Ludgrove School
Ludgrove School is an independent preparatory boarding school for boys aged eight to thirteen, situated in Wokingham, Berkshire, England.[1] Founded in 1892 by Arthur Dunn at Ludgrove Hall in Cockfosters, north London, the school relocated to its current 130-acre rural site in 1937 and operates as a charitable trust since 1972, currently enrolling approximately 185 pupils.[1][2] The institution emphasizes fortnightly boarding in a supportive, homely environment designed to foster confidence, moral awareness, and personal development through its core mantras of "Be kind" and "Be the best you can," alongside the biblical motto "whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with all thy might" from Ecclesiastes 9:10.[3][2] Its curriculum prioritizes building academic foundations, encouraging a love of learning, and promoting high achievement in sports, music, drama, and extracurricular activities, preparing boys for entry into leading public schools.[4][2] Under Headmaster Simon Barber, who assumed sole leadership in 2013 after joint tenure with Sid Inglis from 2004, the school maintains a traditional focus on manners, community living, and individual potential in a single-sex setting.[1][2] Ludgrove's historical continuity and emphasis on effort, kindness, and excellence have defined its reputation as one of the last all-boys, all-boarding preparatory schools, contributing to the formation of character among its pupils amid a landscape of evolving educational norms.[3][1]History
Founding and Early Development (1892–1937)
Ludgrove School was established in 1892 at Ludgrove Hall in Cockfosters, north London, by Arthur Dunn, an Old Etonian sportsman and former master at Elstree School.[1][5] Dunn, a noted amateur footballer who captained the Corinthians and represented England, acquired the Victorian-era hall on Games Road, on the edge of Monken Hadley Common, to create a preparatory boarding school for boys.[5][6] He emphasized vigorous activity and recruited fellow eminent sportsmen as masters, instilling the school's enduring motto from Ecclesiastes 9:10: "Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with all thy might."[1][6] Dunn's leadership lasted until his death in 1901, after which the school was jointly headed by G. O. Smith and W. J. Oakley, both England international footballers and associates of Dunn.[1][6] Under their direction, which continued until 1934, Ludgrove developed a reputation for balancing academic preparation with robust physical education, preparing pupils for entry into leading public schools such as Eton and Harrow.[1] The duo maintained the founder's focus on character-building through sports and outdoor pursuits, fostering a boarding environment suited to the era's emphasis on discipline and camaraderie among boys aged 8 to 13.[6] Following Smith and Oakley's tenure, brief leadership by Frank Henley preceded the appointment of Alan Barber as headmaster in the mid-1930s.[1] By 1937, urban encroachment in Cockfosters prompted the school's relocation to Wixenford in Wokingham, Berkshire, to secure a larger rural site of approximately 130 acres that better supported expansion and preserved the institution's traditional ethos amid interwar changes in British preparatory education.[1] This move marked the end of the Cockfosters era, during which enrollment had steadily grown, establishing Ludgrove as a prominent feeder school for elite public institutions.[1]Relocation and Post-War Growth (1937–1973)
In 1937, Ludgrove School relocated from its original site at Ludgrove Hall in Cockfosters, north London, to the former premises of Wixenford School in Wokingham, Berkshire, approximately 40 miles west and under an hour from central London by train.[1] The move, which involved transporting around 60 boys and staff, was prompted by the extension of the Piccadilly Line subway into the area, which threatened the school's rural tranquility and open grounds essential to its ethos.[7] The new location at Wixenford provided expanded facilities, including established buildings and acreage suited for sports and outdoor activities, allowing continuity of the preparatory boarding model while accommodating future development.[1] Leadership transitioned to Alan Barber as headmaster upon the relocation, following a brief interim by Frank Henley; Barber, a former Yorkshire cricket captain, held the position for the next 36 years until his retirement in 1973.[1] During the Second World War, the school maintained operations at the new site without major disruption, benefiting from its countryside position amid wartime evacuations of urban institutions. Post-war, under Barber's stewardship, Ludgrove experienced steady enrollment growth from its pre-war base of about 60 pupils, emphasizing character-building through sports, academics, and boarding discipline to prepare boys for leading public schools like Eton and Harrow.[1] By the early 1970s, the school's stability enabled structural changes, including its incorporation as a charitable trust in 1972 to formalize governance and support long-term expansion.[1] This period solidified Ludgrove's reputation as a rigorous, all-boys preparatory institution, with Barber's tenure fostering a family-like continuity—his son Gerald would later co-lead—while adapting modestly to post-war educational demands without altering core traditions.[1] Enrollment rose incrementally, reflecting demand from affluent families seeking traditional prep schooling, though precise figures for the era remain undocumented in public records beyond the initial post-relocation scale.[8]Transition to Charitable Trust and Contemporary Leadership (1973–Present)
