LEIGHTON PARK SCHOOL

(Redirected from Leighton Park)

'Leighton Park School' is an independent coeducational Quaker secondary school for both boarding and day pupils in Reading, Berkshire, England.
The school is located next to the Whiteknights Park campus of University of Reading, situated in a parkland setting close to Reading town centre.
Leighton Park's Headmaster is John Dunston.

Contents
Alumni
Further reading
See also
External links

Alumni



Notable include:

Ronald Allen, Crossroads and Shakespearian actor

Sir John Adye, Head of GCHQ, Chairman of Country Houses Association; Governor of Dean Close School, Cheltenham

Maxwell Armfield, Watercolour Artist early to mid 20th Century

Tony Baldry, Conservative Politician; Former Front Bench Spokesman

Giles Barber, Librarian, The Taylor Institute, University of Oxford. Musicologist

Andrew Barker, Chairman Bankers Trust

Sir John Barlow Bt., Liberal and Conservative politician; Company Chairman

Quentin Bell, Son of Clive and Vanessa Bell; Writer and Art historian at Sussex University; Lived at Charleston nearby

Sir Richard Rodney Bennett, World renowned Composer/pianist

Christopher, 2nd Lord Brain, Peer, Photographic Administrator and Senior member of City Livery Companies

James Shields, South African football player

Hon Michael Brain, Professor McMaster University, Canada

David Buxton, Entomologist and British Council Worker, writer and anthropologist; Son of Roden Buxton, Labour MP. Mother set up Save the Children Fund

Robert Gillmor, President of wildlife artists; Artist and illustator

Jim Broadbent, Hollywood Oscar winning Actor

Basil Bunting, North East born poet

Peter Cadbury, Television entrepreneur

Quentin Davies, Labour (was Conservative) politician; Former Banker and Diplomat

Richard Drabble QC, Government Council; Member of Council of the Bar; Leading QC

R. H. C. Davis, Mediaeval historian at Birmingham University

Prys Edwards, Architect, member of Eisteddfod and senior figure in Welsh affairs

Owen Edwards, Founder Director of Welsh Channel 4

Hugh Foot, Baron Caradon, Life Peer, former Governor of Cyprus and West Indies and UK's Ambassador to the United Nations

Robert Gavron, Baron Gavron, Printer and founder of St Ives Printing firm; Owner of Folio Books and active member of the House of Lords

Michael Foot, Former Labour politician, Party Leader. Also a writer (biographer) and former journalist

Martin Griffits, UN Senior Advisor on World Affiars

Robert Hodgkin, Provost Queen's College, Oxford, Professor of History

Canon Rodney Hunter, Scholarly priest turned missionary of great integrity who was devoted to Central Africa; Ex Chaplian to Exeter College, Oxford who was brutally murdered in Africa

Andrew Forge, Painter, Art Critic and Former Dean of Yale School of Art

Sir Lancelot Fox, Editor of The Lancet

Robert Fox, Editor Various Scholarly Medical Reviews

Prince Hassan Aziz Hassan, Egyptian Prince who remained in Cairo after Farouk's fall; Writer and Highly Accomplished pianist and painter

John Hall, Wartime Fighter Ace and modern day Barrister QC and Head of Chambers

John Heap, Diplomat, polar scientist and Architect of the Polar Treaties

Robin Hodgkin, Mountainer, Headmaster of Abbotsholme School and Writer on education

Tim Horder, Jesus College Oxford, Academic

John Hoyland, Contemporary artist

Noah Huntley, Actor

Paul Huson, Member Writers Guild of America, Academy of Television Arts & Sciences

Robin Langdon-Davies, Air Force pilot, Governor of Oxfam (Honorary Treasurer)

Peter Landon-Davies, Barrister, Head of Chambers. Air Force pilot

Sir David Lean, Oscar-winning film director, Director of Lawrence of Arabia, The Bridge on the River Kwai and Brief Encounter

David Loewi, Managing Director Conran Restaurants

Noel Marshall, Diplomat — Ambassador to Europe

Uday Mehta, MIT teacher — Dept of Political Science

David McFarland, Balliol College, Oxford — Fellow in Animal Behaviour.

Avrion Mitchison, Professor at University College London - physiologist

Nicholas Moore, Poet

Sir Oscar Morland, Diplomat, Ambassador to Japan after WWII

Lesslie Newbigin, World respected missionary and theologian who worked for forty years in Southern India

Nathaniel Parker, Film and television actor

Alexander Penrose, Fellow King's College, Cambridge Deputy Lieutenant Cambridgeshire. Restorer of Country Houses

Sir Roland Penrose, Surrealist painter and Art Collector; Friend of Picasso, Miro, and most of ther fashionable artists of the day, Penrose set up the Institute of Contemporary Arts in Piccadily, London; An avid collector with his brother, Beacus Penrose, most of Roland's collection now is housed in Tate Modern at Bankside in London

Matthew Ponsonby, 2nd Lord Ponsonby of Shulbrede, Member of House of Lords

Karel Reisz, film director

Marshall Sissons, Early to mid British 21st Century Artist

John Whitney, Company Chairman — Friends Provident and Really Useful Group Plc; Theatre Director and former Managing Director of Capital Radio in 1980s

Professor Tim Williamson, Wykeham Professor of Logic at Oxford University

John Wolfers, Famous Literary Agent of 1950s and 1960s based in London's Bedford Square

Stuart Zender, Musician; Founder member of Jarimoquai (bassist)

Slynus, aka Linus O'Brien, Musician — Vancouver-based Techno writer and performer

Further reading



★ Brown, S.W. ''Leighton Park: A history of the school''. (Pub. 1952).

★ ''Leighton Park School, Leighton Park: The first 100 years''. (Pub. 1990).

★ ''The Leightonian'' [school magazine]. (Pub. 1895).

★ ''Old Leightonians Club''. A list of names and addresses of the old boys of Leighton Park School. (Pub. 1945, 1957, 1973, 1990).

See also



List of Friends Schools

Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference

External links



School website

Old Leightonians website

Old Leightonians Cricket Club website

ISBI entry

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