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Blundell's School

Blundell's School is a co-educational day and boarding independent school in the English public school tradition, located in Tiverton, Devon. It was founded in 1604 under the will of Peter Blundell, one of the richest men in England at the time, and moved to its present site on the outskirts of the town in 1882.

Blundell's School
Address
Blundells Road

, ,
EX16 4DN

Coordinates50°54′23″N 3°27′58″W / 50.906499°N 3.466174°W / 50.906499; -3.466174Coordinates: 50°54′23″N 3°27′58″W / 50.906499°N 3.466174°W / 50.906499; -3.466174
Information
TypePublic school
Independent day and boarding school
MottoPro Patria Populoque
(For the country and the people)
Established1604; 419 years ago (1604)
FounderPeter Blundell
Department for Education URN113575 Tables
Chairman of the GovernorsNigel Hall
HeadBart Wielenga
Staff360
GenderCo-educational
Age3 to 18
Enrolmentc. 615 in senior school
c. 251 in preparatory school
HousesFrancis House (Boys)

Gorton House (Girls)
North Close (Girls)
Old House (Boys)
Petergate (Boys)
School House (Years 7 and 8)

Westlake (Sixth Form)
Colour(s)Red & White    
Former pupilsOld Blundellians
Websitehttp://www.blundells.org

While the full boarding fees are £38,985 per year, the school offers several scholarships and bursaries, and provides flexi-boarding. The school has 360 boys and 225 girls, including 117 boys and 85 girls in the Sixth Form, and is a member of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference.

The Good Schools Guide calls Blundell's a "distinguished rural school of ancient lineage".[1]

History

 
Old Blundell's

Peter Blundell, one of the wealthiest merchants of Elizabethan England, died in 1601, having made his fortune principally in the cloth industry. His will set aside considerable money and land to establish a school in his home town "to maintain sound learning and true religion". Blundell asked his friend John Popham, Lord Chief Justice of England, to carry out his wishes, and appointed a number of local merchants and gentry as his first trustees (known as feoffees). The position of feoffee is no longer hereditary, but a number of notable local families have held the position for a considerable period: the first ancestor of the current chairman of the governors to hold that position was elected more than 250 years ago, and the Heathcoat-Amory family have a long tradition of service on the Governing Body, since Sir John Heathcoat-Amory was appointed in 1865.

The Old Blundell's School was built to be much larger and grander than any other in the West Country, with room for 150 scholars and accommodation for a master and an usher.[2] The Grade 1 listed building is now in the care of the National Trust and the forecourt is usually open to visitors. One ex-Blundell's boy was the writer R. D. Blackmore, who in the novel Lorna Doone set the stage for a fight between John Ridd and Robin Snell on the Blundell's triangular lawn.[3]

Peter Blundell's executors established links with Balliol College, Oxford, and with Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, and large sums were settled to provide for scholarships for pupils of the school to attend those colleges.[4] The first Sidney Sussex scholar was nominated in 1610 and the first Blundell's Balliol scholar in 1615. The links with these colleges continue today, although without the closed scholarships.

In 1645 Thomas Fairfax used the school for his headquarters during the siege of Tiverton Castle.

 
Blundell's School clocktower and chapel

In 1882, the school moved to the present Horsdon site, one mile from the original location. The new buildings were designed by Hayward & Son of Exeter, and built in red Halberton stone, the foundation stone was laid by the William Courtenay, 11th Earl of Devon, chairman of the governors, in 1880.[5] Reginald Blomfield, the architect and garden designer, was responsible for the additions to the school, which were completed in 1901.[citation needed]

The School's war memorial was carved by the school's sculpture teacher, Estcourt J. Clack and is a replica of the Celtic cross in Eyam churchyard, but with the missing part intact.

The clock tower contains a statue by Alain John, a pupil of the School and aspiring sculptor, who joined the RAF as a navigator and was killed in the Second World War. The statue was subsequently re-cast at the commission of Neville Gorton, then Bishop of Coventry, and stands in the ruins of the old Coventry Cathedral as a memorial to those who lost their lives in the war.

In 1989, Ondaatje Hall was opened, following a donation by OB Christopher Ondaatje for its construction. Among its many facilities is a 150-seat professional theatre, which as well as putting on in-house productions is also used for public performances.

