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Twyford School is a co-educational, private, preparatory , located in the village of Twyford, , England.


History
Twyford states itself to be the oldest preparatory school in the United Kingdom. It moved to its present site in 1809, but there has been a school for boys in Twyford since the seventeenth century. twyford During the nineteenth century buildings were added, including a large schoolroom built during the 1820s, and a mid-Victorian chapel. Original buildings are still used and form part of today's campus.

In 1859, while was master of the school, his friend took a photograph of Kitchin and his class of nine boys.Jon A. Lindseth, Grolier Club, Yours very sincerely, C. L. Dodgson (alias "Lewis Carroll") (1998), p. 52: "Photograph of Twyford School boys and the headmaster, George William Kitchin, by Lewis Carroll. Summer 1859. George William Kitchin, headmaster of Twyford School, Hampshire, with the "first class" of nine pupils."


Current status
A series of developments coincided with the admission of girls to the school, and have continued in recent years. Building works and improvements have been undertaken, although historic fabric has generally been retained. In addition the sports grounds and other outdoor facilities have been upgraded.

Twyford is a private school, and a registered charity. It accepts both day pupils and boarders, and has a pre-preparatory school on the same campus for children below the age of five. It has capacity for around 400 pupils between the ages of 3 and 13, with boarders being accepted from the age of 8. It is a Church of England school.


Headmasters
  • To 1692: Rev. Thomas Brown, alias WeatherbyJohn Dudley Browning, Education in the 18th Century (1979), p. 105: "In 1692 the Reverend William Husband, alias Bernard, succeeded the Reverend Thomas Brown, alias Weatherby, as headmaster at Twyford."
  • From 1692: Rev. William Husband, alias Bernard
  • 1855 to 1861: , later Dean of Winchester in 1883, then Dean of Durham from 1894 to 1912, and from 1908 to 1912, Chancellor of the University of Durham George William Kitchin at npg.org.uk, accessed 16 February 2019
  • 1862 to 1887: Reverend Lathom Wickham The Diaries of Lewis Carroll Volume 2 (1954), p. 387: "Lathom Wickham sometime brought a son to matriculate here Charles.
  • 1887: Reverend Charles Townshend Wickham
  • 1939 to 1963: Reverend Robert ("Bob") G. Wickhamhttp://www.twyfordschool.com/History-of-the-School..."In 1961, Bob Wickham’s son, David, joined the staff. It was the intention that David Wickham would take over the school on Bob’s retirement. This happened in 1963"
  • 1963 to 1983: David. T. Wickham MA (Oxon) Public & preparatory schools yearbook 1983, p. 527
  • 1983 to 1996: Peter Richard Douglas Gouldhttp://www.twyfordschool.com/History-of-the-School..."David Wickham retired in 1983, to be replaced by Mr. Richard Gould"
  • 1996 to 2003: Philip Fawkes
  • 2003 to 2009: Dr David Livingstone Good Schools Guide 2003, p. 894: "TWYFORD SCHOOL... From April, 2003 the new head will be Dr David Livingstone (late forties), deputy headmaster of Rugby and a housemaster and geography teacher there. Doctorate in environmental sciences (East Anglia)."http://www.twyfordschool.com/History-of-the-School..."Dr. Livingstone left in July 2009 to take up another Headship. He was replaced by Dr. Steve Bailey, a Senior Housemaster from Winchester College and an extremely experienced educationalist as well as a renowned Olympic historian."
  • 2009 to 2020: Dr Steve Bailey, previously a master at Winchester College
  • 2020 Andrew Harvey

In 1984, Donald Leinster-Mackay noted that "The Wickham family have provided headmasters for Twyford School since 1834.Donald Leinster-Mackay, Old School Ties: Some Nineteenth Century and Early Twentieth Century Links between Public and Preparatory Schools, in British Journal of Educational Studies, Vol. 32, No. 1 (Feb., 1984), pp. 78-83


Notable old boys
See also
  • (1688–1744), poetHoward Erskine-Hill, “Pope, Alexander (1688–1744)”, in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press, 2004)
  • Thomas Talbot (1727–1795), Roman Catholic bishop
  • James Talbot (1726–1790), priest
  • William Loring (1811–1895), Royal Navy officer
  • (1822–1896), lawyer and author
  • Thomas Baring, 1st Earl of Northbrook (1826–1904)
  • (1829–1913), lawyer and zoologist
  • Sir Robert Biddulph (1835–1918), soldier
  • Charles Eamer Kempe (1837–1907) designer of stained glass
  • Wilfrid Scawen Blunt (1840–1922), poet
  • Thomas Garnier (1841–1898), clergyman and cricketer
  • Robert Moberly (1845–1915), priest
  • (1846–1918), clergyman and missionary, brother of Charles Lutwidge Dodgson (Lewis Carroll)
  • Sir Henry Hallam Parr (1847–1914), soldier
  • (1848–1918), composerJeremy Dibble, "Parry, Sir (Charles) Hubert Hastings, baronet (1848–1918)", in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press, 2004)
  • Arthur Woollgar Verrall (1851–1912), classical scholar
  • (1858–1941), soldier
  • Edward Christian (1858–1934), footballer and tea-trader
  • John Rawlinson (1860–1926), lawyer and politician
  • (1862–1927), soldier
  • (1863–1926), Royal Navy officer
  • Edwyn Alexander-Sinclair (1865–1945), Royal Navy officer
  • John Poynder Dickson-Poynder, 1st Baron Islington (1866–1936), Governor General of New Zealand
  • Andrew Hamilton Russell (1868–1960), New Zealand soldier
  • (1880–1965), landowner and politician
  • John Minshull-Ford (1881–1948), soldier and Lieutenant Governor of Guernsey Notable OTs by Twyford Society at twyfordschool.com, archived by archive.org, accessed February 2019
  • (1882–1956), bishop
  • Clarence Napier Bruce (1885–1957), sportsman
  • (1886–1963), soldier and civil servant
  • (1890–1916), soldier, killed in action
  • (1892–1916), cricketer
  • Ernest Fraser Jacob (1894–1971), scholar
  • (1899–1963), bishop
  • (1899–1974), Royal Navy officer
  • Ralph George Scott Bankes (1900–1948), barrister
  • (1905–1988), nuclear physicist
  • (1907–1974), politician
  • Amherst Barrow Whatman (1909–1984), radio engineer
  • (1910-1986), naval officer
  • (1913–1971), naval officer and politician
  • George Rudolf Hanbury Fielding (1915–2005), soldier
  • Terence Edward Armstrong (1920–1996), arctic geographer
  • (1929–2002), aircraft designer
  • Jock Bruce-Gardyne, (1930–1990), politician
  • (born 1930), politicianDouglas Hurd, Memoirs (2003), p. 52
  • (born 1935), BBC overseas correspondent
  • (born 1938), bishop
  • Christopher Orlebar (1945–2018), Concorde pilot
  • Ralph Palmer, 12th Baron Lucas (born 1951), publisher and politician
  • Andrew Longmore (1953–2019), cricketer and journalist


Further reading
  • C. T. Wickham, ed., "The Story of Twyford School 1809-1909" (Winchester: Wykeham Press, 1909)
  • Rev. Robert G Wickham, "Shades of the Prison House: Glimpses of school life at Twyford over the past three hundred years" Https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B00ATZY4A8/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_hsch_vapi_taft_p1_i0 (accessed on 24 June 2019)


External links

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