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Cheltenham College

Cheltenham College is a public school (independent day and boarding school) for pupils aged 13–18 in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England. The school opened in 1841 as a Church of England foundation and is known for its outstanding classical, military, and sporting traditions.

Cheltenham College
Cheltenham College chapel and library (Big Modern)
Address
Bath Road

, ,
GL53 7LD

England
CoordinatesCoordinates: 51°53′30″N 2°4′30″W / 51.89167°N 2.07500°W / 51.89167; -2.07500
Information
TypePublic school
Independent School
Day and Boarding School
MottoLatin: Labor omnia vincit
("Work Conquers All")
Religious affiliation(s)Church of England
EstablishedJuly 1841; 181 years ago (1841-07)
FounderG. S. Harcourt, J. S. Iredell
Local authorityGloucestershire
Department for Education URN115795 Tables
OfstedReports
President of the CouncilW. J. Straker-Nesbit
HeadNicola Huggett
Staff88[1]
GenderCo-educational
Age13 to 18
Enrolment720[2]
Houses11
Colour(s)   
Former studentsOld Cheltonians (OCs)
PublicationThe Cheltonian & Floreat
Websitecheltenhamcollege.org

History

Two Cheltenham residents, G. S. Harcourt and J. S. Iredell, founded Cheltenham College in July 1841 to educate the sons of gentlemen. It originally opened in three houses along Bays Hill Terrace in the centre of the town.

Within two years it had moved to its present site—with Boyne House as the first College Boarding House—and soon became known simply as Cheltenham College. Accepting both boarding and day boys, it was originally divided into Classical and Military sides until the mid-twentieth century. The 1893 book Great Public Schools by E. S. Skirving, S. R. James, and Henry Churchill Maxwell Lyte contained a chapter on each of what they considered England's ten greatest public schools; it included a chapter on Cheltenham College. It is now an independent fee paying school, governed by Cheltenham College Council. A few girls were admitted in 1969 and then in 1981 when the first girls' house opened, the Sixth Form became fully co educational. In 1998, girls were admitted to all other years, making the College fully co-educational.

In 1865, a Junior Department was added to the main College buildings. In 1993 it opened its doors to girls and also opened a pre-Prep department, Kingfishers, for 3- to 7-year-olds.

Work and service

In the First World War 702 Old Cheltonians (former pupils) were killed in the service of their country, and a further 363 died in World War II. Cheltenham's military past is recognised by the fact that it is one of only three schools in England (the others being Eton College, founded in 1440, and the Duke of York's Royal Military School, founded in 1803) to have its own military colours (last presented in 2000 by The Princess Royal). Queen Victoria School in Dunblane, Scotland, also has Colours.

The names of those Old Cheltonians killed in World War I are recorded in the College Chapel, completed in 1896, which to a degree resembles King's College Chapel, Cambridge and is one of the chapels of an English public school. The names of those killed in the World War II are displayed on the memorial in the College's dining hall.

Cheltenham has approximately 640 pupils (a fifth being day pupils) between the ages of 13 and 18.[3] The fees are between approximately £31,000 - £43,000 per annum, making it amongst the most expensive schools in the United Kingdom.[4] The school is now co-educational and maintains a strong academic reputation, with the majority of pupils going to The Russell Group Universities, and around 7% going on to Oxford and Cambridge universities. Both GCSE and A Level results are among the highest in Gloucestershire.[5][6]

There is also a prep school, Cheltenham College Preparatory School, most of whose pupils go on to the senior school.

Cheltenham has links with the Wynberg Boys' High School in Cape Town, South Africa—an all-boys boarding school coincidentally established in 1841, the same year as Cheltenham.

Structure

Cheltenham College consists of a preparatory school and senior school and educates students from ages 3 to 18. The boarding programme is also available to preparatory school students. The school offers the following courses:

  • Third Form (Students 13 to 14 years old)
  • Fourth Form (GCSEs and IGCSEs)
  • Fifth Form (GCSEs and IGCSEs)
  • Sixth Form (Upper College) – Sixth Form students can choose two routes of study. The first route is to study three A Levels and complete an Extended Project Qualification (EPQ) and the second route is to study four A Levels.

Sport

[7]

Rugby

The Rugby club dates back to 1844. Cheltenham compete with larger single gender schools. The first inter-school rugby football match was played between Rugby School and Cheltenham College, Cheltenham beating Rugby; and the "Cheltenham Rules" were adopted by the Rugby Football Union in 1887. Cheltenham's rugby XV was undefeated in the 1957, 2008 and 2017 seasons.[8]Eddie Butler, former Welsh, Babarian and British Lions International Rugby player, taught French at the school. The schools Director of Rugby is former Gloucester Rugby and England Rugby player Olly Morgan.

