Durnford School

Durnford School was a notoriously spartan and uncomfortable[1] preparatory school which opened in 1894[2] on the Isle of Purbeck in Dorset. The school occupied Durnford House, in High Street (postcode BH19 3HB) in the village of Langton Matravers near Swanage. "Strip and swim" was the morning ritual for the boys – watched by headmaster Thomas Pellatt – into the sea from Dancing Ledge on the coast in 1898. Later, Pellatt had quarrymen blast out a pool in the rocks of Dancing Ledge[3] for his pupils to swim.[4] Pellatt wrote his reminiscences in a book: Boys in the making 1936.[5] In 1939, during World War II, Durnford School was occupied by radar scientists; a map showing the location of the school is shown on a map of radar sites scattered throughout Dorset.[6] The Durnford boys were transferred to another prep school in the village, the Old Malthouse. Durnford House was acquired by the owners of the Old Malthouse when the army gave it up in 1948. The main buildings were variously pulled down or sold, leaving the Old Malthouse with the grounds, which were levelled for playing fields.

War memorial

The Langton Matravers St George's Parish Church has a memorial of names of those from the school who fell in World War I with 53 names and a further memorial to those from World War II but without names.[7]

Notable former pupils

References

  1. Entry for alumnus J N R Elliot
  2. Dora Cockle, a maidservant at the school when it opened
  3. Dancing Ledge quarry on the Jurassic Coastline
  4. Dorset Life Magazine
  5. Boys in the making Thomas Pellatt 1936 Royal Historical Society Database
  6. Radar sites in Purbeck
  7. Roll of Honour, Langton Matravers
  8. Image of Cotton as Chancellor
  9. Life Magazine - Alias James Bond - The Real Story of Ian Fleming by John Pearson, 25 April 2006
  10. "Bond 'based on Elizabethan spy'". BBC. 31 October 2008. Retrieved 2009-09-02.
  11. Bournemouth Echo 9 September 2008, "Dorset days of the spymaster" Accessed 19 May 2009
  12. Obituary, Daily Telegraph 18 July 2006, accessed 11 May 2009
  13. Obituary in The Guardian 28 September 2006

Coordinates: 50°36′35″N 2°00′12″W / 50.60972°N 2.00333°W / 50.60972; -2.00333

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