Girls were admitted from the age of 13 in 1993, to make the school fully co-educational. To make room for them, the boys' boarding house North Close was changed into a girls' house. In 1997, School House became a junior house for pupils aged 11–13.

The prep school St Aubyn's was moved to the Blundell's campus in 2000,[6] taking over the day-boy house Milestones and the Sanatorium, and was renamed Blundell's Prep School. It has about 250 pupils aged from three years to eleven. The headmaster is Andy Southgate.

A change to the way the UVI boarders are housed took place when the old Westlake was sold off and a new Westlake built on the site of the CCF parade ground. Opened in 2004, the new Westlake houses all boys and girls who are in their final year.

The two latest developments to be completed are an extension to the Music School, and the building of the Popham Academic Centre, which houses the new Psychology, Economics and Business Studies departments, as well as the new server for the school intranet and a dedicated IT teaching area.

Sport

 
1740 ticket for Blundell's School Feast by William Hogarth

Rugby

Rugby is the main sport played at Blundell's in the Autumn and Spring terms. The earliest mention of "football" in the Blundellian was in 1861 and the first recorded "rugger" match played by boys at Blundell's was in 1868 against Tiverton Rugby Club, making the school one of the oldest anywhere formally to play the game. The Blundell's crest still hangs in the main room at Twickenham in recognition of this.[7]

The first OB to gain International Honours was R. S. Kindersley for England in 1884 and on 1 January 1908 Thomas Kelly captained England to a 19–0 victory over France.

The strongest years for Blundell's were the two decades after World War 2, when Clem Thomas gained 26 caps for Wales in 1949–59 (in 1958–59 as captain), Richard Sharp won 14 caps for England 1960-67 (Captain 1963 and 1967) and David Shepherd won five caps for Australia in 1964–66. Both Thomas and Sharp played in two tests for Britain in South Africa.

Also of note was Charles Kent, who played for Rosslyn Park and England, having previously won four Blues playing for Oxford, including one as captain in 1974.

Blundell's won the Rosslyn Park National Sevens title in 1981 and won the second ever Open Final 28–0 against Dulwich College, in 1940. The Blundell's XVs continue to compete among the public schools of the South West, with Bryanston, Millfield, Cheltenham College and Clifton College among their regular opponents.

OBs Dave Lewis Gloucester Rugby, Matt Kvesic and Will Carrick-Smith Exeter Chiefs all currently play in the Aviva Premiership.[8]

Jack Maunder is an English rugby union player who plays scrum-half for Exeter Chiefs in the Aviva Premiership.

Sam Maunder, brother of Jack Maunder, plays for England U18 squad.[9]

The Russell

One annual tradition is the school's cross-country run known as the Russell, named after OB Jack Russell, a vicar and dog-breeder. It was first run in 1887,[10] and 2009 saw the 129th run.[11] The Russell course crosses both public and private land with the permission of local landowners. As such, the route has undergone numerous changes throughout its history. The current senior course is 4.85 miles and includes a notorious’Heartbreak Hill’. Although the junior race and a ‘fun run’ follow shorter routes, all participants encounter the muddiest sections. Parents, staff and OB’s may participate in the ‘Open’ which follows the senior route.

Cricket at the 1900 Olympics

Four Old Blundellians played in the gold medal-winning Great Britain cricket team at the 1900 Summer Olympics, the only time cricket featured in the Olympics. Britain was represented by an unofficial touring club team, the Devon & Somerset Wanderers Cricket Club (formed by William Donne in 1894 and made up of Old Blundellians and members of Castle Cary Cricket Club).

