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Summer Fields School

Summer Fields School

FieldValue
nameSummer Fields School
logoSummer Fields School Escutcheon.png
logo_size120px
imageFile:Summer Fields from playing-fields.jpg
captionThe school from its playing fields
motto*Mens sana in corpore sano*
established1864
typePrivate preparatory school
Boarding school
head_labelHeadmaster
headDavid Faber MA (Balliol College, Oxford)
r_head_labelDeputy Headmaster
r_headDavid Woolley MA (Durham)
chair_labelChairman of the Governors
chairA.E. Reeks, MA, FRSA
founderArchibald Maclaren
addressMayfield Road
cityOxford
countryEngland
postcodeOX2 7EN
urn123293
genderBoys
lower_age4
upper_age13
housesCase, Congreve, Maclaren, Moseley
free_label_1Former pupils
free_1Old Summerfieldians
websitehttp://www.summerfields.com/

Boarding school

Summer Fields is a fee-paying boys' independent day and boarding preparatory school in Summertown, Oxford. It was originally called Summerfield and used to have a subsidiary school, Summerfields, St Leonards-on-Sea (known as "Summers mi").

History

Summerfield became a boys' preparatory school in 1864, with seven pupils. Its owner, Archibald MacLaren, had been educated at Dollar Academy and was a fencing teacher who ran a gymnasium in Oxford. He believed strongly in the importance of physical fitness. His wife, Gertrude, was a classical scholar and teacher, a daughter of David Alphonso Talboys. The school motto is Mens sana in corpore sano, "A healthy mind in a healthy body".

The school grew and needed more staff, two of whom married into the Maclaren family: the Reverend Dr Charles Williams ("Doctor"), who took over the scholarship form from Mrs Maclaren and married Mabel Maclaren in 1879, and the Reverend Hugh Alington, who married Margaret Maclaren in 1885 and took over the boys' games. The school remained in the hands of the Maclaren, Williams, and Alington families for its first 75 years.

At the end of the 19th century, "Doctor" became headmaster and there was much building at the school. A second school, "Summers mi", was opened at St Leonards-on-Sea, Sussex, for boys to benefit from the sea air. In 1918 Doctor passed the headmastership on to Hugh Alington. There was a lean spell in the 1930s, and numbers fell, but John Evans and Geoffrey Bolton ("G.B.") took over in 1939. During the Second World War three other schools were evacuated to Summer Fields – Famborough School, Hampshire, Summers mi, and St Cyprian's School from Eastbourne – and this restored the numbers.

In 1955, the school became a charitable trust, with a board of governors, including Harold Macmillan, who had been at the school as a boy and was soon to become prime minister.

Drawing of Summer Fields from ''A Century of Summer Fields'', 1964

During the 1960s, Pat Savage was headmaster, with the assistance of Jimmy Bell and Pat Marston. By the centenary year in 1964, the school's appearance had changed relatively little (see illustration), but it was thriving and energetic enough to celebrate with a hardback book of 332 pages, with contributions from "O.S.", or Old Summerfieldians, including stories about Archibald Wavell, 1st Earl Wavell, and Harold Macmillan, and a friendly greeting in verse from the arch-rival Horris Hill School. A former pupil recollected Pat Marston as follows:

In 1975, Nigel Talbot Rice took over as headmaster. He put the school on a sound financial footing through a series of appeals which paid for an ambitious building programme: new classrooms, the Macmillan Hall and Music Centre, an indoor swimming-pool, the Wavell Arts and Technology Centre (named after Earl Wavell), and the Sports Hall. In 1997, Talbot Rice retired and was succeeded by Robin Badham-Thornhill. In 2010 David Faber, an old boy and governor, took over as headmaster.

In 2002 a new lodge called "Savage's" was built. Later a new year group was added at the bottom of the school.

Summer Fields today

The boys are organised into four "leagues". One of them is named Maclaren, after the Founder; the others are Moseley, after Henry Moseley, Congreve, after William La Touche Congreve, and Case, after William Sterndale Case, a master from 1910 to 1922. Each league has its own identifying colour: Case red, Congreve yellow, Maclaren green, and Moseley blue. In leagues, the boys wear a polo shirt in the league colour, along with the rest of the uniform, blue corduroys, and black shoes. On Sundays as well as on special days, such as the school concert, and the end of term, boys wear a tweed jacket, with a light blue coloured shirt, black shoes, and grey flannel trousers. Their ties are in their league colours.

The school has traditionally been a rival of the Dragon School, which is also in north Oxford.