Rowing

The Boat Club was founded in 1841. The Boat House itself is located at the foot of Tewkesbury Abbey on the banks of the River Severn. Key events in the rowing calendar are; Schools' Head of the River Race, The National Schools Regatta and Henley Royal Regatta. At the 2013 National School's Head of River, the 1st IV+ came first in their division.[9]

Rackets

Cheltenham College plays Rackets where, at times, they have dominated the Queen's Club Public Schools Competition; Cheltenham has been National Champions three times from 2003 to 2011. Chris Stout won the Foster Cup (the individual championship for public schools) at Queen's Club in December 2011. The current World Champion, Jamie Stout (Chris's brother), is an Old Cheltonian as well.[10]

Polo

Cheltenham were National Schools Champions in 1997, 1998, 2004, & 2005 and Arena Champions in 2004, 2005 & 2006.[11]

Cricket

Cricket is one of the main sports that is played in summer. Cheltenham College enjoys a longstanding tradition of cricket and is the home of the Cheltenham Cricket Festival. Gloucestershire County Cricket Club played its first game at the College cricket ground in 1872, making this the longest running cricket festival on an out-ground, in the world (Canterbury Cricket Week was first played in 1842, but the St Lawrence Ground is now Kent County Cricket Club's headquarters).[12]

Houses

There are eleven houses, two of which are day houses: Southwood for the boys and Queens for the girls. Ashmead, Chandos, College Lawn and Westal are the girls' boarding houses. The boys reside in Boyne House, Christowe, Hazelwell, Leconfield, and Newick House. Leconfield also hosts day students.

If....

Cheltenham College was used to film the majority of the school scenes in the popular 1968 British film If...., starring Malcolm McDowell, although an agreement between the school's then Headmaster, David Ashcroft, and the film's director, Lindsay Anderson (who was a former pupil and Senior Prefect), prevented the filmmakers from crediting the school. Additional interior scenes were filmed at Aldenham School in Hertfordshire, which gained sole accreditation in the film's closing credit. Two Surrey public schools, Charterhouse School and Cranleigh School, had also negotiated to appear, but pulled out of negotiations once the subject matter of the film became clear.[citation needed]

Old Cheltonians

Nobel Prize recipient

Victoria Cross recipients

Fourteen Victoria Crosses (VCs) have been won by Old Cheltonians,[13] with only Eton College (37), Harrow School (20), Haileybury College (17), and Wellington College (15), having higher totals.(Although it should be taken into account that the Duke of York's Royal Military School does not publish lists of recipients of bravery awards in order not to diminish the service of those several thousand former pupils who have fought in battle and not received the VC, but only lesser awards for gallantry).[citation needed] The list of names, with age and rank at the time of the deed that merited the award of the VC, is as follows:

George Cross recipient

Sport

Notable former pupils in other fields

Principals, headmasters and head

The current head of Cheltenham College is Nicola Huggett.

The full list of past principals and heads is contained in Cheltenham College Who's Who 5th edition, 2003, and is as follows:

  • Principals (1841–1919)
    • Alfred Phillips, 1841–44
    • William Dobson, 1845–59
    • Henry Highton, 1859–62
    • Alfred Barry, 1862–68
    • Thomas Jex-Blake, 1868–74
    • Herbert Kynaston (né Snow), 1874–88
    • Herbert Armitage James, 1889–95
    • Robert Stuart de Courcy Laffan, 1895–99
    • Reginald Waterfield, 1899–1919
  • Headmasters (1919–2019)
    • Henry Harrison Hardy, 1919–32
    • Richard Victor Harley Roseveare 1932–37
    • Arthur Goodhart Pite 1937–38
    • John Bell 1938–40
    • Alan Guy Elliott-Smith 1940–51
    • Guy Pentreath 1952–59
    • David Ashcroft 1959–78
    • Richard Martin Morgan 1978–90
    • Peter David Vaughan Wilkes 1990–97
    • Paul Arthur Chamberlain 1997–2004
    • John Stephen Richardson 2004–2010
    • Alex Peterken 2010–2018
    • Crispin Dawson (acting headmaster – 2018)
  • Head (2019- )
    • Nicola Huggett 2019 –
  • Heads of the Junior School (1863–2013)
    • Thomas Middlemore Middlemore-Whithard 1863–65
    • Francis Joseph Cade 1896–1910
    • Charles Thornton 1911–23
    • Basil Allcot Bowers 1923–33
    • William Donavan Johnston 1933–46
    • Hugh Alan Clutton-Brock 1946–64
    • William Philip Cathcart Davies 1964–86
    • David John Allenby Cassell 1986–91
    • Nigel Iain Archdale 1992–2008
    • Adrian Morris 2008–2010
    • Scott Bryan 2010–2012
    • Noll Jenkins 2012–2013 (acting head)
  • Heads of the preparatory school (2013–present)
    • Jonathan Whybrow 2013–2018
    • Tom O'Sullivan 2018 –

