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Charterhouse School

Charterhouse is a public school (English boarding school for pupils aged 13–18) in Godalming, Surrey, England. Originally founded by Thomas Sutton in 1611 on the site of the old Carthusian monastery in Charterhouse Square, Smithfield, London, it educates over 800 pupils, aged 13 to 18 years. Charterhouse is one of the 'great' nine English public schools reported upon by the Clarendon Commission in 1864 and is a member of the Rugby Group schools.

Charterhouse
Address
Charterhouse Road

, ,
GU7 2DX

United Kingdom
Coordinates51°11′48″N 0°37′21″W / 51.196552°N 0.622504°W / 51.196552; -0.622504Coordinates: 51°11′48″N 0°37′21″W / 51.196552°N 0.622504°W / 51.196552; -0.622504
Information
TypePublic school
Private boarding school
MottoLatin: Deo Dante Dedi
(God having given, I gave)[1]
Religious affiliation(s)Church of England
Established1611; 412 years ago (1611)
FounderThomas Sutton
Department for Education URN125340 Tables
ChairmanVicky Tuck
HeadmasterAlex Peterken
Second MasterAndrew Turner
Staff≈550
GenderCo-education
Age13 to 18
Enrolment≈800
Houses15[4]
Colour(s)Pink, grey and maroon    
PublicationThe Carthusian
The Charterhouse Review
The Greyfriar
The Greyhound
Former pupilsOld Carthusians
School songCarmen Carthusianum
Websitecharterhouse.org.uk

Charterhouse charges full boarders up to £44,220 per annum (2022/2023)[5] and is among the most expensive Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference (HMC) schools in the UK.[6] It educated the British Prime Minister Lord Liverpool and has a long list of notable alumni.

SR V class 4-4-0 no. E903 (later no. 903 and 30903) was named Charterhouse after the school.[7]

History

 
Statue of Thomas Sutton on Founder's Court

In May 1611, the London Charterhouse came into the hands of Thomas Sutton (1532–1611) of Knaith, Lincolnshire. He acquired a fortune by the discovery of coal on two estates which he had leased near Newcastle upon Tyne, and afterwards, removing to London, he carried on a commercial career. In 1611, the year of his death, he endowed a hospital on the site of the Charterhouse, calling it the hospital of King James, and in his will he bequeathed moneys to maintain a chapel, hospital (almshouse) and school. He died on 12 December, and subsequently the will was hotly contested but upheld in court, and the foundation was finally constituted to afford a home for eighty male pensioners (gentlemen by descent and in poverty, soldiers that have borne arms by sea or land, merchants decayed by piracy or shipwreck, or servants in household to the King or Queen), and to educate forty boys.

 
Brooke Hall at Charterhouse

Charterhouse established a reputation for excellence in hospital care and treatment, thanks in part to Henry Levett, an Oxford graduate who joined the school as a physician in 1712. Levett was widely esteemed for his medical writings, including an early tract on the treatment of smallpox. Levett was buried in Charterhouse Chapel and his widow married Andrew Tooke, the headmaster of Charterhouse.[8][9]

The school was moved to its present site in 1872 by the then headmaster, William Haig Brown – a decision influenced by the findings of the Clarendon Commission of 1864.[10]

The school bought a 68-acre (28 ha) site atop a hill just outside Godalming. In addition to the main school buildings (designed by architect Philip Charles Hardwick), they constructed three boarding houses, known as Saunderites (once the headmaster's house, pronounced "sarnderites" rather than "sornderites"), Verites and Gownboys (for scholars, who were entitled to wear gowns). The school was built by Lucas Brothers,[11] who also built the Royal Albert Hall and Covent Garden.

As pupil numbers grew, other houses were built alongside the approach road, now known as Charterhouse Hill. Each was titled with an adaptation of the name of their first housemaster, such as Weekites, Daviesites and Girdlestoneites. The last of these is still referred to as Duckites, reflecting the unusual gait of its original housemaster, even though he retired well over 100 years ago.[citation needed] There are now the original four 'old' houses plus ten 'new' houses (currently three girls' houses), making fourteen boarding houses in total. The fourteen Houses have preserved a unique identity (each with its own tie and colours) and pupils compete against each other in both sports and the arts. Two new boarding houses were opened upon their completion ahead of the start of the 21/22 academic year. This was done by former pupil and sitting MP Jeremy Hunt.[12] This made the total number of houses reach fifteen.

The school continued to expand over the 20th century. Further land was bought to the north and west, increasing the grounds to over 200 acres (81 ha), and a new school chapel was designed by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott (perhaps best known for designing the red telephone box) and consecrated in 1927 to commemorate almost 700 pupils who died in the First World War, making it the largest war memorial in England. Around 350 names have been subsequently added to commemorate those who died in the Second World War and other more recent conflicts.[citation needed]

An addition to the campus was seven new Houses, built in the 1970s, replacing late Victorian boarding houses which were demolished in 1977. Other newer buildings include the Art Studio, the John Derry Technology Centre, the Ben Travers Theatre, the Ralph Vaughan Williams Music Centre, the Halford Hewitt Golf Course, the Queen's Sports Centre, the Sir Greville Spratt athletics track and Chetwynd, a hall of residence for girls. In 2003, the School renovated its onsite Library. 2006 saw the opening of The Beveridge Centre for the Social Sciences. In 2007, a £3m Modern Languages building was completed.

 
Charterhouse School
 
Charterhouse School

The school has a top 60 placing in the A level league tables, and in 2011 over 80% of pupils are awarded an A* or A grade at GCSE.[citation needed] In 2009, the school announced its decision to switch from A Levels to the International Baccalaureate and Cambridge Pre-U.[13] In 2012 Charterhouse had its best set of Cambridge Pre-U results with 96% of examinations taken awarded Distinction or Merit grades. Seventy-eight pupils achieved Distinctions (or their A level equivalent) in all subjects taken and twenty-one achieved the equivalent of A level A* grades in all their subjects. Twenty pupils were offered places at Oxford or Cambridge.[14]

In 2007, Roy Hattersley, former Deputy Leader of the Labour Party and minister, reported on a visit to Charterhouse in the Guardian newspaper. After describing his impression that "[The chapel]'s geometric spires and minarets proclaim complete confidence that Charterhouse educates men who are destined to rule the universe", he said: "Academically and pastorally, it is near to beyond criticism. And after only a brief glimpse of the school, I have no doubt that I would have been ecstatically happy there. But its existence allows the rich and the powerful to ignore the world beyond its boundaries." He therefore concluded that his aspiration to abolish private education in the 1970s was "totally justified".[15]

The 2009 Ofsted Social Care Inspection Report noted that 'The provision for "Helping children achieve well and enjoy what they do" is rated as outstanding.' and 'This is a good school, in which boarders' welfare is promoted by a strong approach to countering bullying and child protection. Boarding staff have good relationships with the boarders, and boarders can list a range of people who they can talk to if they are worried or have concerns.'[16]

The 2011 Independent Schools Inspectorate Report noted that 'The quality of pupils' achievements is excellent. Pupils are extremely well educated. They attain extremely high standards in external examinations and make exceptional progress in their learning because of their positive attitudes to study, dedicated and often inspiring teaching, and an academically challenging curriculum that is adapted to suit all needs. The curriculum is enriched by an outstanding range of activities'.[17]

The 2017 ISI Educational Quality Inspection Report noted that ‘Pupils' academic and other achievements are high and often exceptional. Pupils' successes in external competitions, in academic distinctions and in sport, music and the creative and aesthetic arts are exceptional. Pupils' social development is outstanding. Pupils are polite, courteous and respectful of one another and of the adults who care for them. Relationships between pupils and staff are excellent. Pupils mature into independent and self-motivated pupils over the course of their time at school and are extremely well prepared, not only for the next stage of their lives, but also to contribute to society at large.’[18]

Charterhouse originally accepted boys only. The school began accepting girls in sixth form in 1971.[19] In 2017 the school announced that it is moving to full co-education from the age of 13, and will welcome the first girls into Year 9 in September 2021. There will be girls in every year group from September 2023.[20]

School terms

There are three academic terms (known as Quarters) in the year,

  • The Oration Quarter (OQ), from early September to mid December.
  • The Long Quarter (LQ), from mid January to late March. Therefore, it traditionally had the distinction of being the shortest third of the school year, despite its name.
  • The Cricket Quarter (CQ), from late April to late June or early July.

Houses

There are four old boarding houses and eleven new houses in the White Book (a directory of names) order. In Charterhouse vocabulary an old house is one which was founded in the early years of the school, as opposed to the new houses which were created later and are situated away from the main school. They are all distinguished by the colour of the pupils' ties, umbrellas and football team's stripes.

