List of masters of Gresham's School

The original school, founded in Sir John Gresham's manor house at Holt, sketched in 1838

This is a list of the Masters (later Headmasters) and Ushers (later Second Masters) of Gresham's School, Holt.

Masters, 1562–1900

Headmasters, 1900 to date

Ushers

  • 1602–1606: Nicholas Stephenson[1]
  • ? to 1621: Reverend John Watson[1]
  • 1627–1632: Reverend Thomas Cooper[1]
  • 1632–1638: Nicholas Davie[1]
  • 1638: Reverend Thomas Cooper (again)[1]
  • 1638–1639: Henry Luce[1]
  • 1640: Henry Luce (again)[1]
  • 1640–1643: Timothy Cutler[1]
  • 1643–1644: Reverend Thomas Cooper (again)[1][8] - hanged in 1650 as a Royalist rebel
  • 1658–1660: Reverend Henry Mazy[1]
  • 1661–1665: Reverend John Goodman[1]
  • 1689–1692: Thomas Kellway[1]
  • 1692: William Chambers[1]
  • 1692–1695: Thomas Garrett[1]
  • 1695: William Rowland[1]
  • 1696–1697: Thomas Turner[1]
  • 1697–1704: Thomas Plumstead[1]
  • 1705–1708: John Reynolds[1]
  • 1708: John Fox[1]
  • 1708–1713: William Selth[1]
  • 1713–1714: John Spurling[1]
  • 1714–1715: William Chaplyn[1]
  • c. 1718: John Brooke[1]
  • c. 1725: John Holmes[1]
  • 1729: Edward Read[1]
  • 1770s: Christopher Stangroom[1]
  • 1796–1801: David Kinnebrook[1]
  • 1810–1811: Reverend Robert Davies[1]
  • 1811–1813: Peter Barney[1]
  • 1813–1821: Daniel Carr[1][9]
  • 1821: James Sturley[1]
  • 1821–1828: Reverend Thomas Beckwith[1]
  • 1828–1843: Reverend William Robert Taylor[1]
  • 1843–1851: John Slann (first Second Master)[1]

Second Masters

  • 1843–1851: John Slann (last Usher)[1]
  • 1851: William Allen Rudkin[1]
  • 1851–1857: John Hubbert Kent[1]
  • 1858–1860: J. Rodney Phillips[1]
  • 1860: Berney Wodehouse Raven[1]
  • 1860–1862: Charles Frederick Furbank[1]
  • 1862–1863: Frederick Roy Dowson[1]
  • 1863–1864: Rev. George W. Anstiss[1][10]
  • 1864–1865: Henry David Jones[1]
  • 1865–1866: William Henry Hooper[1]
  • 1866–1867: Matthew Walter Tunnicliffe[1][11]
  • 1867: William Remington Backhouse[1]
  • 1867: John Robinson Wells[1]
  • 1867–1869: Robert Stokes[1]
  • 1869–1871: Robert Campbell Conolly[1]
  • 1871–1872: John Lowndes[1]>[12]
  • 1872–1880: Stephen Bousfield[1]
  • 1881–1900: John Henry Howell[1]
  • 1900–1907: John Goodrich Wemyss Woods[1]
  • 1907–1919: James Ronald Eccles, later headmaster[1]
  • 1919–1928: John Chambré Miller[1][13]
  • 1928–1942: Joseph Foster[1]
  • 1942–1963: A. Bruce Douglas[1][14]
  • 1963–1970: Bernard Sankey[1]
  • 1970–1977: Paul V. A. Colombé[1]
  • 1977–1985: John Coleridge[1]
  • 1985–2001: Richard N. K. Copas[1]

Deputy Heads (Pastoral)

Deputy Heads (Academic)

Chaplains

Headmasters of the Junior School

The Junior School was reorganized into the Preparatory School and the Pre-Preparatory School in 1984.

Headmasters of the Preparatory School

Heads of the Pre-Preparatory School

Housemasters and staff, 2011

Boys' houses[21]
House Housemaster House Tutor Matron
Howson's Mr A. Stromberg BSc Mr C. Reed BSc Mrs S. Lancaster
Farfield Mr D. Atkinson Mr. D. Saker Mrs J. Straton
Tallis Mr P. Laidler Mr L. Tao Mrs B. Aldridge
Woodlands Mr F. J. V. Retter BA (Exeter) Mr R. West MMath (Warwick) Mrs T. Cameron
Girls' houses[21]
House Housemistress House Tutor Matron
Edinburgh Mrs S. Radley BEd Miss L. B. Roberts BA, ARCM Mrs N. Bancalari
Britten Mrs J. E. Flower Miss E. Thornbury Mrs J. Wardlow
Oakeley Mrs K. Mousley Mrs L. Barden Ms D. Bunkell

