Culford School is a
co-educational independent day and boarding school for pupils age 1-18 in the village of
Culford, miles north of
Bury St Edmunds
Bury St Edmunds (), commonly referred to locally as Bury, is a historic market town, market, cathedral town and civil parish in Suffolk, England.OS Explorer map 211: Bury St.Edmunds and Stowmarket Scale: 1:25 000. Publisher:Ordnance Survey – ...
in
Suffolk
Suffolk () is a ceremonial county of England in East Anglia. It borders Norfolk to the north, Cambridgeshire to the west and Essex to the south; the North Sea lies to the east. The county town is Ipswich; other important towns include Lowes ...
, England. The headmaster is a member of the
Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference and the Prep School is a member of the
IAPS.
History
The school was founded as the
East Anglia
East Anglia is an area in the East of England, often defined as including the counties of Norfolk, Suffolk and Cambridgeshire. The name derives from the Anglo-Saxon kingdom of the East Angles, a people whose name originated in Anglia, in ...
n School for Boys, incorporating an institution founded in 1873 by
Congregationalist minister, Dr John H. L. Christien. It was one of a group of
Methodist schools established in response to the growth of the middle class, the launching of the
Woodard Schools and the 1867
Taunton Commission, which fuelled an expansion of secondary education in general and of non-conformist boarding schools in particular. The original school was in Northgate Street in
Bury St Edmunds
Bury St Edmunds (), commonly referred to locally as Bury, is a historic market town, market, cathedral town and civil parish in Suffolk, England.OS Explorer map 211: Bury St.Edmunds and Stowmarket Scale: 1:25 000. Publisher:Ordnance Survey – ...
, but in 1886 it moved to Thingoe Hill in the town (a site later occupied by the East Anglian School for Girls).
In 1935 the school moved to
Culford Park. This is the former seat of the
Earls Cornwallis, then the Benyon family and finally the
Earls of Cadogan. The
7th Earl Cadogan sold the estate to the Methodist Independent Schools Trust in 1935, and thereafter the school became known as Culford School. It is at the centre of East Anglia, c.90 minutes from London, 60 from
Norwich, 40 from
Ipswich, and c.30 minutes from
Cambridge
Cambridge ( ) is a university city and the county town in Cambridgeshire, England. It is located on the River Cam approximately north of London. As of the 2021 United Kingdom census, the population of Cambridge was 145,700. Cambridge beca ...
.
The school sits in of
Repton parkland with grazing, formal gardens, lake, and the 16th-19th Century Culford Hall. When the school first moved to Culford the Hall became dormitories and classrooms; the laundry the sanatorium; the forge the art and woodwork studios (now the Pringle Centre for Art and Design Technology); and the stables the Junior Department (now the
Preparatory School).
The first new building to be added by the school was Cadogan House, for junior boys, in 1937. The Leigh Memorial Swimming Pool was built in the same year.
The school was one of the '
direct grant grammar school
A direct grant grammar school was a type of selective secondary school in the United Kingdom that existed between 1945 and 1976. One quarter of the places in these schools were directly funded by central government, while the remainder attracted ...
s' in the system that existed in England and Wales between 1945 and 1976. The system provided funds from central government for a number of pupils per year to be admitted from local education authority schools within the County of West Suffolk, selected primarily on the basis of their
Eleven-plus
The eleven-plus (11+) is a standardized examination administered to some students in England and Northern Ireland in their last year of primary education, which governs admission to grammar schools and other secondary schools which use academic ...
exam results.
The Skinner and Hastings buildings were added in the 1960s, followed during the 1970s-1990s by an auditorium, pre-prep school, medical centre and biology laboratories. Purpose-built boarding houses and the
Ashby Ashby may refer to:
People
* Ashby (surname)
* Alan la Zouche, 1st Baron la Zouche of Ashby (1267–1314), governor of Rockingham Castle and steward of Rockingham Forest, England
* Walter Ashby Plecker (1861–1947), American physician and publ ...
Dining Hall (named after the then Chairman of the Governors) were constructed in 1972.

