Katana VentraIP

Monkton Combe School

Monkton Combe School is a public school (fee-charging boarding and day school), located in the village of Monkton Combe near Bath in Somerset, England.

Monkton Combe School

Latin: Verbum Tuum Veritas
(Thy Word is Truth)

1868 (1868)

The Revd Francis Pocock

Christopher Wheeler (Senior School), Catherine Winchcombe (Prep School)

2 to 18

711 (Senior, Prep and Pre-Prep)

6 Senior, 5 Prep

Navy Blue & White    

It is a member of the Rugby Group of major independent boarding schools in the United Kingdom.[1]


Monkton Combe School was founded in 1868 by the Revd. Francis Pocock, a former curate to the Bishop of Sierra Leone in the 1850s.[2]

Houses[edit]

At the Senior school there are three boys houses: Farm, Eddystone and School; and three girls houses: Grove Grange, Clarendon and Nutfield. Each house has both day and boarding pupils.


Clarendon house continues the traditions of Clarendon School for Girls, a former independent girls school which merged with Monkton in 1992, at which point the school became coeducational.[9]


The Preparatory school has four day pupil houses: Howard, Easterfield, Kearns and Jameson; in addition to Hatton house, a mixed boarding house.

Achievements & Artefacts[edit]

Olympic Medalists[edit]

The school’s has produced five Olympic rowing medalists. Each represented Great Britain and three won gold medals.[10]


In addition an OM achieved an Olympic Gold Medal representing Great Britain at men's hockey, while another captained the England Netball Team which won Gold at the 2018 Commonwealth Games.[11]

HMS Magpie[edit]

The school has ties to the Royal Navy ship HMS Magpie, a Black Swan-class sloop which was commanded by then Lieutenant-Commander, later Admiral of the Fleet the Duke of Edinburgh. The ties were established when the ship took the Junior school’s badge, a magpie (designed by the art mistress, Miss Bulmer), as its ship’s emblem.


The ship's bell was presented to the Junior School upon its decommissioning. The link is maintained with the current HMS Magpie, a survey ship, which continues to use the magpie emblem.[12]

Marshall Sledge[edit]

OM Lieutenant Colonel Eric Marshall, who served as surgeon during the 1907 British Antarctic Nimrod Expedition donated a sledge and flag used on the expedition to the school, where it remained on display for many years. Due to its deteriorating condition the school sold it at auction in 2018,[13] replacing it with a replica sculpture, ‘Discovery & Endeavour’.[14]

1868–1875 Revd F. Pocock

1875–1895 Revd R.G. Bryan

1895–1900 Revd W.E. Bryan

1900–1900 Revd N. Bennett

1900–1926 Revd J.W. Kearns

1926–1946 Revd E. Hayward

1946–1968 D.R. Wigram

1968–1978 R.J. Knight

1978–1990 R.A.C. Meredith

1990–2005 M.J. Cuthbertson

2005–2015 R. Backhouse

2016–Present C. Wheeler

The following have served as Head Master and/or Principal of the school:[15]

Revd. , 1866–1909, Classics Master

R.W. Ryde

1873-1934, Mathematics & Music Master[16]

D. Vaughan-Thomas

1878–1958, Cricket Master

A.S. Sellick

1891–1942, History Master and former pupil

G.F. Graham Brown

1896–1957, Association Football and Cricket Master

F. Vallis

1913–1994, French Master

T.M. Watson

1954–, History Master

N.D. Botton

1979–, Rowing Master

M. Wells

1857–1925, barrister, journalist and man of letters

George Somes Layard

1866–1951, Canadian doctor

Harry Martindale Speechly

1867–1953, peer

Montague Waldegrave, 5th Baron Radstock

1868–1927, Tsarist politician from the Second to the Fourth Duma

Count Vladimir Alekseyevich Bobrinsky

1869–1919, Peter's twin and Russian counter-revolutionary

Count Paul Bobrinsky

1869–1932, Paul's twin and Russian counter-revolutionary

Count Peter Bobrinsky

1869–1951, widely regarded as the father of golf course architecture

Harry Colt

1869–1960, British civil engineer

Ernest Crosbie Trench

1869–1958, part-owner of W. D. & H. O. Wills and Lord Lieutenant of Wiltshire

Sir Ernest Wills, 3rd Baronet

1870–1943, British philosopher and Hellenistic historian

Edwyn Bevan

1873–1943, British peer, barrister and soldier

Archibald Kennedy, 4th Marquess of Ailsa

1873–1952, first class cricketer

Horatio Powys-Keck

1873–1940, mathematician and inventor of the Young diagram and Young tableau[17]

Alfred Young

Lieutenant Colonel 1878–1918, recipient of the Victoria Cross for sacrificing his life for his men

Richard Annesley West

Lieutenant Colonel , 1879–1963, Antarctic explorer in Shackleton's Nimrod Expedition

Eric Marshall

1882–1952, administrator in the Indian Civil Service

Frank Lugard Brayne

Revd. , 1884–1981, Provost of Coventry Cathedral during its destruction, Archdeacon of Coventry[18]

Richard Howard

Revd. 1885–1975, Bishop of Iran

William Thompson

Revd. , 1887–1960, Master of St Peter’s Hall, Oxford

Robert Wilmot Howard

1890–1969, Archdeacon of Sudbury

Hugh Norton

Revd. 1891–1942, Principal of Wycliffe Hall, Oxford and Bishop of Jerusalem

Francis Graham Brown

Air Chief Marshal Sir 1892–1970, Commander-in-Chief of the Indian Air Force and of RAF Bomber Command[19]

Richard Peirse

Dr. Sir 1894–1983, medical missionary at Yakusu in the Congo with the Baptist Missionary Society

Clement Chesterman

(1896–1977), medical missionary to China with the Church Mission Society

Harold Gilbee Anderson

Monkton Combe School website

Bluefriars Boatclub website

Senior School Good Schools Guide Report

Monkton Combe village website