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“a timeline showing the College's history”

The College Timeline

Scroll down the page to view the College timeline, from the school's foundation to the present day.

1865

The first crest was designed, together with the motto Ex Oriente Salus (meaning Safety or Health from the East), by Mark Anthony Lower, antiquarian, of Lewes, some two years before the official foundation of the College. The stag's head is derived from the Cavendish arms and the red rose from those of the Gilbert family, prominent local landowners in the 19th century

Dr Charles Hayman, an Eastbourne medical practitioner and member of the town's first Council, together with other local luminaries, decided that an independent school 'for the education of the sons of noblemen and gentlefolk' should be established and the support of the seventh Duke of Devonshire was sought

The seventh Duke supported the venture and made some 12 acres of land available at a modest purchase price or annual rent. He was also Chancellor of Cambridge University and the robes he is wearing in this portrait are those of the Chancellor


1867

Ellesmere Villas (now Spencer Court), the College's first home, a large three-storey villa in Spencer Road, was occupied from August 1867 until 1869. Initially there were just three staff and 14 pupils


1867–9

Rev James Wood, the first headmaster, resigned after two years and opened Trinity College on the sea front. He was succeeded in 1869 by the Rev Thompson Podmore who served for 17 years, a period of quiet growth and consolidation

Larkfield House, an 1835 flint-built villa, was given by the Duke. It became the nucleus of College House (later School House) and remains today as the housemistress's home

1870


Here may be seen the embryonic school, with College House in the foreground and farmland stretching all the way to Meads and beyond

The Foundation Stone of College House was laid by Lady Edward Cavendish, the wife of Lord Edward Cavendish, the seventh Duke's son, on 30 June 1870

College House, now School House, was designed by Henry Currey, the Duke's architect, and built in 1870

Currey was a distinguished architect, notable for the design of St Thomas' Hospital, the Devonshire Park Theatre and Winter Gardens in Eastbourne, as well as works in London, Buxton and elsewhere


College House with sheep sharing College Field with a game of cricket


1873

Blackwater House, built by the Rev GR Green as a boys' boarding house, was demolished and rebuilt as a girls' day house in 1995/6. Green was later headmaster in 1887/8


1874

A single aisle Chapel, built to seat 150. Architect: Henry Currey

The original gym. It cost £120 to build, plus £20 for equipment


c.1875

The view from Devonshire Park, showing Larkfield, College House and the Chapel with Blackwater House in the background


1878

The new gym


1888

George Ambrose Wallis, the Duke's agent and Eastbourne's first mayor. He negotiated the postponement of rent payments by the impoverished school

The Rev Dr Charles Crowden, known to the boys as 'Tubby', came as headmaster from Cranbrook with 90 boys, raising the roll to 150 and so saved the school from financial disaster

Wargrave House was opened at 52 Blackwater Road by Mr Heylyn Matheson. In 1946 it was combined with the next door Crosby House

The Football XI. Previously a form of Harrow Football was played with between 12 and 15 players to a side


1889

The Octagon, the original Cavendish Library, was designed by Henry Currey

The Chancel and transept were added to the Chapel


1895

The Rev Matthew Bayfield came as headmaster from Christ College, Brecon, and brought with him four distinguished schoolmasters: George Peacock, Shum Tuckett, 'Jack' Smart and Cecil Horsburgh. Gordon Carey rated him the most distinguished scholar of the school's first eleven headmasters

The Old Eastbournian Association was founded. This is the original committee

 

The School in front of the Indian Pavilion in Devonshire Park on the occasion of Dr Crowden's retirement


1896

The Cadet Corps, later the OTC, the JTC and the CCF, was founded with Captain Shum Tuckett (third left) its first commanding officer


1897

Gymkhana on College Field. This was first held to celebrate Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee and became an annual event which was later incorporated into Speech Day


1898

A cadet camp

Old Eastbournian Henry Singleton Pennell won the Victoria Cross on the Dargai Heights on the North West Frontier for rescuing a brother officer 'under a perfect hail of bullets'. Pennell later served in the South African War, was twice mentioned in despatches and was wounded. He lost his life on the Cresta toboggan run at St Moritz in 1907


