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Monkton Combe School

Monkton Combe School is a public school (English independent day and boarding school), located in the village of Monkton Combe near Bath in Somerset, England. It is a member of the Rugby Group of independent boarding schools in the United Kingdom.[1]

Monkton Combe School
The Chapel, Monkton Combe School
Location
, ,
BA2 7HG

England
Coordinates51°21′25″N 2°19′37″W / 51.3569°N 2.3270°W / 51.3569; -2.3270Coordinates: 51°21′25″N 2°19′37″W / 51.3569°N 2.3270°W / 51.3569; -2.3270
Information
TypePublic school
Independent school
Boarding school
MottoLatin: Verbum Tuum Veritas
(Thy Word is Truth)
Established1868; 155 years ago (1868)
FounderThe Revd Francis Pocock
Head MasterChristopher Wheeler (Senior School), Catherine Winchcombe (Prep School)
GenderCoeducational
Age2 to 18
Enrolment711 (all three schools from September 2015)
HousesEddystone (MSS Boys)

Farm (MSS Boys)

Grange (MSS Girls)

School (MSS Boys)

Clarendon (MSS Girls)

Nutfield (MSS Girls)

Hatton (MPS Mixed):

  • Easterfield (MPS Mixed)
  • Kearns (MPS Mixed)
  • Howard (MPS Mixed)
  • Jameson (MPS Mixed)
Colour(s)Red, white, blue
Former pupilsOld Monktonians
Websitehttp://www.monktoncombeschool.com

The senior school in Monkton Combe village admits pupils aged from 13 to 18 (pupil numbers are around 500); the Preparatory School in Combe Down village admits children aged from 7 to 13; and the adjacent Pre-Preparatory has classes in nursery (ages 2–3), kindergarten (3–4), reception (4–5) and years 1 and 2 (5–7). The Senior School and Preparatory School have always admitted boarding pupils although day pupils now (2021) comprise one third of the Senior School and are in the majority in the Preparatory School. Since 1992 when it merged with Clarendon School for Girls the school has been fully co-educational although it first admitted girls in 1971. The Senior School operates three boys' boarding houses and three girls' boarding houses, all in the village of Monkton Combe.

History

Monkton Combe School was founded in 1868 by the Revd. Francis Pocock, the vicar of Monkton Combe and former chaplain to John Weeks, the Bishop of Sierra Leone. It became known for its evangelical Christian approach to education and attracted many sons of vicars and overseas missionaries as well as those from a broader background.[2] The school retains its strong evangelical Christian heritage.

During the mid-20th century Monkton was regarded as one of the UK's strongest rowing schools; one-fifth of the 23-strong men's GB rowing squad at the 1948 Olympics consisted of students: I. M. Lang, M. C. Lapage, A. Mellows, W. G. R. M. Laurie, P. C. Kirkpatrick.[citation needed]

The School became progressively co-educational in the late 20th century. In 1971, girls were admitted to the sixth form. In 1989, Nutfield House was built to accommodate them in the village. In 1992, the school became fully co-educational, merging with Clarendon School for Girls, an all-girls' school founded in 1898 that shared a similar Christian ethos to Monkton Combe School.

The Junior School

The Junior school was established with four pupils in 1888 in Combe Lodge, a private house in Church Road, Combe Down, by Revd. Charles Howard, the son-in-law of the then Senior School Principal, the Revd. R.G. Bryan. The Junior school moved into purpose-built premises in Combe Down in June 1907, which it still occupies. After expanding rapidly, the Junior school purchased another large house in Church Road (Glenburnie/Alma Villa) in the early 1920s, which it occupied initially as a boarding house. In 1937, Monkton Pre-Preparatory School was founded in Glenburnie, before transferring to a bespoke building in the grounds of the Junior School in 2016. In 2006 the Junior School was renamed Monkton Preparatory School.

Literature

The official history of the school's first hundred years was published in A Goodly Heritage: A History of Monkton Combe School 1868–1967 by former Senior School master A.F. Lace, published in Bath by Sir Isaac Pitman & Sons, 1968.[3] This was updated in 2017 by the former Junior School headmaster Peter LeRoy to form an official history of the school's first 150 years, entitled A Delightful Inheritance.[4] The history of the Junior School to 1955 was written by schoolmaster Johnnie Walker, in a pamphlet entitled Three Score Years and Ten, published in 1956 by Fyson & Son of Bath.

