Monmouth School for Boys

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Monmouth School for Boys
Haberdashers' Aske's Boys' School (coat of arms).png
Monmouth School.jpg
Henry Stock's School House of the late 19th century
Location
Monmouth School for Boys
,
Monmouthshire
,
NP25 3XP

Wales
Coordinates 51°48′42″N2°42′40″W / 51.8117°N 2.7110°W / 51.8117; -2.7110
Information
Type Public school
Independent
Boarding and day
MottoServe and Obey
Religious affiliation(s) Protestant [1]
Established1614;410 years ago (1614)
Founder William Jones
Local authority Monmouthshire
Department for Education URN 402007 Tables
HeadmasterSimon Dorman
GenderBoys
Age11to 18 [2]
Enrolment650
Colour(s)Gold, chocolate and blue    
Alumni Old Monmothians
Website www.habs-monmouth.org

Monmouth School for Boys is a public school (independent boarding and day school) for boys in Monmouth, Wales. The school was founded in 1614 with a bequest from William Jones, a successful merchant and trader. The School is run as a trust, the William Jones's Schools Foundation, by the Worshipful Company of Haberdashers, one of the livery companies, and has close links to its sister school, Haberdashers' Monmouth School for Girls. In 2018, the Haberdashers renamed their group of schools in the town, the Monmouth Schools, and made corresponding changes to the names of the boys' and girls' schools.

Contents

The school is situated on the eastern edge of the border town of Monmouth, adjacent to the River Wye. Nothing of the original school buildings from the 17th century remains as the school was completely rebuilt in the mid to late 19th century. Later developments have included the Science Block (1981–1984) and the William Jones Building of the early 21st century (2014). In 2014, the quatercentenary of the school's foundation was celebrated with a service at St Paul's Cathedral.

Established originally as a grammar school, by the early 1870s Monmouth was a member of the recently formed Headmasters' Conference and had acquired the status of a public school. Between 1946 and 1976 it was part of the direct grant scheme, returning to full independence in 1976. A member of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference, the school has a roll of approximately 650 pupils. The fees for 2019/2020 are £16,275 for day boys, and £30,852 for boarders. The William Jones's Schools Foundation, which funds the Monmouth Schools on behalf of the Haberdashers’ Company, recorded an income of £20.5M against an expenditure of £24.0M in its accounts for 2020. In June 2022, the Haberdashers initiated a consultation on merging the school with the girls school in the town to create a fully coeducational establishment by 2024.

History

William Jones, the school's founder William Jones haberdasher.jpg
William Jones, the school's founder

Years of foundation: 1613–1616

In 1613, William Jones, a prominent merchant and haberdasher, gave the Haberdashers’ Company £6,000, followed by a further £3,000 bequeathed in his will on his death in 1615, to "ordaine a preacher, a Free-School and Almes-houses for twenty poor and old distressed people, as blind and lame, as it shall seem best to them, of the Towne of Monmouth, where it shall be bestowed". [3] Jones was born at Newland, Gloucestershire [4] and brought up in Monmouth, leaving to make a sizeable fortune as a London merchant engaged in the cloth trade with the continent. [lower-alpha 1] [6] The motivations for his bequest appear partly philanthropic and partly evangelical; the county of Monmouthshire in the early 17th century had a significant Catholic presence [7] and the local historian Keith Kissack noted, "the priority given to the preacher illustrates [Jones's] concern to convert an area in the Marches which was still, when the school opened in 1614, strongly recusant". [lower-alpha 2] [9] The order for the establishment of the school was made, retrospectively by James I in 1616 and decreed "for ever in the town of Monmouth, one almshouse and one free grammar school". [10]

The Haberdashers purchased four fields as the site for the school before Jones's death, paying the sum of £100. [11] Royal permission for this charitable purchase was required under the Statute of Mortmain, which was granted in 1614. By Jones's death in Hamburg in 1615, the almshouses, and the schoolroom and headmaster's house had been completed, although nothing now remains of the original school buildings. [4] The bulk of Jones's considerable bequest was used for the purchase of lands at New Cross, in South-East London, and the rent rolls from that estate provided the money for the salaries and running costs associated with the school, as well as the payment of pensions to the residents of the almshouses. [12]

