Epsom College
Epsom College is a co-educational independent school on Epsom Downs, Surrey, England, for pupils aged 11 to 18. It was founded in 1853 as a boys' school to provide support for poor members of the medical profession such as pensioners and orphans. The college caters takes day pupils throughout with some boarding in 5 of the 13 houses in the senior part of the school. The headmaster is a member of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference.
Foundation
The school was founded in 1853 by John Propert as The Royal Medical Benevolent College, the aims of which were to provide accommodation for pensioned medical doctors or their widows in the first instance, and to provide a "liberal education" to 100 sons of "duly qualified medical men" for £25 each year.The establishment of the College was the culmination of a campaign begun in 1844 by the Provincial Medical and Surgical Association, the forerunner of the British Medical Association. The scheme saw the medical profession was "in regard to charitable institutions for the aged and infirm, the widow and the orphan, the worst provided of all professions and callings" and took as its aim the alleviating of poverty and debt. Discussions were chaired by Sir John Forbes, Physician to Prince Albert and the Royal Household, and followed similar plans establishing schools for the Clergy and the Royal Navy in desiring to raise money to found "schools for the sons of medical men", providing an education which would otherwise be "beyond the means of many parents".
By 1851, the Medical Benevolent Society had limited itself to the foundation of a single Benevolent College, and met in Treasurer John Propert's house in New Cavendish Street, Marylebone. The new campaign's fund-raising activities included dinners, which were attended by numerous doctors and Members of Parliament, and concerts, for example at one such event, on 4 July 1855, composer Hector Berlioz conducted the UK premier of his symphonic suite Harold in Italy.
The foundation stone was laid on 6 July 1853, and almost two years later, on 25 June 1855, the College was formally opened by Prince Albert and his son, the future King Edward VII in front of an unexpectedly large crowd of around 6,000. In March 1855, Queen Victoria had consented to become patron, which relationship with British monarchs has continued ever since; King Edward VII after the death of his mother, King George V, King Edward VIII in 1936, King George VI from 1937, and then the current Queen until the present.
In 1980, it was estimated by a history of the College that a third of its 10,000 alumni had entered the profession. The college's patron is Queen Elizabeth II.
Development and charity
It was founded in 1855 to provide support for poor members of the medical profession. Funding for such a bold undertaking proved inadequate to the task, resulting in a reduced number of buildings and therefore insufficient space to support 100 pensioners and 100 boys. In the 1860s, partially as a result of this, the school was opened up to children of non-medical parents. In subsequent decades, pensioners were supported off-site, until there were none on campus by the end of the 19th century. These moves mark the transition towards the College becoming a public school in the modern sense.The college continued its charitable activities, alongside its strictly educational role, throughout the 20th century. It was only in 2000 that the Royal Medical Foundation was formed as a separate entity, funding the support of four Foundationers at the College, 27 outside it; and paying 20 pensions and supporting one doctor at a medical home.
In the 1920s the junior school side of the college was run down and thereafter it catered only for 13- to 18-year-olds. In 1976, girls were first allowed into the sixth-form. Twenty years later, the school became fully co-educational.
Its campus is on the outskirts of Epsom, near Epsom Downs on the North Downs, near the racecourse, home to the annual Epsom Derby. Its buildings date from 1853 and are mostly influenced by the Gothic revival architecture, described by Prince Albert as the "pointed style of the 14th Century". In 1974, the main building and the College Chapel attained Grade II listed status.
