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  1. Taking A Guided Tour of the Royal Military Academy at Sandhurst. 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 ...

  2. 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 ».

  3. 27 de mar. de 2017 · Churchill left Harrow School in 1892 and went to a ‘crammer’ to help him pass the entrance exam into the Royal Military College at Sandhurst, which he eventually did on the third attempt in 1893. He found life at Sandhurst much more suited to his temperament and talents than school life. Military topics such as tactics and fortifications were far more appealing to him than mathematics and ...

  4. RMAS Today. Today, all those commissioned into the British Army are trained and educated at Royal Military Academy Sandhurst. These include those who are destined for the regular and reserve forces, those with specialist qualifications such as doctors, dentists, lawyers and chaplains and those who are commissioned from the ranks.

  5. The Junior Department of the Royal Military College, formed as a college of gentlemen cadets, began in 1802 at Remnatz, a converted country house at Great Marlow. When the experiment proved successful, a new site was purchased at Sandhurst Park, Berkshire, where, after several false starts, the new Royal Military College (now Old College, RMAS) was first occupied in 1812.

  6. Address. Sandhurst. Surrey. GU15 4PQ. View map. Toward the end of the 19th century, it became apparent that the first chapel was inadequate in many respects and, as there was no way of enlarging it, a new site and building had to be found. It was decided that the ground behind Old College was to be the site of the new chapel.

  7. The cadet registers for the Royal Military College begin in 1806. The college was established in 1802, but records of these cadets are in other sources, such as the minutes of the supreme board of the RMC. The registers run up to 1939, after which they change and become the registers of the RMC Officer Cadet Training Unit, or OCTU.