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Aldenham School is a private and for pupils aged eleven to eighteen, located between and the village of in , England. There is also a preparatory school for pupils from the ages of five to eleven. It was founded in the late sixteenth century by Richard Platt.


History
The school was founded in 1597 by Richard Platt, owner of a City of London brewery and Master of the Worshipful Company of Brewers in 1576 and 1581. In 1596, Queen Elizabeth I granted him to build "the Free and " at Aldenham; the was laid in 1597. Before Platt died in 1600 he obtained an endowment for the School by a covenant between himself and the Brewers' Company. It became a free village for young boys, also taking in private pupils.

In the early 19th century an investigation by the Education Charities Commission of the Poor led to the Tudor Grammar School being demolished and replaced by two new schools: a lower school providing an elementary education for the local population, and a grammar school for fee paying boarders.

In the late 1860s, the Platt estate in St Pancras, which provided the endowment of the school, was compulsorily purchased for the construction of St Pancras railway station, and the had to pay compensation of £91,000, . In a measure described by the headmaster of the time as "a violent act of confiscation", the Endowed Schools Commissioners, acting under the Endowed Schools Act 1869, diverted more than half of this money to other schools. In their scheme approved in 1875, £20,000 went to the North London Collegiate School and Camden School for Girls, £13,333 6s 8d to support secondary education in (see ), £10,000 to , Southgate, and £8,000 to two elementary schools: Medburn School, , and Delrow School, Aldenham.

The school expanded during the 20th century, and in the 1970s girls were admitted, thus paving the way for the school to become fully co-educational.

A new Sixth Form Centre was opened in 2012 providing study and recreation facilities for Sixth Formers under one roof.

In the summer of 2016, restorations were carried out on Beevor's and McGill's House, improving and updating the boarding facilities. Owing to the increasing number of girls in the school, in September 2017 Riding's House became a girls' day house.


Academic results
The 2024 Department for Education figures, which refer to pupils who completed key stage 4, show that the percentage of pupils who achieved "attainment 8" was 42.1%. The percentage for the local authority average was 50.2% and the England average (including state as well as fee-paying schools) was 45.9%


Houses
Aldenham has six senior houses and two junior houses.

Aldenham School operates a house system, with students divided into six senior houses and two junior houses.

  • Beevor's, senior, boarding boys and day boys
  • McGill's, senior, boarding boys and day boys
  • Kennedy's, senior, boarding boys and day boys
  • Paull's, senior, boarding and day girls
  • Riding's, senior, formerly day boys, now day girls
  • Leeman's, senior, day boys
  • Martineau's, junior boarding and day, boys and girls.
  • Woodrow's, junior day boys and girls


Arts and culture
A painting of The Crucifixion was commissioned by the Master of the , for the Aldenham School Chapel in 1958. The painting was sold at Sotheby's in 1993 for £1.3 million and is now in private hands. Aldenham was used to film additional interior scenes in the 1968 classic British film If...., directed by . The most frequently used room was the main school Dining Room containing the portrait of Aldenham's founder Richard Platt. Aldenham was used for scenes in Tom Brown's Schooldays (2005 film). It was used for some scenes in the British satire Greed (2019 film).


Quatercentenary
In 1997, Aldenham celebrated its 400th anniversary. The school was visited during the year by The Princess Royal, who came to open the new artificial turf pitch that had been built as a result of money raised by the appeal.


Aldenham and its influence on football
Football has been a major sport at Aldenham since the dawn of the game. In 1825 Aldenham became the second place, after , to write down rules for its code of football.
(2025). 9780714652498, Routledge.
(2025). 9780415350198, Routledge.
(2025). 9780955637841
The of 1873, edited by Charles W. Alcock, secretary of the Football Association and of Surrey County Cricket Club, states that Aldenham School Football Club was founded in 1825. Consequently, Aldenham School arguably had the earliest organised football club in the history of the game (a distinction often awarded to Sheffield which began 29 years later in 1854). JR Witty, a long-standing member of staff at the Football Association wrote, "It was at such schools as Eton, Harrow, Westminster, Shrewsbury, Winchester and Aldenham and the like that Association Football, governed by the Laws of the Game which now operate, had its real formation."


Masters
Before the school was rebuilt and enlarged in 1824, the head of the school was known as the Master. The founder, Richard Platt, arranged that when there was a vacancy, St John's College, Cambridge, was to nominate three Masters of Arts, from whom the Brewers' Company would appoint one."Richard Platt, Alderman" in Alfred Freer Torry, Founders and benefactors of St. John's college, Cambridge (Cambridge: W. Metcalfe & Son, 1888), p. 14

  • Thomas Neale (1598–1623)
  • Roland Greenwood (1623–1634)
  • Christopher Smyth (1634–1643)
  • Robert Cresswell (1643–1648)
  • Jeremy Collier (1648–1653)
  • William Elliot (1653–1663)
  • Andrew Campion (1663–1673)
  • William Swayne (1673–1678)
  • Randolph Nicoll (1678–1703)
  • John Button (1703–1703)
  • Francis Thompson (1703–1714)
  • Allen Allenson (1714–1738)
  • Gilber Allenson (1738–1757)
  • William Ellis (1757–1767)
  • Joseph Cantrell (1767–1774)
  • Samuel White (1774–1785)
  • Rice Hughes (1785–1792)
  • John Griffin (1792–1799)
  • Methusalem Davies (1800–1823)
  • Joseph Summersby (1823–1825)


