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Our Founder’s vision remains just as relevant today as it was in 1382 as Winchester continues to play a leading role on the global stage. Investing in the future Annual Report 2013

WC26 AR 2013 02 09 AW@29 print - Winchester College REPORT... · signifi cant competition for House places, ... After many years of going backwards and forwards, ... interest in Barton

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Our Founder’s vision remains just as relevant today as it was in 1382

as Winchester continues to play a leading role on

the global stage.

Investing in the futureAnnual Report 2013

2 Winchester College Annual Report 2013

A message from the Warden 02 Sir David Clementi

We are in a good place 04 Dr Ralph Townsend

A message from the Bursar 06 Jeff Hynam

Playing on the global stage 10 Ryan O’Keeffe

War Cloister: ‘We will remember them’ 12 Gordon Baker

Disturbing the Universe: Dreams of Earth and Sky 16 Freeman Dyson

Just Reward: the benefits of the bursary programme 20 Laurie Harris

Entrepreneurial Fruit: an interview 24 with the co-founder of Innocent Drinks Jon Wright

Ladakh: expanding the Founder’s vision 28 beyond our borders Oli Wettern

A report from the Chairman of the 32 Finance Committee Charles Sinclair

Summary statement of financial activities 34

Summary balance sheet 35

Reflections of the Director: Looking back on his ten years ‘in Development’ 36 David Fellowes

Acknowledgements: donations and legacies 38 Lorna Stoddart & David Fellowes

Governing Body and Committees 48

Cover image: The gate through to Meads in the east wall of War Cloister.

Winchester College Annual Report 2013 1

Welcome to the Annual Report of Winchester College

In this year’s Annual Report our Guest Editor,Ryan O’Keeff e (C, 1996-98), Partner at RLM Finsbury,a global leader in strategic communications, reports on

a breadth of activities at the School that refl ect ourcharitable endeavours and scholarly achievements.

T his Report celebrates another successful year for Winchester.Four of this year’s fi ve stories demonstrate the wide-ranging activities and involvement of Wykehamists, whether young or old, both at

home and abroad, whilst the fi fth story, ‘War Cloister’, helps us all to refl ect in this, the fi rst of fi ve centenary years, on the immense contribution made by so many Wykehamists and others in the First World War.

An Old Wykehamist recently volunteered his view on why he felt proud of what the School had to off er its pupils. He wrote: ‘Winchester appears stillto be providing a uniquely broad education which stimulates analysis, curiosity, logic and learning; its approach also encourages Wykehamists to make contributions of value in the course of their careers.’ All fi ve stories serve to illustrate this statement, which in itself perhaps encapsulates the themes of excellent teaching and the development of the mind, together with the encouragement of a humanistic approach which is tolerant and contributory.

This Report aims to provide you with a further insight into the School’s activities and also its fi nances and their dynamics. There still remains much to be done and Winchester welcomes interest from all-comers in what it seeks to achieve, and commitment and contribution from all those whomay wish to support it in achieving its aims.

2 Winchester College Annual Report 2013

I am pleased to report that 2013 hasbeen another good year. The Schoolis full, registrations remain strong with

signifi cant competition for House places,and our academic standing remains high.The quality of the music, art and dramais excellent; and the breadth of the sporting activities available to the boys is immense,with many teams achieving signifi cant success.

Amidst all the activity up to books, up to House, and the many activities in-between, the Governing Body seeks to stay close to its charitable objectives. Our links with the primary schools in the Lambeth LEA and our Academy partner Midhurst Rother were covered in last year’s Report, but it is important to note that Midhurst Rother has continued its progress, and last year received an Ofsted report of ‘Outstanding’, an immense achievement given that it was in Special Measures in 2007.

Just as Winchester continues to fl ourish, I am happy to report that the School’s fi nances are in good health. Included in this Annual Report is a report from Charles Sinclair, who chairs the Governing Body’s Finance Committee, together with a summary statement of our Financial Accounts. One of the key factors which allows us to report a sound fi nancial

A message from the Warden

position is the generosity of many Old Wykehamists, supporters and parents who have contributed signifi cantly to a number of Wykehamical causes,most particularly our ambition to increase our ability to provide bursarial support where it is appropriate. Our capacity in this area has continued to grow and currently, from our total School number of 680,we are supporting 82 pupils with bursaries costing the School nearly £1.7 million. Of this number 52 are receiving bursaries in excess of 50% of the school fees.