Epsom College in Malaysia
In 2009 it was announced that the College was to open a new school in Bandar Enstek, just south of Kuala Lumpur scheduled to open in 2013.OFT Inquiry
In 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 about the sharing of information had subsequently made it an offence. 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. However, Jean Scott, the then-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. She wrote to John Vickers, the OFT director-general, 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".Houses
House Name | Composition | Colours | Named after | Motto | Founded | Housemaster/Mistress |
Carr | Day Boys | Dr. William Carr | Pro Christo et Patria Dulce Periculum | 1883 | Laurence Matthews | |
Crawfurd | Boarding/Day Girls | Sir Raymond Crawfurd, Member and former Chairman of Council | Durum Patientia Frango | 1935 as a Day Boys House | Leah Skipper | |
Fayrer | Day Boys | Sir Joseph Fayrer | Quo Aequior eo Melior | 1897 as a Junior Boys House | Stu Head | |
Forest | Boarding Boys | An early College Benefactor | Semper Forestia | 1883 | Jim Stephens | |
Granville | Boarding Boys | Earl Granville | Frangas non flectes | 1883 as 'Gilchrist'. Renamed 1884. | Andy Day | |
Hart Smith | Closed 1965 | Former Headmaster Rev. T.N. Hart-Smith-Pearse | 1931 for Foundationers aged under 13 | n/a | ||
Holman | Boarding Boys | Treasurer Sir Constantine Holman | 1897 as a Junior Boys House | Chris Filbey | ||
Propert | Day Boys | Founder John Propert | Dyfalad | 1883 as Boarding Boys House | Andy Wilson | |
Raven | Day Girls | Dame Kathleen Raven, Member of Council | Faith in Adversity | 1999 | Sarah Williams | |
Robinson | Day Boys | Henry Robinson, Chairman of Council | Virtute non Verbis | 1968 | Paul Gillespie | |
Rosebery | Day Girls | The Earl of Rosebery | 1926 as a day boys house became girls in 2008 | Katie Lenham | ||
White House | Day and 6th form Boarding Girls | Original Building Name | 1976 | Faith Smith | ||
Wilson | Boarding Girls | Sir Erasmus Wilson | Expecta Cuncta Superna | 1871, as an independent Boarding Boys House, named 1883 & incorporated into the College 1914. | Becca Wilson | |
Murrell House | Day Girls | Lynsey Buhagiar |
House colours are seen in the stripes in the ties worn by the majority of boys ; on a rectangular brooch occasionally worn by the girls; and at the neck of school pullovers. They are also used in house rugby and athletics tops.
Sport
Association Football
Association Football became the major sport for boys in the Lent Term in 2014. Previously the sport was an option and played at Sixth Form level only. Now it is played across all age groups from Under 12 to U18. The College is currently part of the Southern Independent Schools Lent Term League.Rifle shooting
Epsom College has a long history of excellence at Target Rifle Shooting, both small-bore and full-bore, and over the last 40 years has consistently been the premier rifle shooting school in the UK. The College Rifle team has won the National Championships – the Ashburton Shield – 15 times, holding the record for the highest number of Ashburton wins by a single school., thus making it as one of the best rifle teams in the country. They have won the Ashburton Shield, the premiere event at the annual Schools' Rifle Championships more often than any other school, recording a record-breaking 15th Ashburton win in 2011.Rugby Football
Rugby Football major boys sport during the Michaelmas term. Rugby Sevens is played in the Lent Term. In 2001, the Epsom College U15 team won their age group in Daily Mail Cup, beating The John Fisher School by 17-12 at Twickenham in the Final. In 2006, the U16 Epsom sevens team won the 2006 Sevens National Championship at Rosslyn Park by beating Millfield 29-19.In 2005 Epsom College U15 Team lost to Bedford 10-5 in the Semi final of the Daily Mail competition.
