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BLUNDELL'S SCHOOL


'Blundell's School' is a British public school.
It is located in Tiverton in the county of Devon. It was founded by Peter Blundell in 1604, and relocated to its present location on the outskirts of town in 1882. The Old Blundell's School is now in the care of the National Trust, and its forecourt is usually open to visitors. One ex-Blundell's boy was the writer R. D. Blackmore — in ''Lorna Doone'' he used the Blundell's triangular lawn as the stage for a fight between John Ridd and Robin Snell. [1]
Blundell's is also believed to be the model for St Custard's school in the Molesworth series of books. One of his creators, Geoffrey Willans, was a pupil at Blundell's; he was in Petergate house.
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Contents
Notable Old Blundellians
Southern Railway School's Class
External links

Notable Old Blundellians



Richard Newte (c.1613–1678), clergyman

John Newte (1656–1716), clergyman

Richard Venn (1691–1739), clergyman

Bampfylde Moore Carew (1693–1759), impostor and swindler

Thomas Hayter (c.1702–1762), Bishop of Norwich, 1749–1761, and Bishop of London, 1761–1762

Benjamin Incledon (c.1730–1796), Devon antiquary and genealogist

Richard Beadon (1737–1824), Archdeacon of London, 1775–1789, Bishop of Gloucester, 1789–1802, and Bishop of Bath and Wells, 1802–1824

Martin Dunsford (1744–1807), serge maker, Local Historian, Jacobin and antiquary

Stephen Weston (1747–1830), antiquary and classicist

John Rendle (1758–1815), classicist

Thomas Northmore (c.1766–1851), geologist and writer

George Richards (c.1767–1837), poet and clergyman

Sir Matthew Wood (1768–1843), druggist, politician, and Lord Mayor of London, 1815–1816

John Penrose (1778–1859), theologian

William Buckland (1784–1856), Reader in Mineralogy, University of Oxford, 1813–1850, Reader in Geology, University of Oxford, 1818–1850, and Dean of Westminster, 1845–1850

Lieutenant-Colonel William Harding (1792–1886), antiquary and soldier

Sir John Jeremie (1795–1841), Chief Justice of Saint Lucia, 1824–1831, Governor of Sierra Leone, 1840–1841, and anti-slavery campaigner

Jack Russell (1795–1883), clergyman, huntsman, and breeder of the Jack Russell Terrier

Walter Farquhar Hook (1798–1875), Vicar of Coventry, 1828–1837, Vicar of Leeds, 1837–1859, and Dean of Chichester, 1858–1875

Henry Boase (1799–1883), geologist and chemist

Abraham Hayward (1801–1884), barrister, essayist and translator

James Jeremie (1802–1872), Regius Professor of Divinity, University of Cambridge, 1850–1870, and Dean of Lincoln, 1864–1872

Richard Hoblyn (1803–1886), scientific writer

Alexander Knox (1818–1891), journalist and police magistrate

Frederick Temple (1821–1902), Headmaster of Rugby School, 1857–1869, Bishop of Exeter, 1869–1885, Bishop of London, 1885–1896, and Archbishop of Canterbury, 1896–1902

R. D. Blackmore (1825–1900), novelist

Brevet Colonel Charles Cornwallis Chesney (1826–1876), military historian

General Sir George Chesney (1830–1895), soldier

Samuel Reynolds (1831–1897), clergyman and journalist

James Body (1840–1911), clergyman

Edward Hillier (1857–1924), The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation representative in Peking, 1891–1924

Morris Travers (1872–1961), chemist

Eric Gill (1882–1940), typeface designer, sculptor, draughtsman, wood engraver, and social critic

Sir John Squire (1884–1958), poet and literary editor

A.V. Hill (1886–1977), Foulerton Research Professor in Physiology, Royal Society, 1926–1951, and Nobel laureate

C. E. M. Joad (1891–1953), philosopher and broadcaster

Frederick Le Gros Clark (1892–1977), social and industrial reformer

Vernon Bartlett (1894–1983), journalist and broadcaster

Sir Wilfrid Le Gros Clark (1895–1971), Dr Lee's Professor of Anatomy, University of Oxford, 1934–1962

Sir Rex Niven (1898–1993), Senior Resident in Nigeria, 1947–1954, and President and Speaker of the Northern House of Assembly, Nigeria, 1952–1959

John Wyndham (1903–1969), author

Sir Gordon Newton (1907–1998), Editor, ''Financial Times'', 1949–1972

Sir Stephen Spender (1909–1995), poet

Geoffrey Willans (1911–1958), humorist and creator of Nigel Molesworth

G. W. H. Lampe (1912–1980), Edward Cadbury Professor of Theology, University of Birmingham, 1953–1959, Ely Professor of Divinity, University of Cambridge, 1959–1970, and Regius Professor of Divinity, University of Cambridge, 1970–1979

Michael Gilbert (1912–2006) Lawyer and crime writer

General Sir Walter Walker (1912–2001), General Officer Commanding 17th Gurkha Division, 1959–1965, and Commander-in-Chief, Allied Forces, Northern Europe, 1969–1972

Sir Giles Bullard (1926–1992), diplomat

Michael Shanks (1927–1984), journalist and economist

Clem Thomas (1929–1996), Wales rugby player

Christopher Ondaatje (born 1933), author

Michael Mates (born 1934), politician

Richard Sharp (born 1938), rugby union player

Malcolm Moss (born 1943), Conservative MP

Jon Swain (born 1948), journalist and writer (expelled)

Charles Kent (1953–2005), rugby union player

John Van der Kiste (born 1954), author

Miles Tredinnick (born 1955), playwright and rock singer

Vic Marks (born 1955), cricketer

Alison Booker (born 1963), BBC radio presenter

Ben Rice (born 1972), author

Julian de Vere Whiteway-Wilkinson (born 1972), cocaine importer and distributor

Claire Marshall (born 1975), journalist

Southern Railway School's Class


The School lent its name to the thirtythird steam locomotive (Engine 932) 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. 'Blundells', as it was called, was built in 1934.The locomotive bearing the School's name was withdrawn in the early 1960s.

External links



Blundell's School website

2001 UK:Independent Schools Inspectorate Report

Current Information from UK:Independent Schools Council

Julian de Vere Whiteway-Wilkinson Article relating to Julian de Vere Whiteway-Wilkinson's arrest and conviction

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