Windlesham House School
Windlesham House School is an independent boarding and day school for boys and girls aged 4 to 13 on the South Downs, in Pulborough, West Sussex, England. It was founded in 1837 by Charles Robert Malden and was the first boys' preparatory school in the United Kingdom. In 1967 it became the first IAPS co-educational school. The school moved to its current location in 1934. It caters for over 300 pupils. Children aged 4 to 7 are taught in the pre-prep.
From 2011 onward, the school has been inspected by the Independent Schools Inspectorate, who awarded it 'excellent' in its 2017 report. The school received an 'outstanding' award in its Ofsted inspection in 2010.
Boarding and Pastoral Care
Male and female students are accommodated in dormitories based in separate areas of the school. Each wing is run by the Heads of Boarding, who are supported by matrons. The dorms vary in size and children sleep in bunk beds or single beds. Each wing of the boarding house has a 'comfy' room, much like a common room, for recreational use outside of lesson times.There are six houses, each of which are led by 'houseparents', one male and one female, that provide limited pastoral care for the children. These houseparents are key contacts between the headmaster, the head of pastoral care and the parents. In addition, each student has a personal tutor and subject teachers.
The school has an international presence, with over 15 nationalities represented by its students. Mobile phones are not allowed, but the boarding houses have phones for calling home and access to Skype for students with parents based overseas.
In the 2017 ISI inspection, the boarding facilities were judged to be of an excellent quality.
Charles and Elizabeth Ann Malden were the last of five generations of Malden heads from 1837. Their joint headship lasted nearly 40 years. They were leaders of their time, insisting on being known not by their surname, Malden, but by the more informal Mr and Mrs Charles. In 1963 the School was among the first to become a trust and in 1967 Windlesham was the first traditional boys' boarding prep school to become co-educational.
The Headmaster, Richard Foster, has been at the school since 2007. The Chair of the Board of Governors is Douglas Moody-Stuart and the Deputy Head is Andy Nuttall.
School Facilities
The school has been recognised for its school grounds and facilities available to the students. The school has a 9-hole golf course, playing fields and woodland that the children are allowed to play in. Bush craft and survival lessons are often taken in the woodland. The sports facilities are extensive, with an astro pitch, tennis courts, netball courts, athletics track and sports fields that cater for cricket, football, rugby and hockey.In 2014 a new playground was opened by Lord Denman after the Parents Association raised money for its construction. Additionally, their work enabled them to donate £3,000 to Cystic Fibrosis, Cardiac Support, Sanchat Charitable Trust, Worthing Food Bank, Sussex Autistic Society and Canine Partners.
In 2015 the school applied for permission to begin the phase of the expansion of its sports facilities. This was completed in February 2018. The new sports and swimming building incorporates a 25-metre six-lane swimming pool and four indoor playing courts with supporting rooms. It also has areas for spectators watching basketball, hockey, tennis and badminton. There will also be male and female changing rooms, boot rooms and storage areas for the project. The project was undertaken by Kier construction. In July 2018 the complex was awarded 'Highly Commended' at the Sussex Heritage Trust Awards.
Curriculum
The school does not follow standardized tests. However, in the 2017 Independent Schools Inspectorate data from the school were seen to indicate that the majority of the students were working above the national average.Uniform
The School does not have a uniform, but rather a dress code in place.Headship
The headship of Windlesham remained within the Malden family for 157 years spanning five generations. From its founding in 1837 until 1994 each headmaster had been the son of his predecessor, with the exception of Grace Scott Malden, who succeeded her husband, and Charles Christopher Malden, whose elder brother, Roger, led the school while he completed his national service and degree.- 1837–1855 Lieutenant Charles Robert Malden, RN
- 1855–1888 Major Henry Charles Malden
- 1888–1896 Charles Scott Malden
- 1896–1927 Grace Gilbert Scott Malden
- 1927–1953 Christopher Scott-Malden, as principal, with a subordinate headmaster
- 1953–1957 Lieutenant-Colonel Roger William Malden
- 1957–1994 Charles Christopher and Elizabeth Ann Malden, jointly
- 1994–1995 Ian and Margaret Angus, jointly
- 1995–1996 Stephen and Julie Goodhart, as acting heads, jointly
- 1996–2006 Philip Lough
- 2006–2007 Paul Forte, as acting headmaster
- Since 2007 Richard Foster
- From September 2020 Ben Evans will take over as the new headmaster
Both Grace Scott Malden and Elizabeth Ann Malden were known to the pupils as 'Mrs Charles', a tradition that stretches back to 1880 when Charles Scott Malden was styled as 'Mr. Charles' to distinguish him from his father, 'Mr. Malden'.