Eccentricities
Air raid shelters
During the Second World War, in preparation for the possibility of attack from the air, several air raid shelters were built, the outlines of which are still visible in aerial photographs and satellite imagery as a row of negative cropmarks in the grass on the Chapel Triangle. In his 1944 book, Sunday After The War, Henry Miller called these "shelters from aerial bombardment".The fives courts
Near Wilson Pitch, there are the remnants of several open air fives courts, one of which is said to be a doubles court. In the late 1960s these were functional courts, albeit of odd design.Headmasters
- Robinson Thornton
- The Rev. William de Lancy West
- The Rev. William Cecil Wood
- The Rev. Thomas Northcote Hart-Smith
- The Rev. Canon Walter John Barton
- The Rev. Canon Arnold Cecil Powell
- Henry William Fernehough Franklin
- Archibald Duncan Dougal MacCallum
- Owen John Tressider Rowe
- John B. Cook
- Anthony Beadles
- Stephen Borthwick
- James Piggot
Sundry items of interest
- There is a Schools Class steam engine named after the school
- Wartime plane crash on Epsom racecourse by an ex Hart Smith pupil
Southern Railway Schools Class
Notable pupils
Usually this section will reflect past pupils, known as "Old Epsomians". Where a current pupil is notable outside the school environment, such a pupil is listed in this section.A to D
- David Alexander ', the co-founder and former chairman and managing director of Lion Publishing
- Alexander Gordon Bearn '. Pioneering geneticist known for his research into Wilson's disease
- John Bensted ' Chief Executive of Gloucestershire Probation Trust
- Roger Bluett ', oriental art and antiques dealer, Chairman of the Museum of East Asian Art in Bath
- Roland Boys Bradford ' recipient of the Victoria Cross during First World War
- Jeaffreson Vennor Brewer ' rugby union international for England in 1875
- Professor Neville Butler ', paediatrician
- Paul Burke ', Irish International Rugby Union Fly-half.
- Christian Candy '
- Nick Candy '
- Alex Carlile, Baron Carlile of Berriew, CBE, QC, Liberal Democrat member of the House of Lords.
- Warwick Charlton '', Child actor best known for his role in the hit BBC sitcom Outnumbered.
- Alastair Dickenson, Silver expert
- Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu was a Nigerian military officer and politician. Ojukwu served as the military governor of the Eastern Region of Nigeria in 1966, the leader of the breakaway Republic of Biafra from 1967 to 1970
E to K
- John Inkster, a pioneer in anaesthesia and intensive care techniques that helped to make complex surgery safer for small babies.
- McCormack Charles Farrell Easmon ', Doctor, Campaigner for Racial Equality in Sierra Leone, and founder of the Sierra Leone Museum
- Charles Syrett Farrell Easmon, CBE, MD, PhD, MRCP, FRCPath, FMedSci,, British microbiologist and medical professor
- Michael Fallon Member of Parliament for Sevenoaks and Secretary of State for Defence.
- Tony Fernandes ', Malaysian entrepreneur, CEO and founder of AirAsia.
- Geoffrey Gillam FRCP ', consultant cardiologist
- Stewart Granger ', Hollywood Actor
- Sir Charles Felix Harris Vice Chancellor of London University from 1958-61
- Colonel Tony Hewitt , awarded an MC for a daring escape from a Japanese PoW camp after the fall of Hong Kong on Christmas Day 1941
- Sir Alfred Bakewell Howitt, doctor and Conservative Member of Parliament
- Keith Irvine, interior designer
- Ciara Janson, ' Actress
- Richard Stanley Leigh Jones ', Australian parliamentarian.
- Lieutenant-Commander Dicky Kendall, placed a two-ton mine under the German battleship Tirpitz in Operation Source
- Desmond King-Hele, ' physicist and author.
- Professor Wyn Knight-Jones, ', leading marine biologist
L to R
- Derek Lambert, Thriller writer, also journalist
- Professor Suzannah Lipscomb, a historian, academic and broadcaster who specialises in the sixteenth century. She has presented programmes across the BBC and on Britain's Channel 4 Television and ITV networks, and on National Geographic Channel, The History Channel and on the Public Broadcasting Service in the United States.
- George Lowe, a professional rugby union footballer for Harlequins in the Guinness Premiership.
- Philip Gadesden Lucas, ' George Medallist.
- Sir Anthony McCowan,, Lord Justice of Appeal from 1989 to 1997
- Alan McGlashan, ' psychiatrist, pilot, author and theatre critic
- Ross McGowan,, English professional golfer.
- Major Alastair McGregor ', won the DSO and the MC while serving with the SAS behind enemy lines during the Second World War
- James MacKeith,, Forensic Psychiatrist
- Sir Halford John Mackinder, Geographer
- Gyles Mackrell, ', George Medallist.