In 1972, Ludgrove School transitioned from private ownership to a charitable trust structure, establishing the Ludgrove School Trust Limited to advance educational objectives for boys aged 8 to 13.[9] This shift, formalized ahead of Alan Barber's retirement the following year, introduced a board of governors with Pat Meredith-Hardy as its inaugural chairman, emphasizing institutional stability and charitable governance over familial proprietorship.[10] The trust's framework has since supported operational expansions, including facility enhancements and enrollment growth to approximately 185 boarding pupils by the late 2000s.[1] Following Alan Barber's departure in 1973 after 36 years as headmaster, his son Gerald Barber and Nichol Marston assumed joint headmaster roles, maintaining continuity in the school's preparatory ethos while navigating the new trust oversight.[1] This leadership duo presided over post-war stabilization and incremental modernization until Marston's retirement in 2004, after which Gerald Barber continued with assistant headmasters Simon Barber (his son) and Sid Inglis.[1] In July 2008, following Gerald Barber's retirement after 35 years of service, Simon Barber and Sid Inglis transitioned to joint headmasters, overseeing further developments in academic and pastoral provisions.[1] Simon Barber became sole headmaster in 2013, supported by his wife Sophie Barber as Head of Pastoral Care, with deputy heads including Jon Pinchin-Hughes for pastoral matters and Tom Wilson for academics.[1] [11] Under this contemporary leadership, the school has prioritized balanced character development alongside preparation for leading public schools, while the governing board—chaired by Charles Butterworth since summer 2021—ensures fiduciary and strategic alignment with charitable aims.[11] The trust reported £6.93 million in income and £6.36 million in expenditure for the year ending 2024, reflecting sustained financial health without trustee remuneration.[12]Ethos and Educational Philosophy
Core Principles of Character Formation
Ludgrove School's approach to character formation centers on fostering self-discipline, moral awareness, and personal responsibility within a structured boarding environment that prioritizes individual growth alongside communal contribution. The school's ethos, rooted in its founding principles since 1892, seeks to instill lasting values such as confidence, good humor, and self-reliance by encouraging boys to explore their potential in a happy, caring setting.[13] [3] This development occurs progressively, with expectations for self-discipline intensifying as pupils advance from age 8 to 13, promoting hard work and full engagement in academic, sporting, and extracurricular pursuits.[13] Central to these principles are two guiding mantras—"Be kind" and "Be the best you can"—which underscore interpersonal respect and maximal personal effort, complemented by the biblical motto from Ecclesiastes 9:10: "Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with all thy might."[3] These tenets encourage moral awareness and concern for others, manifested through positive values, good manners, and participation in charitable activities like the Ubuntu Club, which supports local and global causes.[13] Character is further shaped by close staff-pupil relationships, particularly in early years, and a emphasis on thriving both individually and within the community, building lifelong friendships and a sense of responsibility.[2] The school's unchanging philosophy prioritizes these elements over transient societal shifts, aiming for boys to depart with robust confidence in their abilities and a commitment to ethical conduct.[3] Inspection reports affirm that principles promoting tolerance, law-abiding behavior, and personal development as responsible individuals are actively embedded in daily life.[14] This holistic formation integrates discipline with encouragement, ensuring character emerges from consistent effort rather than mere instruction.[13]Balance of Tradition and Modern Adaptation