1972 was the year in which Culford amalgamated with its sister school, the East Anglian School for Girls (EASG), becoming one of the first fully co-educational
HMC HMC may stand for:
Education
* Harvey Mudd College, Claremont, California, US
* Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference, UK organisation of independent fee-charging schools
* Harvard Model Congress, congressional simulation conference
* Harr ...
schools. New Houses were formed as follows:
The school today
Although Culford is a selective school, it accepts pupils of a broad ability range. More than half of the senior pupils are boarders.
Three schools are housed within the Park:
*The Nursery and Pre-Prep is for pupils aged from 1–7 years old. The Nursery, launched in September 2017, is housed in a newly converted building for 1–2 year olds and the Pre-Prep (for 3 to 7 year old) is based in Fieldgate House, at the east of the Park. The Pre-Prep School is overseen by the head of the Prep School.
*The Prep School is a boarding and day school for 7–13 year olds. It occupies the north of the Park, surrounded by its own pitches, but also uses Senior facilities. The present Head is Claire Bentley , and she is supported by Rory Parker (Deputy Head), Stephen Clay (Director of Studies), Jon Herd (Assistant Head) and Katie Clarke head of lower school.
*The Senior School is a mixed boarding and day school for 13–18 year olds. The boarding houses overlook parkland and pitches, with academic pursuits taking place in various buildings in the centre of the Park. Pupils join from UK and overseas prep and maintained schools, with scholarships, exhibitions, bursaries, Forces allowances and Methodist Schools assistance being offered. Dr John Guntrip is the current Deputy Head.
A library of historic volumes is located in an oak panelled room overlooking Culford Hall’s south front, completed for the visit of
King Edward VII in December 1904 and now the staff common room. A large contemporary collection of 10,000 books is housed in a free-standing modern building opened 2015,. The Centenary Hall, a facility containing a large hall/auditorium and Studio Theatre was opened in 2006 by
the Duke of Gloucester (twenty five years after his first visit for the school's centenary), and was constructed in what was previously a large courtyard enclosed on three sides by the main building.
The Culford Foundation exists to raise funds for special projects that will benefit the pupils of the school and has raised funds for the Pre-Prep nursery and dining hall; an astro-turf sports field; the William Miller Science Centre (built following a £1m donation by an Old Culfordian); the restoration of Culford Hall, the new library and the Art and Design Centre. The Foundation also supports the Old Culfordians Association.
The most recent inspection report of the Prep and Senior schools (February 2020) by the
Independent Schools Inspectorate
The Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI) is approved by the Secretary of State for Education – under section 106 of the Education and Skills Act 2008 – to inspect independent schools in England. These schools are members of associations, w ...
(ISI) concludes that the schools are “Excellent” in all areas.
Academia

The ISI 2020 inspection rates academics as Excellent and the
Good Schools Guide say that the quality of the pupils’ achievement is good. Pupils are well educated, in accordance with the school’s aims of providing an education that is challenging, enriching and fun.
In 2019 79% of A-level grades were A*-C compared to 82% and 78% at the nearby
County Upper School and
King Edward VI School respectively.
There is a Scholars Programme, plus many societies focused on subjects and areas of interest. Lecturers have included
Sir Andrew Motion,
Ann Widdecombe,
George Alagiah and
Henry Olonga.
A Sixth Form Enrichment Programme offers
Open University degree modules and pupils also compete in competitions such as the
Intermediate Mathematical Challenge
Intermediate may refer to:
* Intermediate 1 or Intermediate 2, educational qualifications in Scotland
* Intermediate (anatomy), the relative location of an anatomical structure lying between two other structures: see Anatomical terms of location
...
. Like many independent schools, Culford teaches the
IGCSE.
The Arts

The arts are overseen by specialist staff covering Music, Drama, Art and Dance.
Music is also supported by Heads of Keyboard, Strings and Wind and Brass and a team of instrumental tutors, covering all the orchestral instruments, drum kit, classical and electric guitar. With many pupils learning an instrument. Inter-house music competitions and termly concerts are held: recent concerts include Mendelssohn’s ''
Elijah'' and Britten’s ''
Noye's Fludde'' at the church in
Orford where it was performed originally. The school has many musical ensembles and groups and also holds special days and assemblies. There is an extensive programme of concerts at all levels. 2009 saw the restoration of the west wing of Culford Hall to create the Beech Centre for Music and Performing Arts (part-funded by Old Culfordian David Beech).
