Rugby School

Rugby School
Motto Orando Laborando
(Latin: "By praying, by working")
Established 1567
Type Independent day and boarding
Public school
Religion Church of England
Head Master Peter Green
Founder Lawrence Sheriff
Location Lawrence Sheriff Street
Rugby
Warwickshire
CV22 5EH
England
Coordinates: 52°22′03″N 1°15′40″W / 52.36750°N 1.26114°W / 52.36750; -1.26114
DfE URN 125777 Tables
Students 810
Gender Co-educational
Ages 10–18
Houses 16
Colours

Oxford blue, Cambridge blue, and Green

              
Former Pupils Old Rugbeians
School Song Floreat Rugbeia
Website www.rugbyschool.co.uk

Rugby School is a co-educational day and boarding school in Rugby, Warwickshire, England. It is a registered charity[1] and is one of the oldest independent schools in Britain.[2] In many ways the stereotype of the English public school is a reworking of Thomas Arnold's Rugby.[3] It is one of the original ten English public schools defined by the Public Schools Act 1868. "Floreat Rugbeia" is the traditional school song. Rugby School enrolls boarding and day students, with a total student enrollment of 800 in day student grades 4 to 12.[4] For the academic year 2015/16, Rugby charges boarders up to £10,995 per term, making it the 39th most expensive HMC boarding school.[5]

Rugby School was the birthplace of Rugby football.[6] In 1845, three Rugby School pupils produced the first written rules of the "Rugby style of game".[6]

History

Rugby School from The Close, the playing field where according to legend the game of rugby was invented

Early history

The logo of Rugby School in an ex libris

Rugby School was founded in 1567 as a provision in the will of Lawrence Sheriff, who had made his fortune supplying groceries to Queen Elizabeth I of England.[7] Since Lawrence Sheriff lived in Rugby and the neighbouring Brownsover, the school was intended to be a free grammar school for the boys of those towns. Up to 1667, the school remained in comparative obscurity. Its history during that trying period is characterised mainly by a series of lawsuits between descendants of the founder, who tried to defeat the intentions of the testator, and the masters and trustees, who tried to carry them out. A final decision was handed down in 1667, confirming the findings of a commission in favour of the trust, and henceforth the school maintained a steady growth.[8]

Academic life

Pupils beginning Rugby in the F Block (first year) study various subjects. This is continued through to D block (GCSE year). The school then provides standard A-levels in 29 subjects. Students at this stage have the choice of taking 3 or four subjects and are also offered the opportunity to take an extended project.

Scholarships

The Governing Body provides financial benefits with school fees to families unable to afford them. Parents of pupils who are given a Scholarship are capable of obtaining a 10% fee deduction, although more than one scholarship can be awarded to one student.

Non-academic school life

Rugby School claim they aim to give pupils more than education with their new tagline being 'The Whole Person, The Whole Point'. The school has many traditions including two annual carol services (one for pupils only and one for parents and the local town), as well as the pushcart race, an event which the entire school competes in, with each house designing, constructing and racing their own cart. The school has three magazines: The Meteor (an annual review of the year), The Boomer (a termly magazine sent to parents, named after the school bell) and Quod (a monthly pupil-run newspaper featuring work from students as well as interviews, comic strips with teachers etc. named after the square in the oldest part of the school).

Growth

It was no longer desirable to have only local boys attending and the nature of the school shifted, and so a new school – Lawrence Sheriff Grammar School – was founded in 1878 to continue Lawrence Sheriff's original intentions; that school receives a substantial proportion of the endowment income from Lawrence Sheriff's estate every year.

The core of the school (which contains School House, featured in Tom Brown's Schooldays) was completed in 1815 and is built around the Old Quad (quadrangle), with its Georgian architecture. Especially notable rooms are the Upper Bench (an intimate space with a book-lined gallery), the Old Hall of School House, and the Old Big School (which makes up one side of the quadrangle and was once the location for teaching all junior pupils). Thomas Hughes (like his fictional hero, Tom Brown) once carved his name onto the hands of the school clock, situated on a tower above the Old Quad. The polychromatic school chapel, new quadrangle, Temple Reading Room, Macready Theatre and Gymnasium were designed by the well-known Victorian Gothic revival architect William Butterfield in 1875, and the smaller Memorial Chapel was dedicated in 1922.