Southern Railway Schools Class

 
932 Blundell's Schools Class 4-4-0 at Eastleigh in 1948.

The School lent its name to the thirty-third steam locomotive (Engine 932) in the Southern Railway's Class V of which there were 40. This class was also known as the Schools Class because all 40 of the class were named after prominent English public schools. Blundell's, as it was called, was built in 1934. The locomotive bearing the school's name was withdrawn from service in January 1961. In 2009 Hornby produced a model of this particular Schools class locomotive. As the product photograph shows, while the name of this locomotive has been variously quoted as Blundells or Blundell's, the apostrophe does actually appear on the nameplate.[12]

Old Blundellians

The first known society of former pupils, known as Old Blundellians (OBs), was established as early as 1725.[13]

William Hogarth engraved the letterhead for the invitation to a dinner for former pupils of the School in 1725 and the Ticket for Tiverton School Feast in 1740, (image of print courtesy of Antiqueprints.com).[14]

Notable former pupils include:

A–D

E–K

L–R

S–Z

Headteachers

  • 2018-present: Bart Wielenga
  • 2013–2018: Nicola Huggett
  • 2012–2013: Randall Thane
  • 2004–2012: Ian Davenport
  • 1992–2004: Jonathan Leigh
  • 1980–1992: A.J.D. Rees
  • 1971–1980: A. Clive S. Gimson
  • 1959–1971: J.M. Stanton
  • 1947–1959: J.S. Carter
  • 1943–1947: R.L. Roberts
  • 1934–1942: Neville Gorton
  • 1930–1933: Alexander Wallace
  • 1917–1930: Arthur Edwin Wynne
  • 1874–1917: A.L. Francis
  • 1847–1874: John Hughes
  • 1834–1847: Henry Sanders
  • 1823–1834: Alldersey Dicken
  • 1797–1823: William Richards
  • 1775–1797: Richard Keats, rector of Bideford and King's Nympton, father of Richard Goodwin Keats (1757–1834),[17] Martha Keats (1753–1833) and of Lewis William Buck (1784–1858), MP.[18]
  • 1757–1775: Philip Atherton
  • 1740–1757: William Daddo
  • 1734–1740: Samuel Wesley
  • 1733–1734: John Jones
  • 1730–1733: Samual Smith
  • 1698–1730: William Rayner
  • 1684–1698: John Sanders
  • 1669–1684: George Hume
  • 1651–1669: Henry Batten
  • 1648–1651: Henry Osborne
  • 1604–1647: Samuel Butler

Notable former masters

Former masters of Blundell's have included:

References

  1. ^ "Blundell's School | Tiverton | LEA:Devon | Devon". The Good Schools Guide. Retrieved 3 October 2011.
  2. ^ GENUKI/Devon: Tiverton 1850
  3. ^ Lorna Doone, A Romance of Exmoor – CHAPTER II
  4. ^ Balliol Archives – Blundell's School
  5. ^ Mike Sampson (2004) A history of Tiverton. ISSN 0305-8549
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 16 July 2011. Retrieved 22 June 2009.
  7. ^ www.blundells.org - Rugby
  8. ^ "OB Club - Sport". Blundells.org. 26 November 2011. Retrieved 7 February 2013.[non-primary source needed]
  9. ^ "RFU".
  10. ^ www.blundells.org - Headmasters
  11. ^ OB Club - Sport 25 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ [1] 19 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ Report & Transactions, Volume 23, Devonshire Association for the Advancement of Science, Literature and Art, 1891
  14. ^ "Search object details". British Museum. Retrieved 26 April 2013.
  15. ^ Frederic Boase, Modern English Biography, vol. 4 (Netherton and Worth, 1906), p. 2,007
  16. ^ "Captain John Marrack - Telegraph". The Daily Telegraph. 3 January 2010. Retrieved 4 May 2012. John Alexander Marrack was born on 10 February 1921 in Barnet and educated at Downsend School, Leatherhead, and Blundell's. He joined the Navy as a special entry in September 1938.
  17. ^ Gentleman's Magazine, 1834, p.653, obituary of Admiral Keats
  18. ^ Vivian, J.L., (Ed.) The Visitations of the County of Devon: Comprising the Heralds' Visitations of 1531, 1564 & 1620, Exeter, 1895, Stucley & Buck pedigree, pp.723