1899

EC Arnold, known as 'Og', joined the staff and introduced rugby and ornithology, initiated carved panels in Big School, and became headmaster from 1924–29. He led the Memorial Building Appeal, giving generously of his own funds. He also gave the College Og's Wood, the Mere at Hampden Park, land near Littlington, the 'Cuckmere Bounty' and his collection of 300 stuffed birds. The north wing of the Memorial Building bears his name

The cadet force provided a Guard of Honour for the Prince of Wales, later King Edward VII, at Eastbourne Station


1900

The first rugby team contained a future England international (Douglas Lambert), a Cambridge blue (Jack Young) and a Victoria Cross holder (Lionel Rees)


1903

A new castellated front was added to School House, designed by architect W Hay Murray


1909

Big School, built as the school's assembly hall, and designed by W Hay Murray, was built by James Longley & Co at a cost of £10,000 and financed by the Duke of Devonshire and Old Eastbournians


c.1910


The New Buildings, Labs, Fives Courts and Big School seen from Grange Road


1912

Old Eastbournian Dr Theodore Pennell, a Christian medical missionary on the Afghan Frontier, who habitually dressed as a Pathan, and had founded a school and hospital at Bannu, died of blood poisoning. The British Army commander in the region stated that Pennell was worth several battalions of infantry

After 23 years in College Road and Blackwater Road, Gonville House was opened in Carlisle Road under Old Eastbournian housemaster Hugh Jameson


1913

Frederick Snowden, Old Eastbournian and father of three OEs, funded the building of the original cricket pavilion on College Field. It has since twice been extended


1916

Old Eastbournian Lionel Rees, Royal Flying Corps, was awarded the Victoria Cross. He single handedly attacked a group of ten enemy aircraft, and damaged or accounted for three. In the action, he was wounded in the thigh, which hospitalised him for some months. He enjoyed a distinguished career in the RAF until his retirement in 1931, when he presented his medals to the school. He rejoined the RAF in the Second World War and served, aged 52, in north Africa. He later sailed the Atlantic single handed and built a home in the Bahamas, where he married and raised three children


1920

Pennell House, formerly Eastbourne Ladies' College, opened in Grassington Road under the Rev Truman Tanqueray. It closed in 1986, when it was sold for development


1920s

A new crest was adopted in the 1920s and survives to this day


1921

Old Eastbournian Frederick Soddy, distinguished scientist who worked with Rutherford and originated the word 'isotopes', was awarded the Nobel Prize for his work on radioactivity

The Soddy Blue Plaque was mounted by the Institute of Physics on the wall of the D&T Building in 1998


1924

Old Eastbournian Christopher Mackintosh (seated centre, behind cup) with fellow athletes at University College Oxford. He played rugby for Scotland, represented Great Britain in the long jump in the 1924 'Chariots of Fire' Olympics, was British ski champion and a member of the GB team which won the World Bobsleigh Championship

The Thomson Gates were erected by the Arnold Embellishers in memory of headmaster Harry Thomson 19006


1924–8

The First World War Memorial Building was erected, using funds subscribed by Old Eastbournians and headmaster EC Arnold. It was built at a cost of £48,000 over a period of four to five years as funds became available


1927

Old Eastbournian Lt Col FFR Minchin CBE DSO MC & Bar, died in an attempted transatlantic flight. Minchin had served with distinction with the Royal Flying Corps in France, north Africa and Macedonia during the First World War. In 1919 he resigned from the RAF and entered civil aviation, flying for Imperial Airways. Always eager for a challenge, he, with two companions, took off from RAF Uphavon on 31 August 1927. After a sighting in mid-Atlantic they were not seen again


1929

Old Eastbournian Gordon Carey became headmaster. Carey had been head boy under Arnold, and a Stag for four seasons. A chorister at King's, scholar of Caius, Cambridge, he was a rugby blue for two years and later played for the Barbarians. He served with distinction with the Rifle Brigade in the First World War and with the RAF as a staff officer in the Second World War. A reforming headmaster, he promoted music and the arts into mainstream activities


1930

The Minchin memorial window and plaque was erected by the Arnold Embellishers on the north wall of the New Building (now the D&T Building)


1931

The Prince of Wales, later King Edward VIII, visited the College (seen here with Gordon Carey)

Powell House was given to the College by Stanley Powell, Governor and Eastbourne resident.  The first day boy house


1932

The College of Heralds granted the third, official, version of the College arms.