Two major dramatic productions are staged each year, one musical and one stage play. Smaller productions are staged more regularly, including during House drama competitions. The Studio Theatre, the Centenary Hall, and the Regency
Theatre Royal are used as venues.
Lamda qualifications are offered as are dance lessons.
Sport and activities
Culford offers high performance academies in Tennis and Golf alongside the major competitive sports of rugby, cricket, hockey, netball, athletics, cross-country and swimming. Regional honours are achieved whilst European and England players and champions in hockey, tennis, horse riding, karate, polo and rugby are on the school roll. Pupils compete in events such as the
National Schools Rugby Sevens, and the Inter-Schools
Hunter Trials.
Numbered amongst current Old Culfordians are an Olympic horserider, a British
modern pentathlon
The modern pentathlon is an Olympic sport consisting of fencing (one-touch épée), freestyle swimming, equestrian show jumping, pistol shooting, and cross country running. The event is inspired by the traditional pentathlon held during the anci ...
champion, a Welsh hockey international, and club rugby and cricket players for
Richmond and
Middlesex respectively. Previous generations of Old Culfordians have included several hockey players for England and one for Scotland, a captain of the Welsh team, and a Great British hockey Olympian; as well as an England badminton player. The school has also produced numerous Oxford and Cambridge
Blues
Blues is a music genre and musical form which originated in the Deep South of the United States around the 1860s. Blues incorporated spirituals, work songs, field hollers, shouts, chants, and rhymed simple narrative ballads from the Afri ...
.
In addition to the major sports, Culford offers a wide range of other sports and activities utilising its of parkland and extensive facilities.

*A sports centre (built in the 1990s) with 25m indoor swimming pool, sports hall with 4-lane cricket nets, bowling machine, squash courts, fitness suite, aerobics and dance studio, video assessment suite, and a climbing wall
*Floodlit astroturf
*Six rugby and five grass hockey pitches
*A 4-court championship standard indoor tennis centre
*Six grass, six hard and six astroturf tennis courts
*Three cricket pitches including cricket square with thatched pavilion, views of the Hall and Park, and grass nets
*A lake, used for fishing and canoeing bordering Repton's gardens and crossed by a cast-iron bridge by
Samuel Wyatt (the fifth-oldest in the world, listed Grade I)
*A 9-hole pitch and putt golf course. The school makes use o
Flempton Golf Clubto play its home matches.
*An indoor golf studio with simulator and radar technology and outdoor covered driving range

A further lake at
Lackford is used for Sailing, and nearby
Thetford Forest is used for outdoor pursuits. Golf is played at a course in neighbouring
Flempton. 1962 saw the school become one of the 16 founder members of
The Public Schools Old Boys Golf Association, and it competes regularly in the Grafton Morrish Trophy.
The school is linked to the
LTA High Performance Centre in Cambridge, and 14 coaches offer a tennis scheme encompassing a junior Academy programme. The school also provides cricket coaching from former Italy international, Andrew Northcote. Culford play an
MCC side annually.
An Activities Programme offers over sixty pursuits including climbing, clay pigeon shooting, chess, critical thinking,
Cub Scouts, debating,
Duke of Edinburgh's Award, expeditions, fencing, horse riding, sub aqua and
Young Enterprise. In addition, external organisations using Culford's facilities contribute to provision for pupils:
*
Northampton Saints Rugby Academy train weekly, as part of their Elite Player Development scheme
*The Eastern Junior Regional Performance Centre for
England Hockey is based at Culford, as is a satellite of the
Eastern Counties Rugby Union “Schools of Rugby” initiative
*
Suffolk County Cricket Youth Squad train regularly, run courses and play matches
*West Suffolk Swimming Team train daily
*The School hosts events such as the European Karate Championships, International Horse Riding Championships,
O2 Premiership Rugby Training Camps, International Archery Championships, Suffolk Schools County Cricket tournaments and drama camps.