House Abbr. Type Colour
Saunderites S Old Boys Orange[21]
Verites V Old Boys Light blue[22]
Gownboys G Old Boys Maroon[23]
Girdlestoneites
(known as 'Duckites')
g New Boys (will begin transition to a girls house in OQ 2023) Silver[24][25]
Lockites L New Boys Light green[26]
Weekites W New Boys (will be all girls by OQ 2025) Light red[27][28]
Hodgsonites H New Boys Dark blue[29]
Daviesites D New Boys Dark green[30]
Bodeites B New Boys Old gold[31]
Pageites P New Boys Lilac[32]
Robinites R New Boys Purple[33]
Fletcherites F New Girls Turquoise-blue[34]
Sutton Su New Girls Pink[35]
Chetwynd C New Girls Grey[36]
Northbrook N New Girls Green [37][38]
 
South African Cloisters

In Autumn 2010, a new house was opened for sixth-form pupils, called Fletcherites, named after Frank Fletcher, a former headmaster. The house moved into the old Great Comp building, now renovated. Verites, Saunderites and Gownboys houses predate the move to Godalming in 1872 and are known as the "old" houses. However, Girdlestoneites is now treated as one of the "old houses" because it, along with Verites, Saunderites and Gownboys, are the only houses still in their 1870s buildings, while all the rest are in their 1970s replacements. Technically the "old" houses plus Girdlestoneites are known as "block" houses, due to their location in the main 1870s block of buildings.[citation needed] Saunderites is named after its first Housemaster Dr. Saunders (Headmaster 1832–53) and it was the Headmaster's house, in that the headmaster would not only run the school but one of the houses. Gownboys was named not after their original housemaster, but because it was the scholars' house, although scholars were distributed across all the houses after the transfer to Godalming.[citation needed] As was tradition, scholars wore gowns with their uniform and were treated as superior to other boys. There is no longer such a tradition and the scholars are now distributed throughout the various houses, on a random but numerically equal basis. There are still scholars in Gownboys, but in no greater proportion than any other house.

Verites is a contraction of Oliverites (Oliver Walford, School Usher 1838–55) and hence 'Verites' is pronounced as if the 'Ver' is from Oliver not as from 'very'. The records of the house run back to the start of the last century, but previously it was just called 'Boarders House No.2'.[citation needed]

Uskites was a temporary house opened in 1872 by Mr Stewart, the writing and chemistry instructor from the old Charterhouse.[citation needed] It was closed in 1878 and the pupils redistributed. The building itself (on Peperharow Road) was bought by a schoolmaster, and later used by the School as a sanatorium. It is now masters' accommodation.

All new Houses apart from Bodeites are named after their founders (although Robinites was originally Robinsonites). Bodeites was originally Buissonites, named after the Head of Languages at the time. He ran off with the matron, and so the house was renamed Bodeites after the replacement, Mr Bode.[39]

Charterhouse has traditionally had very few day pupils. In the 1870s the statutes of the school limited them to 10 (excluding sons of masters) and in the late 1980s the number was only around 25 (some of whom were the sons of masters).[citation needed] Now however, there are spaces for two day pupils in each House per year group, giving a total of 10 day pupils in each House (totaling 150 day pupils across the whole School).[citation needed] In the same way as those boarding, a day pupil also becomes a member of one of the Houses.

To keep up with the increasing number of female applicants to the school, Charterhouse began transitioning former boys' houses Weekites and Girdlestoneites into girl only houses. Weekites became coeducational at the start of OQ 2022 with 36 girls joining in Year 9, Year 10 and Lower Sixth.[40] Girdlestoneites is set to do the same in OQ 2023.[41] Both will be fully transitioned into girls' houses by September 2025 and 2026 respectively.

Memorial Chapel

 
The Memorial Chapel

Memorial Chapel, designed by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott and consecrated in 1927, commemorates the Carthusians who died in action: 700 in World War I and 350 in World War II.

Attendance at all chapel services is compulsory, except where individual exemptions are granted on religious grounds.

Chapel provides a variety of worship experience: hymn-singing; Psalm chanting; the choir performs a repertoire of Church Music; Candle-lit Carols; Eucharists in Millennium Chapel; Remembrance Sunday with the sounding of The Last Post and The Silence.

Each year there is a confirmation service in late January and pupils from any year group can be prepared for this.

The school retains the old chapel used by the school prior to 1927. However, when the school first moved to Godalming even this was not built, and the pupils walked the 2 miles to Shackleford Church. Pupils subsequently benefited, because the time taken for the walk precluded the continuance of Sunday school, which ran from 10:00 to 10:30 on Sundays, which has remained a non-teaching day ever since.

Uniform

  • Under School

The Under School consists of the first three years of attendance at Charterhouse, being the Fourth Form, the Removes and the Fifth Form (GCSE year). Pupils in Under School wear a weekday uniform consisting of a white or blue shirt, house tie, grey trousers, optional blue or black jumper or sweater-vest, dark grey jacket and black leather shoes. A waistcoat is optional. Variations include various society and school honours' ties.[42]

Transition from the Under School to the Upper School occurs upon successful completion of the GCSE exams.

  • Specialists ('The Upper School')

The Specialists (Lower and Upper Sixth Forms) constitute the last two years of attendance at Charterhouse, and form the Upper School. Having completed the GCSE exams successfully, 'First & Second Year Specialists' (as they are colloquially referred) spend two years studying for their A-Level or Pre-U examinations, usually in three subjects, although some students will read for four, or their IB exams. The grey jacket is replaced by a grey blazer with pink squares and shirts may be pink or of striped patterns.

Whether in Under or Upper School, any pupil who has been awarded his House or School 'Colours' for sport or culture, may wear his 'Colours' tie in place of his house tie. School monitors may also wear their monitor tie instead of a house tie, if they so choose. For further on this, please see below, under "School Honours".

  • Summer dresses

During Cricket Quarter, the school uniform can vary slightly from that of the two preceding terms. Boys may wear cravats in house colours instead of ties and are permitted to wear straw Boaters similar to the 'Harrow Hat' found at Harrow School, but these are almost never worn by the majority of pupils. Boys in the Under School may also wear navy blazers similar to those worn by the Specialists. As well as these variations, boys may roll up their sleeves in hashes unless asked not to by a beak.

  • Members of the 1st XI Cricket Team have their own variation on summer dress which is described later in the article.
  • School Honours

School Honours is the Colours system rewarding pupils in various fields with variations on school dress. They are as follows:

House colours – House colours are a variation on the house tie. Colours awarded for house sport prowess have thicker stripes in the House colour, whereas those awarded for cultural prowess have thin doubled striped.

School colours – School colours are awarded for services to School sport, culture and other areas deemed worthy. They all have a similar design of a solid colour and are covered in the crest of Thomas Sutton, the school's founder. However, they come in varying colours: The Head of School – The Heads of School (head boy and deputy, as well as the head girl and deputy head girl) is permitted to wear a Pink tie adorned with Sutton Crests. 1st XI Major Sports – Members of the 1st Team in major school sports (football, hockey and cricket) are permitted to wear maroon ties. Minor Sports – Holders of colours in Minor Sports are permitted to wear a silver ties. Academic/Scholars – Holders of Academic or Scholars colours are permitted to wear a green tie. Culture – Those deemed worthy enough in cultural fields are permitted to wear a purple tie. Service – Brown ties are awarded for commendable service to the school community. Most frequently they are awarded by the CCF.

1st XI Cricket – Members of the 1st XI Cricket team are permitted to wear pink blazers with Sutton's Crest on the front pocket to Hashes on match days (usually Saturdays).

Greyhounds – Every year a few Carthusians are given Greyhound awards for outstanding service to the school. Those awarded the prize are permitted to wear a navy blue tie with rampant gold greyhounds, the greyhound being a notable feature of the coat of arms of Thomas Sutton.

Academic – Pupils who have gained distinctive academic achievements are awarded the Academic Tie and may be referred to as Scholars of the school. They are permitted to wear a green tie adorned with the Sutton Crest.

Culture – Pupils who have contributed to the school distinctively in terms of culture (music, drama etc.) are awarded the Culture Tie, which has a deep purple colour with the Sutton Crest.

Events

 
March around Green at the end of CQ
 
Bagpipe Players on Leavers Day

Carthusian Day is the main social event of the school calendar. It is held on day preceding the Exeat in CQ and Sunday dress is worn. The day is intended for the parents and families of Carthusians to visit the school. Speeches are made and Sports events played: including the annual Cricket and Golf matches between Carthusians and Old Carthusians.