Old Summerfieldians

:See also :Category:People educated at Summer Fields School

  • Gubby Allen (1902–1989), cricketer
  • Julian Amery (1919–1996), politician
  • Ralph Assheton, 1st Baron Clitheroe (1901–1984), politician
  • Anthony Asquith (1902–1968), film director
  • Cyril Asquith, Baron Asquith of Bishopstone (1890–1954), judge
  • Cuthbert Bardsley (1907–1991), bishop
  • Tom Parker Bowles (1974– ), writer
  • Harold Caccia, Baron Caccia (1905–1990), diplomat
  • Sir Olaf Caroe (1892–1981), colonial administrator
  • Mark Colvin (1952–2017), broadcaster and journalist
  • William La Touche Congreve VC, DSO, MC (1891–1916)
  • Hugh Dalton, (1887–1962), politician
  • Robin Durnford-Slater (1902–1984), admiral
  • David Faber (1961– ), politician, schoolmaster
  • Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall (1965–), chef and food writer
  • Neville Ford (1906–2000), cricketer
  • Harold Freeman-Attwood (1897–1963), soldier
  • Julian Grenfell (1888–1915), poet
  • Field Marshal Lord Inge, Chief of the General Staff
  • Monsignor Ronald Knox (1888–1957), theologian
  • Sir Christopher Lee (1922–2015), actor
  • Harold Macmillan (1894–1986), Prime Minister
  • Sir William Macpherson (1926–2021), judge and Chief of the Clan Macpherson
  • Patrick Macnee (1922–2015), actor
  • Henry Gwyn Jeffreys Moseley (1887–1915), physicist
  • Adam Nicolson (1957–), writer
  • Sir Andrew Noble, 1st Baronet (1831–1915), physicist
  • Victor Pasmore (1908–1998), artist and architect
  • Sir James Pitman (1901–1985), inventor of the Initial Teaching Alphabet
  • Archibald Wavell, 1st Earl Wavell (1883–1950), Viceroy of India

File:Henry Moseley.jpg|Henry Moseley, physicist File:Archibald Wavell2.jpg|Archibald Wavell, Viceroy of India File:The National Archives UK - CO 1069-1-17(cropped).jpg|Harold Macmillan, Prime Minister File:Christopher Lee at the Berlin International Film Festival 2013.jpg|Christopher Lee, actor File:Hugh fearnley whittingstall.jpg|Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall, celebrity chef

Notes

References

Sources

  • Summerfields School Register 1864-1960, Oxonian Press 1960
  • Nicholas Aldridge, Time to spare? A History of Summer Fields, 1989

References

  1. McIntosh, Peter C.. "MacLaren, Archibald".
  2. "History". Summer Fields School.
  3. (2 September 2015). "'Dear Harry...' - Henry Moseley: A Scientist Lost to War". Oxford Museum of the History Of Science.
  4. Macfarlane, Alan. (2013). "Becoming a Dragon".
  5. Swanton, E. W.. (1985). "Gubby Allen: Man of Cricket". Hutchinson/Stanley Paul.
  6. Thorpe, D. R.. (2011). "Supermac: The Life of Harold Macmillan". Pimlico.
  7. (1981). "The Dictionary of National Biography". Oxford University Press.
  8. Barber, Lynn. (1 October 2006). "Eating like a king". [[The Observer]].
  9. Hannan, Liz. (12 February 2011). "Lunch with ... Mark Colvin". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  10. "Maj W La T Congreve". [[Imperial War Museum]].
  11. 'Faber, David James Christian', in ''Who's Who 2010'' (London: A. & C. Black, 2009)
  12. (25 May 2007). "It's yesterday once more". The Guardian.
  13. . (22 July 2022). ["Obituaries - Field Marshal Lord Inge"](https://www.telegraph.co.uk/obituaries/2022/07/21/field-marshal-lord-inge-former-head-armed-forces-who-resisted/). *The Daily Telegraph*.
  14. Waugh, Evelyn. (2012). "The Life of Right Reverend Ronald Knox". Penguin Books.
  15. [[Jonathan Rigby. Rigby, Jonathan]], ''Christopher Lee: The Authorised Screen History'', Reynolds & Hearn, 2001 and 2003
  16. (1987). "Maurice Harold Macmillan, First Earl of Stockton. 10 February 1894 – 29 December 1986". [[Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society]].
  17. "The Honourable Sir William Macpherson of Cluny (and Blairgowrie)". Frost's Scottish Who's Who.
  18. (26 June 2015). "Patrick Macnee, actor – obituary". [[The Daily Telegraph]].
  19. Rutherford, Ernest. "Moseley, Henry Gwyn Jeffreys".
  20. Adam Nicolson. ''Prepared for Anything''. The Times Magazine, June 25, 1994. pages 24-30.
  21. ''Summer Fields Register 1864–1960'', [[Oxonian Press]], 1960. {{page needed. (December 2018)
  22. (1981). "Geoffrey Madan's Notebooks". Oxford University Press.
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