Schools Attended by London Life Characters: Difference between revisions

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*[[Jean-Laurent d'Aubin]]
*[[Jean-Laurent d'Aubin]]
**(1798-1803)
**(1798-1803)
*[[Arthur Cartwright]]
**(1799-1804)
*[[Charlie Devenish]]
*[[Charlie Devenish]]
**(1802-1807)
*[[Anthony Dunford]]
*[[Hugo Fotherington]]
**(1794-1799)
*[[Nicholas Gosling]]
*[[Nicholas Gosling]]
**(1794-1799)
*[[William Gosling]]
*[[William Gosling]]
**(1795-1800)
*[[Richard Fitzgerald II|Richard Fitzgerald]]
*[[Richard Fitzgerald II|Richard Fitzgerald]]
*[[Robert Fitzgerald]] (1792-1799)
**(1791-1796)
*[[Robert Fitzgerald]]  
**(1792-1799)
*[[George Hackett]]
*[[George Hackett]]
**(1798-1803)
*[[Rawdon Montgomery]]
*[[Rawdon Montgomery]]
**(1798-1803)
**(1798-1803)
*[[Daniel Rossington]]
**(1794-1799)
*[[Thomas Sterne]]
**(1797-1802)


===Harrow===
===Harrow===
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===Westminster===
===Westminster===
*[[Oscar Moncrieff]]


===Winchester===
===Winchester===

Revision as of 16:01, 25 April 2016

The English school system differs from the American one in that there is no graduation from school - that's reserved for people attaining their degrees at university. In the Regency era there was no minimum age to leave school; it was possible for a young man in his teens to hold a commission in the Army or to be at sea with the Royal Navy, and of course that meant that they would not be at school in full time education. Most, if not all, public schools (schools that were paid for by members of the public) were exclusively boarding schools - some, such as Winchester, still are to this day.

There were also grammar schools which did not have the same cachet as the more expensive public schools, so would be more affordable for those characters of the gentry and middling sort. See List of the oldest schools in the United Kingdom for a list of schools that were around in 1811.

It was common to have a tutor from a young age, and some boys never went to school at all but remained at home and took all their schooling from private tutors. Schools catered for boys aged between eight and 18, although very few boys remained at school until they were eighteen, and not everyone went to school from the age of eight.

Subjects taught included Latin, mathematics, history, geography, English, French, possibly a little drawing.

Ladies would be privately educated at home under a governess, and might be sent to a ladies' seminary later on. They would not learn the same sort of things as the boys would, but would learn basic mathematics, French, dancing, deportment... some ladies' schools even trained their students how to get in and out of a carriage gracefully.

Public Schools

Charterhouse

Eton

Harrow

Rugby

Shrewsbury

Westminster

Winchester

Grammar Schools

Sherborne

Tonbridge School