External links

  Media related to Blundell's School at Wikimedia Commons

blundell, school, educational, boarding, independent, school, english, public, school, tradition, located, tiverton, devon, founded, 1604, under, will, peter, blundell, richest, england, time, moved, present, site, outskirts, town, 1882, addressblundells, road. Blundell s School is a co educational day and boarding independent school in the English public school tradition located in Tiverton Devon It was founded in 1604 under the will of Peter Blundell one of the richest men in England at the time and moved to its present site on the outskirts of the town in 1882 Blundell s SchoolAddressBlundells RoadTiverton Devon EX16 4DNEnglandCoordinates50 54 23 N 3 27 58 W 50 906499 N 3 466174 W 50 906499 3 466174 Coordinates 50 54 23 N 3 27 58 W 50 906499 N 3 466174 W 50 906499 3 466174InformationTypePublic schoolIndependent day and boarding schoolMottoPro Patria Populoque For the country and the people Established1604 419 years ago 1604 FounderPeter BlundellDepartment for Education URN113575 TablesChairman of the GovernorsNigel HallHeadBart WielengaStaff360GenderCo educationalAge3 to 18Enrolmentc 615 in senior schoolc 251 in preparatory schoolHousesFrancis House Boys Gorton House Girls North Close Girls Old House Boys Petergate Boys School House Years 7 and 8 Westlake Sixth Form Colour s Red amp White Former pupilsOld BlundelliansWebsitehttp www blundells orgWhile the full boarding fees are 38 985 per year the school offers several scholarships and bursaries and provides flexi boarding The school has 360 boys and 225 girls including 117 boys and 85 girls in the Sixth Form and is a member of the Headmasters and Headmistresses Conference The Good Schools Guide calls Blundell s a distinguished rural school of ancient lineage 1 Contents 1 History 2 Sport 2 1 Rugby 2 2 The Russell 2 3 Cricket at the 1900 Olympics 3 Southern Railway Schools Class 4 Old Blundellians 4 1 A D 4 2 E K 4 3 L R 4 4 S Z 5 Headteachers 6 Notable former masters 7 References 8 External linksHistory Edit Old Blundell s Peter Blundell one of the wealthiest merchants of Elizabethan England died in 1601 having made his fortune principally in the cloth industry His will set aside considerable money and land to establish a school in his home town to maintain sound learning and true religion Blundell asked his friend John Popham Lord Chief Justice of England to carry out his wishes and appointed a number of local merchants and gentry as his first trustees known as feoffees The position of feoffee is no longer hereditary but a number of notable local families have held the position for a considerable period the first ancestor of the current chairman of the governors to hold that position was elected more than 250 years ago and the Heathcoat Amory family have a long tradition of service on the Governing Body since Sir John Heathcoat Amory was appointed in 1865 The Old Blundell s School was built to be much larger and grander than any other in the West Country with room for 150 scholars and accommodation for a master and an usher 2 The Grade 1 listed building is now in the care of the National Trust and the forecourt is usually open to visitors One ex Blundell s boy was the writer R D Blackmore who in the novel Lorna Doone set the stage for a fight between John Ridd and Robin Snell on the Blundell s triangular lawn 3 Peter Blundell s executors established links with Balliol College Oxford and with Sidney Sussex College Cambridge and large sums were settled to provide for scholarships for pupils of the school to attend those colleges 4 The first Sidney Sussex scholar was nominated in 1610 and the first Blundell s Balliol scholar in 1615 The links with these colleges continue today although without the closed scholarships In 1645 Thomas Fairfax used the school for his headquarters during the siege of Tiverton Castle Blundell s School clocktower and chapel In 1882 the school moved to the present Horsdon site one mile from the original location The new buildings were designed by Hayward amp Son of Exeter and built in red Halberton stone the foundation stone was laid by the William Courtenay 11th Earl of Devon chairman of the governors in 1880 5 Reginald Blomfield the architect and garden designer was responsible for the additions to the school which were completed in 1901 citation needed The School s war memorial was carved by the school s sculpture teacher Estcourt J Clack and is a replica of the Celtic cross in Eyam churchyard but with the missing part intact The clock tower contains a statue by Alain John a pupil of the