Combined Cadet Force
The CCF's
Army section is associated with the
Army Air Corps and the First Battalion
Royal Anglian Regiment. The CCF is commanded by Captain Sarah Schofield. Weekly training activities include shooting, expeditions, combat manoeuvres, ambush and continuity drills, signals training, orienteering, climbing, kayaking, first aid and lifesaving. The CCF also play an important role in the School’s annual Act of Remembrance on
Armistice Day.
The CCF Contingent was inspected in 2007 by General
Sir John McColl, an Old Culfordian, Colonel of the Royal Anglians and
Deputy Supreme Allied Commander Europe
The Supreme Allied Commander Europe (SACEUR) is the commander of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's (NATO) Allied Command Operations (ACO) and head of ACO's headquarters, Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe (SHAPE). The commander is ...
. 2009’s inspection was carried out by Air Vice Marshal
Richard Garwood, parent of a Culfordian and Chief of Staff (Operations) at
Headquarters Air Command
Air Command is the only Command currently active in the Royal Air Force. It was formed by the merger of Royal Air Force Strike and Personnel and Training commands on 1 April 2007, and has its headquarters at RAF High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire.
...
; and 2011’s by
General the Lord Dannatt.
The current CCF is the successor to several individual service cadet forces, established during the world wars and at other stages, as well as to Culford’s
Air Scouts
Air Scouts are a part of the Scout movement with a particular emphasis on an aviation themed programme and/or flying-based activities. Air Scouts follow the same basic programme as other Scouts, but they devote certain amounts of time focused on ...
troop which, in 1939, was amongst the first five nationally and which became the largest in eastern England prior to dwindling in the 1960s.
Headmasters
*Herbert A Davidson 1881-1882
*Samuel B Leigh, 1882–1915
*W C Newman, 1915–1924
*
John W Skinner 1924-1951
*C Storey 1951-1971
*D Robson, 1971–1992
*J S Richardson, 1992-2004 (
Cheltenham College headmaster 2004-2010)
*Julian Johnson-Munday, 2004- (formerly
Mill Hill School deputy headmaster)
Notable alumni
*
John C. A. Barrett
John Charles Allanson Barrett (born 1943) is an English Methodist and chairman and elected president of the World Methodist Council, succeeding Nigerian Sunday Mbang at the World Methodist Conference in Seoul on 24 July 2006. Before stepping down i ...
(President,
World Methodist Council and former Headmaster of sister school
The Leys
The Leys School is a co-educational independent school in Cambridge, England. It is a day and boarding school for about 574 pupils between the ages of eleven and eighteen, and a member of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference.
Histo ...
)
*
Bob Blizzard (
Labour MP 1997-2010;
Lord Commissioner of HM Treasury 2008-2010)
*
Robert Crawford (former Director General of the
Imperial War Museum
Imperial War Museums (IWM) is a British national museum organisation with branches at five locations in England, three of which are in London. Founded as the Imperial War Museum in 1917, the museum was intended to record the civil and military ...
)
*
I Grenville Cross (
Director of Public Prosecutions, Hong Kong, China 1997-2009)
*
Josh Davey (Cricketer,
Middlesex and
Scotland)
*
Nick de Bois
Geoffrey Nicholas de Bois (born 23 February 1959) is a British Conservative Party politician, who served as Special Adviser and Chief of Staff to Dominic Raab during his brief tenure as Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union. He wa ...
(
Conservative MP 2010- )
*
Hugh Falkus (writer and film maker (d.1996))
*
Tommy Freeman (Rugby player for
Northampton Saints and
England
England is a country that is part of the United Kingdom. It shares land borders with Wales to its west and Scotland to its north. The Irish Sea lies northwest and the Celtic Sea to the southwest. It is separated from continental Europe ...
)
*
Jayne-Anne Gadhia (Former Chief Executive of
Virgin Money UK)

*
Ian Hendry (actor, most notably ''
The Avengers
Avenger, Avengers, The Avenger, or The Avengers may refer to:
Arts and entertainment In the Marvel Comics universe
* Avengers (comics), a team of superheroes
** Avengers (Marvel Cinematic Universe), a central team of protagonist superheroes o ...
'' (d.1984))
*
Sharon Hunt
Sharon Ann Hunt (born 11 October 1977 in Bury St Edmunds) is a British three-day eventing rider.