Founder's Day is celebrated every year to commemorate the founding of the school and to thank the founder and benefactor Thomas Sutton. It is considered one of the most important days of the year and is held on the last day of OQ. The day consists of 'clearing up' in houses before 'Founders Feast', a large feast for the whole school where Black Tie is worn. The feast is followed by games and activities.

St. Andrew's Day is celebrated by an annual ball hosted by the historical 'Scottish Dancing society. On St. Andrews Day pupils are permitted to wear traditional Scottish dress including a Kilt, Ghillies and a Sporran.

'The 50 Mile Walk' is an annual event for the 1st Year specialists held at the end of CQ. It consists of walking a 50-mile (80 km) stretch from Brighton to the Brooke Hall arch and taking regular Hashes the next day. The March originates from the 1950s when the American Navy SEALs challenged the School, saying that only they could walk 50 miles (80 km) and go to work the next day. Those who complete the walk in less than 24 Hours are awarded a special '50' tie, which until 2006 consisted of a navy blue tie with the school crest that has a '50' written below it. The current tie is a thickly striped affair in Pink (for the school), Green (for the countryside) and Blue (for the night)

Monitors

Monitors are chosen pupils who are deemed to have the best qualities in leadership and achievement. Each house has at least one monitor, who is appointed Head of House (the most senior pupil in house). On a school-wide level one monitor is appointed the Head of School, and a deputy is appointed to assist. Monitors may wear Navy blue ties and Navy scarves with an embroidered crest. Monitors are also permitted to ride bikes to and from hashes (Carthusian term for lessons) as well as out of Hash time.[citation needed]

House Apostles

The Headmaster's Essay Society, also known as the 'House Apostles' is a historical society of twelve Carthusians deemed to be the most intellectual in the school. The students are invited by the Headmaster to present papers on chosen subjects on Monday evenings and meetings are held in the Headmaster's House. All members are allowed to wear Cambridge Blue Academic ties or scarfs.[citation needed]

Sports

The former England batsman and captain Peter May was educated at Charterhouse. Martin Bicknell, the former Surrey and England seam bowler joined the school as head of cricket following his retirement from the sport in 2006.

In 1999–2000, the Charterhouse first XI reached the final of the ISFA Cup, after winning all their previous rounds away from home, but were beaten 0–1 in the final at the Leicester City ground by Shrewsbury. The school first XI of the year 2006–7 again reached the ISFA cup final, losing on penalties after a one-all draw with Hampton. One year later, the school first XI again qualified for the ISFA cup final against Millfield. Because of poor weather conditions, it was decided that the match would be played on one of Charterhouse's pitches instead of the usual Walkers Stadium or the replacement at Woking F.C. stadium. The team won this match on penalties. In March 2011, the school reached another ISFA final, a fixture with Eton after knocking out Repton and Millfield in the quarter and semi-final respectively. They ran out 2–0 winners on the day.

Origins of football

Association Football is the main Winter sport at the school. During the 1840s at both Charterhouse and Westminster School pupils' surroundings meant they were confined to playing their football in the cloisters, making the rough and tumble of the handling game that was developing at other schools such as Rugby impossible, and necessitating a new code of rules. Dingley Dell, the most active non-school team in the London area in the five years before the Football Association was established in 1863, played Charterhouse eight times between February 1860 and February 1863.[43] During the formulation of the rules of the Association Football in the 1860s representatives of Charterhouse and Westminster School pushed for a passing game, in particular rules that allowed forward passing ("passing on"). Other schools (in particular Eton College, Shrewsbury School and Harrow) favoured a dribbling game with a tight off-side rule. It is claimed that Stoke Ramblers was formed in 1863 when former pupils of Charterhouse School formed a football club while apprentices at the North Staffordshire Railway works in Stoke-on-Trent.[44] By 1867 the Football Association had chosen in favour of the Charterhouse and Westminster game and adopted a "loose" off-side rule that permitted forward passing.[45] The modern forward-passing game was a direct consequence of Charterhouse and Westminster football.

In the early years of the FA Cup, teams formed of ex-pupils from these schools dominated the competition. The Old Carthusians F.C. (the name for the team composed of Charterhouse alumni) won the cup in the 1880–81 season, beating the Old Etonians in the final, and were semi-finalists in the two years that followed. The public school system also provided many of the first England internationals. They included Charles Wreford-Brown, who is often credited for inventing the word "soccer". He was a pupil at Charterhouse in the early 1880s, and played football for the Old Carthusians and for the national side in the 1890s, including several appearances as captain.

Published in 2008, From Cloister to Cup Finals chronicles this history. It was written by Malcolm Bailey, an old Cambridge Blue, and former teacher, housemaster and head of Football at Charterhouse.

Cricket ground

The first recorded match on the school cricket ground came in 1859, when the school played Marlborough College. From its inception, the school has used the ground to take on a number of colleges in England.[46] The cricket ground has held a single List-A match, which was played between Surrey and Warwickshire in the 1972 John Player League.[47] Starting in 2006, the ground has held a number of Surrey Second XI fixtures in the Second XI Championship and Second XI Trophy.[48][49]

Herbarium

The School's Herbarium carries the Index Herbariorum designation GOD and is maintained as The Charterhouse School Herbarium[50] in the University and Jepson Herbaria, University of California, Berkeley.

The scope of the collections is mainly the British Isles, although some plants are from Europe, South Africa and eastern North America. The principal collectors were James Edward Moxon, Rev. George Brown Moxon, Rev. Tullie Cornthwaite, Rev. Samuel Titmas (first curator of Charterhouse Museum), Frederick Yorke Brocas, Andrew Bloxam, William Gardiner, James Buckman and John Drew Salmon. The collections are currently being digitised and being released by the Botanical Society of Britain and Ireland, on the herbaria@home[51] website.

Carthusian language

Known as Lingua Carthusiana, the terminology of this language or idiolect has evolved over the centuries of Charterhouse's existence and is used within the Charterhouse community on a daily basis.[52]

Terminology
Term Meaning
Adsum A roll-call, taken in house after breakfast and dinner
Banco Homework (also a set period for academic work from 7.00 pm to 8.45 pm)
Beak A member of the teaching staff
Brooke Hall The teaching staff's Common Room
Crown The School tuck shop. It is situated on the Long Walk facing Under Green. It is

also sometimes referred to as Crack

Exeat Half term break in the middle of each Quarter when all pupils go away from

Charterhouse. Exeat in LQ is known as Queen's Exeat

Hash A lesson
Hashroom A classroom
Homebill The evening meal for pupils
Pontifex The annual inter-House cross-country races held in LQ
quarter The mid-morning break, which is generally after the first two or three lessons

(hashes)

Quarter The word used to describe terms.
Yearlings Pupils in their first year in the School who are also known as Fourths

Fees

In any given year, there is some contention about which is the most expensive public school in England, depending on whether one compares day fees or boarding fees. In 2019, Charterhouse was reported to be among the most expensive schools for boarding pupils.[53] Charging up to £11,415 per term in 2014/15, Charterhouse is the 7th most expensive HMC boarding school in the UK.[6] For the 2022/23 academic year, day boarding fees are £36,540 and boarding is £44,220.[54]

Controversy

School fees cartel (2005)

In November 2005, the school was one of fifty of the country's leading independent schools which were found guilty of running an illegal price-fixing cartel, exposed by The Times newspaper, although the schools made clear that they had not realised that the change to the law (which had happened only a few months earlier) about the sharing of information had subsequently made it an offence.[55] Each school was required to pay a nominal penalty of £10,000 and all agreed to make ex-gratia payments totalling three million pounds into a trust designed to benefit pupils who attended the schools during the period in respect of which fee information was shared.[56] Mrs Jean Scott, the head of the Independent Schools Council, said that independent schools had always been exempt from anti-cartel rules applied to business, were following a long-established procedure in sharing the information with each other, and that they were unaware of the change to the law (on which they had not been consulted). She wrote to John Vickers, the director-general of the Office of Fair Trading saying: "They are not a group of businessmen meeting behind closed doors to fix the price of their products to the disadvantage of the consumer. They are schools that have quite openly continued to follow a long-established practice because they were unaware that the law had changed."[57]

Gary Lineker accusations (2010)

