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DRAGON SCHOOL

Dragon School logo

School House at the Dragon School, on Bardwell Road.

The 'Dragon School' is a renowned British coeducational, preparatory school in the city of Oxford, founded in 1877. The school accepts pupils from the age of 8 ("E Block") through to 13 ("A Block"), although an associated 'pre-prep', Lynams, accepts children from age 4. It is primarily known as a boarding school, although it also takes day pupils.
In September 2001, it had 840 pupils, of both sexes. Girls have been admitted as boarders since 1994. It has been described as "England's largest and most famous preparatory school" [1].
Like many other prep schools The Dragon has a long history of traditions, among the more notable being the occasional wide-spread use of nicknames for teachers (including to their face — 'Inky', 'Guv', 'Smudge', 'Bofters', etc.), and calling female teachers 'Ma' (e.g. "Ma Jones") and male teachers 'Mr' (e.g. "Mr Smith"). Temporary teaching assistants (usually in their late teens / early twenties) are known as 'Stooges'.

Contents
History of the school
Headmasters of the Dragon
Past pupils
Notes
External links

History of the school


The Dragon School was founded in 1877, and was originally named the 'Oxford Preparatory School' and sometimes called 'Lynam's Preparatory School'. Soon after its founding, it moved to its present site in Bardwell Road in central North Oxford, just to the west of the River Cherwell. The school was started by a committee of Oxford Dons, among whom the most active was a Mr. George so the first pupils decided to call themselves 'Dragons'.
The school was run for many years by the Lynam family, and led to its becoming "arguably the best known of all preparatory schools".

Headmasters of the Dragon



★ Rev A.E. Clarke 1877–1886

★ C.C. Lynam ('Skipper') 1887–1921

★ A.E. Lynam ('Hum') 1921–1942

★ J.H.R. Lynam ('Joc') 1942–1965

★ R.K. Ingram ('Inky') 1965–1989

★ M.W.A. Gover ('Guv') 1972–1989

★ N.P.V. Richardson 1989–1992

★ H.E.P. Woodcock 1992–1993

★ R.S. Trafford 1993–2002

★ J.R. Baugh 2002–

Past pupils


Former pupils of the Dragon School are referred to as ''Old Dragons''. The following people were students at one time:

Sir John Betjeman (1906–1984), British poet, Poet Laureate from 1972

Sir Lennox Berkeley (1903–1989), composer

Humphry Bowen (1929–2002), British chemist and botanist

Jonathan Bowen (born 1956), British computer scientist

Henry Brett, English polo player, Captain England polo team 2003-2006

Humphrey Carpenter (1946–2005), British journalist, author, and musician

Christopher Cazenove (born 1945), actor

★ Group Captain Leonard Cheshire VC, OM, DSO and two bars, Baron Cheshire (1917–1992), distinguished serviceman, Wing Commander, Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve, and founder of the Leonard Cheshire homes for the disabled

Jack Davenport (born 1973), British actor

R. H. C. Davis (1918-1991), mediaeval historian

Lady Antonia Fraser (born 1932), British historical author

Cyril Gadney, rugby player and president of the RFU

The Rt. Hon. Hugh Gaitskell (1906–1963), British politician, leader of the Labour Party from 1955 to 1963

J.B.S. Haldane (1892–1964), geneticist and evolutionary biologist

Tim Henman OBE (born 1974), British tennis player

Tom Hollander (born 1971), British actor

Sir Tim Hunt, British biochemist and Nobel laureate

Pico Iyer (born 1957), British-born journalist and author

Peter Jay, British television journalist, and former Economics Editor for the BBC

Patrick Jenkin PC (Lord Jenkin of Roding, born 1926), British politician

David Jessel, journalist

Stephen Jessel, journalist

Dom Joly (born 1968), comedian

Sir John Kendrew (1917–1997), molecular biologist and Nobel Laureate

Hugh Laurie (born 1959), British comedian and actor

Naomi Mitchison (nee Haldane, 1897–1999), British novelist and poet

John Paul Morrison (born 1937) Inventor/discoverer of Flow-based programming

Sir John Mortimer (born 1923), British playwright, barrister, and novelist

Sir Roger Norrington (born 1934), musician and conductor

Rageh Omaar (born 1967), journalist and writer

Ronnie Poulton-Palmer (born c.1890; killed in First World War), rugby player

Sir Timothy Raison, British politician, journalist and author

Jack Randle VC, distinguished serviceman, T/Captain, 2nd Bn. The Royal Norfolk Regiment, British Army

Andrew Robinson (born 1957), author and editor

William Leefe Robinson VC (1895–1918), distinguished serviceman, Lieutenant, 39 Squadron, Royal Flying Corps

Nicholas Shakespeare (born 1957), British journalist and novelist

Nevil Shute (1899–1960), British novelist

Sir John Slessor, distinguished serviceman and Marshal of the Royal Air Force

Sir John Smyth VC, distinguished serviceman, Lieutenant, 15th Ludhiana Sikhs, Indian Army

Christopher Tolkien, son of J. R. R. Tolkien

Peter Tranchell (1922–1993), musician, composer, and teacher

Paul Watkins (born 1963), Booker Prize nominated author

Emma Watson (born 1990), actress — Hermione Granger in the Harry Potter film series

Admiral Sir Hugo White, distinguished serviceman

Stephen Wolfram (born 1959), British physicist

Shaun Wylie, mathematician and World War II codebreaker

Baroness Young (1926–2002), British politician

Notes


The Dragon shown on the crest is technically a wyvern, although this is sometimes considered to be a type of dragon.[2]
1. Origin of the school: http://www.dragonschool.org/index.php?option=content&task=section&id=16&Itemid=162
2. http://www.draconika.com/wyverns.php

External links



The Dragon School website

Paul Watkins' ''Stand Before Your God'', which recounts his experience at the Dragon

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