Wesley College, Sheffield
Wesley College was a school in Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England, from 1838 until 1905, when it was merged with Sheffield Royal Grammar School to form King Edward VII School.
History
The school, whose mission was to educate the sons of the laity, opened in 1838 in new buildings designed by William Flockton on Glossop Road, Sheffield. It was founded by Rev. Samuel Dousland Waddy (1804–1876) to "supply a generally superior and classical education, combined with religious training in the principles of Methodism" and was initially called the "Wesleyan Proprietary Grammar School".[1] The change in name to Wesley College seems to have taken place in 1844, when a "Royal Warrant, constituting the Sheffield Wesley College a college of the University of London was forwarded to Mr Waddy (subsequently Governor, from 1844 to 1862) by Sir James Graham, which empowered the college to issue certificates to candidates for examination for the several degrees of Bachelor and Master of Arts, and Bachelor and Doctor of Laws". A year later it spurred Rev. James Gillman, William Ferguson, William Stewart and Thomas Waugh in Dublin, Ireland to consider creating a similar school in Dublin. The school accepted its first 90 boarders on 8 August 1838. By 1841 the number of pupils had increased to 172.
In 1905 Wesley College was purchased by Sheffield Council and merged with Sheffield Royal Grammar School to form King Edward VII School (Upper School Site), named after the reigning monarch.[2]
Headmasters
1837–1853 | John Manners, M.A. |
1853–1888 | Henry McE Shera, M.A. LLD. |
1888–1891 | Joseph J. Findlay, M.A. Ph.D. |
1891–1905 | Valentine W. Pearson, B.A. |
Governors
1837–1842 | Rev John McLean |
1842–1844 | Rev Isaac Keeling |
1844–1862 | Samuel Dousland Waddy |
1862–? | Rev John James |
Rev John Harvard | |
Rev William Jessop | |
1879–1888 | Rev William Dallinger FRS |
Wesley College was run from 1837 to 1888 by a 'Dyarchy', comprising the Governor and the Headmaster, the Governor being the senior of the pair (in theory).
Notable alumni
- Robert Bownas Mackie (1820–1885) – English politician and judge
- Samuel Danks Waddy (1830–1902) – English politician, Judge (son of Samuel Dousland Waddy, above)
- William Haswell Stephenson (1836–1918) – Lord Mayor of Newcastle upon Tyne
- Frederick Cawley, 1st Baron Cawley (1850–1937) – cotton merchant and Liberal politician
- Leonard Cockayne (1855–1934) – horticulturist, botanist
- Hillson Beasley (1855–1936) – architect
- John Bilson (1856–1943) – architect
- Frank Wilson (1859–1918) – Premier of Western Australia
- Cecil Henry Wilson (1862–1945) – Labour MP for Attercliffe
- William John Hale (1862–1929) – architect
- John Andrew Pearson (1867–1940) – architect in Canada
- William Henry Cutts (1828–1897) – physician
Notable teachers
- Henry Perlee Parker (1795–1873), drawing-master (1840-1844)
- Samuel Churchward was a mathematics teacher there in the 1871 census. He later went to Elmfield College
References
- Cornwell, John (2005). King Ted's (1st ed.). King Edward VII School, Sheffield. ISBN 0-9526484-1-5.
- "Parker, Henry Perlee" . Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
External links
- Inspires founding of Wesley College, Dublin
53°22′34″N 1°29′45″W / 53.3762°N 1.4957°W / 53.3762; -1.4957 (Wesley College, Sheffield)
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