Sports awards

The school has produced six Olympic rowing medalists. Each represented Great Britain and three won gold medals. Students row as the Monkton Bluefriars Boat Club.

One Old Monktonian achieved an Olympic Gold Medal representing Great Britain at men's hockey. Another Old Monktonian captained the England Netball Team which won Gold at the 2018 Commonwealth Games.

Facilities and buildings

The School maintains a range of sporting facilities including an indoor swimming pool, sports halls with fully equipped gymnasia, three artificial turf pitches (two full size and one half size), nine grass and three hard tennis courts, two boathouses with access to the River Avon and many acres of grounds. Many buildings are of Bath stone, in the same style as those in and around the city of Bath, and in keeping with the traditional architectural style of the area.

Many of the school's facilities are made available for the use of local schools, such as Combe Down Primary School and local children's sports clubs.

Several of the school's buildings are listed, including the main Senior school block known as The Old Farm,[5] and the part of the Terrace Block known as The Old Vicarage.[6] In 2008 the Senior School completed a £5 million project which involved re-building, extending and re-furbishing its mathematics and science departments. In June 2012, a new £3.2 million Music center was opened by Dame Felicity Lott. A new Art & Design center was opened in 2016.

Boarding

Many of the pupils are either weekly or full-time boarders. The Senior school maintains six boarding houses, three of which are for girls (Nutfield, Clarendon and Grange) and three for boys (Eddystone, School and Farm).[7] The Preparatory school operates one boarding house with a floor for boys and a floor for girls (Hatton). There are many traditions in each house, as well as many inter-house competitions throughout the year. Students are allowed to visit the City of Bath each weekend. Lessons take place on Saturday mornings with sporting matches against other schools taking place on most Saturday afternoons.

Head Masters/Principals

The following have been Head Masters or Principals of Monkton Combe School:

Name Years as Head Master
The Revd F. Pocock 1868–1875
The Revd R.G. Bryan 1875–1895
The Revd W.E. Bryan 1895–1900
The Revd N. Bennett 1900
The Revd J.W. Kearns 1900–1926
The Revd E. Hayward 1926–1946
D.R. Wigram 1946–1968
R.J. Knight 1968–1978
R.A.C. Meredith 1978–1990
M.J. Cuthbertson 1990–2005
R. Backhouse 2005–2015
C. Wheeler 2016–Present

Notable members of staff

Notable alumni

19th Century

Early 20th Century

Late 20th Century

21st Century

References

  1. ^ "Monkton Combe School". Monkton Combe School website. Retrieved 14 November 2018.
  2. ^ Lace, A F (1968). A Goodly Heritage. ISBN 0950368806.
  3. ^ "Senior School History". Monkton Combe School. Retrieved 4 October 2010.
  4. ^ LeRoy, Peter (2017). A Delightful Inheritance. Monkton Combe School Enpterprises. ISBN 199986980X.
  5. ^ "Monkton Combe School, the main or old block known as The Old Farm". historicengland.org.uk. English Heritage. Retrieved 4 July 2009.
  6. ^ "Monkton Combe School, the part of the Terrace Block known as The Old – Vicarage". historicengland.org.uk. English Heritage. Retrieved 4 July 2009.
  7. ^ www.monktoncombeschool.com/senior/boarding.html
  8. ^ p.9.
  9. ^ L, Klemen (1999–2000). "Air Chief Marshal Sir Richard Edmund Charles Peirse". Forgotten Campaign: The Dutch East Indies Campaign 1941–1942.
  10. ^ David Ellis (17 May 1994). "Obituary: David Adeney". The Independent Features. p. 14.
  11. ^ Secretary, Office of the Home; Sciences, National Academy of (21 November 2003). Biographical Memoirs. National Academies Press. ISBN 9780309527699.
  12. ^ Burgess, Kaya (22 December 2008). "Adrian Mitchell Shadow Poet Laureate dies aged 76". The Times. London.
  13. ^ "The Right Reverend Ian Cundy". The Daily Telegraph. London. 11 May 2009.
  14. ^ Ryan, Peter G. (1 July 2013). "Phil Hockey (1956-2013)". Ibis. 155 (3): 698–700. doi:10.1111/ibi.12058.