In 2019 Richard Foster announced his intention to retire at the end of the 2019/20 academic year. He will be succeeded by Ben Evans, currently the headmaster of Edge Grove School.
Notable former pupils (ordered by date of birth)
Former pupils are traditionally known as Old Windleshamites, though the term 'OWLs' has been used by the school in recent years.- Lieutenant Colonel Charles Ichabod Wright, banker and Conservative politician
- Professor Reverend Walter Shirley, priest and historian
- William John Monson, 1st Viscount Oxenbridge, PC, Liberal politician and Captain of the Queen's bodyguard
- Major Henry Charles Malden, pivotal in the standardisation of the laws of association football. Windlesham's first pupil and second headmaster
- Debonnaire John Monson, 8th Baron Monson, KCVO, Sergeant-at-Arms to Queen Victoria
- Sir John Edward Dorington, 1st Bt., PC, DL, Conservative politician
- Gerald Vesey, Archdeacon of Huntington
- Ross Lowis Mangles, VC, first civilian recipient of the Victoria Cross
- Roden Noel, poet
- Ronald Leslie-Melville, 11th Earl of Leven, KT, PC, DL, Scottish peer and Keeper of the Privy Seal of Scotland
- Saumarez Smith, Archbishop of Sydney
- Sir Frederick Albert Bosanquet, KC, JP, lawyer and Common Serjeant of London
- Sir William Hart Dyke, 7th Bt., PC, DL, JP, Conservative politician, 1862 World Rackets Champion and tennis pioneer
- Admiral Sir Robert More-Molyneux, GCB, Royal Navy officer and President of the Royal Naval College, Greenwich
- Sir Lepel Griffin, KCSI, writer and diplomat of the British Raj
- Sir Edmund Verney, 3rd Bt., FRGS, DL, JP, Royal Navy officer, author and Liberal politician
- Leveson Francis Vernon-Harcourt, MICE, civil engineer
- Henry Brudenell-Bruce, 5th Marquess of Ailesbury, soldier, businessman and Conservative politician
- Joseph Herbert Tritton, banker
- George Carnac Fisher, Bishop of Southampton
- Admiral Swinton Colthurst Holland, Royal Navy officer
- Hubert Thomas Knox, MRIA, FRSAI, Irish historian
- Sir Henry Bellingham, 4th Bt., Conservative politician
- Sir Andrew Agnew, 9th Bt., JP, Liberal Unionist politician
- Herbert Lawford, Scottish tennis player, 1887 Wimbledon champion
- Major Edward Hay Mackenzie Elliot, soldier and England footballer
- Alexander Wallace Rimington, ARE, RBA, Hon. FSA, etcher, painter, illustrator and author
- St John Brodrick, 1st Earl of Midleton, KP, PC, DL, Conservative politician and Secretary of State for War during the Second Boer War
- Lieutenant General Sir William Pitcairn Campbell, KCB, British general during World War I and Aide-de-Camp to King Edward VII
- George Ulick Browne, 6th Marquess of Sligo, Irish soldier and peer
- Sir John Barlow, 1st Bt., Liberal politician
- Percy Melmoth Walters, England football captain
- Arthur Melmoth Walters, England footballer
- Lieutenant General Sir Sydney Turing Barlow Lawford, KCB, British general and father of 'Rat Pack' actor Peter Lawford
- Arthur Browne, 8th Marquess of Sligo, KBE, Irish soldier and peer and Principal Assistant Secretary to the Imperial War Graves Commission
- Richard Heywood, Bishop of Mombasa
- Admiral of the Fleet Sir Osmond Brock, GCB, KCMG, KCVO, commander of HMS Princess Royal and the 1st Battlecruiser Squadron at the Battle of Jutland
- Lieutenant Colonel Sir Alexander Leith, 1st Bt., MC, British benefactor