By the twentieth century Rugby expanded and new buildings were built inspired by this Edwardian Era. The Temple Speech Room, named after former headmaster and Archbishop of Canterbury Frederick Temple (1858–69) and now used for whole-School assemblies, speech days, concerts, musicals – and BBC Mastermind. Oak-panelled walls boast the portraits of illustrious alumni, including Neville Chamberlain holding his piece of paper. Between the wars, the Memorial Chapel, the Music Schools and a new Sanatorium appeared.[9]

Cartel

In 2005, Rugby School was one of fifty of the country's leading independent schools which were found guilty of running an illegal price-fixing cartel which had allowed them to drive up fees for thousands of parents.[10] 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.[11] However, Mrs Jean Scott, the 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 (on which they had not been consulted). 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."[12]

Headmasters

Thomas Arnold

Main article: Thomas Arnold

Rugby's most famous headmaster was Thomas Arnold, appointed in 1828; he executed many reforms to the school curriculum and administration. Arnold's reputation and the school's reputation was immortalised through Thomas Hughes' book Tom Brown's School Days.

David Newsome writes about the new educational methods employed by Arnold in his book, 'Godliness and Good Learning' (Cassell 1961). He calls the morality practised at Arnold's school muscular Christianity. Arnold had three principles: religious and moral principle, gentlemanly conduct and academic performance. Dr. George Mosse, former professor of History in University of Wisconsin-Madison, lectured on Arnold's time at Rugby. According to Mosse, Thomas Arnold created an institution which fused religious and moral principles, gentlemanly conduct, and learning based on self-discipline. These morals were socially enforced through the "Gospel of work." The object of education was to produce "the Christian gentleman," a man with good outward appearance, playful but earnest, industrious, manly, honest, virginal pure, innocent, and responsible.

John Percival

In 1888 the appointment of Marie Bethell Beauclerc by Percival was the first appointment of a female teacher in an English boys' public school and the first time shorthand had been taught in any such school. The shorthand course was popular with one hundred boys in the classes.

William Webb Ellis

Main article: William Webb Ellis
William Webb Ellis plaque
Webb-Ellis at Rugby, 1823

The game of Rugby football owes its name to the school. The legend of William Webb Ellis and the origin of the game is commemorated by a plaque. The story has been known to be a myth since it was investigated by the Old Rugbeian Society in 1895. There were no standard rules for football in Webb Ellis's time at Rugby (1816–1825) and most varieties involved carrying the ball. The games played at Rugby were organised by the pupils and not the masters, the rules being a matter of custom and not written down. They were frequently changed and modified with each new intake of students. The sole source of the story is Matthew Bloxam, a former pupil but not a contemporary of Webb Ellis. In October 1876, four years after the death of Webb Ellis, in a letter to the school newspaper The Meteor he quotes an unknown friend relating the story to him. He elaborated on the story four years later in another letter to The Meteor, but shed no further light on its source. Richard Lindon, a boot and shoemaker who had premises across the street from the School's main entrance in Lawrence Sheriff Street, is credited with the invention of the "oval" rugby ball, the rubber inflatable bladder and the brass hand pump.[17]

Houses

Rugby School has both day and boarding-pupils, the latter in the majority. Originally it was for boys only, but girls have been admitted to the sixth form since 1975. It went fully co-educational in 1995. The school community is divided into houses.

House Founded Girls/Boys
Cotton 1836 Boys
Kilbracken 1841 Boys
Michell 1882 Boys
School Field 1852 Boys
School House 1750 Boys
Sheriff 1881 Boys
Town House 1567 Boys
Whitelaw 1838 Boys
Bradley 1830 Girls
Dean 1832 Girls
Griffin 2000 Girls
Rupert Brooke 1860 Girls
Southfield 2005 Girls
Stanley 1828 Girls
Tudor 1893 Girls

There is also a co-educational day house for 11+ admission, called Marshall House. It is much smaller than the other main school houses.