- Jonathan Maitland ', ITV Television journalist
- Mark Mardell, BBC North America Editor; fmr. BBC Europe Editor; Television Journalist, Radio Journalist
- Toby Nash,,, awarded an MC in 1942 while serving with an anti-aircraft battery in Burma.
- Julian Nott scientist and balloonist who set more than 100 records, including reaching 55,000 feet
- Colonel Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu ', Son of Sir Louis Odumegwu Ojukwu, Nigerian Army Officer and politician. Ojukwu served as the military governor of the Eastern Region of Nigeria in 1966, the leader of the breakaway Republic of Biafra from 1967 to 1970 and a leading Nigerian politician from 1983 to 2011, when he died, aged 78. Leader of Biafra during the war with Nigeria
- Europe's Youngest Cabinet Minister
- Parag Patel ', Full bore rifle Commonwealth Games Gold Medallist 2006 and 2010
- Nick Paton-Walsh, ' Foreign Correspondent for Channel 4 News, formerly with The Guardian
- Keith Pilcher ' multiple Queen's Prize winner
- John Piper ', Cubist artist
- Geoffrey Pope ', Director of the Royal Aircraft Establishment
- Sir Philip Powell, half of one of the most important British architectural partnerships - Powell & Moya - with Hidalgo Moya, of the post-war period
- Richard Ratner, ', retail industry analyst and a vice-chairman at Seymour Pierce, the boutique broking house; cousin of Gerald Ratner.
- Major-General Jim Robertson,, , commanded the 1/7th Gurkha Rifles in Burma and the 1/6th Gurkha Rifles in Malaya; a formidable field commander, he was awarded two DSOs and was four times mentioned in dispatches.
S to Z
- Sir John Scarlett, head of the British Secret Intelligence Service . He is currently a governor.
- Sergeant Robert George Scott VC, DSO, won his Victoria Cross on 8 April 1879 at Morosi's Mountain, South Africa during the Basuto War.
- Craig Shephard ', Grenadier Guards officer awarded a Military Cross for operations in Afghanistan in 2009
- Kyle Sinckler, professional rugby union player for Harlequins, England and the British and Irish Lions
- Edward Smyth, orthopaedic surgeon and an intrepid mountaineer, skier and sailor
- Flaxman Charles John Spurrell, Archaeologist and Photographer
- Lt-Col Alex Simson,, awarded a Military Cross in 1943 while leading mine-clearing parties in the last phase of the battle for Tunis
- Air Vice-Marshal Graham Stacey ', appointed Commander British Forces Cyprus 2010
- Rear-Admiral Michael Stacey, took the surrender of a Japanese general at Singapore and later became an oil pollution clearance expert.
- Graham Sutherland ' Artist
- David Urquhart,, consultant orthopaedic surgeon. Known affectionately as 'Dru', a consultant orthopaedic surgeon at St Thomas' Hospital, London, from 1957 until 1981. He was undoubtedly one of the established St Thomas' personalities in the post-war era. His skills were in student teaching and administration, having been heavily involved in the hospital re-building programme.
- Jeremy Vine ', BBC Television journalist and Radio Presenter, brother of Tim
- Tim Vine ', record breaking comedian, brother of Jeremy
- Sir David Warren, ',, in 2010 British Ambassador to Japan.
- Tom Williams, cricketer
- Sir Graham Wilson, bacteriologist
- Nicholas Witchell, BBC Television journalist
- Julian Worricker '', BBC Radio journalist
Notable staff
- Denis Barnham, Taught art 1949 – 1972, Spitfire pilot in the Siege of Malta
- Robert Roseveare, Bletchley Park cryptographer
- Nigel Starmer-Smith, Taught Geography while scrum-half for England rugby union team, prior to his TV Rugby commentary role at the BBC
- Paul Burke, Head of Rugby from 2016, former professional Irish International rugby union footballer.