- Rennie MacInnes, Bishop of Jerusalem
- Alnod Boger, first-class cricketer
- Arthur Dunbar Whatman, cricketer
- Frederick Waldegrave Head, MC & Bar, twice-decorated Senior Chaplain to the Guards Division during World War I and Archbishop of Melbourne
- Ian Hannah, academic, writer and Conservative politician
- Arthur Baillie Lumsdaine Karney, first Bishop of Johannesburg, later Bishop of Southampton
- Harry Wrightson, Conservative politician, notable for dying before he could take his seat in Parliament
- Elliot James Dowell Colvin, Prime Minister of Jammu and Kashmir
- Guy Kindersley, Conservative politician
- J. I. Wedgwood, first Presiding Bishop of the Liberal Catholic Church
- Archibald Bentley Beauman, British Army officer
- Lionel Bostock, OBE, MC, first-class cricketer and British Army officer
- Sutton Vane, British playwright
- James Philip Mills, civil servant and ethnographer
- Claud Lovat Fraser, artist, designer and author
- Philip Sargant Florence, American economist
- Christopher Scott-Malden, first-class cricketer and Windlesham's fifth headmaster
- Hon. Freddie Calthorpe, first-class cricketer
- Lieutenant-Colonel Dick Rawlinson, OBE, intelligence officer in both world wars and peacetime film producer and screenwriter
- Major John Roland Abbey, prolific English book collector, High Sheriff of Sussex and British Army Officer
- Donald Howard Beves, academic
- Robert Grimston, 1st Baron Grimston of Westbury, Conservative politician
- Hilary Saint George Saunders, British Army officer, author and historian
- Major Sir Charles Buchanan, 4th Bt., British Army officer and High Sheriff of Nottinghamshire
- Kenneth Gandar-Dower, sportsman, aviator, explorer and author
- Sir Michael Hordern, CBE, actor
- John Davies, MBE, Conservative politician and Director-General of the Confederation of British Industry. Father of Frank Davies
- Prince Emanuel Vladimirovich Galitzine, Spitfire pilot and member of the Russian royal family
- Chris Tyler, surfing entrepreneur
- James Hamilton-Paterson, poet and novelist
- Frank Davies, Anglo-Canadian record producer. Son of John Davies, MBE
- John Michie, actor
- Duncan Goodhew, MBE, swimming athlete and Olympic gold medalist
- Dr Martha Holmes, BAFTA Award-winning producer of wildlife documentaries
- Alexandra Hall Hall, diplomat
- Andrew Page, diplomat
- Professor Chris Whitty, Chief Medical Officer to the UK Government
- Sophie Darlington, BAFTA award-winning wildlife filmmaker and cinematographer
- Guy Ritchie, film director, producer and screenwriter, married to Madonna 2000–2008
- Frances Osborne, author, married to George Osborne 1998–2019
- Adam Buxton, actor and comedian
- Gabriel Weston, surgeon, author and television presenter
- Polly Renton, documentary film-maker
- Tina Cook, three-time Olympic medalist event rider and 2009 European Champion
- Noah Huntley, actor
- Tom Hiddleston, actor
- Jacquetta Wheeler, fashion model
- Tom Williams, English rugby union player
- Georgia Hardinge, fashion designer
- Ted Dwane, musician, bassist of Mumford & Sons
- Thom Evans, Scottish international rugby union player
- Alfie Allen, actor
- Alan Pownall, singer/songwriter, married to Gabriella Wilde
- Tamzin Merchant, actress
- Gabriella Wilde, actress and model, married to Alan Pownall