1936

In 1936–40 and 1945–48 Bishop Walter Carey was appointed College Chaplain. Carey had been a quadruple Oxford rugby blue and a member of the first ever GB touring team (nowadays The Lions) which visited South Africa. Notoriously outspoken in the pulpit and on the BBC, he was greatly loved by the boys


1938

John Nugee became headmaster. Educated at Radley and Magdalen College, Oxford, after a distinguished war record in which he won the MC, Nugee was Sub-Warden at Radley. He is best known for taking the College into wartime exile at Radley and, with a small team of devoted staff, bringing it safely back to Eastbourne in 1945

Speech Day on the lawns behind the Memorial Building


1940

Evacuation to Radley 1940–45. Angus McPhail, Warden of Radley, and headmaster Charlie Bush unveil a plaque to commemorate the happy collaboration of the two schools between 1940 and 1945


19405

During the Second World War HMS Marlborough, a torpedo school, occupied the College buildings

The Grange Road gate to HMS Marlborough


19405 and later

Old Eastbournian Wing Cmmdr Roland 'Bee' Beamont CBE DSO* DFC*, outstanding fighter pilot and, later, test pilot who fought in the Battle for France, the Battle of Britain, against the doodle-bug scourge and on D-Day. The first Briton to exceed the speed of sound and author of nine books on aviation


1945

Memorial Field, the playing field of the former St Cyprian's prep school, was given by Old Eastbournians as a Second World War Memorial. The picture shows St Cyprian's as it once was

Originally Reeves House, the gift of Old Eastbournian Herbert Reeves, a solicitor, now Craig House, a day boy house, named after 'Teddy' Craig, a much-loved housemaster of Powell


1946

Ascham, the College Preparatory School, opened in the former Ascham St Vincent’s buildings in Carlisle Road and closed in 1977. The First World War Memorial Gate survives


1948

Speech Day: Field Marshall Montgomery (seen with headmaster John Nugee) presented the prizes and inspected a Guard of Honour


1951

Old Eastbournian Stanley Sears gave land, Sears' Piece, to the College.  This formed the site of a newly-built CCF Building

Old Eastbournian Sir Hugh Casson, later President of the Royal Academy, was Chief Architect for the Festival of Britain. He was knighted for this achievement


1956–70

Michael Birley was a reforming headmaster who steered the College through the 'swinging sixties', a period when many traditional patterns of behaviour were being superseded by a more liberal approach. He abolished fagging and corporal punishment, tolerated long hair and introduced girls into the College


1956

The Carey Pillars in Old Wish Road, in honour of Old Eastbournian headmaster Gordon Carey, were erected by the Arnold Embellishers


1957

The Link (Science) Building, largely financed by Old Eastbournians, was opened by Lord Kilmuir, Lord Chancellor


1958

The new gym was built in The Wish


1966

Visit of the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh on the eve of the College's centenary


1967

Centenary of the College. On Speech Day, the Rt Hon Harold Macmillan MP met Ann and Michael Birley, with the Duke of Devonshire in the background 

Ex Oriente Salus, a history of the College’s first hundred years by member of staff Vin Allom, was published in time for the centenary


1970–73

John Kendall Carpenter, headmaster of Cranbrook School in Kent, was appointed to follow Michael Birley in 1970. After three years and following a period of ill health he moved on to become headmaster of Wellington School in Somerset. As a young man he played rugby 23 times for England (1949–54) and later became President of the RFU

1973–80
 

Simon Langdale came to the College having been a housemaster and master in charge of cricket at Radley. He re-established our strong links with Radley after the College’s evacuation to that school in the Second World War. It was his first headship and he set about his tasks with gusto, creating a business-like atmosphere, initiating developments in facilities, and instilling self belief and ambition in the pupils. In 1980 he moved on to become headmaster of Shrewsbury School

1976

The swimming pool was opened by Michael Birley, headmaster 1956–70


1980

The new Art School was opened by Old Eastbournian Sir Hugh Casson, President of the Royal Academy, in March 1980. OE Admiral Sir Derek Empson, Chairman of Council, stands behind him


1981–92

Christopher Saunders took over as headmaster in January 1981, leaving Bradfield where he had been a popular housemaster. His charisma soon became apparent and he attracted prep school headmasters and parents, raising school numbers to 560, at that stage the largest in its history. At the outset of his tenure he had to cope with the tragedy of the fire in Big School, but this provided an opportunity for his optimism and there arose a phoenix from the ashes in the shape of a modern theatre. After 11 years he moved on to his old school Lancing for his second headship.


