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'''Hillbrow School''' was an English boys' [[preparatory school]] established in 1859 in the Midland town of [[Rugby]]. The founder was John William Joseph Vecquerary, a [[Prussian]] by birth, who had been recently recruited as a modern languages master at [[Rugby School]], to which it was a feed school, although he remained in post at Rugby.<ref>[[Donald P. Leinster-Mackay]] (1984) ''The rise of the English prep school'', Falmer Press</ref> The name Hillbrow, taken from the name of the building erected to house the school, was in use by the time of his successor, T.J. Eden, who according to Duncan Grant, one of its most famous pupils, ran "a Spartan institution with only about forty pupils".<ref>[[Frances Spalding]] (1997) ''Duncan Grant, A Biography'', Random House UK ISBN 0-7126-6640-0 [http://www.nytimes.com/books/first/s/spalding-grant.html]</ref>
'''Hillbrow School''' was an English boys' [[preparatory school]] established in 1859 in the Midland town of [[Rugby, Warwickshire|Rugby]]. The founder was John William Joseph Vecquerary, a [[Prussian]] by birth, who had been recently recruited as a modern languages master at [[Rugby School]], to which it was a feed school, although he remained in post at Rugby.<ref>[[Donald P. Leinster-Mackay]] (1984) ''The rise of the English prep school'', Falmer Press</ref> The name Hillbrow, taken from the name of the building erected to house the school, was in use by the time of his successor, T.J. Eden, who according to Duncan Grant, one of its most famous pupils, ran "a Spartan institution with only about forty pupils".<ref>[[Frances Spalding]] (1997) ''Duncan Grant, A Biography'', Random House UK ISBN 0-7126-6640-0 [http://www.nytimes.com/books/first/s/spalding-grant.html]</ref>


==Twentieth century==
==Twentieth century==

Revision as of 10:03, 2 April 2012

Hillbrow School was an English boys' preparatory school established in 1859 in the Midland town of Rugby. The founder was John William Joseph Vecquerary, a Prussian by birth, who had been recently recruited as a modern languages master at Rugby School, to which it was a feed school, although he remained in post at Rugby.[1] The name Hillbrow, taken from the name of the building erected to house the school, was in use by the time of his successor, T.J. Eden, who according to Duncan Grant, one of its most famous pupils, ran "a Spartan institution with only about forty pupils".[2]

Twentieth century

In the First World War the school moved to Overslade House, also in Rugby, and in 1922 the school was taken over by W.S. Dixon. In 1940 a landmine, or perhaps two, exploded some way from Overslade, and blew out all the windows. The school was thereafter evacuated to Featherstone Castle in Northumberland. George Bennett took over as headmaster in 1953, but was quickly succeeded by D.N. Clark-Lowes. In 1961 the school amalgamated with St Nicholas's School and moved to their premises at Ridley Hall, Northumberland. In 1962 D.N. Clark-Lowes resigned, and the name Hillbrow ceased to be used. St Nicholas's closed a few years later.

Famous pupils

Famous pupils under Eden's headmastership (before 1922) were Rupert Brooke (1887-1915), First World War poet, Duncan Grant (b. 21 Jan 1885), artist, James Strachey (b. 26 Sept 1887), psychoanalyst, and translator and editor of the works of Sigmund Freud, Robert Graves (b. 24 Jul 1895), poet and writer, and Hubert Leslie (1890-1976), silhouettist.[3]

References and sources

  1. ^ Donald P. Leinster-Mackay (1984) The rise of the English prep school, Falmer Press
  2. ^ Frances Spalding (1997) Duncan Grant, A Biography, Random House UK ISBN 0-7126-6640-0 [1]
  3. ^ school list