See also

References

  1. ^ . Cheltenham College. Archived from the original on 22 August 2007. Retrieved 24 August 2007.
  2. ^ . Cheltenham College. Archived from the original on 9 August 2007. Retrieved 24 August 2007.
  3. ^ [1] 22 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ . Cheltenham College. 10 September 2008. Archived from the original on 29 February 2012. Retrieved 28 February 2012.
  5. ^ "2006 GCSE and A-level results: Gloucestershire | Schools special reports". EducationGuardian.co.uk. from the original on 3 June 2012. Retrieved 28 February 2012.
  6. ^ Education (25 September 2008). "Town vs Gown: Cheltenham, Gloucestershire". The Daily Telegraph. from the original on 9 July 2011. Retrieved 28 February 2012.
  7. ^ "Languages and rugby – an interview with Eddie Butler". Fitzwilliam College, University of Cambridge. from the original on 1 September 2020. Retrieved 1 September 2020.
  8. ^ School Sport (15 December 2008). "Cheltenham College 1st XV remain undefeated throughout school rugby season". The Daily Telegraph. from the original on 26 March 2010. Retrieved 28 February 2012.
  9. ^ "Rowing – Cheltenham College". cheltenhamcollege.org. from the original on 19 March 2018. Retrieved 19 March 2018.
  10. ^ "Rackets". Cheltenham College. 10 September 2008. from the original on 7 February 2012. Retrieved 28 February 2012.
  11. ^ "Success for College Polo Teams". Cheltenham College. 24 February 2011. from the original on 12 May 2012. Retrieved 28 February 2012.
  12. ^ "Cricket". Cheltenham College. 10 September 2008. from the original on 8 February 2012. Retrieved 28 February 2012.
  13. ^ Michael Croke Morgan, (1968), Cheltenham College: The First Hundred Years, page 219, (published for the Cheltonian Society by Sadler)
  14. ^ . Dhs.kyutech.ac.jp. Archived from the original on 4 February 2012. Retrieved 28 February 2012.
  15. ^ George Cross Database Recipient: Andre Gilbert KEMPSTER, GC (Posthumously) 23 August 2004 at the Wayback Machine
  16. ^ "GB win eventing gold, McEwen silver". BBC Sport. Retrieved 5 August 2021.
  17. ^ "Philip Astley-Sparke". Replimune.
  18. ^ a b c d David Robson (25 September 2008). "Town vs Gown – Cheltenham, Gloucestershire". The Daily Telegraph. from the original on 2 October 2017. Retrieved 2 October 2017.
  19. ^ Who Was Who 1981-1990. A & C Black, London. 1991. ISBN 0-7136-3336-0.
  20. ^ "Forde Everard de Wend Cayley | RCP Museum". history.rcplondon.ac.uk. Retrieved 2 October 2022.
  21. ^ Wyndham Charles Knight, Sir, janeaustensfamily.co.uk, accessed 5 June 2022
  22. ^ "Insight into Hargreaves Lansdown's top talent acquisition as IG Group exec Christopher Hill becomes CFO – FinanceFeeds". financefeeds.com. 29 October 2015. from the original on 19 March 2018. Retrieved 19 March 2018.
  23. ^ C. Hayavadana Rao. "The Indian Biographical Dictionary (1915)". Archived from the original on 21 September 2018. Retrieved 26 March 2018.
  24. ^ Robinson, David (20 July 2005). . The Independent. Archived from the original on 14 April 2020. Retrieved 2 October 2017.
  25. ^ Goudie, Andrew S. (2015). "Kenneth J. Mason 1887-1976". Geographers: Bibliographical Studies, Volume 18. Bloomsbury Academic. p. 67-72. ISBN 9781474226738.
  26. ^ Purser, Philip (5 May 2009). "Lord Moore of Wolvercote". The Guardian. Retrieved 1 August 2022.
  27. ^ ”Posthumous Kenya Award” in Flight, 9 July 1954, p. 64
  28. ^ "Politics - Lord Richard obituary". The Guardian. 22 March 2018. from the original on 2 July 2020. Retrieved 14 February 2020.
  29. ^ "General Sir Michael Rose Honorary Fellow". St Edmund Hall, Oxford. Retrieved 1 August 2022.
  30. ^ "Iain Sinclair – poet, novelist, editor, filmmaker, publisher, playwright, book-dealer". Anachron.org. from the original on 2 October 2017. Retrieved 1 October 2017.

