BRADFIELD COLLEGE


'Bradfield College' is a coeducational public school located in the small village of Bradfield in the English county of Berkshire.
The college was founded in the 1850s by Thomas Stevens, Rector and Lord of the Manor of Bradfield. It now has some 500 male and 120 female pupils.

Contents
Overview
The Greek Play
In the News
Trivia
Southern Railway School's Class
Notable Old Bradfieldians
See also
External links

Overview


The school, which admits pupils between the ages of 13–18, has been co-educational throughout since September 2005. All first years pupils (fourth formers) enter a first year boarding house (Faulkners) and then, from the second year (the shell), they move to their main boarding houses for the remaining four years.
'Bradfield's Motto:' ''Benedictus es, O Domine doce me Statuta Tua'', which roughly translates as, ''You are blessed, Lord: teach me your laws''.
(Blessed art thou Oh Lord: Teach me thy statutes)

The Greek Play


Bradfield is most renowned for its Greek theatre and triennial Greek play, which is performed on a three-year rota ('presumably', says Tatler's Good Schools Guide, 'it takes that long to build up the stamina again) in conjunction with Cambridge University and Oxford University respectively. Started to save the school from bankruptcy, the Greek plays have been staged by the school for almost 150 years. The students who act in it receive no formal training in speaking Ancient Greek, and have only nine months to learn the lines and direction, as well as keeping up with their other studies. The 2006 play was Euripides’s Medea, directed by John Taylor. It has been noted for its groundbreaking advances, including the addition of projected subtitles and the bold decision of incorporating the orchestra into the skene, using a ramp covered in sand and flooded to symbolise the sea and Medea's situation of being "between places".

In the News


In 2005 the school was embroiled in the so-called “Sevenoaks survey†fee-fixing scandal, exposed by ''The Times''. They were eventually found guilty, with fifty other schools, of breaking the Competition Act (1998).
The Commission for Social Care Inspection, which routinely inspects standards at both private and state boarding schools, praised Bradfield, in an otherwise damning report, for its "safe and caring environment" and for endeavouring to "develop a more modern approach to boarding". The ''Daily Telegraph'' reported that, ‘against the relevant 47 standards, Bradfield achieved 16 gold stars. In only two areas was it judged to have "minor shortcomingsâ€.

Trivia


Former footballing hardman turned Hollywood actor, Vincent Peter Jones, known as Vinnie Jones, once worked in the kitchens at the college. 'He got me in at a boys’ public school, Bradfield College, near Reading, Berkshire. Neil’s dad, Tom, was the hairdresser who called at the school a couple of times a week. He went to see the bursar and got me a job: washing pots and pans!' explains Jones in his hard-hitting autobiography ''Vinnie: My Life'' (Headline Books 2001). Although at the time Jones was at a particularly low-ebb – the Bradfield days appear in a chapter entitled ‘Life in a Bin Liner’ – he writes with some tenderness about the friends he made, and the room in which he lived: 'It was built on a corner and overlooked the gardens and the sports field, which was lovely, and there was a river [the pang] at the bottom.'
In 2005, girls taking German A-level at Bradfield scored the highest results of any independent school in the country.

Southern Railway School's Class


The School lent its name to the twentyfourth steam locomotive (Engine 923) in the Southern Railway's Class V of which there were 40. This Class was also known as the Schools Class because all 40 of the class were named after prominent English public schools. 'Bradfield', as it was called, was built in 1934. It was originally named ''Uppingham'', but the name was changed following objections from that school.[1]The locomotive bearing the School's name was withdrawn in the early 1960s.

Notable Old Bradfieldians



George Blackall Simonds (1843–1929), Sculptor

Edward Armstrong (1846–1928), historian and Pro-Provost, Queen's College, Oxford

Archibald Robertson (1853–1931), Bishop of Exeter

Stephen Coleridge (1854–1936), author, anti-vivisectionist and co-founder of the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children

Cecil Tyndale-Biscoe (1863–1949), missionary in Kashmir

Gordon Craig (1872–1966), theatre director, stage designer and wood engraver

H. Pelham Lee (1877–1953), internal combustion engine pioneer and founder of the Coventry Climax Engines company

Zachary Nugent Brooke (1883–1946), historian

William Ormston Backhouse (1885–1962), agricultural geneticist

Cyril Falls (1888–1971), military historian

Admiral of the Fleet Bruce Fraser, Baron Fraser of North Cape (1888–1981), Chief of the Naval Staff

George Grey Wornum (1888–1957), architect

Air Chief Marshal Sir Christopher Courtney (1890–1976), Royal Air Force officer

Air Chief Marshal Sir Guy Garrod (1891–1965), Royal Air Force officer

Oscar Henderson (1891–1969), Royal Navy officer, Private Secretary to the Governor of Northern Ireland, and television executive

G. Norman Knight (1891–1978), civil servant and indexer

Air Chief Marshal Sir Roderic Hill (1894–1954), Royal Air Force officer

Hubert Foss (1899–1953), composer and music publisher

Basil Gray (1904–1989), British Museum curator

Robin Ironside (1912–1965), painter and writer

Brigadier Mike Calvert (1913–1998), Chindits and Special Air Service commander

Terence Reese (1913–1996), bridge player and writer

Martin Wight (1913–1972), historian and international affairs expert

Vivian H. H. Green (1915–2005), historian and Rector of Lincoln College, Oxford

Morrice James, Baron Saint Brides (1916–1989), High Commissioner in Pakistan, India and Australia

Charles Phillips (1916–1994), neurophysiologist

George Paine (1918–1992), Registrar General

Sir Martin Ryle (1918–1984), Astronomer Royal

Richard Adams (born 1920), author

Marshal of the Royal Air Force Sir Andrew Humphrey (1921–1977), Chief of the Air Staff and Chief of the Defence Staff

Tony Hancock (1924–1968), comedian

Sir Michael Marshall (1930–2006), politician

Sir John Nott (born 1932), Secretary of State for Defence

Sir Cyril Townsend (born 1937), politician

David Owen, Baron Owen (born 1938), Foreign Secretary and co-founder of the SDP

Graham Roope (1946–2006), Surrey and England cricketer

Nick Clarke (1948–2006), journalist and BBC Radio 4 presenter

Stephen Milligan (1948–1994), auto-asphyxiated Conservative MP

Louis de Bernières (born 1954), novelist

Peter Ainsworth (born 1956), Conservative Member of Parliament for East Surrey and member of the Shadow Cabinet

Mark Nicholas (born 1957), cricketer and TV presenter

Charles Tannock (born 1957) Conservative Member of the European Parliament

Richard Benyon (born 1960), Conservative Member of Parliament for Newbury

Tim Dellor (born 1975), BBC Local Radio presenter

Claudia Harrison, actress

Will Lyons (born 1976), wine writer

Kaddy Lee-Preston, TV weather presenter

Suresh Guptara, novelist

James Peet, god
James Wilding - Headmaster

See also



Independent school (UK)

List of independent schools in the United Kingdom

External links



Bradfield College website

Schoolsguidebook

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