Notable masters

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 I Will Plant Me a Tree: an Illustrated History of Gresham's School by S. G. G. Benson and Martin Crossley Evans (James & James, London, 2002)
  2. Atkins was dead by 1820: see Urban, Sylvanus, Gentleman's Magazine volume XC, for January to June 1820 (London, John Nichols & Son, 1820) Obituary, p. 477 online: "May 5 In Great Ormond street, the relict of Mr Atkins, formerly Master of Sir John Gresham's Grammar School, at Holt, in Norfolk."
  3. Benjamin Pullan was educated at Wakefield Grammar School, was elected a Cave Scholar on 19 January 1805, was Senior Optime in 1808, and was described as "Master of Holt Grammar School, Norfolk, in 1837". (Peacock, Matthew, 'The History of Wakefield Grammar School', Milnes, 1892, p. 182)
  4. Burke, Edmund, Annual Register for 1858, p. 511 (London, Rivington's, 1859): [Promotions, July 1858] "Rev. C. A. Elton to be Head Master of the Gresham Grammar School, Holt, Norfolk."
  5. Roberts, Rev. R.J., M.A., Head Master, Holt Grammar School: from The Teachers List (1872) p. 216
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Who's Who 2003 (A. & C. Black, London, 2003)
  7. Born 10 July 1939 (Birthdays in The Independent dated July 10, 1999, accessed 9 January 2009
  8. CCED for Joseph Hall, Bishop of Norwich: "1643 / Subsc / Cooper, Thomas / Holt Grammar School / Schoolmaster"
  9. Notice in Norwich Mercury newspaper dated December 8, 1821:"D. CARR Begs leave respectfully to inform the inhabitants of Fakenham, and the Public in general, that after the Christmas Vacation, he intends opening a BOARDING and DAY SCHOOL, in that Place, for the reception of YOUNG GENTLEMEN... D. CARR has spent six years and a half as Sub-Master in the Holt Grammar School, under the Rev. B. Pullan; and a year and a half as one of the Masters in the Norwich grammar School, under the Rev. E. Valpy, by whom he was also formerly instructed. NB Letters addressed to D. Carr, Holt, will receive immediate attention."
  10. 'Ecclesiastical News' in Liverpool Mercury, Saturday, February 13, 1864; Issue 4997
  11. Matthew Walter Tunnicliffe of St John's College, Cambridge, graduated BA 1866; second master of Holt Grammar School, Norfolk, 1866-67; curate of Ringstead, Norfolk, 1867-69, of Elmley, Yorks, 1869-71; Vicar of Earlsheaton, Yorks., 1871; died 1891: from Leeds Grammar School Admission Books, from 1820 to 1900 (Thoresby Society, 1906) p. 139
  12. "Lowndes, J., B.A., Assistant Master, Holt Grammar School": from The Teachers List (1872) p. 206
  13. Died 1928: obituary in The Times, Sept. 6, 1928; pg. 15; Issue 44991; col A
  14. Died 1963: see L. Bruce Lockart, Mr. A. B. Douglas in The Times, Friday, Dec 27, 1963; pg. 10; Issue 55893; col D
  15. born 9 May 1886 (habershons.com); educated Harrow School and Clare College, Cambridge
  16. Benson, I Will Plant Me a Tree, p. 56 & pp. 92-93: Linnell was also the editor of the School Register published in 1955
  17. Previously assistant chaplain at Repton School: see The Times, Tuesday, Nov 24, 1959; pg. 14; Issue 54626; col E
  18. Sandford Link Archive Issue 37 February 1985 at sandfordonthames.co.uk, accessed 9 January 2009
  19. Born 1913; author of A Guide to Divinity Teaching (London, SPCK, 1962)
  20. The Times, Tuesday, May 10, 1983; pg. 14; Issue 61528; col C
  21. 1 2 Senior Staff list at greshams.com
  22. 1 2 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press, 2004)
  23. 1 2 The History and Register of Gresham's School, 1555–1954 (Ipswich, 1955)
  24. Geoffrey Shaw (Composer, Arranger) at www.bach-cantatas.com
  25. BUSHELL, Warin Foster, in Who Was Who 1897-2007 online, retrieved 24 May 2008 from BUSHELL, Warin Foster (2008)
  26. Dalziel Llewellyn Hammick, 1887-1966 by E. J. Bowen in Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society, vol. 13, November 1967, pp. 107–124
  27. The Times, Saturday, January 13, 1917, issue 41375, p. 4, col. B
  28. According to W. H. Auden's The Map of All My Youth (Clarendon Press, 1990, p. 117), McEachran arrived at Gresham's as a master in September 1924. His books include The Civilized Man (1930), The Destiny of Europe (1932), The Life and Philosophy of Johann Gottfried Herder (1939), Freedom - The Only End, Spells for Poets, and More Spells
  29. Obituary of Boris Ford in College Record 1998 of Downing College, Cambridge (accessed 22 October 2007)
  30. Professor Richard D'Aeth, obituary in The Independent dated May 5, 2008
  31. Who’s Who 1997 (A. & C. Black, London, 1997) p. 1186
  32. THOMPSON, (Hugh) Patrick in Who's Who 2007 online (accessed 28 September 2007)
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/6/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.