Haileybury and Imperial Service College
See here for the building in London Charing Cross called Kipling House
Mottoes |
Fear God, Honour The King Sursum Corda (Lift up your Hearts) |
---|---|
Established |
1862 (Haileybury College. Predecessor colleges were founded as follows: East India Company College - 1806; Imperial Service College - 1845; United Services College - 1874) |
Type | Independent day and boarding |
Religion | Church of England |
Master | Joe Davies |
Chairman of Council | M. Gatenby |
Founder | East India Company |
Location |
Hertford Heath Hertfordshire SG13 7NU England Coordinates: 51°46′43″N 0°02′00″W / 51.7787°N 0.033333°W |
DfE number | 919/6015 |
DfE URN | 117607 Tables |
Students | 750 (approx.) |
Gender | Mixed |
Ages | 11–19 |
Houses |
13 Magenta |
Publication | The Haileyburian, Hearts & Wings |
Former pupils | Old Haileyburians |
Website |
www |
Haileybury and Imperial Service College is an independent school near Hertford, England. Originally a boys' public school, it is now co-educational, enrolling pupils at 11+, 13+ and 16+ stages of education. Over 750 pupils attend Haileybury, of whom more than 500 board. Haileybury currently partners with/owns 3 different schools; Haileybury Turnford in the UK, and Haileybury Astana and Haileybury Almaty in Kazakhstan.
History
The previous institution at Haileybury was the East India College (EIC), the training establishment founded in 1806 for administrators of the Honourable East India Company. The EIC was initially based in Hertford Castle, but substantial grounds on Hertford Heath were acquired for future development. William Wilkins, the architect of Downing College, Cambridge, and the National Gallery in London, was appointed principal architect. The buildings were completed and occupied in 1809. They comprise four ranges which enclose an area known as Quad, the largest academic quadrangle in the UK and one of the largest in the world.[1] In the wake of the Indian Rebellion of 1857, the East India Company was wound up, and its College closed in January 1858. In 1862, a public school that retained close links with the EIC opened on the site. Many of the houses were named after Old Boys or Principals of the EIC, and Haileybury's primary purpose during the second half of the 19th century was to serve the British Empire, principally in India.
The Chapel dome was added by Arthur Blomfield and completed in 1877. Further Victorian additions were designed by John William Simpson. The Memorial Dining Hall was opened by the future King George VI and Queen Elizabeth, and acts as a monument to former pupils who gave their lives in the First World War. During the past 40 years, its use has been extended to commemorate deaths of OHs in all military conflicts.
The dining hall contains one of the largest unsupported domes in Europe. Until the 1990s, the entire school of over 700 pupils dined there at a single sitting, all brought to silence for grace by the beating of a massive brass howitzer shell, captured from a German gun emplacement during World War I and then converted into a gong. A gilded plaster boss in the centre of this dome represents an oak tree being struck by lightning. Known as Little Lightning Oak this decoration represents the massive oak tree that stands on the lawn in front of Terrace, the promenade visible in this photograph. This tree was struck by lightning and all but destroyed but re-sprouted.
As well as the wooden tablets surrounding the exterior of the dining hall, there are other memorials to the school's 1,436 war casualties. The memorial on Terrace, originally built to commemorate those lost in World War I, was unveiled by General Sir Alexander Godley, KCB, KCMG on 7 July 1923. It was designed by former pupil Sir Reginald Blomfield. Known as the Cross of Sacrifice this simple stone structure serves as a prototype for war memorials found in every Commonwealth War Cemetery and other war memorials around the world.
Seventeen former pupils of Haileybury and its antecedents have received the Victoria Cross, and three the George Cross.
In 1942, Haileybury and the Imperial Service College (which had itself subsumed the United Services College) merged to become Haileybury and Imperial Service College, now known as Haileybury.[2]
In the late twentieth century, reforming headmaster David Jewell took charge of Haileybury, bringing it out of its post-cold-war austerity. Stuart Westley, Master of Haileybury until July 2009, was responsible for making the school fully co-educational.[3]
Present day
Haileybury serves as a co-educational school for 11- to 18-year-olds. Girls' houses comprise Colvin, Melvill, Allenby, Albans, and Hailey, which provides for the needs of day girls. The seven boys' houses consist of Edmonstone, Lawrence, Bartle Frere, Kipling, Batten, Thomason and Trevelyan. The Ayckbourn Theatre functions as a modern auditorium with a fully equipped stage and back-stage. In 1997 the college chapel organ was re-built by Klais. Further developments include a Modern Languages Centre, a Design Technology Department, a vast sports centre, two all weather surfaces and a Costa Café "Grubber" for staff and pupils. On site is a rackets court, built in 1908, notable for its double gallery.