Bibliography

  • Cheltenham College: The First Hundred Years by Michael C. Morgan [Chalfont St. Giles: Richard Sadler, for the Cheltonian Society, 1968]. A formal history, starting with the meeting on 9 November 1840 of Cheltenham residents (presided over by Major-General George Swiney) who decided to set up a 'Proprietary Grammar School' and appointed a committee to achieve this. ISBN unknown/unavailable.
  • Then & Now: An Anniversary Celebration of Cheltenham College 1841–1991 by Tim Pearce, (Cheltonian Society, 1991). The author explains in the Preface that this is "more of a scrap book than a formal history, and like all scrap books it reflects the tastes and interests of its compilers and depends on what in the way of pictures and documents may be available to them". ISBN 0-85967-875-X
  • Cheltenham College Who's Who, 5th edition ed. John Bowes, (Cheltonian Society, 2003) No ISBN on book.
  • Floreat, A collection of photographs of College life from the 1960s and early 1970s compiled by the late M.F. Miller, a Physics master at the school

External links

  • Cheltenham College website


cheltenham, college, public, school, independent, boarding, school, pupils, aged, cheltenham, gloucestershire, england, school, opened, 1841, church, england, foundation, known, outstanding, classical, military, sporting, traditions, chapel, library, modern, a. Cheltenham College is a public school independent day and boarding school for pupils aged 13 18 in Cheltenham Gloucestershire England The school opened in 1841 as a Church of England foundation and is known for its outstanding classical military and sporting traditions Cheltenham CollegeCheltenham College chapel and library Big Modern AddressBath RoadCheltenham Gloucestershire GL53 7LDEnglandCoordinatesCoordinates 51 53 30 N 2 4 30 W 51 89167 N 2 07500 W 51 89167 2 07500InformationTypePublic schoolIndependent SchoolDay and Boarding SchoolMottoLatin Labor omnia vincit Work Conquers All Religious affiliation s Church of EnglandEstablishedJuly 1841 181 years ago 1841 07 FounderG S Harcourt J S IredellLocal authorityGloucestershireDepartment for Education URN115795 TablesOfstedReportsPresident of the CouncilW J Straker NesbitHeadNicola HuggettStaff88 1 GenderCo educationalAge13 to 18Enrolment720 2 Houses11Colour s Former studentsOld Cheltonians OCs PublicationThe Cheltonian amp FloreatWebsitecheltenhamcollege wbr org Contents 1 History 2 Work and service 3 Structure 4 Sport 4 1 Rugby 4 2 Rowing 4 3 Rackets 4 4 Polo 4 5 Cricket 5 Houses 6 If 7 Old Cheltonians 8 Nobel Prize recipient 8 1 Victoria Cross recipients 8 2 George Cross recipient 8 3 Sport 8 4 Notable former pupils in other fields 9 Principals headmasters and head 10 See also 11 References 12 Bibliography 13 External linksHistory EditTwo Cheltenham residents G S Harcourt and J S Iredell founded Cheltenham College in July 1841 to educate the sons of gentlemen It originally opened in three houses along Bays Hill Terrace in the centre of the town Within two years it had moved to its present site with Boyne House as the first College Boarding House and soon became known simply as Cheltenham College Accepting both boarding and day boys it was originally divided into Classical and Military sides until the mid twentieth century The 1893 book Great Public Schools by E S Skirving S R James and Henry Churchill Maxwell Lyte contained a chapter on each of what they considered England s ten greatest public schools it included a chapter on Cheltenham College It is now an independent fee paying school governed by Cheltenham College Council A few girls were admitted in 1969 and then in 1981 when the first girls house opened the Sixth Form became fully co educational In 1998 girls were admitted to all other years making the College fully co educational In 1865 a Junior Department was added to the main College buildings In 1993 it opened its doors to girls and also opened a pre Prep department Kingfishers for 3 to 7 year olds Work and service EditIn the First World War 702 Old Cheltonians former pupils were killed in the service of their country and a further 363 died in World War II Cheltenham s military past is recognised by the fact that it is one of only three schools in England the others being Eton College founded in 1440 and the Duke of York s Royal Military School founded in 1803 to have its own military colours last presented in 2000 by The Princess Royal Queen Victoria School in