External links

  • Monkton Combe School website
  • Bluefriars Boatclub website
  • Senior School Good Schools Guide Report
  • Monkton Combe village website

monkton, combe, school, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article,. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Monkton Combe School news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article contains content that is written like an advertisement Please help improve it by removing promotional content and inappropriate external links and by adding encyclopedic content written from a neutral point of view September 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Monkton Combe School is a public school English independent day and boarding school located in the village of Monkton Combe near Bath in Somerset England It is a member of the Rugby Group of independent boarding schools in the United Kingdom 1 Monkton Combe SchoolThe Chapel Monkton Combe SchoolLocationMonkton Combe near Bath Somerset BA2 7HGEnglandCoordinates51 21 25 N 2 19 37 W 51 3569 N 2 3270 W 51 3569 2 3270 Coordinates 51 21 25 N 2 19 37 W 51 3569 N 2 3270 W 51 3569 2 3270InformationTypePublic schoolIndependent schoolBoarding schoolMottoLatin Verbum Tuum Veritas Thy Word is Truth Established1868 155 years ago 1868 FounderThe Revd Francis PocockHead MasterChristopher Wheeler Senior School Catherine Winchcombe Prep School GenderCoeducationalAge2 to 18Enrolment711 all three schools from September 2015 HousesEddystone MSS Boys Farm MSS Boys Grange MSS Girls School MSS Boys Clarendon MSS Girls Nutfield MSS Girls Hatton MPS Mixed Easterfield MPS Mixed Kearns MPS Mixed Howard MPS Mixed Jameson MPS Mixed Colour s Red white blueFormer pupilsOld MonktoniansWebsitehttp www monktoncombeschool comThe senior school in Monkton Combe village admits pupils aged from 13 to 18 pupil numbers are around 500 the Preparatory School in Combe Down village admits children aged from 7 to 13 and the adjacent Pre Preparatory has classes in nursery ages 2 3 kindergarten 3 4 reception 4 5 and years 1 and 2 5 7 The Senior School and Preparatory School have always admitted boarding pupils although day pupils now 2021 comprise one third of the Senior School and are in the majority in the Preparatory School Since 1992 when it merged with Clarendon School for Girls the school has been fully co educational although it first admitted girls in 1971 The Senior School operates three boys boarding houses and three girls boarding houses all in the village of Monkton Combe Contents 1 History 1 1 The Junior School 1 2 Literature 2 Sports awards 3 Facilities and buildings 4 Boarding 5 Head Masters Principals 6 Notable members of staff 7 Notable alumni 7 1 19th Century 7 2 Early 20th Century 7 3 Late 20th Century 7 4 21st Century 8 References 9 External linksHistory EditMonkton Combe School was founded in 1868 by the Revd Francis Pocock the vicar of Monkton Combe and former chaplain to John Weeks the Bishop of Sierra Leone It became known for its evangelical Christian approach to education and attracted many sons of vicars and overseas missionaries as well as those from a broader background 2 The school retains its strong evangelical Christian heritage During the mid 20th century Monkton was regarded as one of the UK s strongest rowing schools one fifth of the 23 strong men s GB rowing squad at the 1948 Olympics consisted of students I M Lang M C Lapage A Mellows W G R M Laurie P C Kirkpatrick citation needed The School became progressively co educational in the late 20th century In 1971 girls were admitted to the sixth form In 1989 Nutfield House was built to accommodate them in the village In 1992 the school became fully co educational merging with Clarendon School for Girls an all girls school founded in 1898 that shared a similar Christian ethos to Monkton Combe School The Junior School Edit The Junior school was established with four pupils in 1888 in Combe Lodge a private house in Church Road Combe Down by Revd Charles Howard the son in law of the then Senior School Principal the Revd R G Bryan The Junior school moved into purpose built premises in Combe Down in June 1907 which it still occupies After expanding rapidly the Junior school purchased another large house in Church Road Glenburnie Alma Villa in the early 1920s which it occupied initially as a boarding house In 1937 Monkton Pre Preparatory School was founded in Glenburnie