Ludgrove School maintains its foundational ethos rooted in late-19th-century principles, emphasizing character formation through self-discipline, moral awareness, and full commitment to endeavors, as reflected in its biblical motto from Ecclesiastes 9:10: "Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with all thy might."[3] The school's mantras—"Be kind" and "Be the best you can"—underscore a traditional focus on manners, kindness, and personal excellence, fostering close staff-pupil relationships and a boarding environment that prioritizes settling new boys into a structured community life without modern distractions like mobile phones.[3] [15] Traditions such as painting pupils' names on the dining-room wall—emulating historical figures like Princes William and Harry—reinforce a sense of heritage and pride in the institution's 1892 origins.[15] In adapting to contemporary needs, Ludgrove integrates modern educational elements while preserving its all-boys, predominantly boarding structure, positioning itself as the last such prep school in the UK.[16] The curriculum builds academic foundations alongside activities like coding, current affairs quizzes, and a pupil-produced classroom newspaper, addressing social media influences by teaching self-acceptance and promoting reading through bedtime stories and "book champions."[15] Pastoral care emphasizes individual wellbeing in a "happy caring environment," with initiatives like the Ubuntu Club for community awareness and the Grub Club for social skills, alongside facilities such as the Exploration Centre for advanced science and creativity.[13] [17] Headmaster Simon Barber describes this equilibrium as a "traditional, 21st-century school," where historical practices like bushcraft and carpentry coexist with forward-looking preparations for senior school challenges, ensuring boys develop confidence, humor, and resilience amid evolving societal expectations.[15] This approach has evolved from earlier, more austere boarding norms—once deemed "Dickensian"—to include fortnightly boarding patterns for flexibility, without compromising core values of self-reliance and ethical grounding.[16] [2]Academic Program
Curriculum Structure and Academic Standards
Ludgrove School operates as an independent preparatory boarding school for boys aged 8 to 13, spanning Years 3 through 8, with a curriculum designed to establish firm academic foundations while fostering a love of learning and preparing pupils for Common Entrance examinations or scholarships to leading public schools such as Eton and Harrow.[4] The program emphasizes disciplined study habits, high expectations, and small class sizes typically ranging from 9 to 15 pupils, enabling individualized attention and a pupil-to-teacher ratio of approximately 6:1.[4] [18] Core subjects include mathematics, English, science, French, geography, history, religious studies, information and communications technology (ICT), music, physical education (PE), and design and technology (CDT), with Latin introduced from Year 2 (age 9) and optional Greek for advanced pupils.[4] Teaching methods prioritize engaging, rigorous lessons that develop curiosity and independent study skills, supported by learning assistance for pupils with specific difficulties and targeted exam preparation techniques.[4] The structure avoids rigid streaming, relying instead on mixed-ability groups within small classes to encourage peer support and broad participation.[18] Academic standards are maintained at a high level, as evidenced by the Independent Schools Inspectorate's (ISI) 2022 Focused Compliance and Educational Quality Inspection, which rated the quality of pupils' academic achievements as excellent, noting articulate, self-confident pupils excelling in a wide range of activities.[19] Assessment occurs through termly full reports on academic work, art, and music, supplemented by progress updates every three weeks and annual parent-teacher meetings to monitor development and behavior.[4] This framework supports consistent progression, with the school serving as a key feeder to elite institutions, including approximately 70% of leavers entering Eton College.[18]Examination Success and Progression to Public Schools
Pupils at Ludgrove School prepare for the Common Entrance examinations, administered by the Independent Schools Examinations Board (ISEB), which serve as the primary assessment for entry to leading British public schools at age 13.[4] The school has achieved a 100% pass rate for its top year cohort in multiple recent years, with results enabling progression to chosen senior institutions.[20] [21] This success is attributed to focused academic preparation, small class sizes of 9-15 pupils, and regular progress monitoring through termly reports and effort assessments.[4] Leavers predominantly advance to elite public schools, including Eton College, Harrow School, Radley College, Winchester College, Sherborne School, Charterhouse, Marlborough College, Ampleforth College, and Bradfield College.[22] In recent cohorts, destinations have included approximately 17-20 pupils to Eton, 7-10 to Radley, 3-5 to Harrow, and 6 to Winchester, reflecting a strong emphasis on high-achieving placements.[22] [23] For the class of 2024, a record 11 pupils secured academic or other awards at schools such as Ampleforth, Eton, Harrow, Marlborough, Radley, and Winchester.[24] The school's non-selective admissions policy contrasts with its outcomes, as boys without prior entrance exams benefit from tailored support, including for specific learning difficulties, to meet Common Entrance standards and secure scholarships.[4] Over 80% of leavers in earlier documented years progressed to Eton, Harrow, Radley, or Winchester, underscoring consistent performance in competitive entry processes.[25] Headmaster Andrew Barlow has highlighted the cohort's academic readiness, describing successful examinees as well-prepared for senior school demands.[21]Facilities and Daily Life