Sir David Clementi (E, 1962-67)

We are supporting 82 pupils with bursaries costing the School nearly£1.7 million. Of this number52 are receiving bursaries inexcess of 50% of the school fees.

In addition to the generosity of our many supporters through our bursarial campaign and through the growing Goddard Legacy Society, I like to thinkthe School has been helping itself, through proper management of its Endowment Funds, the management of which is overseen by our Investment Committee, chaired by Mark Loveday. Our funds have grown well

Winchester College Annual Report 2013 3

over the last few years and I am hopeful that at some point we will get a further signifi cant boost from our interest in Barton Farm. For those who don’t know, Barton Farm is a farm of some 300 acres north of Winchester. It was sold many years ago to CALA,a property company, but on the basis that the School retained a material economic interest in the application CALA then made for planning permission for the site. After many years of going backwards and forwards, outline planning consent was eventually obtainedin 2012, and an application has now been made for detailed planning consent. There still remains a large number of uncertainties, as regards both any monies we might receive and the time over which we might receive them. I refer to it here because our economic interest in Barton Farm is owned in our Endowment; and if signifi cant proceeds do come through, they will remain in the Endowment and allow us to take another important step in building up our funds for bursaries.

This drive to increase our bursarial funds is partly about the number of bursaries we are able to award; it is also about the level at which we are able to start providing assistance. We want to attract boys whose families come from backgrounds such as medicine, teaching and the civil service, where our fees are diffi cult to meet out of earned income for a single child, let alone for parents with more than one child. It is far too early to start to talk about a needs-blind

Sir David Clementi (E, 1962-67) Warden

One of the key factors which allows usto report a sound fi nancial position is the generosity of many Old Wykehamists, supporters and parents who have contributed signifi cantly to a number of Wykehamical causes.

entry policy for Winchester, but this is undoubtedly the direction in which the Governing Body and the Common Room wish to travel; and it is a direction of which I have no doubt our Founder would have thoroughly approved.

I hope you will fi nd this Report interesting.In addition to a signifi cant amount of fi nancial information, it contains an interview with Freeman Dyson, one of our most eminent academics of the last 50 years, and with Jon Wright, one of our most successful entrepreneurs, a spread of skills that reminds us that it is dangerous to pigeonhole Wykehamists. This Report also provides me with the opportunity to thank the many people, those who work within the School and those who contribute from outside, for their support in making Winchester the vibrant community that it is.

4 Winchester College Annual Report 2013

A lot has changed in schools and education over the past forty years. Back in 1975, when I began my

teaching career, only about 20% of children nationally stayed at school for the Sixth Form, only 5% of school leavers went to university – and they were predominantly boys. Oxbridge was dominated by independent and grammar school graduates. There were closed awards to Oxbridge (Winchester-New College, Westminster-Christ Church, Eton-King’s).A-levels were a two-year course without coursework, perhaps favouring boys.

The late seventies and the eighties brought change. The numbers of Wykehamists winning places at Oxford and Cambridge dropped from around 70%, which was generally reckoned to be disproportionately high, to around half that. Simultaneously the number going to other universities increased, overtaking the Oxford and Cambridge total for the fi rst time in 1979. O-levels were abolished to be replaced by the GCSE, and over the next twenty years A-levels were repeatedly revised to include a broader curriculum,a greater coursework component and ultimatelya reduction in content and rigour.

In 2013 the great majority of children nationally remain at school for the Sixth Form. There are now more girls than boys at top universities. Government access policies have reduced the number of independent school leavers at Oxbridge. A-level and AS reforms since 2000 have given special weight to the learning and examination preferences of girls. Closed awards at Oxbridge have long since been abolished. The number of co-educational boarding schools has increased, leaving only fi ve boys’ full-boarding schools. The rise of league tables has narrowed the public judgement of schools but has increased the importance of ‘academic’ delivery among schools which previously celebrated other aspects of education, such as sport and character-building. All Wykehamists go on to higher education; about twelve go to US universities each year. While statistics compiled since 1996 indicate that there has been little change in the quality of elections into College, the academic quality in the Commoner Houses has improved, resulting in a narrowing ofthe academic gap between College and Houses andan enhancement of academic consistency acrossthe School.

