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  1. The Radley Keys Award. We are proud to launch The Radley Keys Award, an all-inclusive scholarship programme for talented and ambitious boys from families who would not normally consider an independent boarding education. The award is aimed at boys currently attending a primary or secondary state school. Our carefully curated assessment process ...

  2. Strategic Vision - Radley College. Radley College is a proudly traditional boarding school for boys aged 13-18 in Oxfordshire. “We wish to surround the boys with an atmosphere breathing greatness and goodness.”. – Robert Singleton, First Warden. “An absolute humdinger of a school.”. – The Good Schools’ Guide.

  3. Radley College is a proudly traditional boarding school, offering boys aged 13-18 an outstanding all-round education. A Radleian is recognisable by his drive and ambition, his confidence and kindness, his loyalty and integrity, and his love of life. John Moule, Warden. Meet the Warden.

  4. Radley College is a proudly traditional boarding school for boys aged 13-18 in Oxfordshire. “We wish to surround the boys with an atmosphere breathing greatness and goodness.”. – Robert Singleton, First Warden. “An absolute humdinger of a school.”. – The Good Schools’ Guide. “What strikes you is how kind and nurturing it is ...

  5. Radley College is a proudly traditional boarding school, offering boys aged 13-18 an outstanding all-round education. A Radleian is recognisable by his drive and ambition, his confidence and kindness, his loyalty and integrity, and his love of life. John Moule, Warden. Meet the Warden.

  6. Sixth Form Entry - Radley College. Radley College is a proudly traditional boarding school for boys aged 13-18 in Oxfordshire. “We wish to surround the boys with an atmosphere breathing greatness and goodness.”. – Robert Singleton, First Warden. “An absolute humdinger of a school.”.

  7. Singleton took the diary away with him when he left Radley College. He kept no other journals after 1851 and appears to have revisited this one only once, in 1874, when he added a codicil condemning Sewell’s extravagant purchases of works of art: “… my studious suppression of every act and fact that I thought was plainly unfavourable to Mr Sewell.