the Department for Education Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bishop Wordsworth 27s School amp oldid 1222480383, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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