In August 2010, former English footballer Gary Lineker publicly accused Charterhouse of failing his son, George, in his bid for a place at university.[58] Lineker claimed that the school had used him as a 'guinea pig'[59][60] by ditching A-Levels for the new Cambridge Pre-U. The school reacted by saying it was proud of its students' results.[61] John Witheridge, then headmaster, defended the choice of the Pre-U as being more academically rigorous and educationally valid than the current A-Level standard in an article in The Spectator in August 2010.[62]

Historic sexual abuse

In March 2012, it was reported that a 16-year-old had filmed fellow pupils while they showered, and stored the images on his laptop. The boy was taken into custody by Surrey Police for questioning. A police inquiry was subsequently established.[63]

In April 2013, a physics teacher, Dean Johnson, resigned after allegations of an 'inappropriate relationship' with a former teenage girl pupil led to a police investigation. A police investigation followed, and resulted in a conviction after trial by a jury for the teacher who was found to be in possession of extreme pornography, which depicted a woman being hanged, in 2015; he was given an eight-month prison sentence, suspended for two years.[64] A professional misconduct panel later found:

  • that he had sex with her in the classroom at the school;
  • that he had communicated his fantasies to the girl over Facebook;
  • that he had asked what her underwear size was before buying stockings and presenting them to her gift-wrapped;
  • that the relationship became sexual weeks after the girl turned 18.[65][66]

In 2018, Cathy Newman, who attended the school on a scholarship said that she was humiliated and sexually harassed while a pupil at the school. Other ex-pupils told The Times about experiences including a humiliating initiation ceremony at the school and flashing and groping incidents.[67][68][69] Rebecca Willis, commenting on similar themes around the time reiterated these themes, but also commented on racism which resulted in Asian children leaving.[70] The school has subsequently contacted former pupils to ask them to share concerns.[68]

Film location

The school is occasionally used as a film location. It was used to represent the Palace of Westminster in the 2018 BBC drama Bodyguard[71] and in seasons 4 and 5 of Netflix's The Crown where the Memorial Chapel and South African Cloisters are made to represent the House of Commons as well as the film Peterloo which used the Chapel as the House of Lords. In addition, a location outside Brooke Hall was used in the filming of The Crown season 5. It has previously been used in The Boys are Back, Jupiter Ascending, St Trinians 2, The Mystery of Edwin Drood (an adaptation of a Charles Dickens novel), Foyle's War, An Ideal Husband, and Vampire Academy.[72][73]

Headmasters

  • 1614–1624: Nicholas Grey
  • 1624–1628: Robert Grey
  • 1626–1628: William Middleton
  • 1628–1643: Robert Brooke
  • 1643–1651: Samuel Wilson
  • 1651–1654: Thomas Bunkley
  • 1654–1662: Norris Wood
  • 1662–1679: Thomas Watson
  • 1679–1728: Thomas Walker
  • 1728–1731: Andrew Tooke
  • 1731–1748: James Hotchkis
  • 1748–1769: Eberard Lewis Crusius
  • 1769–1791: Samuel Berdmore
  • 1791–1811: Matthew Raine
  • 1811–1832: John Russell
  • 1832–1853: Augustus Page Saunders
  • 1853–1858: Edward Elder
  • 1858–1863: Richard Elwyn
  • 1863–1897: William Haig Brown
  • 1897–1911: Gerald Henry Rendall
  • 1911–1935: Frank Fletcher
  • 1935–1947: Sir Robert Birley
  • 1947–1952: George Turner
  • 1952–1964: Brian W. M. Young
  • 1965–1973: Oliver van Oss
  • 1973–1981: Brian Rees
  • 1982–1993: Peter Attenborough
  • 1993–1995: Peter Hobson
  • 1995–1996: Clive Carter
  • 1996–2013: John Witheridge
  • 2014–2017: Richard Pleming
  • 2017–2018: Andrew Turner
  • 2018–present: Alex Peterken

Old Carthusians

Former pupils are referred to as Old Carthusians, and current pupils as Carthusians.

Victoria Cross holders

Three Old Carthusians have won the Victoria Cross:

See also

References

  1. ^ . Charterhouse School. Archived from the original on 26 December 2018. Retrieved 26 December 2018.
  2. ^ "The Senior Leadership Team - Charterhouse".
  3. ^ "The Governing Body - Charterhouse".
  4. ^ "Houses". Charterhouse School. Retrieved 7 January 2023.
  5. ^ Charterhouse. "Fees" 23 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 12 November 2017.
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External links

  • Charterhouse School website
  •   Texts on Wikisource:
    • William Parish (1879), List of Carthusians: 1800–1879 (1st ed.), Lewes: Farncombe and Co., Wikidata Q19100045
    • "Charter-House". The New Student's Reference Work. 1914.


  1. ^ Ackermann, Rudolph; Combe, William (1816). "The History of the Colleges of Winchester, Eton, and Westminster: With the Charter-House, the Schools of St. Paul's, Merchant Taylors, Harrow, and Rugby, and the Free-school of Christ's Hospital". Google Books.