The first headmaster was John Owen, M.A. of Queens' College, Cambridge, appointed on a salary of £60 per annum. [lower-alpha 3] [14] Neither Owen, nor many of his 17th and 18th century successors, lasted very long unlike the school day which ran from 7–11 a.m., followed by an afternoon session from 1.30 to 5.00 p.m. [15]

Years of uncertainty: 1617–1799

The 17th-century school buildings Ancient Schoolroom 1615.jpg
The 17th-century school buildings

The mid-twentieth-century historian of the school, H. A. Ward, described its early history as "the precarious years". [16] Continuing religious controversy, coupled with the English Civil War, made the town of Monmouth a divided and uncertain setting for the school. Divisions between staff, and the financial instability, and remoteness, of the Haberdashers Company, which was compelled to make substantial loans to the Parliamentary government that went unpaid for decades, and was then required to finance the rebuilding of their livery hall which was destroyed during the Great Fire of London, [17] contributed to internal weaknesses. [18] These difficulties continued well into the 18th century, and at one point, during the headship of the "morose and tyrannical" John Crowe, who was removed from his post after becoming insane, the school roll fell to just three boys. [19] A source for information regarding the school in the mid-17th century is the diary of the school's usher, More Pye. The diary, extracts from which were published in the Monmouthshire Beacon in 1859 but which is now lost, records Pye's experiences in great detail from the date of his appointment in 1646 until his resignation in 1652. [20] An example is Pye's entry for February 18, 1647; "Pd (paid) 6d ffor (for) wormeseedes and triacle for ye boys". A less parochial entry for November 11, 1647, records Pye's monarchist sympathies, "Ye King's Magy (Majesty) made an escape from Hampton Court, out of ye Armye's power. Vivat, vivat in aeternum". [lower-alpha 4] [20]

Years of controversy: 1800–1850

Ward described the early 19th century period of the school's history as years of "controversy". [22] These focused mainly on three issues; relations between the school and the town, relations between the school, the town and the Haberdashers Company and the Court of Chancery, which together were responsible for the school's funding and oversight, and attempts to expand the school's curriculum beyond the traditional study of Latin and Greek. The first issue saw the school perceived as part of the faction of the Dukes of Beaufort, the premier landowners in the county, and directors of the town's politics from their regional base at Troy House. [23] Early 19th century Monmouth had a strong Radical tradition led by burgesses such as Thomas Thackwell, and fuelled by the liberal positions of the local newspapers, the Monmouthshire Beacon and the Monmouthshire Merlin . [24] The school's leadership was perceived in the town to be too close to the Beauforts, and Thackwell ran an almost fifty-year campaign against their attempts to defend the established order. [23] The second controversy related to the governance of the school and another long campaign of attrition saw the school's Lecturer lose the responsibility for preparing an annual report on the school, this being transferred by the Court of Chancery to a Board of Visitors. [25] The last area of conflict arose between the school's leadership, which wanted to maintain the tradition of a curriculum that involved the study solely of Latin and Greek, [26] and the Court and the Haberdashers who wanted expansion to cover such areas as writing and arithmetic. In a damming report in 1827 they condemned "the present Masters, though so liberally paid, and having so little to do, consider themselves engaged only to teach Latin and Greek. A school teaching those branches of learning only will never be useful to a place of such confined population as Monmouth". [27] Reforms introduced by John Oakley Hill in 1852, saw the establishment of Upper and Lower Schools, the former continuing to provide a classical education, while the latter had a curriculum focused on writing and arithmetic. [28] William Coxe, who undertook extensive tours of Wales in the very late 18th and early 19th centuries in the company of his friend, Sir Richard Colt Hoare, recorded his impressions of the school in the second volume of his An Historical tour in Monmouthshire, published in 1801. Describing the school as enjoying "a high reputation under the care of (the headmaster) the Rev. John Powell", Coxe retells the mythical story of the school's establishment and records a "portrait of the founder, habited in the costume of the age of James the First, with an inscription 'Walter William Jones, haberdasher and merchant of London etc.' is preserved in the school room". [13]

