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  1. Tours last 2.5 hours and the current list of bookable tours are below. £25 per person - This includes tea, coffee and biscuits upon arrival. Discount for under 16s, school groups, military and Sandhurst Trust members. £25 per person - Includes tea, coffee and biscuits upon arrival. 10% discount for groups over 20. Private tours can be arranged.

  2. Rehearsals are taking place on Old College Square at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst, in the lead up to Soveriegn's Parade on the 12 April. Every individual participating in the parade, whether they are Officer Cadets or senior staff members, must strive for perfection.⁠ ⁠ #Sandhurst #ServeToLead #Perfection #Military #Marching #Parade

  3. Royal Military College, Sandhurst. 1864–1869: Colonel Edmund Gilling Hallewell. 1865–1874: Colonel Joseph Edward Addison (Superintendent of Studies) 1874–1879: Colonel Frederick Dobson Middleton (Assistant to the Governor) 1879–1884: Colonel Frederick Middleton (Commandant reporting to the Governor)

  4. Comprising of the iconic buildings of Old College (Designed by John Sanders and built c. 1808) New College (Designed by Harry Bell Measures c. 1908) and Victory College (Designed by Gollins, Melvin, Ward & Partners c. 1970) The Royal Military Academy Sandhurst is set in a 600-acre estate that straddles the Surrey/Berkshire border.

  5. The Sandhurst Collection also preserves and manages the archives of the academy. The archives contain records of the academy and its predecessors; the Royal Military College Sandhurst 1799-1939 and the Royal Military Academy Woolwich 1741-1939. It also maintains the archive of the current academy which was established in 1947.

  6. Royal Military Academy Sandhurst. Established: 1947 Sandhurst. The Royal Military Academy Sandhurst (RMAS), commonly known simply as Sandhurst, is the British Army's initial officer training centre and is located near the village of Sandhurst. Branch: British Army. Motto: Serve to Lead. OFFICIAL WEBSITE ».

  7. The Royal Military Academy of Sandhurst is where the elite of the British Army train to be officers. Cadets arrive for nearly a year of training in the leafy expanses of this military enclave on the Berkshire, Hampshire and Surrey border. Founded in the early 1800s, the buildings are suitably prestigious and filled with tradition.