In the last decade Winchester has, like many schools of its type, become much more outward-looking and aware of its presence on the international stage. Winchester International Symposium (10 schools) is now secure in its fi fth year. Our partnership with

We are in a good place

Dr Ralph Townsend, Headmaster

Winchester College Annual Report 2013 5

the High School Affi liated to Fudan University in Shanghai has matured into a new collaboration with the World Leading Schools Association whereby Winchester, in association with Eton, Montgomery Bell Academy USA and the High School Affi liated to Xian Jiaotong University in China, will supervise, examine and validate a diploma course designed to prepare Chinese students for university entrance in the UK and the USA. In 2014 two schools (Fudan and Beijing No 8) will enrol one hundred students each in this programme. Winchester European Symposium now numbers fi ve continental schools including Italy and Romania. There are annual Modern Languages department visits for two weeks from pupils in partner schools in France, Germany & Spain. Two seventeen-year-old boys from Johannes Kepler Grammar School in Prague spend Common Time with us, four pupils from Fudan come to Winchester for the month of February, four from Colegio Claustro Moderno in Bogota for the month of March and three from Montgomery Bell Academy in Nashville USA for the month of June. A new link with Germantown Friends’ School in Philadelphia has recently been forged. Chapel Choir undertakes regular tours of European centres. Elsewhere in this report is an article about the recent building project undertaken by Wykehamists in Ladakh; such charity projects havein recent years become a feature of outward-looking and outward-bound Winchester.

We have become more connected into the local scene too. Our academy partnership with Midhurst Rother College in West Sussex is now well-known to our readers. So too is our partnership with the Crown& Manor Club. Our access and outreach programme includes work with primary schools in Lambeth.And at home our Community Service programme includes half-a-dozen after-school clubs for childrenin local primary schools.

So what makes Winchester stand out in the judgement of parents who choose us over other schools? Our personalised admissions process; our ability to attract

academic teachers of high calibre; the conspicuously intellectual tone of the School; Division as our unique intellectual base; the still-strong House system, including the preservation of eating in Houses; the high quality of our pastoral care; our fair, clear and eff ective system of discipline respected by parents and boys alike; outstanding music; very good sport; a well-organised rich programme of extra-curricular opportunities;the beauty and tranquillity of our setting and buildings, well-maintained but unostentatious.

We have demonstrated educational leadership in recent years. The School Review carried out by the Warden & Fellows in 2006 was thorough, bracing, bold and self-critical. We pioneered the adoption of the Cambridge IGCSE and Pre-U examinations (in which we took a leading role in syllabus design) in 2008. We came out of misleading league tables (fashioned by journalists) in 2007 (followed bysuch schools as St Paul’s and Eton).

And what gives us confi dence that our future is secure? Our ability to attract more than four times the number of boys we can admit; our ability toattract parents who understand and value what we off er; our increasing bursarial capacity; in sympathy with the signs of the times, our cultivation of an ethos in which money and social celebrity are of little orno consequence; and not least, our exemplary codesof governance and administration.

We are not complacent, but we are indeed in a good place.

Dr Ralph Townsend Headmaster

The rise of league tables has narrowed the public judgement of schools but has increased the importance of ‘academic’ delivery among schools.

6 Winchester College Annual Report 2013

A message from the Bursar

Jeff Hynam, Bursar & Secretary to the Governing Body

T he Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 31 August 2013, which are summarised on pages

34 and 35 of this report, show that theCollege reported overall net incoming resources of £2.789 million, a smallincrease on the previous year.

The table to the right on this page shows wherethis surplus came from.

School income from school fees and other charitable activities contributed £967,000 before depreciation, though this becomes a defi cit of £984,000 once depreciation of the School’s buildings and otherfi xed assets is taken into account.

Income from trading, investments and fundraising added another £1.935 million, net of related costs. This brings net operating income up to £951,000.

In addition, there were donations of £1.838 million to the Endowed Funds, bringing the total up tothe full £2.789 million.

This is an important reminder that fee incomealone is not suffi cient to pay for the School’s primary objectives: education, bursaries, Quiristers and ancient buildings.

