The Philberds was a preparatory school based in a house in Holyport, near Maidenhead, Berkshire, on the site of one which Charles II had given to Nell Gwyn. The name derives from a family which owned land in the area in mediaeval times.

School founder Edward Henry Price

Edward Henry Price (1822–1898) was educated at Rugby School under Thomas Arnold, arriving in May 1835 aged 13.[1] He matriculated at St John's College, Cambridge in 1841, graduating B.A. in 1845, M.A. in 1863.[2]

Ordained deacon in 1845 and priest in 1846, Price spent the years 1845 to 1853 at Lutterworth as a curate.[2] He founded The Philberds in 1862, having previously founded a school at Tarvin in Cheshire which he moved to become Mostyn House School, in Cheshire, in 1855. In 1862 he sold Mostyn House School to Algernon Sydney Grenfell.[3]

Price was headmaster of The Philberds from 1862 until 1879.[2] The initial school fee was 80 guineas per annum.[4] He succeeded in building the reputation of Philberds as a preparatory school. He then took the living of Kimbolton.[5]

Later history

Frederick William Stephen Price, one of the sons, took over the school. He later was head of Ovingdean Hall School.[3] In 1885, the partnership he had with his brother Edward Matthew Price as schoolmasters at The Philberds was dissolved.[6] He left the school in the charge of his brother Edward and another brother, Herbert Johnson Price.[3][7]

In 1898 Frank Watkinson took over the school—an Oxford B.A. in 1892, he had been an assistant master at Mostyn House School.[8] In 1904 Charles R. Lupton moved his school from Farnborough, Hampshire to The Philberds.[9]

The school survived until the start of World War I. During the war, the manor building was used as an internment camp for German prisoners of war,[10] and in 1919 was demolished.

Old Philberdians F.C.

Old Philberdians
Full nameOld Philberdians Football Club
Nickname(s)the Black and White[11]
Founded1875 (1875)
Dissolved1914 (1914)
Groundschool grounds, Holyport, Maidenhead

The Rev. Price founded an association football club, the Old Philberdians, for the old boys and masters of the school, for which he regularly played as captain; the first such recorded match being a 0–0 draw in a 12-a-side match against Maidenhead in April 1875.[12] By 1877–78 the Old Philberdians were playing regularly against teams in the Berkshire area, and the club was strong enough to beat the established teams of Marlow[13] and the Remnants.[14]

In 1879–80, the club reached the final of the Berkshire & Buckinghamshire Senior Cup, having beaten Maidenhead away 7–0 en route.[15] Following two draws with the Swifts (in Maidenhead and Reading),[16] the clubs agreed to share the trophy.

The club was one of the first fifteen members of the Berkshire and Buckinghamshire Football Association[17] and in 1880–81 entered the FA Cup for the only time. The club withdrew when drawn away to Pilgrims; three of the club’s key players (the Wild brothers and Arnott) played instead for the Swifts.

Following that season, the club did not play competitively on either the local or national stage. Old Philberdians continued until at least 1889, with annual matches against Guy’s Hospital.[18]

Notable individuals associated with the school

Pupils:

Teachers:

References

  1. Rugby school register: with annotations and alphabetical index. Rugby: A. J. Lawrence. 1881. p. 194.
  2. 1 2 3 "Rice, Edward Henry (PRY841EH)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  3. 1 2 3 Leinster-Mackay, Donald (16 December 2021). The Rise of the English Prep School. Routledge. p. 123 note 27. ISBN 978-1-000-35754-7.
  4. "Preparatory school for the public schools". Athenaeum. 4 July 1863.
  5. "Death of the Rev. E. H. Price". Exeter and Plymouth Gazette. 26 September 1898. p. 3.
  6. "No. 25510". The London Gazette. 11 September 1885. p. 4300.
  7. "Price, Herbert Johnson (PRY877HJ)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  8. Oxford Historical Society (1909). Brasenose College Register. Vol. I. Clarendon Press for the Oxford Historical Society. p. 688.
  9. "The Philberds, Maidenhead". Army and Navy Gazette. 3 December 1904. p. 23.
  10. "Tunnelling for liberty". The Colonialist: 4. 8 April 1915.
  11. "Foot-ball". The Philberdian: 2. March 1876.
  12. "Results". Maidenhead Advertiser: 3. 14 April 1875.
  13. "Football". Buckinghamshire Herald: 8. 1 December 1877.
  14. "Football". The Field: 565. 10 November 1877.
  15. "Football Matches Yesterday". Lloyds Illustrated. 7 March 1880.
  16. "Football". The Standard: 6. 19 April 1880.
  17. Alcock, Charles (1881). Football Annual. p. 111.
  18. "Association Football". Guy's Hospital Gazette: 271. 7 December 1889.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.