The school close with the memorial sundial to G. H. Sutherland, Head of School, who drowned in the River Wye in 1921 Boys school - geograph.org.uk - 951358.jpg
The school close with the memorial sundial to G. H. Sutherland, Head of School, who drowned in the River Wye in 1921

Years of expansion: 1851–1913

In the early 1850s the Court of Chancery insisted on the appointment of an external examiner. His report of 1852 was not encouraging; "many of the boys appear so ignorant as to be a disgrace to their parents, still more than to their teachers". [29] If the academic outlook remained bleak, the financial position of the school was transformed in this period. The sale of part of the New Cross estate to railway developers, and the vastly increased rents accruing from the development and expansion of London saw the Haberdashers' fortunes dramatically increase. [30] The availability of funds led to the complete rebuilding of the school on its original site between 1864, the school's 250th anniversary, and the end of the century. [31] The school's expansion was undertaken during the long reign of the Rev. Charles Manley Roberts, headmaster for 32 years from 1859 to 1892. [32] During Roberts's time Monmouth became an early member of the prestigious Headmaster's Conference (created by Edward Thring of Uppingham in 1869), a mark of its increasing reputation and status as a public school. [lower-alpha 5] [35] The school's reputation for sporting prowess also rose, its rugby teams and rowers enjoying particular success. [36] As a result of rising revenues from rents and investments, [37] by the mid-19th century, Monmouth's endowment was one of largest of any school in England and Wales. [lower-alpha 6] To use the resulting surpluses, the original foundation was reorganised in 1891 to support a new girls’ school and an elementary school in the town, as well as a boys' grammar school West Monmouth School in Pontypool. [39] As importantly for the school's development, the rule that limited applications to boys from Monmouthshire and the neighbouring counties was set aside, and applications were opened to the entirety of Wales and England. [35]

Years of war: 1914–1945

The school war memorial, unveiled by Old Monmothian Angus Buchanan (VC) in 1921 Monmouth School war memorial.jpg
The school war memorial, unveiled by Old Monmothian Angus Buchanan (VC) in 1921

Monmouth School's Combined Cadet Force was reportedly the last CCF in the country to change its uniforms to khaki from the traditional blue at the outbreak of war in August 1914. [40] The conflict brought the award of the school's only Victoria Cross, awarded to Angus Buchanan in 1916 for conspicuous bravery in the Mesopotamian campaign. [lower-alpha 7] [42] Blinded by a bullet to the head the following year, he returned to Monmouthshire and worked as a solicitor in Coleford, unveiling the school's war memorial in 1921. [43] In total, seventy-six old boys from the school were killed in the war. [42] The school's Bricknell Library, founded in 1921, commemorated one of them, Ernest Thomas Samuel Bricknell, who died in October 1916 from wounds received at the Battle of the Somme. [lower-alpha 8] [45]

Further loss of life occurred in 1921, when the Head of School, G. H. Sutherland, drowned in the Wye during a rowing match between the school and Hereford Cathedral School. Sutherland is commemorated by the sundial in the school's cloister. [46] The Second World War added the names of a further sixty-one Old Monmothians to the lists of the dead inscribed on the school's war memorial. [47] During the war, the school hosted the entire school and staff from King Edward VI Five Ways School, Birmingham, who were evacuated due to German bombing of the Midlands. [48]

Recent years: 1946–present

Internal conflict within the school's management continued in the mid-twentieth century, with the governors sacking two headmasters within three years. [49] This led to the school's expulsion from the Headmasters Conference, and to that body's advising any of its members against applying for the vacant headship. [49] The impasse was resolved in 1959, with the appointment of Robert Glover. [50] Reorganisation of the Haberdashers' endowments also occurred at this time. The elementary school, founded with Haberdashers' funds in 1891, was transferred to County Council control in 1940 with West Monmouth School at Pontypool following in 1955. [51] This left the William Jones's Schools Foundation responsible for Monmouth School and Haberdashers' Monmouth School for Girls – also known as HMSG – both of which joined the Direct Grant scheme in 1946. [52]