Hunt was educated at Culford School and the Perse School for Girls. With her horse Tankers Town, she was fifth at Badminton Horse Trials the ...
(
Great Britain 3-Day Eventing Bronze Medalist, 2008 Beijing Summer Olympics)
*
Kate Jackson (singer, formerly of
The Long Blondes)
*
Peter Jenkins (political columnist and associate editor, ''
The Independent'' (d.1992))
*
Andy Johnson-Laird (pioneer in
computer forensics
Computer forensics (also known as computer forensic science) is a branch of digital forensic science pertaining to evidence found in computers and digital storage media. The goal of computer forensics is to examine digital media in a forensical ...
,
software reverse engineering and forensic software analysis)
*
Lucy Johnston (Health Editor, ''
The Daily Express'')
*Professor
Philip Johnson-Laird
Philip Nicholas Johnson-Laird, FRS, FBA (born 12 October 1936) is a philosopher of language and reasoning and a developer of the mental model theory of reasoning. He was a professor at Princeton University's Department of Psychology, as well ...
(Stuart Professor of Psychology,
Princeton University)
*
John McColl, (
Lieutenant Governor of Jersey;
Deputy Supreme Allied Commander Europe
The Supreme Allied Commander Europe (SACEUR) is the commander of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's (NATO) Allied Command Operations (ACO) and head of ACO's headquarters, Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe (SHAPE). The commander is ...
2007-2011)
*
William McFee (Anglo-American novelist, especially of sea-tales, and essayist (d.1966))
*
William R. Miller CBE (former Vice Chairman of
Bristol-Myers Squibb and benefactor to Culford and
St Edmund Hall, Oxford)
*
John Motson (sports commentator,
BBC)
*
Gary Newbon
Gary Newbon MBE (born 15 March 1945 in Cambridge, Cambridgeshire) is a television sports presenter and executive.
Biography
He attended Culford School near Bury St Edmunds where he captained the rugby first XV and edited the school magazine. Upon ...
(
Sky Sports presenter)
*
Andrew Phillips, Baron Phillips of Sudbury
Andrew Wyndham Phillips, Baron Phillips of Sudbury, OBE (born 15 March 1939) is a solicitor and former Liberal Democrat politician.
Education and legal practice
Andrew Phillips attended Culford School, Uppingham School and Trinity Hall, Cambrid ...
(
Liberal Democrat politician and Chancellor of the
University of Essex)
*
David Plastow
Sir David Arnold Stuart Plastow, (9 May 1932 – 5 June 2019) was a British businessman who was chairman of the UK's Medical Research Council 1990–1998.
He became an automobile executive who filled a series of high level appointments in th ...
(former Chairman of
Rolls-Royce Motors & Chairman & Chief Executive of
Vickers)
*
Paula Pryke (noted floral artist and author)
*
Derek Reffell
Admiral Sir Derek Roy Reffell, (born 6 October 1928) is a former Royal Navy officer and Governor of Gibraltar.
Naval career
Educated at Culford School, Reffell entered the Royal Navy, qualified as a Navigating Officer in 1954 and progressed thr ...
, (former
Controller of the Navy and
Governor of Gibraltar)
*
John Rose (businessman) (chief executive, Rolls-Royce, 1996-2011)
*
Heather J. Sharkey (
Marshall Scholar,
Fulbright-Hays Scholar, historian of the Middle East and Africa at the
University of Pennsylvania, author)
*
Henry Tang (Chief Secretary of Hong Kong 2007-11)
*
John Taylor John Taylor, Johnny Taylor or similar may refer to:
Academics
*John Taylor (Oxford), Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University, 1486–1487
*John Taylor (classical scholar) (1704–1766), English classical scholar
*John Taylor (English publisher) (178 ...
(first Chief Justice of
Lagos (d.1973))
*
Colin White,
Nelson scholar and Director of the
Royal Naval Museum (d. 2008))
Controversies
*In 2017 two individuals were alleged by Suffolk police to be dealing cannabis to students, with several pupils being suspended by the school for smoking the drug.
