Cothill House
Cothill House is a day and boarding boys' independent school for preparatory pupils in Cothill, Oxfordshire, which houses around 220 boys from the ages 8–13.
Cothill House, Cothill | |
---|---|
Location | |
Cothill , , OX13 6JL England | |
Information | |
Type | Private day and boarding school Preparatory School |
Motto | Dum spiro spero ("While I breathe, I hope") |
Religious affiliation(s) | Church of England |
Established | 1860 (moved to present location in 1870) |
Chairman of the governors | Emma McKendrick |
Head Master | Duncan Bailey |
Gender | Boys |
Age | 8 to 13 |
Enrolment | 204 |
Publication | The Cothill Magazine |
Former pupils | Old Cothillians |
Website | http://www.cothill.net/ |
General information
The school offers day and boarding places for around 220 pupils. Facilities include a CDT centre, golf course, BMX track, swimming pool (covered), theatre, six hard tennis courts, 20 music practice rooms, 2 drum rooms, squash court, library, science labs, a computer room and two teaching blocks. A new state of the art Sports Centre is currently being constructed, due to be completed by the summer of 2023. The headmaster's house is attached to the main school.
The school is operated by the Prep Schools Trust, a charity registered in England,[1] which also runs the nearby Chandlings School, Kitebrook Preparatory School, Mowden Hall in Northumberland, and Barfield School in Surrey. The Chair of Trustees is Emma McKendrick, headmistress of Downe House School.
From September 2023, the new headmaster of Cothill will be George May.
Boarding
Cothill House is a full boarding school, meaning pupils go home only for organised weekends, exeats, half-terms and end-of-terms. Day places are offered for Cothill Juniors in Years 4 and 5. Prince William and his brother Prince Harry were registered to attend Cothill, which was the choice of their father Charles, Prince of Wales,[2] but in the end they both attended a rival establishment, Ludgrove, instead.
Notable Old Cothillians
- Maharaja Gaj Singh of Jodhpore, diplomat and politician[3]
- John Bradbury, 2nd Baron Bradbury[4]
- General Sir Hugh Stockwell, Deputy Supreme Allied Commander Europe[5]
- James Charles Macnab of Macnab, Chief of Clan Macnab[6]
- Rupert Thorneloe, soldier
- Alexander Gordon, 7th Marquess of Aberdeen and Temair[7]
- Thomas FitzGerald, Earl of Offaly
- Jeremy Thorpe, British politician, leader of the Liberal Party 1966–76
- Richard Symonds, civil servant.
- Hugh Pym, British journalist and author
- Archie Campbell, Marquess of Lorne, British aristocrat
History
The school was founded in 1860 (in Dry Sandford), before moving to its present location in 1870.
References
- "Prep Schools Trust, registered charity no. 309639". Charity Commission for England and Wales.
- The Ladies' Home Journal, vol. 106 (1989), p. 171
- Dhananajaya Singh, The House of Marwar (Lotus Collection, Roli Books, 1994), p. 204
- George Edward Cokayne, The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom: extant, extinct, or dormant, vol. 13 (The St Catherine Press Ltd, 1940), p. 408
- 'General Sir Hugh Stockwell' in Patricia Burgess & Trish Burgess, eds., The Annual Obituary 1986 (Chicago & London: St James Press, 1989), p. 677
- 'MACNAB of Macnab, James Charles', in Who's Who 2012 (London: A. & C. Black, 2012)
- 'Aberdeen and Temair, 7th Marquess of' in Who's Who 2012 (London: A. & C. Black, 2011