charterhouse, school, charterhouse, public, school, english, boarding, school, pupils, aged, godalming, surrey, england, originally, founded, thomas, sutton, 1611, site, carthusian, monastery, charterhouse, square, smithfield, london, educates, over, pupils, a. Charterhouse is a public school English boarding school for pupils aged 13 18 in Godalming Surrey England Originally founded by Thomas Sutton in 1611 on the site of the old Carthusian monastery in Charterhouse Square Smithfield London it educates over 800 pupils aged 13 to 18 years Charterhouse is one of the great nine English public schools reported upon by the Clarendon Commission in 1864 and is a member of the Rugby Group schools CharterhouseAddressCharterhouse RoadGodalming Surrey GU7 2DXUnited KingdomCoordinates51 11 48 N 0 37 21 W 51 196552 N 0 622504 W 51 196552 0 622504 Coordinates 51 11 48 N 0 37 21 W 51 196552 N 0 622504 W 51 196552 0 622504InformationTypePublic school Private boarding schoolMottoLatin Deo Dante Dedi God having given I gave 1 Religious affiliation s Church of EnglandEstablished1611 412 years ago 1611 FounderThomas SuttonDepartment for Education URN125340 TablesChairmanVicky TuckHeadmasterAlex PeterkenSecond MasterAndrew TurnerStaff 550GenderCo educationAge13 to 18Enrolment 800Houses15 4 Colour s Pink grey and maroon PublicationThe CarthusianThe Charterhouse ReviewThe GreyfriarThe GreyhoundFormer pupilsOld CarthusiansSchool songCarmen CarthusianumWebsitecharterhouse wbr org wbr ukCharterhouse charges full boarders up to 44 220 per annum 2022 2023 5 and is among the most expensive Headmasters and Headmistresses Conference HMC schools in the UK 6 It educated the British Prime Minister Lord Liverpool and has a long list of notable alumni SR V class 4 4 0 no E903 later no 903 and 30903 was named Charterhouse after the school 7 Contents 1 History 2 School terms 3 Houses 4 Memorial Chapel 5 Uniform 6 Events 7 Monitors 8 House Apostles 9 Sports 9 1 Origins of football 9 2 Cricket ground 10 Herbarium 11 Carthusian language 12 Fees 13 Controversy 13 1 School fees cartel 2005 13 2 Gary Lineker accusations 2010 13 3 Historic sexual abuse 14 Film location 15 Headmasters 16 Old Carthusians 16 1 Victoria Cross holders 17 See also 18 References 19 External linksHistory EditSee also Grammar school History Latin school and New Latin Latin in school education 1500 1700 Statue of Thomas Sutton on Founder s Court In May 1611 the London Charterhouse came into the hands of Thomas Sutton 1532 1611 of Knaith Lincolnshire He acquired a fortune by the discovery of coal on two estates which he had leased near Newcastle upon Tyne and afterwards removing to London he carried on a commercial career In 1611 the year of his death he endowed a hospital on the site of the Charterhouse calling it the hospital of King James and in his will he bequeathed moneys to maintain a chapel hospital almshouse and school He died on 12 December and subsequently the will was hotly contested but upheld in court and the foundation was finally constituted to afford a home for eighty male pensioners gentlemen by descent and in poverty soldiers that have borne arms by sea or land merchants decayed by piracy or shipwreck or servants in household to the King or Queen and to educate forty boys Brooke Hall at Charterhouse Charterhouse established a reputation for excellence in hospital care and treatment thanks in part to Henry Levett an Oxford graduate who joined the school as a physician in 1712 Levett was widely esteemed for his medical writings including an early tract on the treatment of smallpox Levett was buried in Charterhouse Chapel and his widow married Andrew Tooke the headmaster of Charterhouse 8 9 The school was moved to its present site in 1872 by the then headmaster William Haig Brown a decision influenced by the findings of the Clarendon Commission of 1864 10 The school bought a 68 acre 28 ha site atop a hill just outside Godalming In addition to the main school buildings designed by architect Philip Charles Hardwick they constructed three boarding houses known as Saunderites once the headmaster s house pronounced sarnderites rather than sornderites Verites and Gownboys for scholars who were entitled to wear gowns The school was built by Lucas Brothers 11 who also built the Royal Albert Hall and Covent Garden As pupil numbers grew other houses were built alongside the approach road now known as Charterhouse Hill Each was titled with an adaptation of the name of their first housemaster such as Weekites Daviesites and Girdlestoneites The last of these is still referred to as Duckites reflecting the unusual gait of its original housemaster even though he retired well over 100 years ago citation needed There are now the original four old houses plus ten new houses currently three girls houses making fourteen boarding houses in total The fourteen Houses have preserved a unique identity each with its own tie and colours and pupils compete against each other in both sports and the arts Two new boarding houses were opened upon their completion ahead of the start of the 21 22 academic year This was done by former pupil and sitting MP Jeremy Hunt 12 This made the total number of houses reach fifteen The school continued to expand over the 20th century Further land was bought to the north and west increasing the grounds to over 200 acres 81 ha and a new school chapel was designed by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott perhaps best known for designing the red telephone box and consecrated in 1927 to commemorate almost 700 pupils who died in the First World War making it the largest war memorial in England Around 350 names have been subsequently added to commemorate those who died in the Second World War and other more recent conflicts citation needed An addition to the campus was seven new Houses built in the 1970s replacing late Victorian boarding houses which were demolished in 1977 Other newer buildings include the Art Studio the John Derry Technology Centre the Ben Travers Theatre the Ralph Vaughan Williams Music Centre the Halford Hewitt Golf Course the Queen s Sports Centre the Sir Greville Spratt athletics track and Chetwynd a hall of residence for girls In 2003 the School renovated its onsite Library 2006 saw the opening of The Beveridge Centre for the Social Sciences In 2007 a 3m Modern Languages building was completed Charterhouse School Charterhouse School The school has a top 60 placing in the A level league tables and in 2011 over 80 of pupils are awarded an A or A grade at GCSE citation needed In 2009 the school announced its decision to switch from A Levels to the International Baccalaureate and Cambridge Pre U 13 In 2012 Charterhouse had its best set of Cambridge Pre U results with 96 of examinations taken awarded Distinction or Merit grades Seventy eight pupils achieved Distinctions or their A level equivalent in all subjects taken and twenty one achieved the equivalent of A level A grades in all their subjects Twenty pupils were offered places at Oxford or Cambridge 14 In 2007 Roy Hattersley former Deputy Leader of the Labour Party and minister reported on a visit to Charterhouse in the Guardian newspaper After describing his impression that The chapel s geometric spires and minarets proclaim complete confidence that Charterhouse educates men who are destined to rule the universe he said Academically and pastorally it is near to beyond criticism And after only a brief glimpse of the school I have no doubt that I would have been ecstatically happy there But its existence allows the rich and the powerful to ignore the world beyond its boundaries He therefore concluded that his aspiration to abolish private education in the 1970s was totally justified 15 The 2009 Ofsted Social Care Inspection Report noted that The provision for Helping children achieve well and enjoy what they do is rated as outstanding and This is a good school in which boarders welfare is promoted by a strong approach to countering bullying and child protection Boarding staff have good relationships with the boarders and boarders can list a range of people who they can talk to if they are worried or have concerns 16 The 2011 Independent Schools Inspectorate Report noted that The quality of pupils achievements is excellent Pupils are extremely well educated They attain extremely high standards in external examinations and make exceptional progress in their learning because of their positive attitudes to study dedicated and often inspiring teaching and an academically challenging curriculum that is adapted to suit all needs The curriculum is enriched by an outstanding range of activities 17 The 2017 ISI Educational Quality Inspection Report noted that Pupils academic and other achievements are high and often exceptional Pupils successes in external competitions in academic distinctions and in sport music and the creative and aesthetic arts are exceptional Pupils social development is outstanding Pupils are polite courteous and respectful of one another and of the adults who care for them Relationships between pupils and staff are excellent Pupils mature into independent and self motivated pupils over the course of their time at school and are extremely well prepared not only for the next stage of their lives but also to contribute to society at large 18 Charterhouse originally accepted boys only The school began accepting girls in sixth form in 1971 19 In 2017 the school announced that it is moving to full co education from the age of 13 and will welcome the first girls into Year 9 in September 2021 There will be girls in every year group from September 2023 20 School terms EditThere are three academic terms known as Quarters in the year The Oration Quarter OQ from early September to mid December The Long Quarter LQ from mid January to late March Therefore it traditionally had the distinction of being the shortest third of the school year despite its name The Cricket Quarter CQ from late April to late June or early July Houses EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message There are four old boarding houses and eleven new houses in the White Book a directory of names order In Charterhouse vocabulary an old house is one which was founded in the early years of the school as opposed to the new houses which were created later and are situated away from the main school They are all distinguished by the colour of the pupils ties umbrellas and football team s stripes House Abbr Type ColourSaunderites S Old Boys Orange 21 Verites V Old Boys Light blue 22 Gownboys G Old Boys Maroon 23 Girdlestoneites known as Duckites g New Boys will begin transition to a girls house in OQ 2023 Silver 24 25 Lockites L New Boys Light green 26 Weekites W New Boys will be all girls by OQ 2025 Light red 27 28 Hodgsonites H New Boys Dark blue 29 Daviesites D New Boys Dark green 30 Bodeites B New Boys Old gold 