1981

19 November 1981 – Big School burnt down


1983

The Big School theatre was opened in the shell of the old building, built with funds of £650,000 raised by Old Eastbournians and friends of the College under the enthusiastic leadership of David Winn, Chairman of the Old Eastbournian Association


1986

New Pennell House was opened at the corner of Blackwater and College Roads


1991

Watt House was opened by Old Eastbournian Ian Watt, College Governor and a distinguished forensic accountant


1992

Old Eastbournian 'Beefy' Howell, Cambridge rugby blue, housemaster of Powell and Gonville Houses and rugby coach 1925–53, died. Treasurer, Chairman and President of the OEA


19932005

Charlie Bush brought incredible energy and enthusiasm to the role of headmaster and knew every one of his 600 pupils by name. He will be remembered for steering the College through an ambitious programme of new building – the Science Centre, the D&T Building, the Cavendish LRC, the Beresford Astroturf and the Nugent extension


1994

The Howell Memorial Pavilion, an enlargement of the original Snowden pavilion, was opened. It commemorates the life and work of 'Beefy' Howell and includes on its first floor a fascinating Long Room


1994–5

The Beresford Astroturf pitch was opened on the site of the former Beresford House School in Paradise Drive/Summerdown Road


1995

'New' Blackwater, a girls' day house, was opened on the site of old Blackwater.  A time capsule was planted in the presence of Virginia Bottomley MP and present and previous housemasters

The College became fully co-educational

(This picture shows Nugent leavers in 2006)


1997

The Cavendish Learning Resources Centre (LRC) was opened, incorporating the Memorial Building Cavendish Library for which Mrs Eila Carey had provided the oak panelling in 1931. The LRC is well-stocked and always staffed. Pupils can study here during the day or in prep time, accessing computing resources alongside multimedia items and the printed word


2002

The Science Centre, built at a cost of nearly £3.75 million and opened by Baroness Greenfield, herself a notable scientist, provided the College with an exceptional resource for the teaching of the sciences, without rival in the independent schools sector

For most of its life the College’s growth and development has been underpinned by a long series of generous donations by OEs and others. The Memorial Building, Big School, Nugent House, Reeves House, the Rule Centre and the Howell Memorial Pavilion are but six of the many additions to the College campus that were funded in this way. In 2002 the decision was taken to centralise and formalise fund raising under the banner of the Eastbourne College Foundation. Its directors have been Forbes Wastie (left) and Kim Deshayes (right); the current incumbent is David Stewart (centre)


2005

The new Design and Technology (D&T) Building was opened in the shell of the old Science Building by Old Eastbournian and College Governor Sir Charles Masefield

World War Two Memorial Panels in the Memorial Arch, which commemorate the 164 boys killed in that war, and five more who lost their lives in other conflicts between and after the wars, were dedicated. They had been planned and erected by the Arnold Embellishers

Current headmaster Simon Davies joined the College in September 2005 from Bedford School where he was Vice Master and Usher (Deputy Head). Here he is seen with two school prefects in Old Wish Road


2006

The Nugent House extension was opened. Nugent was originally acquired as the gift of Old Eastbournian Arthur Nugent in 1957


2007

The College celebrated its 140th anniversary

A part of the 140th year celebrations was the publication of the book Eastbourne College: A Celebration, which sought to record those first 140 years with reminiscences, anecdotes and photographs from and of Old Eastbournians of all ages

22 September 2007 – The plaque at Spencer Court, the College’s first home in 1867, was unveiled. Pictured are Robert Beatson (right), great-grandson of the first headmaster, with current headmaster Simon Davies


2008

In October, Old Eastbournian General Sir David Richards KCB CBE DSO, Commander in Chief British Land Forces, was appointed the new Chief of the General Staff with effect from August 2009