The school offers a wide range of GCSE and IGCSEs and the choice of IB Diploma or A Levels in the Sixth Form. Haileybury has taught the IB Diploma for 15 years; the average IB score of Haileybury pupils was 37 in 2013, with one pupil securing the maximum possible 45 points (one of only 110 pupils to achieve this globally). In 2013, over 55% of all grades (A Level & IB combined) were A*-A or equivalent, and over 85% of all grades were A*-B or equivalent. Nearly 60% of all (I)GCSE grades attained were at A*-A, and over a third of all Haileyburians obtained at least nine A*-As.
Haileybury supports such organisations as The Children's Trust, Tadworth, UK's leading charity for children with acquired brain injury (ABI), multiple disabilities and complex health needs. Teens Unite, a charity dedicated to improving the lives of young people aged 13–24, with cancer and other life limiting illnesses and the Haileybury Youth Trust (HYT), whose objective is to provide sustainable interventions to improve health, education and training, and employment prospects among impoverished young people in Uganda.
Haileybury Almaty
In 2006/2007, Haileybury advised on the building of a Haileybury in Almaty, Kazakhstan where all English GCSEs are taught and the curriculum is taught similarly under the guidance of Haileybury. The school, opened in September 2008, is known as Haileybury Almaty.
The pupils are made up mostly of Kazakhstan citizens. They are all required to speak English. Academic year 2010–2011 saw the first batch of pupils pass their IGCSE exams. Since August 2011 Haileybury Almaty has opened a 6th form. A second school, in the Kazakhstan capital Astana, was opened in September 2011.[4]
Haileybury Astana
Following the successful foundation of Haileybury Almaty, a cognate school was opened in Astana, the capital city of Kazakhstan. Haileybury Astana provides education for boys and girls from the two to eleven years of age under the headship of Andrew Auster. The school follows the UK National Curriculum with the option of studying Russian and Kazakh, as well as the history and geography of Kazakhstan. Provision of boarding facilities is planned for 2014, and the school intends to expand to include pupils up to the age of sixteen.
Haileybury Turnford
In September 2015 Turnford School in Turnford, Hertfordshire converted to academy status and was renamed Haileybury Turnford. Haileybury College acts as the main sponsor of the school, and this is the first state-funded school to have links with Haileybury.
Model United Nations
Model United Nations (MUN) is popular extra-curricular activity students in the senior school. Throughout the year, groups of students are chosen to form delegations which meet two times per week outside of school hours to practise writing and debating resolutions. These students then travel to several MUN conferences in the UK and mainland Europe to debate their resolutions.
Haileybury hosts their own Model United Nations conference every year (HMUN)[5] for nearly 900 pupils, making it largest MUN conference in the UK.[6] The conference is typically held the weekend before the Easter holiday.
Notable former pupils
Past pupils are known as Old Haileyburians.
Arts
- Michael Aitkens, scriptwriter
- Alan Ayckbourn, dramatist
- John Bailey, literary critic
- John Blofeld, Taoist and Buddhist author
- Reginald Blomfield, architect
- Bruce Bairnsfather (attended United Services College), humourist
- Robert Erskine Childers, author of The Riddle of the Sands
- Harold Creighton, magazine proprietor
- Michael Davie, journalist and newspaper editor
- Victor George de Freyne, novelist and playwright (as Victor Bridges)
- Edmund Fisher, architect
- Philip Franks, actor and director
- Charles Wellington Furse, artist
- Gerald Harper, actor
- John Howard Davies, TV director and producer
- Dom Joly, comedian and journalist
- Rudyard Kipling (attended United Services College), writer
- Quentin Letts, journalist
- Chris Lowe, BBC journalist and news presenter
- Simon MacCorkindale, actor
- Stephen Mangan, actor
- John McCarthy, journalist
- Anthony Meyer, actor
- David Meyer, actor
- Christopher Nolan, film director
- Hoyt Richards, model and actor
- Alan Ross, poet and writer
- Joe Saward, sports journalist and author
- Rik Simpson, record producer, sound engineer, musician, and songwriter
- Alison Stephens, virtuoso classical mandolinist and recording artist
- Arthur Thomas, composer
- Herbert Trench, poet
- Rex Whistler, artist
- Peter Woodward, actor
- Tim Woodward, actor
Armed forces
- Field Marshal Lord Edmund Allenby, 1st Viscount Allenby
- Field Marshal Sir John Chapple
- Marshal of the Royal Air Force Sir William Dickson
- Marshal of the Royal Air Force Sir John Slessor
- Admiral Sir Jonathon Band, First Sea Lord
- Admiral Sir Royston Wright
- Air Chief Marshal Sir Robert Brooke-Popham
- Air Chief Marshal Sir Trafford Leigh-Mallory
- Air Chief Marshal Sir Arthur Penrose Martyn Sanders
- General Sir Thomas Astley Cubitt
- General David Ramsbotham, Baron Ramsbotham GCB, CBE
- General Lionel Dunsterville
- General Sir Alexander Godley
- General Sir Rupert Smith