Dunblane Scotland also has Colours The names of those Old Cheltonians killed in World War I are recorded in the College Chapel completed in 1896 which to a degree resembles King s College Chapel Cambridge and is one of the chapels of an English public school The names of those killed in the World War II are displayed on the memorial in the College s dining hall Cheltenham has approximately 640 pupils a fifth being day pupils between the ages of 13 and 18 3 The fees are between approximately 31 000 43 000 per annum making it amongst the most expensive schools in the United Kingdom 4 The school is now co educational and maintains a strong academic reputation with the majority of pupils going to The Russell Group Universities and around 7 going on to Oxford and Cambridge universities Both GCSE and A Level results are among the highest in Gloucestershire 5 6 There is also a prep school Cheltenham College Preparatory School most of whose pupils go on to the senior school Cheltenham has links with the Wynberg Boys High School in Cape Town South Africa an all boys boarding school coincidentally established in 1841 the same year as Cheltenham Structure EditCheltenham College consists of a preparatory school and senior school and educates students from ages 3 to 18 The boarding programme is also available to preparatory school students The school offers the following courses Third Form Students 13 to 14 years old Fourth Form GCSEs and IGCSEs Fifth Form GCSEs and IGCSEs Sixth Form Upper College Sixth Form students can choose two routes of study The first route is to study three A Levels and complete an Extended Project Qualification EPQ and the second route is to study four A Levels Sport Edit 7 Rugby Edit The Rugby club dates back to 1844 Cheltenham compete with larger single gender schools The first inter school rugby football match was played between Rugby School and Cheltenham College Cheltenham beating Rugby and the Cheltenham Rules were adopted by the Rugby Football Union in 1887 Cheltenham s rugby XV was undefeated in the 1957 2008 and 2017 seasons 8 Eddie Butler former Welsh Babarian and British Lions International Rugby player taught French at the school The schools Director of Rugby is former Gloucester Rugby and England Rugby player Olly Morgan Rowing Edit The Boat Club was founded in 1841 The Boat House itself is located at the foot of Tewkesbury Abbey on the banks of the River Severn Key events in the rowing calendar are Schools Head of the River Race The National Schools Regatta and Henley Royal Regatta At the 2013 National School s Head of River the 1st IV came first in their division 9 Rackets Edit Cheltenham College plays Rackets where at times they have dominated the Queen s Club Public Schools Competition Cheltenham has been National Champions three times from 2003 to 2011 Chris Stout won the Foster Cup the individual championship for public schools at Queen s Club in December 2011 The current World Champion Jamie Stout Chris s brother is an Old Cheltonian as well 10 Polo Edit Cheltenham were National Schools Champions in 1997 1998 2004 amp 2005 and Arena Champions in 2004 2005 amp 2006 11 Cricket Edit Cricket is one of the main sports that is played in summer Cheltenham College enjoys a longstanding tradition of cricket and is the home of the Cheltenham Cricket Festival Gloucestershire County Cricket Club played its first game at the College cricket ground in 1872 making this the longest running cricket festival on an out ground in the world Canterbury Cricket Week was first played in 1842 but the St Lawrence Ground is now Kent County Cricket Club s headquarters 12 Houses EditThere are eleven houses two of which are day houses Southwood for the boys and Queens for the girls Ashmead Chandos College Lawn and Westal are the girls boarding houses The boys reside in Boyne House Christowe Hazelwell Leconfield and Newick House Leconfield also hosts day students If EditCheltenham College was used to film the majority of the school scenes in the popular 1968 British film If starring Malcolm McDowell although an agreement between the school s then Headmaster David Ashcroft and the film s director Lindsay Anderson who was a former pupil and Senior Prefect prevented the filmmakers from crediting the school Additional interior scenes were filmed at Aldenham School in Hertfordshire which gained sole accreditation in the film s closing credit Two Surrey public schools Charterhouse