before transferring to a bespoke building in the grounds of the Junior School in 2016 In 2006 the Junior School was renamed Monkton Preparatory School Literature Edit The official history of the school s first hundred years was published in A Goodly Heritage A History of Monkton Combe School 1868 1967 by former Senior School master A F Lace published in Bath by Sir Isaac Pitman amp Sons 1968 3 This was updated in 2017 by the former Junior School headmaster Peter LeRoy to form an official history of the school s first 150 years entitled A Delightful Inheritance 4 The history of the Junior School to 1955 was written by schoolmaster Johnnie Walker in a pamphlet entitled Three Score Years and Ten published in 1956 by Fyson amp Son of Bath Sports awards EditThe school has produced six Olympic rowing medalists Each represented Great Britain and three won gold medals Students row as the Monkton Bluefriars Boat Club One Old Monktonian achieved an Olympic Gold Medal representing Great Britain at men s hockey Another Old Monktonian captained the England Netball Team which won Gold at the 2018 Commonwealth Games Facilities and buildings EditThe School maintains a range of sporting facilities including an indoor swimming pool sports halls with fully equipped gymnasia three artificial turf pitches two full size and one half size nine grass and three hard tennis courts two boathouses with access to the River Avon and many acres of grounds Many buildings are of Bath stone in the same style as those in and around the city of Bath and in keeping with the traditional architectural style of the area Many of the school s facilities are made available for the use of local schools such as Combe Down Primary School and local children s sports clubs Several of the school s buildings are listed including the main Senior school block known as The Old Farm 5 and the part of the Terrace Block known as The Old Vicarage 6 In 2008 the Senior School completed a 5 million project which involved re building extending and re furbishing its mathematics and science departments In June 2012 a new 3 2 million Music center was opened by Dame Felicity Lott A new Art amp Design center was opened in 2016 Boarding EditMany of the pupils are either weekly or full time boarders The Senior school maintains six boarding houses three of which are for girls Nutfield Clarendon and Grange and three for boys Eddystone School and Farm 7 The Preparatory school operates one boarding house with a floor for boys and a floor for girls Hatton There are many traditions in each house as well as many inter house competitions throughout the year Students are allowed to visit the City of Bath each weekend Lessons take place on Saturday mornings with sporting matches against other schools taking place on most Saturday afternoons Head Masters Principals EditThe following have been Head Masters or Principals of Monkton Combe School Name Years as Head MasterThe Revd F Pocock 1868 1875The Revd R G Bryan 1875 1895The Revd W E Bryan 1895 1900The Revd N Bennett 1900The Revd J W Kearns 1900 1926The Revd E Hayward 1926 1946D R Wigram 1946 1968R J Knight 1968 1978R A C Meredith 1978 1990M J Cuthbertson 1990 2005R Backhouse 2005 2015C Wheeler 2016 PresentNotable members of staff EditSee also Category Staff at Monkton Combe School The Revd R W Ryde 1866 1909 Classics Master Mr A S Sellick 1878 1958 Cricket Master Mr G F Graham Brown 1891 1942 History Master and former pupil Mr F Vallis 1896 1957 Association Football and Cricket Master Mr T M Watson 1913 1994 French Master Mr N D Botton 1954 History Master Mr M Wells 1979 Rowing MasterNotable alumni EditSee also Category People educated at Monkton Combe School 19th Century Edit George Somes Layard 1857 1925 leading barrister journalist and man of letters Harry Martindale Speechly 1866 1951 leading Canadian doctor Montague Waldegrave 5th Baron Radstock 1867 1953 peer Count Vladimir Alekseyevich Bobrinsky 1868 1927 Tsarist politician from the Second to the Fourth Duma Count Paul Bobrinsky 1869 1919 Peter s twin and Russian counter revolutionary Count Peter Bobrinsky 1869 1932 Paul s twin and Russian counter revolutionary Harry Colt 1869 1951 widely regarded as the father of golf course architecture Ernest Crosbie Trench CBE TD 1869 1960 British civil engineer Sir Ernest Wills 3rd Baronet CStJ JP 1869 1958 part owner of W D amp H O Wills and Lord Lieutenant of Wiltshire Edwyn