*The former head of IT, Gerald Baalham, was convicted in 2014 of dishonestly abusing his position to obtain £32k of computer equipment between August 2012 and December 2013 and sentenced to a two-year prison sentence suspended for two years.
*In 1992 five pupils were expelled and three suspended for smoking cannabis, with the school chef Nicholas Clutterham, 19, committing suicide after being sacked for his part in the drug scandal. A further five pupils were expelled and five suspended in 1999 for similar offences.
The Fifth Dinner Club

The name of the ‘Fifth Dinner Club’ (FDC) is derived from its foundation by five members of the Fifth Form - G G Hawes, R H Tuffs, Gaubert, Downs and Marley - to subvert the prefects. However the Fifth Formers eventually became prefects themselves and only prefects have been admitted ever since. It is separate from the school and is run by its members. The club is associated with a motto, abbreviated to D.V.P.M. It is also associated with
Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese pub on London’s
Fleet Street
Fleet Street is a major street mostly in the City of London. It runs west to east from Temple Bar at the boundary with the City of Westminster to Ludgate Circus at the site of the London Wall and the River Fleet from which the street was na ...
, where members first dined in the 1930s and which they visit to this day.
Miscellanea
*During the 1940s,
Basil Brown, the amateur archaeologist, worked as a stoker at the school. Enlisting the help of several Culford boys, he dug out two Roman pottery kilns at nearby
West Stow, inspiring Stanley West to return two decades later to unearth
West Stow Anglo-Saxon Village
West Stow Anglo-Saxon Village is an archaeological site and an open-air museum located near to West Stow in Suffolk, eastern England. Evidence for intermittent human habitation at the site stretches from the Mesolithic through the Neolithic, ...
.
*Construction of the indoor tennis centre unearthed the body of a Bronze Age child.
*Backdrops of Culford Park, and particularly the thatched cricket pavilion, were featured in the BBC's ''
Lovejoy
''Lovejoy'' is a British television comedy-drama mystery series, based on the novels by John Grant under the pen name Jonathan Gash. The show, which ran to 71 episodes over six series, was originally broadcast on BBC1 between 10 January 19 ...
'' series.
*The
London and North Eastern Railway
The London and North Eastern Railway (LNER) was the second largest (after LMS) of the " Big Four" railway companies created by the Railways Act 1921 in Britain. It operated from 1 January 1923 until nationalisation on 1 January 1948. At th ...
named one of their
Class B17s, no. 2815, “Culford Hall”.

*In September 1940, during the Battle of Britain, a German
Junkers 88A-1 aircraft was shot down by the RAF over the school's lake, resulting in numerous fragments of the plane disappearing into Cadogan House as souvenirs. The School Archive now has a number of these fragments including the maker's plate and an oxygen bottle.
*The school is featured in a 2005 Victorian crime novel by Ethard Wendel Van Stee as having turned out one James Lott, notorious swindler and one of the chief protagonists of the tale. Van Stee imagines Lott's father having "packed him off to join the first class at the East Anglian School for Boys, later the Culford School, in Bury St Edmunds, ostensibly to provide him with a good Christian education." Having "expected the school, in its mysterious way, to turn the son of a publican into a young gentleman," he would not be disappointed; "However, like ice cream, the products of the East Anglian School for Boys were turned out in distinctive flavours..."
*A bronze statue of the Victorian racing greyhound
Master McGrath on the south lawns of Culford Hall led to some speculation that he is buried there.
1971 ''Sports Illustrated'' article on Master McGrath
Retrieved 2010-01-05
Further reading
*
*
*
*
* Written by the Headmaster of Kingswood School, chronicles the involvement of Methodism with education and the history of each of the Board’s 14 schools.
* Charts the foundation of the Methodist schools.
*
*
*
References
External links
Culford School Website
Profile
on the ISC website
Methodist Education Website
{{authority control
Educational institutions established in 1881
1881 establishments in England
Independent schools in Suffolk
Boarding schools in Suffolk
Member schools of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference
Preparatory schools in Suffolk
Methodist schools in England
Grade I listed buildings in Suffolk
Grade II* listed buildings in Suffolk
Grade II listed educational buildings
Sports venues in Suffolk
Culford
Gardens by Humphry Repton