School and Cranleigh School had also negotiated to appear but pulled out of negotiations once the subject matter of the film became clear citation needed Old Cheltonians EditNobel Prize recipient EditPatrick White 1912 1990 1973 Literature laureateVictoria Cross recipients Edit Fourteen Victoria Crosses VCs have been won by Old Cheltonians 13 with only Eton College 37 Harrow School 20 Haileybury College 17 and Wellington College 15 having higher totals Although it should be taken into account that the Duke of York s Royal Military School does not publish lists of recipients of bravery awards in order not to diminish the service of those several thousand former pupils who have fought in battle and not received the VC but only lesser awards for gallantry citation needed The list of names with age and rank at the time of the deed that merited the award of the VC is as follows Lieutenant Andrew Cathcart Bogle 78th Regiment Oonao India 29 July 1857 aged 28 William Fraser McDonell Bengal Civil Service Arrah India 30 July 1857 aged 27 Midshipman Duncan Gordon Boyes HMS Euryalus Japan 6 September 1864 aged 17 14 Captain George Nicolas Channer 1st Gurkha Rifles Perak Expedition 20 December 1875 aged 32 Lieutenant Teignmouth Melvill 24th Regiment of Foot Isandlwanha Zululand 22 January 1879 aged 36 Lieutenant Reginald Clare Hart Royal Engineers Afghan War 31 January 1879 aged 30 Lieutenant John Duncan Grant 8th Gurkha Rifles Gyantse Jong Tibet Expedition 6 July 1904 aged 27 Captain Douglas Reynolds Royal Field Artillery Le Cateau France 26 August 1914 aged 31 Lieutenant Philip Neame Royal Engineers Neuve Chapelle France aged 26 Lieut Commander Edward Courtney Boyle Submarine E14 Sea of Marmara Dardanelles 27 April 1915 aged 32 Second Lieut George Raymond Dallas Moor Hampshire Regiment Krithia Dardanelles 5 June 1915 aged 18 Lieutenant Colonel James Forbes Robertson 34 Sergeant Frederick Charles Booth 1st Rhodesian Native Regiment Johannes Bruck East Africa 12 February 1917 aged 26 Commander Robert Edward Dudley Ryder RN St Nazaire 27 March 1942 aged 34George Cross recipient Edit Andre Gilbert Kempster ne Coccioletti Royal Armoured Corps Algeria 21 August 1943 15 Sport Edit Nick Abendanon 1986 England international rugby player Michael Baines 1898 1990 First class cricketer and British Army officer Henry Baird 1878 1950 First class cricketer and British Army officer Jonah Barrington 1941 6 times British Open Squash Champion Tom Beim 1975 England rugby international Francis Brandt 1840 1925 First class cricketer Thomas Bramwell 1850 1924 First class cricketer James Brettell 1962 First class cricketer Jamie Chadwick 1998 Racing driver Neville Cohen 1913 1987 First class cricketer Simon Danielli born 1979 Scottish rugby player Charles Garnett 1840 1919 First class cricketer Leslie Hancock 1899 1944 First class cricketer Allan Jay MBE born 1931 five time Olympian foil and epee fencer and world champion George Kennedy 1841 1869 First class cricketer Frank Kershaw 1879 1959 First class cricketer Reginald le Bas 1856 1938 First class cricketer Tom McEwan 1991 Olympic Silver and Team Gold Medalist Equestrian 16 James Robertson 1844 1877 First class cricketer Chris Sandbach born 1985 cricketer Percival Sanger 1899 1968 first class cricketer and an officer in both the British Army and the British Indian Army James Stout Rackets World Champion Ollie Thorley born 1996 Gloucester Rugby player Arthur Tyler 1907 1985 First class cricketer and British Army officer Geoffrey Wood 1891 1915 cricketerNotable former pupils in other fields Edit Lieut Col J D H Stewart 1845 1884 accompanied Charles George Gordon to Khartoum in 1884 and was killed leading the last Europeans out of Khartoum when their steamer ran aground He was awarded the Order of St Michael and St George Major General Sir Colin Gubbins 1896 1976 prime mover of the Special Operations Executive in the Second World War He received the Military Cross and Distinguished Service Order Philip Astley Sparke born 1971 pioneering world s first oncolytic vaccine gene therapy US biotech executive 17 Lindsay Anderson 1923 1994 18 film director Brigadier Charles Douglas Armstrong 1897 1985 Head of the British Special Operations Executive liaison mission to the Chetniks in Yugoslavia 1943 44 19 Tim Bevan 1957 co founder of Working Title Films Forde Everard de Wend Cayley 1915 2004 MD RAMC MBE FRCP World War II POW camp survivor 20 Houston Stewart Chamberlain