- General Sir Hugh Henry Gough
- General Sir Reginald May
- Lieutenant General Sir Richard Vickers
- Major General The Reverend Morgan Llewellyn
- Major General Hurdis Ravenshaw
- Major General Hubert Hamilton
- Major General Sir Thompson Capper
- Major General William George Walker
- Major General Clifford Coffin
- Brigadier George William St. George Grogan
- Brigadier Francis Aylmer Maxwell
- Brigadier The Honourable Alexander Gore Arkwright Hore-Ruthven
- Lieutenant-Colonel Arthur Rawlins
- Group Captain Peter Townsend
- Harry Carr, Special Intelligence Service 1919–45, Northern Area Controller (Baltic & USSR)[7]
Victoria Cross and George Cross holders
Seventeen former pupils, and one master, of Haileybury and its antecedents have received the Victoria Cross, and three former pupils the George Cross.[8]
Victoria Cross
- Pupils
- Indian Rebellion of 1857
- General Sir Hugh Henry Gough, VC, GCB (attended East India College Haileybury)[8][9]
- Ross Lowis Mangles, VC (attended East India College Haileybury) - A Civilian recipient.[8][10]
- William Fraser McDonell, VC (attended East India College Haileybury) - A Civilian recipient.[8][11]
- Persian War 1857
- Lieutenant Arthur Thomas Moore VC (attended East India College Haileybury) He later achieved the rank of major general and was made a Companion of the Most Honourable Order of the Bath (CB).[8][12]
- Zulu War 1879
- Lieutenant Nevill Josiah Aylmer Coghill VC (attended Haileybury College, Trevelyan House from 1865 to 1869)[8][13]
- Sudan Campaign 1898
- Brigadier General The Honourable Alexander Gore Arkwright Hore-Ruthven, VC, GCMG, CB, DSO & Bar, PC, Croix de Guerre (France and Belgium) . Earl of Gowrie & Viscount Ruthven of Canberra. (attended United Services College 1882.2). He was a Captain when he earned his VC.[8]
- Second Boer War 1899–1902
- Colonel Edward Douglas Browne-Synge-Hutchinson, VC, CB (attended United Services College Day Boy 1875). He was a Major when he earned his VC.[8]
- Brigadier General Francis Aylmer Maxwell, VC, CSI, DSO & Bar, (attended United Services College 1883–1890)[8][14]
- Captain Conwyn Mansel-Jones, VC, CMG, DSO, (attended Haileybury College, Batten House 1885–1888)[8]
- Third Somaliland Expedition 1903
- Major General William George Walker, VC, CB (attended Haileybury College, Colvin House, 1876–1881)[8]
- First World War
- Captain Anketell Moutray Read, VC, (attended United Services College 1898–1902)[8]
- Second Lieutenant Rupert Price Hallowes, VC, MC (attended Haileybury College, Le Bas House 1894–1897)[8]
- Major General Clifford Coffin, VC, CB, DSO & Bar (attended Haileybury College, Lawrence House, 1884–1886)[8]
- Captain Clement Robertson, VC (attended Haileybury College, Colvin House 1904–1906)[8]
- Captain Cyril Hubert Frisby, VC (attended Haileybury College, Hailey House, 1899–1903)[8]
- Brigadier General George William St. George Grogan, VC, CB, CMG, DSO & Bar (attended United Services College, 1890–1893)[8]
- Korean War 1951
- Colonel James Power Carne, VC, DSO (attended Imperial Service College, (Alexander House), 1920–1923)[8]
- Staff
- First World War
- Major Richard Raymond Willis, VC (staff at Haileybury College, 1921–1921)[8]
George Cross[8]
- First World War 1919
- Wing Commander Harry "Wings" Day (Harry Melville Arbuthnot Day), GC (formerly AM)
- 1934
- Captain Richard Deedes, GC (formerly EGM)
- Second World War
Business
- Alan Sainsbury, Baron Sainsbury of Drury Lane
- Sir Clive Martin
- Prannoy Roy; Founder NDTV
- Datuk Vinod Sekhar; Malaysian businessman and Haileybury scholarship donor[15]
Law
- Geoffrey Lawrence, 1st Baron Oaksey
- Sir Richard May
- Cyril Radcliffe, 1st Baron Radcliffe
- The Rt. Hon. Lord Justice Scott Baker
- Sir Barry Sheen
- Sir Arthur Watts
- Kenelm George Digby
Learning
- Forster Fitzgerald Arbuthnot
- Frank Bell
- John Burnaby, Regius Professor of Divinity, Cambridge University
- Lionel Curtis, professor at Oxford University
- Bonamy Dobrée
- W. H. C. Frend
- Brian Houghton Hodgson
- Alexander Francis Kirkpatrick, Master of Selwyn College, Cambridge
- Peter Ladefoged, prominent linguist and phonetician
- Robert Liddell
- Jack Meyer, founder of Millfield School and cricketer
- Humphry Osmond
- Frank Podmore
- George Speaight
- J.T.M. Gibson, (OBE, Padmashri): Former Headmaster of Mayo College
Politics
- Cuthbert James McCall Alport, Baron Alport, Cabinet Minister
- Clement Attlee, Prime Minister
- Hugh Bayley
- Sir Geoffrey de Freitas
- Barry Gardiner
- Nick Herbert, Tory Minister
- Christopher Mayhew, Baron Mayhew
- Ian Stewart, Baron Stewartby
- Tom Sutcliffe MP
- David Garro Trefgarne, 2nd Baron Trefgarne
- Sir Edward Wakefield
- John Robert Jermain Macnamara
Civil service
- John Beames ICS, Bengal cadre, author of "Memoirs of a Bengal Civilian"
- Sir Andrew Green
- Edward Maltby (British civil servant), Acting governor of Madras
- Stewart Perowne
- Rennell Rodd, 1st Baron Rennell
- Henry Bartle Frere, 1st Baronet
Sport
- Tom Askwith, Olympic Rower
- John Batten, England rugby union international
- Sam Billings, English cricketer
- John Birkett, England rugby union international player and captain.