School and aspiring sculptor who joined the RAF as a navigator and was killed in the Second World War The statue was subsequently re cast at the commission of Neville Gorton then Bishop of Coventry and stands in the ruins of the old Coventry Cathedral as a memorial to those who lost their lives in the war In 1989 Ondaatje Hall was opened following a donation by OB Christopher Ondaatje for its construction Among its many facilities is a 150 seat professional theatre which as well as putting on in house productions is also used for public performances Girls were admitted from the age of 13 in 1993 to make the school fully co educational To make room for them the boys boarding house North Close was changed into a girls house In 1997 School House became a junior house for pupils aged 11 13 The prep school St Aubyn s was moved to the Blundell s campus in 2000 6 taking over the day boy house Milestones and the Sanatorium and was renamed Blundell s Prep School It has about 250 pupils aged from three years to eleven The headmaster is Andy Southgate A change to the way the UVI boarders are housed took place when the old Westlake was sold off and a new Westlake built on the site of the CCF parade ground Opened in 2004 the new Westlake houses all boys and girls who are in their final year The two latest developments to be completed are an extension to the Music School and the building of the Popham Academic Centre which houses the new Psychology Economics and Business Studies departments as well as the new server for the school intranet and a dedicated IT teaching area Sport Edit 1740 ticket for Blundell s School Feast by William Hogarth Rugby Edit Rugby is the main sport played at Blundell s in the Autumn and Spring terms The earliest mention of football in the Blundellian was in 1861 and the first recorded rugger match played by boys at Blundell s was in 1868 against Tiverton Rugby Club making the school one of the oldest anywhere formally to play the game The Blundell s crest still hangs in the main room at Twickenham in recognition of this 7 The first OB to gain International Honours was R S Kindersley for England in 1884 and on 1 January 1908 Thomas Kelly captained England to a 19 0 victory over France The strongest years for Blundell s were the two decades after World War 2 when Clem Thomas gained 26 caps for Wales in 1949 59 in 1958 59 as captain Richard Sharp won 14 caps for England 1960 67 Captain 1963 and 1967 and David Shepherd won five caps for Australia in 1964 66 Both Thomas and Sharp played in two tests for Britain in South Africa Also of note was Charles Kent who played for Rosslyn Park and England having previously won four Blues playing for Oxford including one as captain in 1974 Blundell s won the Rosslyn Park National Sevens title in 1981 and won the second ever Open Final 28 0 against Dulwich College in 1940 The Blundell s XVs continue to compete among the public schools of the South West with Bryanston Millfield Cheltenham College and Clifton College among their regular opponents OBs Dave Lewis Gloucester Rugby Matt Kvesic and Will Carrick Smith Exeter Chiefs all currently play in the Aviva Premiership 8 Jack Maunder is an English rugby union player who plays scrum half for Exeter Chiefs in the Aviva Premiership Sam Maunder brother of Jack Maunder plays for England U18 squad 9 The Russell Edit One annual tradition is the school s cross country run known as the Russell named after OB Jack Russell a vicar and dog breeder It was first run in 1887 10 and 2009 saw the 129th run 11 The Russell course crosses both public and private land with the permission of local landowners As such the route has undergone numerous changes throughout its history The current senior course is 4 85 miles and includes a notorious Heartbreak Hill Although the junior race and a fun run follow shorter routes all participants encounter the muddiest sections Parents staff and OB s may participate in the Open which follows the senior route Cricket at the 1900 Olympics Edit Four Old Blundellians played in the gold medal winning Great Britain cricket team at the 1900 Summer Olympics the only time cricket featured in the Olympics Britain was represented by an unofficial touring club team the Devon amp Somerset Wanderers Cricket Club formed by William Donne in 1894 and made up of Old Blundellians and members of Castle Cary Cricket Club Main article Cricket at the 1900 Summer OlympicsSouthern Railway Schools Class Edit 932 Blundell s Schools Class 4 4 0 at Eastleigh in 1948 The School lent its name to the thirty third steam locomotive Engine 932 in the Southern