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There are four day houses, named ], ], ] and ]. The boarding houses are ], ], and ]. | There are four day houses, named ], ], ] and ]. The boarding houses are ], ], and ]. | ||
The four junior school houses (junior school ages 7-13) are Tudors, Windsors, Hanovers and Stuarts. | |||
== Some Famous Old Chigwellians == | == Some Famous Old Chigwellians == |
Revision as of 19:06, 22 February 2007
Chigwell School is an English public school in the Epping Forest district of Essex. It was founded by Samuel Harsnett in 1629. There are around 730 pupils, aged between 7 and 18 years.
The school motto is aut viam inveniam aut faciam, a Latin phrase which translates literally as Either I shall find a way or I shall make one, but is usually rendered as Find a way or make a way.
There are four day houses, named Caswalls', Lambourne, Penn's and Swallow's. The boarding houses are Grange Court, Sandon Lodge, and Hainault House.
The four junior school houses (junior school ages 7-13) are Tudors, Windsors, Hanovers and Stuarts.
Some Famous Old Chigwellians
- Ken Campbell, actor.
- Tim Collins, Conservative politician, now unemployed.
- Sir Arthur Grimble, colonial governor.
- Austin Bradford Hill, medical statistician and epidemiologist.
- Sir Ian Holm, actor.
- Michael Marshall Smith, novelist.
- William Penn, founder of the American state of Pennsylvania.
- Ben Shephard, television presenter.
- Horace Smith, nineteenth-century poet.
- Prof. Sir Bernard Williams, philosopher.
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