Another significant development for the school's location was the building of the A40, which "severed (Monmouth) ruthlessly from the river on which in the past it had depended" and cut off the school from its historic frontage onto the River Wye. [53] This led to the permanent closure of the school's ceremonial entrance, the Wye Bridge Gate, constructed by Henry Stock in the 1890s. The direct impact on the school was perhaps less significant, Ward had recorded an early comment on the entrance, "that ancient gate which never opened is but thrice a year on notable occasions, such as when the coal cart comes". [54]

In 1976, with the ending of the Direct Grant system, the school returned to full independence. [55] Having argued strongly against the ending of the grant system, the headmaster at the time, Robert Glover, gave a warning as to the likely consequences, "if direct grant goes, the school which has served the boys of Monmouth for four hundred years, will suddenly become for many families financially prohibitive". [55] In response, a committee of the Old Monmothian Club, headed by Lord Brecon and Sir Derek Ezra undertook a campaign to raise funding for scholarships which accumulated £100,000 in ten weeks. [56] During his tenure Glover also secured re-admittance to the Headmasters' Conference. To mark the school's four hundredth anniversary [57] a service of thanksgiving was held at St. Paul's Cathedral, on 19 March 2014, attended by some 2,200 pupils and staff from the school and from Haberdashers' Monmouth School for Girls, as well as Haberdashers and friends of the Schools. [58] [59]

In 2018, the Haberdashers rebranded their group of schools in the town as Haberdashers Monmouth Schools and renamed the senior schools as Monmouth School for Boys and Monmouth School for Girls respectively. [60] In its most recent accounts, published in 2020, the William Jones's Schools Foundation, which funds the Monmouth group of schools on behalf of the Haberdahers’ Company, recorded an expenditure of £24.0M against an income of £20.5M. [61] In June 2022, the Haberdashers began a consultation on proposals to merge the Boys and Girls schools, making them fully coeducational by 2024. [62] [63]

Histories of the school

The library, formerly the Victorian era "Big School" Monmouth - school (geograph 3898399).jpg
The library, formerly the Victorian era “Big School”

The Monmouthshire antiquarian Charles Heath described the traditional, and almost certainly inaccurate, story of the school's foundation in his Accounts of the Ancient and Present State of the Town of Monmouth, published in 1804. [64] Heath records that William Jones, now established as a successful and wealthy merchant, returned to his home town of Newland disguised as a beggar. Receiving a hostile reception, he travelled to Monmouth, where he was more warmly received and where, as a consequence, he funded the construction of the school and associated almshouses. [65] The story is taken from an earlier oral tradition, also recorded in Archdeacon Coxe's An Historical Tour in Monmouthshire, published three years before. [13] In 1899, the Rev. W. M. Warlow published his History of the Charities of William Jones at Monmouth and Newland. [66] His fellow cleric and master, the Rev. K. M. Pitt wrote a more focused account, Monmouth School in the 1860s. [64] H. A. Ward published Monmouth School: 1614–1964: An Outline History to commemorate the school's 350th anniversary. [66] In 1995, Keith Kissack published his history, Monmouth School and Monmouth: 1614–1995. [67] In 2014, in celebration of the school's quatercentenary, two masters at the school, Stephen Edwards, who wrote the text, and Keith Moseley, who took the photographs, published a new history, Monmouth School: The First 400 Years. [68]

Buildings

Interior of Monmouth School Chapel, 1865 Monmouth School Chapel 1865.png
Interior of Monmouth School Chapel, 1865

William Jones's original foundation provided for a schoolroom, on the site of the present chapel, houses for the Headmaster and Lecturer, and almshouses segregated by sex. [14] A painting by J.A. Evans, of later date and purchased on behalf of the school by the then Headmaster Lionel James in 1921, shows the buildings and is titled The Old School Room. Built A.D. 1614. Pulled down to make room for the present school room, 1865. [69] Nothing of these buildings remains. The local writer and artist Fred Hando records that the bell, which hung above the schoolroom, was cast at the Evan Evans foundry at Chepstow in 1716. [70]