Campus Infrastructure and Grounds
Ludgrove School occupies a 130-acre estate in rural Berkshire, providing expansive grounds that include gardens, woodland areas for building dens and camps, and small shared gardens for recreational use.[26] The terrain supports an adventure playground, featuring structures such as the Tree House—a large climbing frame integrated into the trees—and the Monkey House, another popular climbing apparatus.[26] These natural and constructed elements facilitate outdoor exploration and play, integral to the school's daily activities. The core infrastructure centers on the main school building, which houses classrooms equipped with multimedia resources and networked computers, as well as boarding facilities with dormitories on the first floor.[26] Dormitories are described as bright and spacious, accommodating single and bunk beds, and are periodically refurbished to maintain standards; boys personalize their spaces with posters and photos.[27] Additional specialized buildings include a theatre constructed in 2014 for drama productions and the recently opened Exploration Centre, designed as a dedicated hub for scientific and creative learning.[26] [17] Sports infrastructure encompasses both indoor and outdoor venues optimized for physical education. Indoor amenities feature a large sports hall for activities like hockey, football, badminton, judo, fencing, and gymnastics; two squash courts; two Eton fives courts; and a 20-meter indoor swimming pool.[28] Outdoors, the campus includes extensive playing fields, a nine-hole golf course, a large all-weather Astroturf surface used for hockey, cricket, and tennis, six tennis courts, and a croquet lawn.[28] [26] These facilities support a range of competitive and recreational sports, leveraging the site's ample space.Boarding Experience and Pastoral Care
Ludgrove operates as a fortnightly boarding school for boys aged 8 to 13, with pupils returning home every other weekend.[27] The boarding routine emphasizes structure and calm, overseen by Houseparents Mr. and Mrs. Pinchin-Hughes, who joined in 2010 and also teach subjects including Latin, English, and Geography.[27] Evenings typically include games followed by quiet reading time, culminating in a weekly "Pinchin’ Mix" sweet shop event on Sundays to foster enjoyment within bounds.[27] Dormitories are bright and spacious, featuring single and bunk beds; arrangements change each term based on boys' friend requests, with competitive prizes for the neatest dorms, including end-of-term outings.[27] Resident matrons handle bedtime routines, clothing management, and lost property, supported by evening matrons and rotating duty staff for continuous supervision.[27] New boarders receive targeted support to ease transition, including assignment of a "shadow" pupil from the year above to guide them through daily routines and school life, often leading to lasting friendships.[29][30] Pre-term visits hosted by Mrs. Sophie Barber, the Headmaster's wife, introduce Year 4 life to small groups, with parents attending for queries and tours led by shadows.[29] Special provisions apply to the youngest boarders in their first year, promoting adaptation through personalized boarding staff assistance.[29] Headmaster Simon Barber describes the environment as a "home-from-home," where boys decorate dorms, enjoy hot chocolate movie nights, and share meals with live-in staff, including long-serving matrons, to cultivate independence and preparation for senior schooling.[30] Pastoral care is led by Sophie Barber, integrating input from Houseparents, matrons, and Division Masters/Mistresses, who conduct morning check-ins with boys and remain accessible to parents.[27] Daily staff meetings review individual welfare, prioritizing a homely and secure atmosphere that staff maintain through close knowledge of each boy’s needs and concerns.[27] The Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI) rated pastoral provision "excellent" in its 2022 Focused Compliance and Educational Quality Inspection, noting that "the outstanding care… towards the boys maintains the family ethos of the school, enabling the boys to be valued as individuals and grow and develop in a happy caring community."[27][14] Wellbeing support complements pastoral efforts with a team of three registered nurses, led by Mrs. Rebecca Salt, a visiting school doctor on Tuesdays from Wokingham Medical Centre, and a weekly qualified counsellor, Heidi Joliffe (MBACP accredited).[31] Three staff hold Mental Health First Aid training, and the counsellor collaborates across medical, pastoral, and learning teams to address mental health proactively.[31] Facilities include a fully equipped surgery and six-bed sick bay, with new boys undergoing initial health assessments (height, weight, vision, hearing); external referrals occur to Royal Berkshire Hospital or Bracknell Urgent Care as needed.[31] This integrated framework aims to promote overall fulfillment, self-confidence, community values, and manners through communal living.[27]Extracurricular Activities