Bevan OBE FBA 1870 1943 British philosopher and Hellenistic historian Archibald Kennedy 4th Marquess of Ailsa DL JP FSRGS 1873 1943 British peer barrister and soldier Horatio Powys Keck 1873 1952 first class cricketer Alfred Young FRS 1873 1940 mathematician and inventor of the Young diagram and Young tableau 8 Lieutenant Colonel Richard Annesley West VC DSO amp Bar MC 1878 1918 recipient of the Victoria Cross for sacrificing his life for his men Lieutenant Colonel Eric Marshall CBE MC 1879 1963 Antarctic explorer in Shackleton s Nimrod Expedition Frank Lugard Brayne CIE CSI MC VD 1882 1952 administrator in the Indian Civil Service The Right Revd William Thompson CBE DD 1885 1975 Bishop of Iran The Venerable Hugh Norton OBE 1890 1969 Archdeacon of Sudbury The Right Revd Francis Graham Brown OBE DD 1891 1942 Principal of Wycliffe Hall Oxford and Bishop of Jerusalem Air Chief Marshal Sir Richard Peirse KCB DSO AFC 1892 1970 Commander in Chief of the Indian Air Force and of RAF Bomber Command 9 Dr Sir Clement Chesterman Kt OBE 1894 1983 medical missionary at Yakusu in the Congo with the Baptist Missionary SocietyEarly 20th Century Edit Michael Head 1900 1976 composer singer and musical educator Dr W E Shewell Cooper MBE FLS FRSL FRHS 1900 1982 organic gardening pioneer Percival Spear OBE 1901 1982 historian and civil servant in India The Very Revd Kenneth Mathews OBE DSC 1906 1992 Dean of St Albans R C Hutchinson 1907 1976 novelist David Howard Adeney 1911 1994 missionary in China and East Asia 10 Jim Broomhall 1911 1994 historian and medical missionary to China with the China Inland Mission Charles Sergel 1911 1980 Olympic rower and medical missionary to Uganda The Very Revd Gonville ffrench Beytagh 1912 1991 Dean of Johannesburg and anti apartheid activist Major General John Frost CB DSO amp Bar MC DL 1912 1993 leader of airborne forces during the Battle of Arnhem Colin Butler OBE FRS 1913 2016 entomologist who first isolated the pheromone Martyn Cundy 1913 2005 reforming mathematical educator and academic Thorley Walters 1913 1991 actor Thomas Watson 1913 1994 first class cricketer Professor John Anderson Strong CBE FRSE FRCP FRCPE 1915 2012 President of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh Dr Ran Laurie 1915 1998 Olympic rowing champion and physician J Desmond Clark 1916 2002 influential archaeologist and Professor of Anthropology at the University of California Berkeley 11 The Right Revd Maurice Wood DSC 1916 2007 Principal of Oak Hill Theological College and Bishop of Norwich Harold Jameson 1918 1940 first class cricketer Lt Kevin Walton GC DSC 1918 2009 Antarctic explorer Squadron Leader James MacLachlan DSO DFC amp Two Bars 1919 1943 flying ace The Right Revd Hassan Dehqani Tafti 1920 1990 Bishop of Iran dubious discuss The Right Revd Graham Leonard KCVO 1921 2010 Bishop of London The Right Revd David Brown 1922 1982 Bishop of Guildford and missionary Prince Asrate Kassa GCVO 1922 1974 Viceroy of Eritrea Pilot Officer Alfred Mellows DFC 1922 1997 Olympic rower Arthur Wallis 1922 1988 itinerant Bible teacher and author Captain David Eyton Jones 1923 2012 SAS officer during Operation Tombola businessman and chaplain Michael Lapage 1923 2018 Olympic rower and missionary Colonel David Wood MBE 1923 2009 last surviving officer of the capture of the Caen canal and Orne river bridges Professor David Marshall Lang 1924 1991 Professor of Caucasian Studies at the School of Oriental and African Studies Senator Andy Thompson 1924 2016 leader of the Ontario Liberal Party Major General Sir Philip Ward KCVO CBE 1924 2003 GOC London District and Lord Lieutenant of West Sussex The Revd Allan Rutter 1928 first class cricketer and vicar Christopher Buxton OBE 1929 2017 property developer and President of The Abbeyfield Society The Right Revd John Bone 1930 2014 Bishop of Reading Count Michel Didisheim 1930 2020 Private Secretary and Chief of the Royal Household to Albert Prince of Liege Adrian Mitchell 1932 2008 poet novelist and playwright 12 Barclay Palmer 1932 2020 Olympic athlete Professor Gerald Blake 1936 Professor Emeritus of Geography at Durham University and former Principal of Collingwood College Durham John Barnard Bush CVO OBE CStJ DL JP 1937 land owner and former Lord Lieutenant of Wiltshire Michael Mortimore 1937 2017 geographer and a researcher of issues in the African drylands Air Chief Marshal Sir Michael Stear KCB CBE DL 1938 