Railway s Class V of which there were 40 This class was also known as the Schools Class because all 40 of the class were named after prominent English public schools Blundell s as it was called was built in 1934 The locomotive bearing the school s name was withdrawn from service in January 1961 In 2009 Hornby produced a model of this particular Schools class locomotive As the product photograph shows while the name of this locomotive has been variously quoted as Blundells or Blundell s the apostrophe does actually appear on the nameplate 12 Old Blundellians EditSee also Category People educated at Blundell s School This article s list of alumni may not follow Wikipedia s verifiability policy Please improve this article by removing names that do not have independent reliable sources showing they merit inclusion in this article AND are alumni or by incorporating the relevant publications into the body of the article through appropriate citations May 2012 The first known society of former pupils known as Old Blundellians OBs was established as early as 1725 13 William Hogarth engraved the letterhead for the invitation to a dinner for former pupils of the School in 1725 and the Ticket for Tiverton School Feast in 1740 image of print courtesy of Antiqueprints com 14 Notable former pupils include A D Edit Robert Arundell Governor of the Windward Islands and Barbados Vernon Bartlett journalist and politician Edward Bellew drainage inspector and winner of the Victoria Cross Dominic Bess England cricketer R D Blackmore author of Lorna Doone Richard Bowring Master of Selwyn College Cambridge William Buckland geologist William Edward Buckley professor of Anglo Saxon 15 George Bull theologian and bishop Giles Bullard High Commissioner to the West Indies Charles Campion food critic Bampfylde Moore Carew rogue and imposter Aelred Carlyle missionary and monk Frederick William Cuming 1900 Olympic gold medal winner as part of the UK cricket team Charles Cornwallis Chesney soldier and military writer George Tomkyns Chesney soldier and novelist Ben Collins Formula 3 racing driver and the infamous Stig John Conybeare Bishop of Bristol and notable 18th century theologian John Davis Welsh cricketer Edward Dayman hymn writerE K Edit John Ebdon writer John Eliot English statesman Tristan Evans Drummer amp backing vocals for UK based band The Vamps Charles Rossiter Forwood lawyer and Attorney General of Fiji Francis Fulford Anglo Catholic bishop of Montreal John Gay philosopher Anthony Gifford cricketer and educator Michael Gilbert writer of fictional mysteries and thrillers Douglas Gracey Commander in Chief Pakistan Army 1948 51 Charles Harper Governor and Commander in Chief of St Helena 1925 1932 C Brian Haselgrove mathematician best known for disproving the Polya conjecture in 1958 Thomas Hayter bishop of Norwich 1749 61 bishop of London 1761 62 Abraham Hayward man of letters Archibald Hill Nobel Prize winner David Gordon Hines developer of co operatives in Tanganyika and Uganda Peter Gordon Hines Civil Engineer in Hong Kong Bangkok Sumatra UK Nigeria Australia Romania Walter Hook Tractarian vicar of Leeds Ella Hunt actress dickinson anna and the apocalypse intruders James Jeremie academic and churchman John Jeremie governor of Sierra Leone C E M Joad intellectual broadcasting personality and fare dodger Philip Keun Special Operations Executive Captain and co leader of the Jade Amicol French resistance network L R Edit Geoffrey Lampe theologian and winner of the Military Cross Wilfrid Le Gros Clark surgeon primatologist and paleoanthropologist who disproved Piltdown Man Robin Lloyd Jones Author Jeremy Lloyds Test Cricket umpire George Malcolm army officer Thomas Manton Puritan clergyman John Margetson former British Ambassador to Vietnam the United Nations and the Netherlands Vic Marks Somerset and England cricketer Professor John Marrack DSO MC Emeritus Professor of Chemical Pathology in the University of London John Marrack 10 February 1921 7 November 2009 naval officer Queen s Harbourmaster 1962 16 Claire Marshall journalist Michael Mates former MP constituency of East Hampshire Hugh Morris England cricketer and current Managing Director of the England and Wales Cricket Board Gordon Newton Editor of the Financial Times Christopher Ondaatje author and donor to the Labour Party William Pillar Fourth Sea Lord and Chief of Naval Supplies John de la Pole 6th Baronet Ben Rice novelist Jack Russell Victorian hunting parson dog breederS Z Edit Peter Schidlof Austrian British violist and co founder of the Amadeus Quartet Edward Seymour 16th Duke of Somerset Evelyn Seymour 