MALVERN COLLEGE


'Malvern College' is a coeducational English public school, founded in 1865. It is located in Malvern, Worcestershire. It is not to be confused with Malvern Girls' College, which is a separate school.

Contents
History
Houses
Innovations
Notable alumni
Southern Railway School's Class
External links

History


The school opened in January 1865 to two dozen boys and half a dozen masters. Initially, there were two Houses but expansion was rapid and by 1877 there were six Houses and 290 boys.
Further expansion of pupil numbers and buildings continued after the Great War, but during the Second World War the College suffered more than any other comparable independent school, being twice ejected and shrinking to half its former size. Required to make way for the Admiralty between October 1939 and July 1940, it found a temporary home at Blenheim Palace. The College underwent a further period of exile from May 1942 to July 1946. Ordered out at one week's notice, the school was housed with Harrow School. The College's premises were then occupied by the Telecommunications Research Establishment (TRE), and the modern Defence Research Agency is still sited on former College land.
Until 1992, it was an all boys' school, taking boys from 13 to 18 years old. In 1992, it merged with Ellerslie Girls’ School and Hillstone Prep school to become coeducational with pupils from 5 to 18 years old.

Houses


Malvern is considered a bit of an oddity, in that the names of houses are numbers (1-9) with the exception of School House. There are six boys and four girls houses. Nine are situated on the school's campus while House 7, uniquely lies further out close to the school's '9 acre' field.

★ No.1- Red and white (boys)

★ No.2- Blue and white (boys)

★ No.3- Light Blue (girls)

★ No.4- Maroon (girls)

★ No.5- Black and white (boys)

★ No.6- Yellow (girls)

★ No.7- Black and purple (boys)

★ No.8- Pink (girls)

★ No.9- Black and green (boys)

★ School House (SH)- Black, Blue and Purple (boys)
Planning permission has been granted for the building of an additional two houses.

Innovations


The school has played a significant role in the development of educational projects. In 1963 it was the first independent school to have a language laboratory, it pioneered Nuffield Physics in the 1960s, Science in Society in the 1970s, and the Diploma of Achievement in the 1990s.
Also at the beginning of the 1990s, Malvern College became one of the first schools in Britain to offer the choice between the International Baccalaureate and A-Levels in the Sixth Form.
Each summer the staff and some older pupils run a summer school, Young Malvern, which incorporates many sports, activities and learning experiences.

Notable alumni


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James Jesus Angleton, spymaster

Michael Arlen, author, playwright

Francis William Aston, Physicist, 1922 winner of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry

Humphry Berkeley, politician, humourist

Benedict Carpenter, sculptor

Aleister Crowley, occultist

Tim Culley, contestant on Big Brother

Denholm Elliott, actor

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, journalist

Prince Christian of Hanover, and Prince Ernst August of Hanover

Godfrey Martin Huggins, 1st Viscount Malvern, Prime Minister of Southern Rhodesia

C. S. Lewis, novelist, scholar, Christian apologist

Reginald Erskine Foster, the only man to have captained England at both cricket and football

★ "Fostershire", the Foster brothers who played for Worcestershire County Cricket Club.

J.F.C. Fuller, soldier, military historian, strategist, occultist

Sidney Goodsir Smith, poet, artist

Christmas Humphries, lawyer, Buddhist author

Rory Laing, failed applicant on The Apprentice

Ian MacLaurin, Baron MacLaurin of Knebworth, businessman

James Meade, economist, 1977 winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics

Jeremy Paxman, journalist, broadcaster, author

★ Sir Ghillean Prance, Botanist

Najib Tun Razak, Deputy Prime Minister of Malaysia

James Rousseau, model

Dominic Sandbrook, historian and author

Oliver Selfridge, computer scientist

George Simpson-Hayward, England cricketer

Peter Temple-Morris, Baron Temple-Morris, politician

Roger Tolchard, England cricketer

Bernard Weatherill, politician, Speaker of the British House of Commons

John Wheeler-Bennett, historian

Southern Railway School's Class


The School lent its name to the thirtieth steam locomotive (Engine 929) 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. 'Malvern', as it was called, was built in 1934.The locomotive bearing the School's name was withdrawn in the early 1960s.

External links



Malvern College official web site

Malvern College Preparatory official web site

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