St Ninian's School, Moffat


St Ninian's Preparatory School was an independent preparatory school for boys in Moffat, Scotland.

History

St Ninian's Preparatory School for boys was founded in 1879 by Arthur John Caswall Dowding and Reverend William Henry Churchill. Dowding had previously been an Assistant Master for three years at Fettes College in Edinburgh. E. W. Hornung was one of the nine boys with which the school opened at Easter 1879. In 1887, the Reverend John William Rundall, who was Assistant Master at St Ninian's from 1882-1887, became the new owner and headmaster of the school, until his death in 1903.
Following the death of Rundall, aged 44, ownership of the school passed to his widow Constance Ethel Pearse. Her brother,
the Reverend Francis Wingate Pearse became headmaster in 1906, having been headmaster at Harlington Preparatory School, Llanbedr, Merionethshire, in Wales. In 1910, Constance Pearse died, bequeathing the school to another brother, Hugh, who conveyed ownership to Reverend Pearse. In August 1934 Reverend Pearse sold the school to Mr D A Gregory and retired.
Hugh Dowding, son of the founder, was born at the school in 1882 and educated there. In 1987, to honour the contribution made by Lord Dowding during the Second World War, the RAF Association in conjunction with the RAF Benevolent Fund, purchased St Ninian's School, his birthplace. The building was renamed Dowding House and restored to provide sheltered housing for former members of the Royal Air Force or their dependents. The driving force behind this project was Irene 'Sandy' Park, a former Women's Auxiliary Air Force officer, and native of Moffat.
A stained-glass window from the demolished school chapel, commemorating former St Ninian's pupils who died during the Second Boer War, can be found in the west window of St John's Church in Moffat. There is a plaque in the church with the names and details of the ten fallen, among them Captain David Younger, VC.

Notable alumni