In 1864 the Haberdashers undertook a substantial rebuilding of the school. [71] Funded by the rising fortunes of Jones's bequest on the back of the Victorian expansion of London, the work was mostly undertaken by William Snooke and Henry Stock, of the firm Snooke & Stock, surveyors to the Haberdashers' Company. [lower-alpha 9] [73] Snooke built the chapel, two schoolrooms and a classroom in 1864–1865, followed in the 1870s by the library, Headmaster's House and the buildings which now form Monmouth House and Hereford House. [74] These buildings are all Grade II listed. [75] [76] [77] The Monmouth Alms Houses, on Almshouse Street, were rebuilt by James Bunstone Bunning in 1842, and redeveloped by William Burn in 1895–1896. [78] They now form part of the school and incorporate a large inscription panel describing the benefactions of the Jones Foundation. [74] The almshouses are also Grade II listed. [79] The chapel was further extended in 1875. [80] Snooke's work was not universally praised; a report from the School's Commissioner commenting, "the architect has arranged the buildings in a most inconvenient manner, and the ventilation is deficient." [81] School House, with its ceremonial arched entrance and coat of arms facing the Wye Bridge, and the adjacent technology block, were designed by Henry Stock in 1894–1895. [74] They are Grade II listed buildings as of 8 October 2005. [82] [83] The style of the School House block mirrors that of the main block of Haberdashers' Monmouth School for Girls, which Stock designed at the same time. [84] The war memorial was dedicated in 1921, Angus Buchanan (VC) attending the ceremony. [42] It is a Grade II listed structure. [lower-alpha 10] [88] To the west of Stock's School House block, and set into the wall previously facing the Wye and now completely overshadowed by the A40 by-pass, is a pair of iron gates, of 18th century date and installed at the school in 1941. They come from the Haberdashers' Hall in London which was destroyed during the Blitz. [lower-alpha 11] [82]

The school's building of greatest architectural merit is the Grade II* listed Chapel House. [91] The architectural historian John Newman describes the 18th-century building, situated on the Hereford Road away from the main school site, as "the best house in the entire street". [92] More modern developments include the Hall of 1961, redeveloped in the early 21st century and now the Blake Theatre, [93] the Red Lion Block of the same date and the Science Block of 1981–1984. [74] In 1985–1986, two ceramic murals were designed for the chapel by the Polish religious artist Adam Kossowski, a friend and wartime colleague of the school's Head of Art from 1947 to 1978, Otto Maciag (1918-2000). Executed by Maciag, and another art master at the school, Michael Tovey, [94] the murals were dedicated at a service conducted by the Bishop of Monmouth, the Rt Rev Clifford Wright on 3 October 1987. [95] He described them as "masterpieces of twentieth-century religious art”. [96] In November 2008, a £2.3 million sports pavilion was completed [97] and opened by the former British Lions player and Welsh captain, Eddie Butler, an old boy of the School. [98] It was designed by the architects Buttress Fuller Alsop Williams. [98] In 2011 the school began the Heart Project. [97] This led to the sale of some outlying sites, such as St. James's House, and the re-organisation of others, to assist in the raising of funds for the redevelopment of the main school site. [93] Further funds came from the Haberdashers' Company, and the first phase was completed with the rebuilding of the Red Lion Block, renamed the William Jones Building. [97]

The school today

The William Jones Building William Jones Building, Monmouth School.jpg
The William Jones Building

With 650 pupils, the school offers boarding and day places as well as preparatory departments in a single-sex environment. A range of GCSE, A and AS level subjects are offered, with the Sixth Form having some collaborative teaching with pupils from the sister school, Haberdashers' Monmouth School for Girls (HMSG). Tatler magazine's 2020 Schools Guide noted its strong academic performance. [99] [100] The school charges fees for attendance; for 2019–2020, the annual fees are: day pupils, £16,275, boarding pupils, £30,852. [101] The school operates a substantial bursary programme. [102] [103] [104] In September 2018, Monmouth School was renamed Monmouth School for Boys after a merger of all five Haberdashers' Company schools in Monmouth. The Foundation now operates under the name Haberdashers' Monmouth Schools and consists of: Monmouth School for Boys (formerly Monmouth School), Monmouth School for Girls (formerly Haberdashers' Monmouth School for Girls or HMSG), Monmouth School Boys' Prep (formerly The Grange), Monmouth School Girls' Prep (formerly Inglefield House) and Monmouth Schools Pre-Prep and Nursery (formerly Agincourt School). [60]