British born philosopher and naturalised German citizen highly influential in the pan Germanic Volkisch movements of the early 20th century and later influenced the antisemitism of Nazi racial policy Jack Davenport born 1973 18 film and television actor Charles Eliot 1862 1931 former British ambassador to Japan and the inaugural Vice Chancellor of the University of Hong Kong Lieutenant General Sir John Fowler 1864 1939 Commander of British Forces in China 1922 1925 Sir Wyndham Charles Knight 1863 1942 Indian Army general 21 Sir Alan Haselhurst 1937 former Deputy Speaker amp MP Adam Henson 1966 farmer and TV presenter Chris Hill born 1971 businessman CEO of Hargreaves Lansdown 22 Hichamuddin Hussein 1961 Malaysian politician Lawrence Hugh Jenkins 1857 1928 Chief Justice of Calcutta High Court and Bombay High Court 23 Gavin Lambert 1924 2005 24 screenwriter novelist and biographer Lieutenant Commander Mike Lithgow 1920 1963 chief test pilot Vickers Supermarine and holder of absolute World Speed Record 1953 Kenneth Mason 1887 1976 Himalayan explorer and first statutory Professor of Geography at Oxford University 25 Philip Moore 1921 2009 The Lord Moore of Wolvercote Private Secretary to Queen Elizabeth II from 1977 to 1986 26 Rageh Omaar born 1967 18 ITV News correspondent and presenter formerly with BBC News and Al Jazeera English Endicott Peabody 1857 1944 American clergyman and founder of Groton School Alfred Pullman 1916 1954 RAF Officer killed in Mau Mau Uprising 27 Ivor Richard 1932 2018 Former Labour Cabinet minister British Ambassador to the United Nations and Shadow Leader of the House of Lords 28 Michael Rose 1940 Commander UNPROFOR Bosnia in 1994 during the Yugoslav Wars 29 W H D Rouse 1863 1950 British teacher who advocated the use of the Direct Method of teaching Latin and Greek Iain Sinclair born 1943 30 poet novelist editor filmmaker publisher playwright and book dealer Mark Stone born 1979 Journalist Foreign Correspondent Sirichalerm Svasti or Chef McDang born 1953 Thai TV Celebrity Chef Hugh Verity 1918 2001 RAF pilot veteran of many night landings in wartime France for the SOE Prince Vivadhanajaya 1899 1960 First Governor of the Bank of Thailand and Finance minister of Thailand Ts o Seen Wan 1868 1953 Founder of St Stephen s College Hong Kong Edward Wilson 1872 1912 18 physician polar explorer natural historian painter and ornithologist Ken Yeang 1948 ArchitectPrincipals headmasters and head EditThe current head of Cheltenham College is Nicola Huggett The full list of past principals and heads is contained in Cheltenham College Who s Who 5th edition 2003 and is as follows Principals 1841 1919 Alfred Phillips 1841 44 William Dobson 1845 59 Henry Highton 1859 62 Alfred Barry 1862 68 Thomas Jex Blake 1868 74 Herbert Kynaston ne Snow 1874 88 Herbert Armitage James 1889 95 Robert Stuart de Courcy Laffan 1895 99 Reginald Waterfield 1899 1919 Headmasters 1919 2019 Henry Harrison Hardy 1919 32 Richard Victor Harley Roseveare 1932 37 Arthur Goodhart Pite 1937 38 John Bell 1938 40 Alan Guy Elliott Smith 1940 51 Guy Pentreath 1952 59 David Ashcroft 1959 78 Richard Martin Morgan 1978 90 Peter David Vaughan Wilkes 1990 97 Paul Arthur Chamberlain 1997 2004 John Stephen Richardson 2004 2010 Alex Peterken 2010 2018 Crispin Dawson acting headmaster 2018 Head 2019 Nicola Huggett 2019 Heads of the Junior School 1863 2013 Thomas Middlemore Middlemore Whithard 1863 65 Francis Joseph Cade 1896 1910 Charles Thornton 1911 23 Basil Allcot Bowers 1923 33 William Donavan Johnston 1933 46 Hugh Alan Clutton Brock 1946 64 William Philip Cathcart Davies 1964 86 David John Allenby Cassell 1986 91 Nigel Iain Archdale 1992 2008 Adrian Morris 2008 2010 Scott Bryan 2010 2012 Noll Jenkins 2012 2013 acting head Heads of the preparatory school 2013 present Jonathan Whybrow 2013 2018 Tom O Sullivan 2018 See also EditCheltonian Society College Ground Cheltenham Thirlestaine House List of people educated at Cheltenham CollegeReferences Edit Facts amp figures Cheltenham College Archived from the original on 22 August 2007 Retrieved 24 August 2007 Welcome Cheltenham College Archived from the original on 9 August 2007 Retrieved 24 August 2007 1 Archived 22 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine Fees 2011 2012 Cheltenham College 10 September 2008 Archived from the original on 29 February 2012 Retrieved 28 February 2012 2006 GCSE and A level results Gloucestershire Schools special reports