Sports and Physical Development
Ludgrove School emphasizes sports as a core component of physical development, with boys participating in organized games five afternoons per week to build fitness, teamwork, and resilience alongside academic pursuits. The program prioritizes team sports for their role in fostering interpersonal relationships and personal growth, ensuring every pupil represents the school in at least one match per term to encourage widespread involvement rather than selective elitism.[28] Seasonal activities structure the curriculum: winter terms feature football, rugby, hockey, and cross-country running, transitioning to cricket, athletics, tennis, and swimming in summer, with additional options like squash, Eton fives, and golf available year-round. This variety accommodates diverse abilities, promoting an active lifestyle and linking physical exertion to enhanced concentration and well-being, as articulated in the school's philosophy that sports underpin broader achievement.[28][26] Extensive facilities on the 130-acre campus support intensive participation, including vast playing fields for team games, a large sports hall equipped for indoor hockey, football, badminton, judo, fencing, and gymnastics, two squash courts, two Eton fives courts, a 20-metre indoor swimming pool, six tennis courts (four hard-core plus Astroturf), a nine-hole golf course, a croquet lawn, and an adventure playground for unstructured play. The high fixture volume—often involving 17 teams in a single afternoon—maximizes match exposure, with coaching focused on skill progression and enjoyment to sustain long-term engagement.[26][28]Cultural and Leadership Opportunities
Ludgrove School emphasizes cultural development through structured music and drama programs integrated into the curriculum and extracurricular timetable. All boys receive weekly class music lessons, with over two-thirds participating in private instrumental tuition from peripatetic and full-time staff covering instruments such as violin and bagpipes.[32] These efforts support weekly ensembles including choirs, the school band, and string groups, leading to termly formal and informal concerts where boys perform solo and in ensembles, alongside preparation for external examinations from bodies like the Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music and Trinity Guildhall.[32] Drama forms a core component of school life, utilizing a dedicated Performing Arts Centre for rehearsals and performances; five major productions occur annually, encompassing plays and musicals such as The Little Shop of Horrors and Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, with involvement from all year groups in acting, backstage, technical, and design roles.[32] Nearly every boy performs on stage each year, complemented by LAMDA sessions focused on acting, group performance, speaking, and prose interpretation, culminating in examinations held in June and November.[32] The enrichment programme extends cultural opportunities via targeted trips, such as art scholars' visits to the Stanley Spencer Gallery and Tate Modern, Year 5 excursions to the Roald Dahl Museum, and workshops including Raku pottery and demonstrations by visiting sculptors like David Roper-Curzon, alongside author visits from figures such as Dan Freedman and Mark Robson.[33] Leadership development is embedded through formal roles and activities designed to build responsibility and interpersonal skills. Boys assume positions such as house captains and monitors, opportunities that the Independent Schools Inspectorate noted enable pupils to thrive by exercising initiative and oversight within the school community.[14] The Debating Society, offered as a Thursday afternoon extracurricular option, cultivates public speaking, critical analysis, and persuasion—key attributes for future leaders—alongside LAMDA's emphasis on articulate expression.[34] Senior-year pupils engage in specialized leadership and team-building days, such as the annual event on 11 September at the nearby Oakwood Centre, featuring challenges to enhance collaboration and decision-making.[35] These initiatives align with the school's ethos of encouraging boys to "be the best you can" through practical application of authority and teamwork.[3]Achievements and Impact
Institutional Recognitions and Awards