31 Pageites P New Boys Lilac 32 Robinites R New Boys Purple 33 Fletcherites F New Girls Turquoise blue 34 Sutton Su New Girls Pink 35 Chetwynd C New Girls Grey 36 Northbrook N New Girls Green 37 38 South African Cloisters In Autumn 2010 a new house was opened for sixth form pupils called Fletcherites named after Frank Fletcher a former headmaster The house moved into the old Great Comp building now renovated Verites Saunderites and Gownboys houses predate the move to Godalming in 1872 and are known as the old houses However Girdlestoneites is now treated as one of the old houses because it along with Verites Saunderites and Gownboys are the only houses still in their 1870s buildings while all the rest are in their 1970s replacements Technically the old houses plus Girdlestoneites are known as block houses due to their location in the main 1870s block of buildings citation needed Saunderites is named after its first Housemaster Dr Saunders Headmaster 1832 53 and it was the Headmaster s house in that the headmaster would not only run the school but one of the houses Gownboys was named not after their original housemaster but because it was the scholars house although scholars were distributed across all the houses after the transfer to Godalming citation needed As was tradition scholars wore gowns with their uniform and were treated as superior to other boys There is no longer such a tradition and the scholars are now distributed throughout the various houses on a random but numerically equal basis There are still scholars in Gownboys but in no greater proportion than any other house Verites is a contraction of Oliverites Oliver Walford School Usher 1838 55 and hence Verites is pronounced as if the Ver is from Oliver not as from very The records of the house run back to the start of the last century but previously it was just called Boarders House No 2 citation needed Uskites was a temporary house opened in 1872 by Mr Stewart the writing and chemistry instructor from the old Charterhouse citation needed It was closed in 1878 and the pupils redistributed The building itself on Peperharow Road was bought by a schoolmaster and later used by the School as a sanatorium It is now masters accommodation All new Houses apart from Bodeites are named after their founders although Robinites was originally Robinsonites Bodeites was originally Buissonites named after the Head of Languages at the time He ran off with the matron and so the house was renamed Bodeites after the replacement Mr Bode 39 Charterhouse has traditionally had very few day pupils In the 1870s the statutes of the school limited them to 10 excluding sons of masters and in the late 1980s the number was only around 25 some of whom were the sons of masters citation needed Now however there are spaces for two day pupils in each House per year group giving a total of 10 day pupils in each House totaling 150 day pupils across the whole School citation needed In the same way as those boarding a day pupil also becomes a member of one of the Houses To keep up with the increasing number of female applicants to the school Charterhouse began transitioning former boys houses Weekites and Girdlestoneites into girl only houses Weekites became coeducational at the start of OQ 2022 with 36 girls joining in Year 9 Year 10 and Lower Sixth 40 Girdlestoneites is set to do the same in OQ 2023 41 Both will be fully transitioned into girls houses by September 2025 and 2026 respectively Memorial Chapel EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Memorial Chapel Memorial Chapel designed by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott and consecrated in 1927 commemorates the Carthusians who died in action 700 in World War I and 350 in World War II Attendance at all chapel services is compulsory except where individual exemptions are granted on religious grounds Chapel provides a variety of worship experience hymn singing Psalm chanting the choir performs a repertoire of Church Music Candle lit Carols Eucharists in Millennium Chapel Remembrance Sunday with the sounding of The Last Post and The Silence Each year there is a confirmation service in late January and pupils from any year group can be prepared for this The school retains the old chapel used by the school prior to 1927 However when the school first moved to Godalming even this was not built and the pupils walked the 2 miles to Shackleford Church Pupils subsequently benefited because the time taken for the walk precluded the continuance of Sunday school which ran from 10 00 to 10 30 on Sundays which has remained a non teaching day ever since Uniform EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Under SchoolThe Under School consists of the first three years of attendance at Charterhouse being the Fourth Form the Removes and the Fifth Form GCSE year Pupils in Under School wear a weekday uniform consisting of a white or blue shirt house tie grey trousers optional blue or black jumper or sweater vest dark grey jacket and black leather shoes A waistcoat is optional Variations include various society and school honours ties 42 Transition from the Under School to the Upper School occurs upon successful completion of the GCSE exams Specialists The Upper School The Specialists Lower and Upper Sixth Forms constitute the last two years of attendance at Charterhouse and form the Upper School Having completed the GCSE exams successfully First amp Second Year Specialists as they are colloquially referred spend two years studying for their A Level or Pre U examinations usually in three subjects although some students will read for four or their IB exams The grey jacket is replaced by a grey blazer with pink squares and shirts may be pink or of striped patterns Whether in Under or Upper School any pupil who has been awarded his House or School Colours for sport or culture may wear his Colours tie in place of his house tie School monitors may also wear their monitor tie instead of a house tie if they so choose For further on this please see below under School Honours Summer dressesDuring Cricket Quarter the school uniform can vary slightly from that of the two preceding terms Boys may wear cravats in house colours instead of ties and are permitted to wear straw Boaters similar to the Harrow Hat found at Harrow School but these are almost never worn by the majority of pupils Boys in the Under School may also wear navy blazers similar to those worn by the Specialists As well as these variations boys may roll up their sleeves in hashes unless asked not to by a beak Members of the 1st XI Cricket Team have their own variation on summer dress which is described later in the article School HonoursSchool Honours is the Colours system rewarding pupils in various fields with variations on school dress They are as follows House colours House colours are a variation on the house tie Colours awarded for house sport prowess have thicker stripes in the House colour whereas those awarded for cultural prowess have thin doubled striped School colours School colours are awarded for services to School sport culture and other areas deemed worthy They all have a similar design of a solid colour and are covered in the crest of Thomas Sutton the school s founder However they come in varying colours The Head of School The Heads of School head boy and deputy as well as the head girl and deputy head girl is permitted to wear a Pink tie adorned with Sutton Crests 1st XI Major Sports Members of the 1st Team in major school sports football hockey and cricket are permitted to wear maroon ties Minor Sports Holders of colours in Minor Sports are permitted to wear a silver ties Academic Scholars Holders of Academic or Scholars colours are permitted to wear a green tie Culture Those deemed worthy enough in cultural fields are permitted to wear a purple tie Service Brown ties are awarded for commendable service to the school community Most frequently they are awarded by the CCF 1st XI Cricket Members of the 1st XI Cricket team are permitted to wear pink blazers with Sutton s Crest on the front pocket to Hashes on match days usually Saturdays Greyhounds Every year a few Carthusians are given Greyhound awards for outstanding service to the school Those awarded the prize are permitted to wear a navy blue tie with rampant gold greyhounds the greyhound being a notable feature of the coat of arms of Thomas Sutton Academic Pupils who have gained distinctive academic achievements are awarded the Academic Tie and may be referred to as Scholars of the school They are permitted to wear a green tie adorned with the Sutton Crest Culture Pupils who have contributed to the school distinctively in terms of culture music drama etc are awarded the Culture Tie which has a deep purple colour with the Sutton Crest Events EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message March around Green at the end of CQ Bagpipe Players on Leavers Day Carthusian Day is the main social event of the school calendar It is held on day preceding the Exeat in CQ and Sunday dress is worn The day is intended for the parents and families of Carthusians to visit the school Speeches are made and Sports events played including the annual Cricket and Golf matches between Carthusians and Old Carthusians Founder s Day is celebrated every year to commemorate the founding of the school and to thank the founder and benefactor Thomas Sutton It is considered one of the most important days of the year and is held on the last day of OQ The day consists of clearing up in houses before Founders Feast a large feast for the whole school where Black Tie is worn The feast is followed by games and activities St Andrew s Day is celebrated by an annual ball hosted by the historical Scottish Dancing society On St Andrews Day pupils are permitted to wear traditional Scottish dress including a Kilt Ghillies and a Sporran The 50 Mile Walk is an annual event for the 1st Year specialists held at the end of CQ It consists of walking a 50 mile 80 km stretch from Brighton to the Brooke Hall arch and taking regular Hashes the next day The March originates from the 1950s when the American Navy SEALs challenged the School saying that only they could walk 50 miles 80 km and go to work the next day Those who complete the walk in less than 24 Hours are awarded a special 50 tie which until 2006 consisted of a navy blue tie with the school crest that has a 50 written below it The current tie is a thickly striped affair in Pink for the school Green for the countryside and Blue for the night Monitors EditMonitors are chosen pupils who are deemed to have the best qualities in leadership and achievement Each house has at least one monitor who is appointed Head of House the most senior pupil in house On a school wide level one monitor is appointed the Head of School and a deputy is appointed to assist Monitors may wear Navy blue ties and