Heads of Aldenham School (later, The Aldenham Foundation)
  • Jonathan Wilkinson (1824–1833)
  • Richard Foster (1834–1836)
  • Thomas Spyers (1836–1842)
  • Alfred Leeman (1843–1876)
  • John Kennedy (1877–1899)
  • Alfred Cooke (1900–1920)
  • Harvey Beck (1920–1933)
  • George Riding (1933–1949)
  • Peter Mason (1949–1961)
  • Paul Griffin (1962–1974)
  • Peter Boorman (1974–1983)
  • Michael Higginbottom (1983–1994)
  • Stephen Borthwick(1994–2000)
  • Richard Harman (2000–2006)
  • James Fowler (2006–2022)
  • Alex Hems (2022–current)Aldenham Blog, "New Head for Aldenham Foundation", Aldenham.com, 25 November 2021, accessed 2 June 2022


Notable alumni
  • , FRS, (1824–1911), physician and pathologist.
  • William Josiah Sumner Hammersley (1826–1886), journalist, sportsman, co-founder of Australian rules football
  • Colonel Sir Robert Edis (1839–1927), architect
  • (1849–1930), yachtsman, writer and illustratorStaff writer (1907). "Cowper, Frank, M.A Ox." Who’s Who (UK). A & C Black, London. p. 399
  • (1854–1934), sculptor and goldsmith
  • Sir William Laird Clowes (1856–1905), naval writer
  • Stanley Owen Buckmaster, 1st Viscount Buckmaster (1861–1934), politician, judge and , 1915–1916
  • Arnold McNair, 1st Baron McNair (1885–1975), legal scholar, judge of the International Court of Justice, 1946–1959, and first President of the European Court of Human Rights (1959–1965)
  • (1888–1954), and Director of Research, ICI, 1944–1953
  • (1888–1915), cricketer
  • (1888–1938), cricketer
  • Sir Kenneth Pickthorn, 1st Baronet (1892–1975), historian, politician, and President of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, 1937–1944
  • (1895–1966), cricketer and military officer
  • Colonel (1895–1984), professional soldier and World War I
  • General Sir Richard Gale (1896–1982), General Officer Commanding 6th Airborne Division, 1943–1945, GOC I Airborne Corps, 1945, and Commander-in-Chief, British Army of the Rhine, 1952–1956
  • (1899–1988), first-class cricketer and British Army officer
  • Thomas Rice Henn (1901–1974), literary scholar and writer
  • Lawrence P. Williams (1905–1996), film production designer
  • Raleigh Ashlin Skelton (1906–1970), historian
  • Geoffrey Longfield (1909–1943), first-class cricketer and Royal Air Force officer
  • Jack de Manio (1914–1988), radio broadcaster
  • John Blake (1917–1944), first-class cricketer and Royal Marines officer
  • John Debenham Taylor (1920–2016), Secret Intelligence Service officer
  • Sir Michael Kerr (1921–2002), High Court Judge and Lord Justice of Appeal
  • Flying Officer Leslie Thomas Manser (1922–1942), RAF officer and bomber pilot, awarded a posthumous Victoria Cross for saving the lives of his crew.
  • (born 1923), Colonial Secretary of , 1973–1978, and Chief Justice of Hong Kong, 1978–1988
  • Churton Fairman, known as (1924–1997), radio , author, actor and artist
  • David Blake (1925–2015), first-class cricketer
  • (1925–2001), presenter
  • Colonel Sir Michael McCorkell (1925–2006), Northern Irish soldier
  • Sir Kenneth Warren (1926–2019), politician
  • Sir David Mitchell (1928–2014), politician
  • Geoffrey Hewlett Thompson (born 1929), Bishop of Exeter, 1985–1999
  • Field Marshal Richard Vincent, Baron Vincent of Coleshill (1931–2018), Chief of the Defence Staff, 1991–1992
  • Robert St Clair Grant (1932–2003), comedian, writer and actor.
  • Al-Sultan Abdullah (born 1959), 6th King of Malaysia
  • Tuanku Muhriz ibni Almarhum Tuanku Munawir (born 1948), 11th Yang Di Pertuan Besar
  • Peter Dawes, Bishop of Derby, 1988–1995
  • (1946–2008), High Court Judge
  • , Director of the Surrey Space Centre and chief executive officer of Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd
  • (1955–2018), television presenter, BBC Radio 2 broadcaster
  • (born 1957), actor turned artist; husband of Lady Sarah Armstrong-Jones
  • (1962–2005),
  • Marcus Buckingham (born 1966), author and motivational speaker
  • Baroness (born 1969), Managing Director of West Ham United FC
  • (born 1972), British musician and broadcaster
  • Matt Wallace (born 1990), Professional golfer
  • (born 2003), LaLiga2 footballer
  • Myles Lewis-Skelly (born 2006), Premier League and England footballer


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