Haileybury and Imperial Service College
United Kingdom /
England /
Little Amwell /
College Road
World
/ United Kingdom
/ England
/ Little Amwell
World / United Kingdom / England
boarding school, independent school
Haileybury has been one of the country's leading co-educational boarding schools for nearly 150 years.
In 1806 the Honourable East India Company commissioned William E Wilkins (later the designer of the National Gallery, of Downing College, Cambridge, and much of the University of London) to plan the buildings for its new training college for civil servants for India.
On an area of empty heath, not far from the manor of Hailey, Wilkins created his buildings in a neo-classical style round a large grass quadrangle (still said to be the largest academic quadrangle in the land) and here the East India College flourished for 50 years.
It was one of the country’s most distinguished centres of scholarship and teaching and the training ground for generations of those destined to govern British India.
Four years after its closure in 1858, Haileybury opened its gates once again, this time as a public school, under the headmastership of the Reverend A G Butler. By the middle 1870s, the number of boys was close to 500. In 1874, a Haileybury housemaster was appointed the first headmaster of the United Services College at Westward Ho!, which later moved to Windsor and became the Imperial Service College.
In 1942, Haileybury and the ISC combined to become “Haileybury and Imperial Service College”, now known as Haileybury.
Haileybury
Hertford
Hertfordshire SG13 7NU
Tel: 01992 706200
haileybury.com/
In 1806 the Honourable East India Company commissioned William E Wilkins (later the designer of the National Gallery, of Downing College, Cambridge, and much of the University of London) to plan the buildings for its new training college for civil servants for India.
On an area of empty heath, not far from the manor of Hailey, Wilkins created his buildings in a neo-classical style round a large grass quadrangle (still said to be the largest academic quadrangle in the land) and here the East India College flourished for 50 years.
It was one of the country’s most distinguished centres of scholarship and teaching and the training ground for generations of those destined to govern British India.
Four years after its closure in 1858, Haileybury opened its gates once again, this time as a public school, under the headmastership of the Reverend A G Butler. By the middle 1870s, the number of boys was close to 500. In 1874, a Haileybury housemaster was appointed the first headmaster of the United Services College at Westward Ho!, which later moved to Windsor and became the Imperial Service College.
In 1942, Haileybury and the ISC combined to become “Haileybury and Imperial Service College”, now known as Haileybury.
Haileybury
Hertford
Hertfordshire SG13 7NU
Tel: 01992 706200
haileybury.com/
Wikipedia article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haileybury_and_Imperial_Service_College
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 51°46'51"N -0°1'48"E
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