Navy scarves with an embroidered crest Monitors are also permitted to ride bikes to and from hashes Carthusian term for lessons as well as out of Hash time citation needed House Apostles EditThe Headmaster s Essay Society also known as the House Apostles is a historical society of twelve Carthusians deemed to be the most intellectual in the school The students are invited by the Headmaster to present papers on chosen subjects on Monday evenings and meetings are held in the Headmaster s House All members are allowed to wear Cambridge Blue Academic ties or scarfs citation needed Sports EditThe former England batsman and captain Peter May was educated at Charterhouse Martin Bicknell the former Surrey and England seam bowler joined the school as head of cricket following his retirement from the sport in 2006 In 1999 2000 the Charterhouse first XI reached the final of the ISFA Cup after winning all their previous rounds away from home but were beaten 0 1 in the final at the Leicester City ground by Shrewsbury The school first XI of the year 2006 7 again reached the ISFA cup final losing on penalties after a one all draw with Hampton One year later the school first XI again qualified for the ISFA cup final against Millfield Because of poor weather conditions it was decided that the match would be played on one of Charterhouse s pitches instead of the usual Walkers Stadium or the replacement at Woking F C stadium The team won this match on penalties In March 2011 the school reached another ISFA final a fixture with Eton after knocking out Repton and Millfield in the quarter and semi final respectively They ran out 2 0 winners on the day Origins of football Edit Association Football is the main Winter sport at the school During the 1840s at both Charterhouse and Westminster School pupils surroundings meant they were confined to playing their football in the cloisters making the rough and tumble of the handling game that was developing at other schools such as Rugby impossible and necessitating a new code of rules Dingley Dell the most active non school team in the London area in the five years before the Football Association was established in 1863 played Charterhouse eight times between February 1860 and February 1863 43 During the formulation of the rules of the Association Football in the 1860s representatives of Charterhouse and Westminster School pushed for a passing game in particular rules that allowed forward passing passing on Other schools in particular Eton College Shrewsbury School and Harrow favoured a dribbling game with a tight off side rule It is claimed that Stoke Ramblers was formed in 1863 when former pupils of Charterhouse School formed a football club while apprentices at the North Staffordshire Railway works in Stoke on Trent 44 By 1867 the Football Association had chosen in favour of the Charterhouse and Westminster game and adopted a loose off side rule that permitted forward passing 45 The modern forward passing game was a direct consequence of Charterhouse and Westminster football In the early years of the FA Cup teams formed of ex pupils from these schools dominated the competition The Old Carthusians F C the name for the team composed of Charterhouse alumni won the cup in the 1880 81 season beating the Old Etonians in the final and were semi finalists in the two years that followed The public school system also provided many of the first England internationals They included Charles Wreford Brown who is often credited for inventing the word soccer He was a pupil at Charterhouse in the early 1880s and played football for the Old Carthusians and for the national side in the 1890s including several appearances as captain Published in 2008 From Cloister to Cup Finals chronicles this history It was written by Malcolm Bailey an old Cambridge Blue and former teacher housemaster and head of Football at Charterhouse Cricket ground Edit The first recorded match on the school cricket ground came in 1859 when the school played Marlborough College From its inception the school has used the ground to take on a number of colleges in England 46 The cricket ground has held a single List A match which was played between Surrey and Warwickshire in the 1972 John Player League 47 Starting in 2006 the ground has held a number of Surrey Second XI fixtures in the Second XI Championship and Second XI Trophy 48 49 Herbarium EditThe School s Herbarium carries the Index Herbariorum designation GOD and is maintained as The Charterhouse School Herbarium 50 in the University and Jepson Herbaria University of California Berkeley The scope of the collections is mainly the British Isles although some plants are from Europe South Africa and eastern North America The principal collectors were James Edward Moxon Rev George Brown Moxon Rev Tullie Cornthwaite Rev Samuel Titmas first curator of Charterhouse Museum Frederick Yorke Brocas Andrew Bloxam William Gardiner James Buckman and John Drew Salmon The collections are currently being digitised and being released by the Botanical Society of Britain and Ireland on the herbaria home 51 website Carthusian language EditKnown as Lingua Carthusiana the terminology of this language or idiolect has evolved over the centuries of Charterhouse s existence and is used within the Charterhouse community on a daily basis 52 Terminology Term MeaningAdsum A roll call taken in house after breakfast and dinnerBanco Homework also a set period for academic work from 7 00 pm to 8 45 pm Beak A member of the teaching staffBrooke Hall The teaching staff s Common RoomCrown The School tuck shop It is situated on the Long Walk facing Under Green It is also sometimes referred to as CrackExeat Half term break in the middle of each Quarter when all pupils go away from Charterhouse Exeat in LQ is known as Queen s ExeatHash A lessonHashroom A classroomHomebill The evening meal for pupilsPontifex The annual inter House cross country races held in LQquarter The mid morning break which is generally after the first two or three lessons hashes Quarter The word used to describe terms Yearlings Pupils in their first year in the School who are also known as FourthsFees EditIn any given year there is some contention about which is the most expensive public school in England depending on whether one compares day fees or boarding fees In 2019 Charterhouse was reported to be among the most expensive schools for boarding pupils 53 Charging up to 11 415 per term in 2014 15 Charterhouse is the 7th most expensive HMC boarding school in the UK 6 For the 2022 23 academic year day boarding fees are 36 540 and boarding is 44 220 54 Controversy EditSchool fees cartel 2005 Edit Main article Independent school fee fixing scandal In November 2005 the school was one of fifty of the country s leading independent schools which were found guilty of running an illegal price fixing cartel exposed by The Times newspaper although the schools made clear that they had not realised that the change to the law which had happened only a few months earlier about the sharing of information had subsequently made it an offence 55 Each school was required to pay a nominal penalty of 10 000 and all agreed to make ex gratia payments totalling three million pounds into a trust designed to benefit pupils who attended the schools during the period in respect of which fee information was shared 56 Mrs Jean Scott the head of the Independent Schools Council said that independent schools had always been exempt from anti cartel rules applied to business were following a long established procedure in sharing the information with each other and that they were unaware of the change to the law on which they had not been consulted She wrote to John Vickers the director general of the Office of Fair Trading saying They are not a group of businessmen meeting behind closed doors to fix the price of their products to the disadvantage of the consumer They are schools that have quite openly continued to follow a long established practice because they were unaware that the law had changed 57 Gary Lineker accusations 2010 Edit In August 2010 former English footballer Gary Lineker publicly accused Charterhouse of failing his son George in his bid for a place at university 58 Lineker claimed that the school had used him as a guinea pig 59 60 by ditching A Levels for the new Cambridge Pre U The school reacted by saying it was proud of its students results 61 John Witheridge then headmaster defended the choice of the Pre U as being more academically rigorous and educationally valid than the current A Level standard in an article in The Spectator in August 2010 62 Historic sexual abuse Edit In March 2012 it was reported that a 16 year old had filmed fellow pupils while they showered and stored the images on his laptop The boy was taken into custody by Surrey Police for questioning A police inquiry was subsequently established 63 In April 2013 a physics teacher Dean Johnson resigned after allegations of an inappropriate relationship with a former teenage girl pupil led to a police investigation A police investigation followed and resulted in a conviction after trial by a jury for the teacher who was found to be in possession of extreme pornography which depicted a woman being hanged in 2015 he was given an eight month prison sentence suspended for two years 64 A professional misconduct panel later found that he had sex with her in the classroom at the school that he had communicated his fantasies to the girl over Facebook that he had asked what her underwear size was before buying stockings and presenting them to her gift wrapped that the relationship became sexual weeks after the girl turned 18 65 66 In 2018 Cathy Newman who attended the school on a scholarship said that she was humiliated and sexually harassed while a pupil at the school Other ex pupils told The Times about experiences including a humiliating initiation ceremony at the school and flashing and groping incidents 67 68 69 Rebecca Willis commenting on similar themes around the time reiterated these themes but also commented on racism which resulted in Asian children leaving 70 The school has subsequently contacted former pupils to ask them to share concerns 68 Film location EditThe school is occasionally used as a film location It was used to represent the Palace of Westminster in the 2018 BBC drama Bodyguard 71 and in seasons 4 and 5 of Netflix s The Crown where the Memorial Chapel and South African Cloisters are made to represent the House of Commons as well as the film Peterloo which used the Chapel as the House of Lords In addition a location outside Brooke Hall was used in the filming of The Crown season 5 It has previously been used in The Boys are Back Jupiter Ascending St Trinians 2 The Mystery of Edwin Drood an adaptation of a Charles Dickens novel Foyle s War An Ideal Husband and Vampire Academy 72 73 Headmasters Edit1614 