Houses

There are three age divisions in the school; lower (forms I and II) middle (forms III, IV, and V) and sixth form (forms VI.1 and VI.2). Within these divisions, the school operates a House system. As of December 2022, the houses are:

Extracurricular activities

The school has its own theatre, The Blake, opened in 2004. [106] Funded by Bob Blake, a former pupil, it is used as a venue for performances by both the school and the girls' school, and by external performers. [93] The Glover Music School has an auditorium and teaching and practice rooms. The strong musical tradition [107] owes much to Michael Eveleigh, director of music at the school from 1950 to 1986, and his successors, [108] there having been only five directors of music since the Second World War. [109] Other extra-curricular activities include foreign expeditions, music and drama events as well as a newspaper, The Lion, a creative writing leaflet, The Lion's Tale, The Mon-Mouth, a bi-weekly, student-run newspaper and an annual magazine, The Monmothian, first published in 1882. [110] The Combined Cadet Force, founded in 1904, which has both Army and RAF sections, is operated in collaboration with HMSG. [111]

Sport

Old Monmothian Victor Spinetti at the school's Speech Day, 2009 Victor Spinetti, Old Monmothian.jpg
Old Monmothian Victor Spinetti at the school's Speech Day, 2009

The school has a notable sporting tradition, [107] with a high number of successful sportsmen amongst its alumni. [112] The main sports are rugby, rowing and cricket. The school's rowing club, affiliated to British Rowing (boat code MNS), [113] produced three championship crews at the 1988, [114] 2007 [115] and 2009 British Rowing Championships. [116] Facilities include a boathouse, a sports complex which houses a six-lane swimming pool, indoor facilities including a weights and fitness suite, tennis courts, and a full size astroturf pitch. [117] The Hitchcock sports pavilion, completed in 2008, stands on the playing fields, on the other side of the Wye from the school's main site. In addition to rugby, rowing and cricket, the school offers a range of other sports which include soccer, cross-country, tennis, basketball, golf, athletics, swimming, water polo, canoeing, and squash. [118]

Other

The school has an alumni society, the Old Monmothian Club, founded in 1886. [119] In June 2009, the school paid out £150,000 to settle a landmark pensions rights case brought by female catering and support staff who claimed that, as part-time workers, they had been unjustly excluded from the school's pension scheme. [120]