EducationGuardian co uk Archived from the original on 3 June 2012 Retrieved 28 February 2012 Education 25 September 2008 Town vs Gown Cheltenham Gloucestershire The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 9 July 2011 Retrieved 28 February 2012 Languages and rugby an interview with Eddie Butler Fitzwilliam College University of Cambridge Archived from the original on 1 September 2020 Retrieved 1 September 2020 School Sport 15 December 2008 Cheltenham College 1st XV remain undefeated throughout school rugby season The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 26 March 2010 Retrieved 28 February 2012 Rowing Cheltenham College cheltenhamcollege org Archived from the original on 19 March 2018 Retrieved 19 March 2018 Rackets Cheltenham College 10 September 2008 Archived from the original on 7 February 2012 Retrieved 28 February 2012 Success for College Polo Teams Cheltenham College 24 February 2011 Archived from the original on 12 May 2012 Retrieved 28 February 2012 Cricket Cheltenham College 10 September 2008 Archived from the original on 8 February 2012 Retrieved 28 February 2012 Michael Croke Morgan 1968 Cheltenham College The First Hundred Years page 219 published for the Cheltonian Society by Sadler The Life of Duncan Boyes V C Dhs kyutech ac jp Archived from the original on 4 February 2012 Retrieved 28 February 2012 George Cross Database Recipient Andre Gilbert KEMPSTER GC Posthumously Archived 23 August 2004 at the Wayback Machine GB win eventing gold McEwen silver BBC Sport Retrieved 5 August 2021 Philip Astley Sparke Replimune a b c d David Robson 25 September 2008 Town vs Gown Cheltenham Gloucestershire The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 2 October 2017 Retrieved 2 October 2017 Who Was Who 1981 1990 A amp C Black London 1991 ISBN 0 7136 3336 0 Forde Everard de Wend Cayley RCP Museum history rcplondon ac uk Retrieved 2 October 2022 Wyndham Charles Knight Sir janeaustensfamily co uk accessed 5 June 2022 Insight into Hargreaves Lansdown s top talent acquisition as IG Group exec Christopher Hill becomes CFO FinanceFeeds financefeeds com 29 October 2015 Archived from the original on 19 March 2018 Retrieved 19 March 2018 C Hayavadana Rao The Indian Biographical Dictionary 1915 Archived from the original on 21 September 2018 Retrieved 26 March 2018 Robinson David 20 July 2005 Gavin Lambert Incorrigibly witty Hollywood writer The Independent Archived from the original on 14 April 2020 Retrieved 2 October 2017 Goudie Andrew S 2015 Kenneth J Mason 1887 1976 Geographers Bibliographical Studies Volume 18 Bloomsbury Academic p 67 72 ISBN 9781474226738 Purser Philip 5 May 2009 Lord Moore of Wolvercote The Guardian Retrieved 1 August 2022 Posthumous Kenya Award in Flight 9 July 1954 p 64 Politics Lord Richard obituary The Guardian 22 March 2018 Archived from the original on 2 July 2020 Retrieved 14 February 2020 General Sir Michael Rose Honorary Fellow St Edmund Hall Oxford Retrieved 1 August 2022 Iain Sinclair poet novelist editor filmmaker publisher playwright book dealer Anachron org Archived from the original on 2 October 2017 Retrieved 1 October 2017 Bibliography EditCheltenham College The First Hundred Years by Michael C Morgan Chalfont St Giles Richard Sadler for the Cheltonian Society 1968 A formal history starting with the meeting on 9 November 1840 of Cheltenham residents presided over by Major General George Swiney who decided to set up a Proprietary Grammar School and appointed a committee to achieve this ISBN unknown unavailable Then amp Now An Anniversary Celebration of Cheltenham College 1841 1991 by Tim Pearce Cheltonian Society 1991 The author explains in the Preface that this is more of a scrap book than a formal history and like all scrap books it reflects the tastes and interests of its compilers and depends on what in the way of pictures and documents may be available to them ISBN 0 85967 875 X Cheltenham College Who s Who 5th edition ed John Bowes Cheltonian Society 2003 No ISBN on book Floreat A collection of photographs of College life from the 1960s and early 1970s compiled by the late M F Miller a Physics master at the schoolExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cheltenham College Cheltenham College website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cheltenham College amp oldid 1132344485, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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