Farnham Grammar School
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Farnham Grammar School is now called Farnham College which is located in Farnham, Surrey, southern England.
History[]
The grammar school was created at some time before 1585 (the date of a donation being made by a Richard Searle "to the maintenance of the school in Farnham").[1] The first evidence that the school was built is a record in 1585 of a yeoman in Farnham donating 20 shillings 'to the maintenance of the school of Farnham'.[2] It is, though, possible that this ancient school dated back as far as 1351 when a chantry was created at Farnham Castle, but there is no documentary evidence of this.[1]
The school benefited over the years from bequests by different people as well as the generosity of Bishops of Winchester who occupied Farnham Castle over the centuries.[1]
New building[]
The school was housed in West Street, Farnham until 1906. It moved then because in the previous year, the town centre assets were sold in order to purchase and build a new school in fields to the south of the town.[1]
Dissolution[]
In 1973, under Government education reforms, the school merged with to form Farnham College.[1]
Notable alumni[]
- Jack Coutu (1924–2017), printmaker and sculptor[3]
- Maj-Gen Alexander Elmslie CB CBE, Colonel Commandant of the Royal Army Service Corps (RASC) from 1964-5, and the Royal Corps of Transport from 1964–69[citation needed]
- Cyril Garbett (briefly), successively the Anglican Bishop of Southwark and Bishop of Winchester, later Archbishop of York from 1942–55[citation needed]
- Jack Gwillim, actor[citation needed]
- Jeremy Hardy, comedian[4]
- Hugh Johns, ITV football commentator
- Charles Judd CBE, Director General of the United Nations Association UK from 1945–64
- James Kendall, Professor Chemistry at the University of Edinburgh from 1928–59, and President of the Royal Society of Edinburgh from 1949–54
- David Lea, Baron Lea of Crondall OBE, trade union official
- Lt-Gen Sir Harold Redman CB CBE, Governor of Gibraltar from 1955-8
- Prof Charles Rees CBE, Hofmann Professor of Organic Chemistry at Imperial College London from 1978–83, and President of the Royal Society of Chemistry from 1992–94
- Sir Eric Rideal MBE (briefly), chemist, Professor of Colloid Science at the University of Cambridge from 1930–46[5]
- George Sturt, author
- Dr Jeffrey Tate CBE (attended 1954–61), conductor (head boy in his final year) of the Hamburger Symphoniker from 2009
- Bill Wallis (attended 1948–55), actor and satirist (head boy in his final year)
- Prof David Watkin, Professor of History of Architecture from 2001-8 at the University of Cambridge
- Squadron Leader Sydney Wiltshire,[6] awarded the George Cross
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e History of Farnham College - Farnham College website
- ^ "Brief History of Farnham Grammar School". Old Farnhamians’ Association. Retrieved 26 September 2018.
- ^ "Obituary: Jack Coutu". The Times. 4 September 2017. Retrieved 16 August 2020.
- ^ Jupp, Miles (1 February 2019). "Jeremy Hardy obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 16 August 2020.
- ^ Eley, D. D. (1976). "Eric Keightley Rideal. 11 April 1890 -- 25 September 1974". Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society. 22: 381–413. doi:10.1098/rsbm.1976.0017.
- ^ "Obituaries: Squadron Leader Sidney Wiltshire, GC". Daily Telegraph. 30 September 2003.
External links[]
- Farnham
- Defunct grammar schools in England
- Educational institutions established in the 1580s
- 1580s establishments in England
- Defunct schools in Surrey
- 1973 disestablishments in England
- Educational institutions disestablished in 1973
- Buildings and structures in Farnham