17th Duke of Somerset Percy Seymour 18th Duke of Somerset Richard Sharp England rugby captain Richard Shore cricketer Frederick Spring senior army officer Trevor Spring army officer J C Squire poet writer historian and influential literary editor Donald Stokes industrialist and peer Jon Swain award winning writer whose memoirs were portrayed in the film The Killing Fields Frederick Temple Archbishop of Canterbury Clem Thomas Wales Rugby Captain Georgia Toff Toffolo television and media personality Charles Trevelyan 1st Baronet English civil servant governor of Madras Henry Hawkins Tremayne creator of the Lost Gardens of Heligan John Van der Kiste author Walter Walker controversial soldier and writer Arthur Graeme West war poet John Whiteley Deputy Chief of the Imperial General Staff 1949 53 Cyril Wilkinson Great Britain hockey player and Olympic Gold Medallist Geoffrey Willans humorist and co author of Nigel Molesworth series Matthew Wood 1st Baronet Lord Mayor of London MP for the City of London and close friend of Queen Caroline John Wyndham author whose work included The Day of the TriffidsHeadteachers Edit2018 present Bart Wielenga 2013 2018 Nicola Huggett 2012 2013 Randall Thane 2004 2012 Ian Davenport 1992 2004 Jonathan Leigh 1980 1992 A J D Rees 1971 1980 A Clive S Gimson 1959 1971 J M Stanton 1947 1959 J S Carter 1943 1947 R L Roberts 1934 1942 Neville Gorton 1930 1933 Alexander Wallace 1917 1930 Arthur Edwin Wynne 1874 1917 A L Francis 1847 1874 John Hughes 1834 1847 Henry Sanders 1823 1834 Alldersey Dicken 1797 1823 William Richards 1775 1797 Richard Keats rector of Bideford and King s Nympton father of Richard Goodwin Keats 1757 1834 17 Martha Keats 1753 1833 and of Lewis William Buck 1784 1858 MP 18 1757 1775 Philip Atherton 1740 1757 William Daddo 1734 1740 Samuel Wesley 1733 1734 John Jones 1730 1733 Samual Smith 1698 1730 William Rayner 1684 1698 John Sanders 1669 1684 George Hume 1651 1669 Henry Batten 1648 1651 Henry Osborne 1604 1647 Samuel ButlerNotable former masters EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Former masters of Blundell s have included Terry Barwell cricketer Estcourt J Clack Jim Clack woodwork teacher and sculptor of the Diana Fountain in London s Green Park Manning Clark historian Neville Gorton Bishop of Coventry Malcolm Moss politician Grahame Parker sportsman C Northcote Parkinson naval historian and author of the bestselling book Parkinson s Law Gilbert Phelps writer and broadcaster Lawrence Sail poet Willi Soukop sculptor Stephen Spender poet and essayist Mervyn Stockwood missioner to the School and later Bishop of Southwark Samuel Wesley the Younger poet and churchmanReferences Edit Blundell s School Tiverton LEA Devon Devon The Good Schools Guide Retrieved 3 October 2011 GENUKI Devon Tiverton 1850 Lorna Doone A Romance of Exmoor CHAPTER II Balliol Archives Blundell s School Mike Sampson 2004 A history of Tiverton ISSN 0305 8549 Eteach Education Recruitment Vacancies Supply Teaching Jobs Archived from the original on 16 July 2011 Retrieved 22 June 2009 www blundells org Rugby OB Club Sport Blundells org 26 November 2011 Retrieved 7 February 2013 non primary source needed RFU www blundells org Headmasters OB Club Sport Archived 25 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine 1 Archived 19 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine Report amp Transactions Volume 23 Devonshire Association for the Advancement of Science Literature and Art 1891 Search object details British Museum Retrieved 26 April 2013 Frederic Boase Modern English Biography vol 4 Netherton and Worth 1906 p 2 007 Captain John Marrack Telegraph The Daily Telegraph 3 January 2010 Retrieved 4 May 2012 John Alexander Marrack was born on 10 February 1921 in Barnet and educated at Downsend School Leatherhead and Blundell s He joined the Navy as a special entry in September 1938 Gentleman s Magazine 1834 p 653 obituary of Admiral Keats Vivian J L Ed The Visitations of the County of Devon Comprising the Heralds Visitations of 1531 1564 amp 1620 Exeter 1895 Stucley amp Buck pedigree pp 723External links Edit Media related to Blundell s School at Wikimedia Commons Blundell s School website 2001 UK Independent Schools Inspectorate Report Current Information from UK Independent Schools Council Texts on Wikisource Blundell s School New International Encyclopedia 1905 Blundell s School Encyclopedia Americana 1920 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Blundell 27s School amp oldid 1115018495, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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