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King Edward VI School, Southampton

King Edward VI School (also known as King Edward's, or KES) is a selective co-educational private school founded in Southampton, England, in 1553.

King Edward VI School

Dieu et mon droit
(God and my right)

1553 (1553)

William Capon

Neal Parker

approx. 130

11 to 18

960

Lake, Capon, Watts, Sylvester, Reynolds and Lawrence

Old Edwardians

The school was founded at the request of William Capon, who bequeathed money in his will for a grammar school for the poor. King Edward VI signed the necessary Royal Charter in 1553 and the school opened in 1554. King Edward's became an independent school in 1978 and accepted girls into the sixth form in 1983. It became a fully co-educational school in 1994. It is a member of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference, and is a registered charity.[1] The school roll is approximately 950 pupils.


The current building was designed by the English architect Ernest Berry Webber in the early 1930s.

biochemist

Edward Penley Abraham

author

Alan F. Alford

clergyman

Thomas George Adames Baker

cricketer

Iain Brunnschweiler

Robert Bulling, Clerk of the Privy Council

rector and master of Jesus College, Cambridge

William Capon

Alec Campbell (footballer)

educator

James Cobban

clergyman

George Bernard Cronshaw

journalist

Ian Dunt

actor

Justin Edwards

John Francis (English cricketer)

Simon Francis (cricketer)

chief executive of British Land[4]

Chris Grigg

cricketer

Frederick Gross

MP for Wimbledon

Stephen Hammond

philanthropist

Henry Robinson Hartley

entomologist

John Heath

UK Independence Party MEP

Roger Helmer

artist

James Henry Hurdis

Arthur Lake, Bishop of Bath and Wells

politician

Thomas Lake

bishop

Michael Langrish

Michael Lewis (bishop)

painter

Eric Meadus

military

Gordon Messenger

geographer

Nick Middleton

Basil Mitchell (academic)

actor

Hugh Mitchell

Rob Moore (field hockey player)

scholar

John Muddiman

palaeontologist

Darren Naish

scholar

Dennis Nineham

politician

George Penny, 1st Viscount Marchwood

Olympic sailor

Iain Percy

scholar

Paul O'Prey

poet

Joshua Sylvester

minister and hymnist

Isaac Watts

playwright/screenwriter

Hugh Whitemore

zoologist

Gilbert Whitley

musician

Justin Young

School Website

on the Independent Schools Council website

Profile