Headmasters

Alumni

Footnotes

  1. W. J. Townsend Collins, in his anthology Monmouthshire Writers, records the traditional story of Jones being forced to leave Monmouth as a youth when unable to settle a debt of ten groats. [5]
  2. John Gwynfor Jones, in his essay Language, Literature and Education in the third volume of the Gwent County History, describes Jones as "puritanically inclined". [8]
  3. Archdeacon Coxe records slightly different rates in his An Historical Tour in Monmouthshire, published in 1801. Coxe notes that the master received, "a house with a salary of £90 a year; to the usher, a salary of £45 per year with a house; and to a lecturer, for the purpose of inspecting the alms houses, reading prayers and preaching a weekly sermon, an excellent house and garden, with a salary of £105 a year". [13]
  4. Placed under house arrest at Hampton Court, Charles I escaped on the night of 11 November 1647. He was quickly recaptured, and imprisoned at Carisbrooke Castle on the Isle of Wight. [21]
  5. Manley Roberts' desire to enhance the reputation and status of the school was circumscribed by a traditional snobbery against education in Wales. Sian Rhiannon Williams, in her essay Education and Literacy in the fourth volume of the Gwent County History, notes, "sons of the Monmouthshire gentry were educated in the public schools of England, a tradition which contributed to Monmouth (S)chool's difficulty in attracting even the highest rankings of the local professional classes". [33] An inspector appointed by the Haberdashers to enquire into the issue in 1870 reported that; "The sons of professional men in the neighborhood hardly ever attend, an objection being felt by their parents to the lower class of boys in the School". [34]
  6. Sir Joseph Bradney, in his monumental history of the county, A History of Monmouthshire from the Coming of the Normans into Wales down to the Present Time , records the school's income as £780 per year in 1829, £1,324 p/a by 1853 and rising to over £10,00 per year by 1891. [38]
  7. Other decorations awarded to pupils of the school during the World Wars included 32 Military Crosses, 11 Distinguished Service Orders and 8 Distinguished Flying Crosses, Distinguished Flying Medals and Air Force Medals. [41]
  8. A Second lieutenant in the South Wales Borderers Bricknell died of his wounds on 20 October 1916, aged 20. He is buried in the Longueval Road Cemetery in north-eastern France. [44]
  9. John V. Hiling, in his study The Architecture of Wales: From the first to the twenty-first century, omits mention of Henry Stock's contribution, ascribing the work solely to "W. Snoke" (sic). [72]
  10. The memorial was designed and built by Alfred William Ursell, a monumental mason from the nearby town of Ross-on-Wye, [85] whose son Victor studied at Monmouth, died at the Second Battle of Arras in May 1917, [86] and whose name is inscribed on the memorial. [87]
  11. The CADW listing gives a date of 1941 for the installation of the gates, although Fred Hando records this as happening in 1961. [89] Hando is supported by the school's historian, H. A. Ward, who dates the installation to after 1958, when the wall fronting the River Wye was moved back to enable the construction of the A40. [90]
  12. Edward Culley, a mathematician and classics scholar, was the first headmaster to be appointed since the establishment of the school who was not in holy orders. Nevertheless, his candidacy enjoyed considerable ecclesiastical support. The South Wales Daily News, in its report of his appointment in 1891, noted that his referees included the Bishop of Chester, the Bishop of Liverpool and the Dean of St Asaph, as well as the Master of Balliol. [122]

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">William Jones (haberdasher)</span>

William Jones was a London haberdasher, born in Newland, Gloucestershire, England. He is remembered for his bequests, which led to the establishment of schools in Monmouth and Pontypool, almshouses at Newland, and the so-called "Golden Lectureship" in London.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mayor of Monmouth</span>

The Mayor of Monmouth is an elected position given to a town councillor in Monmouth in Wales. The position dates back about 750 years.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Keith Kissack</span> British schoolteacher & historian (1913-2010)

Keith Edward Kissack MBE was a British schoolteacher and historian. He is notable for his many publications on the history of Monmouth and Monmouthshire.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Treowen</span> 17th-century house in Wales

Treowen is an early 17th-century house in Monmouthshire, Wales, regarded as "the most important gentry house in the county". It is located in open countryside within the parish of Wonastow, about ½ mile (1 km) north-east of the village of Dingestow, and 3 miles (4.8 km) south-west of Monmouth. After being used as a farmhouse for three centuries, Treowen now operates as a conference and functions venue and holds the annual Wye Valley Chamber Music Festival. It is a Grade I listed building, and its gardens are designated Grade II on the Cadw/ICOMOS Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in Wales.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Llanarth Court</span> House in Llanarth, Monmouthshire

Llanarth Court is a late-18th-century country house with substantial 19th-century alterations in Llanarth, Monmouthshire, Wales. The court was built for the Jones family of Treowen and was subsequently the home of Ivor Herbert, 1st Baron Treowen, whose family still owns much of the Llanarth estate, although not the court itself. The court is a Grade II* listed building and is now a private hospital. The gardens are included on the Cadw/ICOMOS Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in Wales.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Fred Hando</span> Welsh writer, artist, teacher, and historian

Frederick James Hando MBE was a Welsh writer, artist and schoolteacher from Newport. He chronicled the history, character and folklore of Monmouthshire, which he also called Gwent, in a series of nearly 800 newspaper articles and several books published between the 1920s and 1960s.