Ludgrove School achieved the highest possible rating of 'excellent' in all inspected categories during the Independent Schools Inspectorate's (ISI) Focused Compliance and Educational Quality Inspection in October 2022, as announced by the school in January 2023.[19] This outcome affirmed the school's compliance with regulatory standards and the quality of its educational provision, pastoral care, and governance.[36] The institution was selected as a finalist for Best Independent Boarding School of the Year in the Independent Schools of the Year Awards, recognizing its boarding facilities and overall experience.[37] Additionally, Ludgrove was shortlisted in the Independent Boys' School category of the same awards in July 2025, highlighting its standing among UK preparatory schools. Headmaster Simon Barber received the Best Head of a Prep School award at the Tatler Schools Awards ceremony on an unspecified date in 2023 or later, reflecting leadership recognition that bolsters the school's institutional profile.[38] These accolades, drawn primarily from industry-specific evaluations rather than broad public rankings, underscore Ludgrove's operational strengths within the independent sector.[39]Contributions to Broader Society via Alumni
Alumni of Ludgrove School have contributed to broader society through advancements in environmental conservation, veterans' welfare, mental health advocacy, and youth leadership development. Princes William and Harry, who attended the school from ages eight to thirteen starting in 1990 and 1992 respectively, have leveraged their platforms for global philanthropy.[8][40] Prince William established the Earthshot Prize in 2020, an initiative that awards £50 million over a decade to scalable solutions addressing environmental challenges such as protecting nature, cleaning air, reviving oceans, eliminating waste, and fixing climate issues; by 2023, it had granted over £20 million to projects worldwide, fostering innovation in sustainability.[41][42] Through the Royal Foundation, he has also supported efforts in homelessness prevention and mental health, including the 2016 Heads Together campaign that raised awareness and funds for UK charities aiding over 1.5 million people annually.[43] Prince Harry co-founded the Invictus Games in 2014, an international adaptive multi-sport event for wounded, injured, and sick armed services personnel and veterans; the foundation reports that participants experience significant improvements in physical fitness, mental resilience, and social reintegration, with events like the 2025 Vancouver Whistler Games generating economic impacts exceeding £10 million while reaching millions via broadcasts and saving lives through recovery programs.[44][45] Bear Grylls, another alumnus who attended in the late 1970s and early 1980s, served as the United Kingdom's Chief Scout from 2009 to 2024, the youngest ever appointed at age 35; in this role, he expanded scouting membership by emphasizing adventure and survival skills, engaging over 500,000 youth annually in activities that build resilience, teamwork, and environmental stewardship, while launching global initiatives like Scouts for SDGs at the United Nations in 2018 to align youth programs with sustainable development goals.[46][47][48] Other alumni, including military officers and aristocrats, have bolstered national defense and public administration, though their impacts are often less publicly quantified.[8]Leadership and Staff
Headmasters and Key Administrators
Ludgrove School was founded in 1892 by Arthur Dunn, who served as its first headmaster until his death in 1901.[1] Dunn, an Old Etonian sportsman, established the school at Ludgrove Hall in Cockfosters, north London, and coined its motto from Ecclesiastes 9:10.[1] Following Dunn's death, G. O. Smith and W. J. Oakley assumed joint headmastership from 1901 to 1934, overseeing early expansion and operations.[1] Frank Henley briefly held the position after 1934 before transitioning leadership to Alan Barber and Tim Shaw, who managed the school until Alan Barber's retirement in 1973; under their tenure, the school relocated to Wixenford in Berkshire in 1937.[1] From 1973 to 2004, Gerald Barber (son of Alan Barber) and Nichol Marston served as joint headmasters, during which the institution transitioned to a charitable trust in 1972 and educated high-profile pupils including Princes William and Harry in the late 1980s and early 1990s.[1] [49] After Marston's retirement in 2004 and Gerald Barber's in 2008, Simon Barber (grandson of Alan Barber) and Sid Inglis acted as joint headmasters from 2008 to 2013, with Simon Barber becoming sole headmaster in 2013 and continuing in the role as of 2025, maintaining the multi-generational family leadership tradition alongside his wife Sophie and their children residing on-site.[1] [2]| Headmaster(s) | Tenure | Notable Details |
|---|---|---|
| Arthur Dunn | 1892–1901 | Founder; established motto and initial site in north London.[1] |
| G. O. Smith & W. J. Oakley | 1901–1934 | Joint leadership post-founding era.[1] |
| Frank Henley | 1934 (brief) | Transitional head before Barber/Shaw era.[1] |
| Alan Barber & Tim Shaw | ~1934–1973 | Oversaw relocation to Berkshire; Alan Barber retired 1973.[1] |
| Gerald Barber & Nichol Marston | 1973–2004 (Marston); to 2008 (Gerald) | Joint; charitable trust formation; royal pupils in 1980s–1990s.[1] [49] |
| Simon Barber & Sid Inglis | 2008–2013 | Joint; family continuity.[1] |
| Simon Barber (sole) | 2013–present | Current; recognized as Best Head of a Prep School in 2025 Tatler Awards.[1] [50] |