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  1. Wixenford School, also known as Wixenford Preparatory School and Wixenford-Eversley, was a private preparatory school for boys near Wokingham, founded in 1869. A feeder school for Eton, after it closed in 1934 its former buildings were taken over by the present-day Ludgrove School . History.

    • 1934
    • Richard Cowley Powles
    • 1869
  2. Ludgrove lifts the Caldicott Athletics Shield. Congratulations to the boys in the Athletics Squad who ran, jumped and threw to the best of their abilities to win the Caldicott Athletics Shield and, in the process, made history as the first Ludgrove team to do so!

  3. Richard Cowley Powles (1819–1901), known often as Cowley Powles, was an English cleric, academic and founding headmaster of Wixenford School.

  4. Wixenford School, Wokingham. This page summarises records created by this Organisation. The summary includes a brief description of the collection (s) (usually including the covering dates of...

  5. History. There has been a school on the site of St Neot's since 1869 when the Reverend Richard Powles, a childhood friend of Charles Kingsley, leased the newly built Wixenford House and opened it as a boys' boarding school.

    • 0118 973 9650
    • office@stneotsprep.co.uk
  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › WixenfordWixenford - Wikipedia

    Wixenford is an area of the civil parish of Wokingham Without in which Ludgrove School stands. It adjoins Wokingham and is in the English county of Berkshire. Name. The area was developed by the former Wixenford School, which closed in 1934.

  7. Wixenford School, also known as Wixenford Preparatory School and Wixenford-Eversley, was a private preparatory school for boys near Wokingham, founded in 1869. A feeder school for Eton, after it closed in 1934 its former buildings were taken over by the present-day Ludgrove School. History