2020 Deputy Commander in Chief Allied Forces Central Europe The Right Revd Stephen Sykes 1939 2014 Regius Professor of Divinity at the University of Cambridge and Bishop of Ely Michael Barton Akehurst 1940 1989 international lawyer Peter Webb 1940 Olympic rower Sir Tim Lankester KCB 1942 former President of Corpus Christi College Oxford Professor Nick Jardine FBA 1943 Emeritus Professor at the Department of History and Philosophy of Science at the University of Cambridge Sir Richard Stilgoe OBE DL 1943 songwriter lyricist and musician Bernard Cornwell OBE 1944 historical novelist The Right Revd Ian Cundy 1945 2009 Bishop of Lewes and Bishop of Peterborough 13 Sir Richard Dearlove KCMG OBE 1945 Head of the British Secret Intelligence Service MI6 from 1999 until 2004 and former Master of Pembroke College Cambridge The Venerable Ricky Panter 1948 Archdeacon of Liverpool Nigel Sinclair CBE 1948 Hollywood producer Sir Iain Torrance KCVO Kt TD FRSE 1949 Pro Chancellor of the University of Aberdeen and former Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland Sir David Haslam 1949 CBE FRCP FRCGP Former Chair of National Institute for Health and Care Excellence NICE and President of BMA and RCGPLate 20th Century Edit Professor Sir Robert Lechler FRCP FRCPath FMedSci 1951 President of the Academy of Medical Sciences and Professor of Immunology at King s College London The Venerable John Reed 1951 former Archdeacon of Taunton Julian Colbeck 1952 musician and businessman Professor Mike Cowlishaw FREng 1953 leading programmer and scientist Howard Milner 1953 2011 leading tenor James Hawkins 1954 artist and film maker The Revd Canon Nigel Biggar 1955 Regius Professor of Moral and Pastoral Theology at the University of Oxford Chris Anderson 1957 Journalist and publisher Owner of TED and curator of TED Talks Stephen Warren 1957 Professor of Astrophysics at Imperial College London The Venerable John Kiddle 1958 Archdeacon of Wandsworth Sir Charles Farr CMG OBE 1959 2019 Chairman of the Joint Intelligence Committee and Head of the Joint Intelligence Organisation Lieutenant General Tim Evans CB CBE DSO 1962 former Commander of the Allied Rapid Reaction Corps Steve Williams OBE 1976 Olympic rowing champion Rowley Douglas MBE 1977 Olympic coxswain champion James Frith 1977 former Member of Parliament for Bury North Stefan Booth 1979 actor Seyi Rhodes 1979 television presenter and investigative journalist Alex Partridge 1981 Olympic rower and World Rowing champion Ama Agbeze MBE 1982 former Captain of the England national netball team Josh Ovens 1989 farmer and former player for Bath Rugby Professor Phil Hockey 1959 2010 South African ornithologist director of the Percy FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology University of Cape Town 14 21st Century Edit Ben Wells 2000 first class cricketerReferences Edit Monkton Combe School Monkton Combe School website Retrieved 14 November 2018 Lace A F 1968 A Goodly Heritage ISBN 0950368806 Senior School History Monkton Combe School Retrieved 4 October 2010 LeRoy Peter 2017 A Delightful Inheritance Monkton Combe School Enpterprises ISBN 199986980X Monkton Combe School the main or old block known as The Old Farm historicengland org uk English Heritage Retrieved 4 July 2009 Monkton Combe School the part of the Terrace Block known as The Old Vicarage historicengland org uk English Heritage Retrieved 4 July 2009 www wbr monktoncombeschool wbr com wbr senior wbr boarding wbr html p 9 L Klemen 1999 2000 Air Chief Marshal Sir Richard Edmund Charles Peirse Forgotten Campaign The Dutch East Indies Campaign 1941 1942 David Ellis 17 May 1994 Obituary David Adeney The Independent Features p 14 Secretary Office of the Home Sciences National Academy of 21 November 2003 Biographical Memoirs National Academies Press ISBN 9780309527699 Burgess Kaya 22 December 2008 Adrian Mitchell Shadow Poet Laureate dies aged 76 The Times London The Right Reverend Ian Cundy The Daily Telegraph London 11 May 2009 Ryan Peter G 1 July 2013 Phil Hockey 1956 2013 Ibis 155 3 698 700 doi 10 1111 ibi 12058 External links EditMonkton Combe School website Bluefriars Boatclub website Senior School Good Schools Guide Report Monkton Combe village website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Monkton Combe School amp oldid 1124791621, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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