- Ernest Cheston, England rugby union international
- David Cooke, England rugby union international
- Guy Evers, England rugby union international
- Archibald Fargus, English cricketer, scholar and clergyman
- Jamie George, Saracens rugby union player
- Billy Geen, Welsh rugby union international
- Charles Gurdon, Cambridge varsity rower and England rugby union international
- Herbert Hake OBE, English first-class cricketer
- Nigel Harrison, English first-class cricketer
- Victor Le Fanu, Ireland rugby union international
- Maharajkumar of Vizianagram, Indian cricketer
- Martin Maslin, English first-class cricketer
- Osbert Mackie, England rugby union international and Anglican priest
- Jack Meyer, English first-class cricketer and founder of Millfield School
- Sir Stirling Moss, Formula 1 racing driver
- Major-General James Spens English cricketer and British Army officer
- Robert Spurway, English cricketer
- Peter Warfield, England rugby union international
- Charles Wynch, English first-class cricketer
- Chris Wyles, Saracens and USA rugby union international
Miscellaneous
- Quentin Stafford-Fraser, co-creator of the Trojan room coffee pot
- William Henry Battle, surgeon
- Prince Andrew Romanov
- Edward Clive Bayley, archaeologist
See also
References
- ↑ "Country Life, Volume 203". March 2014: 28. Check date values in:
|year= / |date= mismatch
(help) - ↑ http://www.haileybury.com/the-school/a-brief-history
- ↑ The Times, Obituaries, July 2006
- ↑ "UK public school for Kazakhstan". BBC. 25 January 2007. Retrieved 2007-09-12.
- ↑ http://www.haileyburymun.com/
- ↑ http://www.haileybury.com/news/uks-largest-model-united-nations-conference-to-be-held-at-haileybury
- ↑ Jeffery, Keith (2010) Secret History of MI6, p.191, (The Penguin Press)
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Haileybury College Archives - Roll of Honour
- ↑ Frederick Charles Danvers, (1894), Memorials of Old Haileybury College, page 455, (A. Constable and Company)
- ↑ Frederick Charles Danvers, (1894), Memorials of Old Haileybury College, page 453, (A. Constable and Company)
- ↑ Frederick Charles Danvers, (1894), Memorials of Old Haileybury College, page 607, (A. Constable and Company)
- ↑ Frederick Charles Danvers, (1894), Memorials of Old Haileybury College, page 448, (A. Constable and Company)
- ↑ Sir David Hughes Parry, (2005), The V. C. Its Heroes And Their Valor, page 251, (Kessinger Publishing)
- ↑ Francis Aylmer Maxwell, (1921), Frank Maxwell: A Memoir and Some Letters, page 9, (J. Murray)
- ↑ "Malaysian work experience offer for six pupils". Haileybury and Imperial Service College. Retrieved 15 August 2010.
External links
- Haileybury web site
- Haileybury Model United Nations Haileybury MUN
- Trevelyan House — One of the 7 boys' houses in the school.
- Kipling House — One of the 7 boys' houses in the school.
- Edmonstone House — One of the 7 boys' houses in the school.
- Melvill House — One of the 5 girls' boarding houses.
- Haileybury Images — Images of Haileybury.
- The Haileybury Society
- Junior school
- Imperial Service College
- Rackets
- Running track
- Haileybury College, Melbourne, Australia
- Running track
- Haileybury Images
- Haileybury Youth Trust
- Memorials of old Haileybury College (1894)
|