1624 Nicholas Grey 1624 1628 Robert Grey 1626 1628 William Middleton 1628 1643 Robert Brooke 1643 1651 Samuel Wilson 1651 1654 Thomas Bunkley 1654 1662 Norris Wood 1662 1679 Thomas Watson 1679 1728 Thomas Walker 1728 1731 Andrew Tooke 1731 1748 James Hotchkis 1748 1769 Eberard Lewis Crusius 1769 1791 Samuel Berdmore 1791 1811 Matthew Raine 1811 1832 John Russell 1832 1853 Augustus Page Saunders 1853 1858 Edward Elder 1858 1863 Richard Elwyn 1863 1897 William Haig Brown 1897 1911 Gerald Henry Rendall 1911 1935 Frank Fletcher 1935 1947 Sir Robert Birley 1947 1952 George Turner 1952 1964 Brian W M Young 1965 1973 Oliver van Oss 1973 1981 Brian Rees 1982 1993 Peter Attenborough 1993 1995 Peter Hobson 1995 1996 Clive Carter 1996 2013 John Witheridge 2014 2017 Richard Pleming 2017 2018 Andrew Turner 2018 present Alex PeterkenOld Carthusians EditMain article List of Old Carthusians Former pupils are referred to as Old Carthusians and current pupils as Carthusians Victoria Cross holders Edit Three Old Carthusians have won the Victoria Cross Victoria Cross Hunza Nagar Expedition India Lieutenant Guy Hudleston Boisragon at Charterhouse from Oration Quarter OQ Autumn Term 1878 to OQ 1880 He later achieved the rank of brigadier 1864 1931 Mohmand Campaign Bilot India Lieutenant James Morris Colquhoun Colvin at Charterhouse from Cricket Quarter CQ Summer Term 1884 to CQ 1888 He later achieved the rank of colonel 1870 1945 First World War Lieutenant Eric Archibald McNair at Charterhouse from CQ 1907 to CQ 1913 was Head of the School He later achieved the rank of captain 1894 1918 See also EditList of English and Welsh endowed schools 19th century References Edit Social Responsibility Charterhouse School Archived from the original on 26 December 2018 Retrieved 26 December 2018 The Senior Leadership Team Charterhouse The Governing Body Charterhouse Houses Charterhouse School Retrieved 7 January 2023 Charterhouse Fees Archived 23 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 12 November 2017 a b Archived copy PDF Archived from the original on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 29 February 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Swift Peter 2006 Maunsell 4 4 0 Schools Class Locomotives in detail Vol 6 Hersham Ian Allen pp 79 84 ISBN 0 71103 178 9 The Roll of the Royal College of Physicians of London Royal College of Physicians of London Longman Green Longman and Roberts 1861 p 21 Retrieved 7 April 2015 via Internet Archive henry levett charterhouse The Roll of the Royal College of Physicians of London 1701 to 1800 William Munk G H Brown The College 1878 p 22 Retrieved 7 April 2015 via Internet Archive henry levett charterhouse Charterhouse History Charterhouse School Archived from the original on 23 April 2019 Retrieved 26 December 2018 Charles Lucas Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press 2004 doi 10 1093 ref odnb 49439 Retrieved 7 April 2015 Subscription or UK public library membership required Jeremy Hunt Opens New Boarding Houses Retrieved 21 December 2022 Schools ditching A levels for diploma programme Getsurrey co uk 28 January 2009 Archived from the original on 24 February 2012 Retrieved 7 April 2015 Examination REsults Charterhouse org uk Archived from the original on 4 October 2013 Retrieved 7 April 2015 Hattersley Roy 17 July 2007 Roy Hattersley visits Charterhouse The Guardian London Archived from the original on 30 December 2016 Retrieved 11 December 2016 Charterhouse Inspection report for boarding school PDF Ofsted gov uk Archived from the original PDF on 3 November 2012 Retrieved 7 April 2015 Charterhouse ISI Independent Schools Inspectorate ISI net Archived from the original on 15 May 2012 Retrieved 7 April 2015 ISI Inspection Reports Charterhouse www charterhouse org uk Archived from the original on 12 October 2018 Retrieved 12 October 2018 Charterhouse set open a sixth form day house The Independent 22 October 2011 Retrieved 23 June 2019 Full coeducation at Charterhouse Archived from the original on 12 October 2018 Retrieved 12 October 2018 Saunderites charterhouse org uk Archived from the original on 1 May 2019 Retrieved 1 May 2019 Verites charterhouse org uk Archived from the original on 1 May 2019 Gownboys charterhouse org uk Archived from the original on 1 May 2019 Girdlestonites charterhouse org uk Archived from the original on 1 May 2019 Girdlestoneites Charterhouse www charterhouse org uk Retrieved 7 January 2023 Lockites charterhouse org uk Archived from the original on 1 May 2019 Weekites charterhouse org uk Archived from the original on 1 May 2019 Weekites Charterhouse www charterhouse org uk Retrieved 7 January 2023 Hodgsonites charterhouse org uk Archived from the original on 1 May 2019 Daviesites charterhouse org uk Archived from the original on 1 May 2019 Retrieved 1 May 2019 Bodeites charterhouse org uk Archived from the original on 1 May 2019 Retrieved 1 May 2019 Pageites charterhouse org uk Archived from the original on 1 May 2019 Retrieved 1 May 2019 Robinites charterhouse org uk Archived from the original on 1 May 2019 Retrieved 1 May 2019 Fletcherites charterhouse org uk Archived from the original on 1 May 2019 Retrieved 1 May 2019 Sutton Charterhouse www charterhouse org uk Retrieved 7 January 2023 Chetwynd Charterhouse www charterhouse org uk Retrieved 7 January 2023 Houses Charterhouse Northbrook Charterhouse www charterhouse org uk Retrieved 7 January 2023 Dann John 2017 Maud Coleno s Daughter The Life of Dorothy Hartman 1898 1957 p 166 ISBN 978 1785899 713 Weekites Charterhouse www charterhouse org uk Retrieved 10 January 2023 Girdlestoneites Charterhouse www charterhouse org uk Retrieved 10 January 2023 Boys Uniform List and Dress Code PDF charterhouse org uk Archived from the original PDF on 1 May 2019 Curry Graham 2017 Football in the capital a local study with national consequences Soccer amp Society Volume 20 2019 Issue 3 DOI http dx doi org 10 1080 14660970 2017 1355790 1863 1888 in the Beginning Stoke City F C Archived from the original on 19 October 2008 Retrieved 22 June 2007 Marples Morris A History of Football Secker and Warburg London 1954 page 150 OTHER MATCHES PLAYED ON CHARTERHOUSE SCHOOL GODALMING 287 Cricketarchive com Archived from the original on 28 May 2018 Retrieved 7 April 2015 LIST A MATCHES PLAYED ON CHARTERHOUSE SCHOOL GODALMING 1 Cricketarchive com 28 May 1972 Archived from the original on 28 May 2018 Retrieved 7 April 2015 SECOND XI CHAMPIONSHIP MATCHES PLAYED ON CHARTERHOUSE SCHOOL GODALMING 3 Cricketarchive com Archived from the original on 28 May 2018 Retrieved 7 April 2015 SECOND XI TROPHY MATCHES PLAYED ON CHARTERHOUSE SCHOOL GODALMING 5 Cricketarchive com Archived from the original on 28 May 2018 Retrieved 7 April 2015 University and Jepson Herbaria Ucjeps berkeley edu 10 August 2007 Archived from the original on 7 June 2011 Retrieved 7 April 2015 herbaria home project homepage Herbariaunited org Archived from the original on 23 March 2010 Retrieved 7 April 2015 Charterhouse Terminology PDF Retrieved 21 December 2022 Most Expensive Boarding Schools In The UK 2020 Updated Britannia StudyLink Malaysia UK Study Expert 9 September 2019 Retrieved 31 December 2020 Fees charterhouse org uk Archived from the original on 1 May 2019 Halpin Tony 10 November 2005 Independent schools face huge fines over cartel to fix fees The Times London Archived from the original on 7 October 2008 Retrieved 25 July 2008 OFT names further trustees as part of the independent schools settlement Press release 21 December 2006 Archived from the original on 10 June 2008 Private schools send papers to fee fixing inquiry The Daily Telegraph London 1 March 2004 Archived from the original on 25 June 2013 Retrieved 15 March 2011 Uk Mirror co 23 August 2010 Gary Lineker s son fails to get grades for place at university 3am amp Mirror Online Mirror Mirror co uk Archived from the original on 15 January 2012 Retrieved 7 April 2015 Gary Lineker attacks Charterhouse school over son s results The Daily Telegraph London 23 August 2010 Archived from the original on 5 May 2013 Gary Lineker s anger at guinea pig son s school Metro News Metro co uk 24 August 2010 Archived from the original on 27 August 2010 Retrieved 7 April 2015 Garner Richard 24 August 2010 Lineker blames 25 000 a year school after son fails to make grade Education News Education Independent co uk Archived from the original on 7 December 2011 Retrieved 7 April 2015 An answer to the A level debacle and Gary Lineker The Spectator Archived from the original on 2 March 2012 Retrieved 10 October 2011 Charterhouse 16 year old pupil held over filming pupils in showers The Daily Telegraph London 26 March 2012 Archived from the original on 28 May 2018 Retrieved 2 April 2018 Shepherd Rebecca 20 May 2015 Suspended sentence for physics teacher with perverted videos getsurrey Archived from the original on 17 September 2018 Retrieved 16 September 2018 Teacher at top public school had sex with teenage pupil in classroom Evening Standard Archived from the original on 17 September 2018 Retrieved 16 September 2018 National College for Teaching and Leadership 2 June 2017 Professional conduct panel decision and recommendations and decision on behalf of the Secretary of State PDF UK gov Archived PDF from the original on 17 September 2018 Retrieved 17 September 2018 Griffiths Sian ed 2 September 2018 Cathy Newman I was abused by boys at top private school Charterhouse The Sunday Times ISSN 0956 1382 Retrieved 16 September 2018 a b Schools asks pupils for harassment concerns BBC News 13 September 2018 Archived from the original on 18 September 2018 Retrieved 16 September 2018 Griffiths Sian ed 9 September 2018 Charterhouse girls tell of culture of abuse The Sunday Times ISSN 0956 1382 Retrieved 16 September 2018 Willis Rebecca 25 November 2009 Private hell in a boys public school The Daily Telegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Archived from the original on 17 September 2018 Retrieved 16 September 2018 Bodyguard filming locations how to visit Number 10 and the other settings of the BBC drama i 16 September 2018 Archived from the original on 17 September 2018 Retrieved 16 September 2018 Vampire Academy Filming Location on IMDB The Charterhouse on Joolz GuidesExternal links EditCharterhouse School website Texts on Wikisource William Parish 1879 List of Carthusians 1800 1879 1st ed Lewes Farncombe and Co Wikidata Q19100045 Charter House The New Student s Reference Work 1914 Ackermann Rudolph Combe William 1816 The History of the Colleges of Winchester Eton and Westminster With the Charter House the Schools of St Paul s Merchant Taylors Harrow and Rugby and the Free school of Christ s Hospital Google Books Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charterhouse School amp oldid 1151835792, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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