There are a number of war memorials in Monmouth, Wales.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Monmouth Alms Houses</span> Charitable organisation

The Monmouth Alms Houses of Monmouth, Wales are funded by the charity established by the haberdasher William Jones before his death in 1615. That charity also established schools in Monmouth and a lectureship in London. The Haberdashers' Company served as trustee of the charity from 1613 until 2011, when the trusteeship was transferred to Bristol Charities. A second charity established through a separate bequest by Jones enabled the building of the Newland Alms Houses in the Forest of Dean. The original Monmouth Alms Houses were constructed in 1614; they were rebuilt in 1842 and 1961. The fourth version of the Monmouth Alms Houses was completed in 2013 and is named 'Cwrt William Jones Almshouses' and is owned and managed by Bristol Charities under the name of 'William Jones Almshouse Charity'. The original alms houses were located on what is now known as Almshouse Street. The most recent houses are located off St James' Square.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Wye Bridge Ward, Monmouth</span>

Wye Bridge Ward was one of four wards in the town of Monmouth, Monmouthshire, Wales. Streets in the ward included St Mary's Street, Almshouse Street, St James Street, St James Square, Whitecross Street and Monk Street. The ward existed as a division of the town by the early seventeenth century, and continued into the twentieth century.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Grade I listed buildings in Monmouthshire</span>

Monmouthshire is a county and principal area of Wales. It borders Torfaen and Newport to the west; Herefordshire and Gloucestershire to the east; and Powys to the north. The largest town is Abergavenny, with the other major towns being Chepstow, Monmouth, and Usk. The county is 850 km2 in extent, with a population of 95,200 as of 2020. The present county was formed under the Local Government (Wales) Act 1994, which came into effect in 1996, and comprises some sixty percent of the historic county. Between 1974 and 1996, the county was known by the ancient title of Gwent, recalling the medieval Welsh kingdom. In his essay on local government in the fifth and final volume of the Gwent County History, Robert McCloy suggests that the governance of "no county in the United Kingdom in the twentieth century was so transformed as that of Monmouthshire".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">St Cenedlon's Church, Rockfield</span> Church located in Monmouthshire, Wales

St Cenedlon's is a parish church in the village of Rockfield, Monmouthshire, Wales. The dedication to St Cenedlon is unusual and the history of the saint is obscure. Some sources suggest that she was a daughter of Brychan king of Brycheiniog while others identify her as the wife of King Arthfael ab Ithel, king of Glywysing. The existing church dates from the Middle Ages but only the tower remains from that period. After the English Reformation, the surrounding area of north Monmouthshire became a refuge for Catholics and Matthew Pritchard (1669-1750), Roman Catholic bishop and Vicar Apostolic of the Western District is buried at the church. By the mid-19th century the church was in ruins and a complete reconstruction was undertaken by the ecclesiastical architects John Pollard Seddon and John Prichard in around 1860. St Cenedlon's is an active parish church in the Diocese of Monmouth. It is designated by Cadw as a Grade II listed building.

Henry Stock (1824/5–1909) was a British architect. He served as the county surveyor for Essex for nearly 50 years, and as the surveyor and architect to the Worshipful Company of Haberdashers. The latter appointment led Stock to undertake a considerable number of educational commissions, but his primary field of activity was in the construction of manufacturing sites and warehouses in London.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Perth-hir House</span> House in Rockfield, Monmouthshire

Perth-hir House, Rockfield, Monmouthshire, Wales, was a major residence of the Herbert family. It stood at a bend of the River Monnow, to the north-west of the village. At its height in the 16th century, the mansion, entered by two drawbridges over a moat, comprised a great hall and a number of secondary structures. Subsequently in the ownership of the Powells, and then the Lorimers, the house became a centre of Catholic recusancy following the English Reformation. By the 19th century, the house had declined to the status of a farmhouse and it was largely demolished in around 1830. Its ruins, and the site which contains considerable remnants of a Tudor garden, are a scheduled monument.

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