Information

Rugby School from the side

Alumni

Main article: List of Old Rugbeians

There have been a number of notable Old Rugbeians including the purported father of the sport of Rugby William Webb Ellis, the inventor of Australian rules football Tom Wills, the war poets Rupert Brooke and John Gillespie Magee, Jr., Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain, author and mathematician Lewis Carroll, poet and cultural critic Matthew Arnold, the author and social critic Salman Rushdie (who said of his time there: "Almost the only thing I am proud of about going to Rugby school was that Lewis Carroll went there too."[20]) and the Irish writer and republican Francis Stuart. Matthew Arnold's father Thomas Arnold, was a headmaster of the school. An OR seven-a-side rugby team was invited to compete in the inaugural Old Boys Sevens tournament in June 2010, hosted by the Old Silhillians, the former pupils' association of Solihull School. Philip Henry Bahr (later Sir Philip Henry Manson-Bahr), a zoologist and medical doctor, World War I veteran, was President of both Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene and Medical Society of London, and Vice-President of the British Ornithologists’ Union.[21][22]

Rugbeian Society

The Rugbeian Society is for former pupils at the School.[23] An Old Rugbeian is sometimes referred to as an OR.

The purposes of the society are to encourage and help Rugbeians in interacting with each other and to strengthen the ties between ORs and the school.

In 2010 the Rugbeians reached the semi-finals of the Public Schools' Old Boys' Sevens tournament, hosted by the Old Silhillians to celebrate the 450th anniversary of fellow Warwickshire public school, Solihull School.

Rugby Fives

Rugby Fives

Rugby Fives is a handball game, similar to squash, played in an enclosed court. It has similarities with Winchester Fives (a form of Wessex Fives) and Eton Fives.

It is most commonly believed to be derived from Wessex Fives, a game played by Thomas Arnold, Headmaster of Rugby, who had played Wessex Fives when a boy at Lord Weymouth's Grammer, now Warminster School. The open court of Wessex Fives, built in 1787, is still in existence at Warminster School although it has fallen out of regular use.

Rugby Fives is played between two players (singles) or between two teams of two players each (doubles), the aim being to hit the ball above a 'bar' across the front wall in such a way that the opposition cannot return it before a second bounce. The ball is slightly larger than a golf ball, leather-coated and hard. Players wear leather padded gloves on both hands, with which they hit the ball.

Rugby Fives continues to have a good following with tournaments being run nationwide, presided over by the Rugby Fives Association.[24]

See also

References

  1. "Charity Commission – Rugby School". Charity Commission. Retrieved 30 March 2013.
  2. "Gabbitas". Retrieved 26 August 2015.
  3. "The truth about Flashman: an old Rugbeian writes". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 16 October 2015.
  4. 1 2 3 University of Oxford student. "Rugby School". Retrieved 26 August 2015.
  5. http://www.privateschoolfees.co.uk/uploads/1/1/2/4/11247026/boarding_fees_2015_2016.pdf
  6. 1 2 "Six ways the town of Rugby helped change the world". BBC. Retrieved 29 January 2015
  7. Rugby by Henry Christopher Bradby
  8.  Gilman, D. C.; Thurston, H. T.; Colby, F. M., eds. (1905). "Rugby School". New International Encyclopedia (1st ed.). New York: Dodd, Mead.
  9. rugbyschool.net/history
  10. "Education - The Times". Retrieved 26 August 2015.
  11. Article at UK Office of Fair Trade
  12. "Private schools send papers to fee-fixing inquiry". The Daily Telegraph (London). 1 March 2004. Retrieved 15 March 2011.
  13. 1 2 3 4 5 6 John Barclay Hope Simpson, Rugby Since Arnold: A History of Rugby School from 1842, Published by Macmillan, 1967
  14. 1 2 3 Rugby School – History and Traditions
  15. "New Post for Head Master". Retrieved 26 August 2015.
  16. "New Head Master Announced". Retrieved 26 August 2015.
  17. "richardlindon.com". Retrieved 26 August 2015.
  18. "Rugby School - The Good Schools Guide". The Good Schools Guide. Retrieved 26 August 2015.
  19. http://image.guardian.co.uk/sys-files/Education/documents/2007/09/20/100topoxbridge.pdf
  20. Salman Rushdie: The Arab spring is a demand for desires and rights that are common to all human beings, Telegraph
  21. "Sir Philip Henry Manson-Bahr". Lives of the fellows : Munk's Roll : Volume VI. Royal College of Physicians of London. Retrieved 3 December 2014.
  22. "Obituary Notices: Sir Philip Manson-Bahr, C.M.G., D.S.O., M.A., M.D., F.R.C.P., D.T.M.&H.". British Medical Journal 2 (5525): 1332–1334. 1966. PMC 1944321. PMID 5332525.
  23. "Rugby School - (Development Office)". Retrieved 26 August 2015.
  24. Ruby Fives Association

External links

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