2013 2012 (£’000) (£’000)

Income

Gross School fees 22,504 21,634

Gross scholarships and bursaries (1,951) (2,057)

Other School income including contributions towards bursaries 1,164 1,201

School fees and other School income 21,717 20,778

Other income

Trading and other income 650 666

Investment income 1,943 1,785

Other fundraising income (excluding Donations to Endowed Funds) 1,130 1,434

3,723 3,885

Total income 25,440 24,663

Expenditure

On charitable activities (22,701) (21,940)

On generating other income (1,788) (1,752)

Total expenditure (24,489) (23,692)

Net operating income 951 971

Donations to Endowed Funds 1,838 1,765

Net income 2,789 2,736

Sources of income:

School income 967 703

Depreciation (1,951) (1,865)

Defi cit in School income (984) (1,162)

Trading, investment and fundraising 1,935 2,133

Net operating income 951 971

Donations to Endowed Funds 1,838 1,765

Net income 2,789 2,736

Winchester College Annual Report 2013 7

Income from the School’s investments and cash deposits was 9% higher year on year. Investment income from the School’s fi nancial assets and property investments remained largely unchanged and interest receivable increased by £162,000 to £444,000 as a result of more attractive rates available in the fi xed deposit markets in the fi rst half of the year.

2012/13 was another successful year for fundraising. In total the amount raised in the year was £2.968 million; while not quite reaching the all-time highof the previous year, this was most encouraging and the School is extremely grateful to all donors.

Fundraising falls into two distinct categories.First, donations to endowed funds totalled £1.838 million, including £805,000 for the bursary fund, £463,000 to endow the new museum and £417,000 for the Wykeham Fund, which supports the School’s charitable objectives through the three principal areas of the provision of bursaries, the maintenance of the Ancient Buildings and collections, and support forthe Quiristers. Although new endowment is treatedas income under charity accounting, in practicethis money has to be ring-fenced and invested,and hence is not immediately available to supportthe School’s activities.

Steven Little Deputy Bursar & Chief AccountantJeff Hynam Bursar & Secretary to Governing Body

IncomeThe School and its subsidiaries have four separate income streams and in the 2012/13 fi nancial year (excluding new money for the endowment) these produced income totalling £25.440 million,a 3.2% increase over the previous year.

The School’s core charitable activities produced by far the largest part of that income. Gross fee income grew by just over 4% to £22.504 million, from which the cost of bursaries, scholarships and other awards totalling £1.951 million is deducted. Fees were putup by 4.3%, and the average number of pupils inthe year was 689, close to the target set by theGoverning Body of 690.

In addition to fees, the School generates income through trading, investments and fundraising,and these together produced income totalling£3.723 million (£1.935 million net of related costs).

Income from trading fell by 2% but profi tability was higher. While the closure of the Cornfl owers shop part way through the previous year reduced turnover, Winchester College Enterprises reported both higher turnover and improved profi tability. The School’s investment in green technology also began to pay off .

A message from the BursarJeff Hynam

8 Winchester College Annual Report 2013

Total expenditure (£’000)

Premises Costs: ignoring depreciation total expenditure on maintaining the premises and grounds and collections, including insurance, utilities, securityand cleaning was £5.765 million. The School continued to spend heavily on its programme to improve boarding accommodation. A total of £1.451 million was spent on capital projects including a further £350,000 on the refurbishment of Kingsgate House, and £700,000 initial costs on the New Hall project.

Support and Other Costs: £1.526 million was spent on a range of support functions including academic administration and the registry, the bursary, governance and audit, and legal and professional fees, whilst expenditure on other activities to generate funds, such as trading, investment management, fi nancing and development, was £1.788 million.

Income (£’000)

1 Net School fees receivable (£20,965)2 Other School income (£752)3 Trading income (£650)4 Investment income and interest receivable (£1,943)5 Donations and other development income (£2,968)

1 Charitable expenditure – Education (£21,866)2 Charitable expenditure – Ancient Buildings and Collections (£835)3 Costs of generating funds (£1,788)

Second, other fundraising income available for immediate use amounted to £1.130 million,including a further £199,000 towards the construction of the new museum. The museumis intended to provide our own pupils, pupilsfrom other colleges and educational establishmentsand other scholars, as well as the local communityand the general public, with a fi rst-class educational environment in which to make available theSchool’s collections for study and enjoyment.

ExpenditureTotal expenditure in the year was £24.489 million,a 3.4% increase year on year, as the School continuedto spend and invest in its academic and pastoral priorities, whilst ensuring that costs remainedunder fi rm control.

Expenditure on generating non-School income, which includes trading, investment management and fundraising costs, was particularly well controlled.

Teaching and Related Costs: £9.054 million for the year, £7.545 million of which was the cost of employingthe teaching and academic support staff .

Accommodation and Welfare Costs: £3.897 millionfor the year, relating mostly to the cost of runningthe boarding houses and School.

1

23

4

5

1

23

Winchester College Annual Report 2013 9

Income from the School’s investmentsand cash deposits was 9% higheryear on year.

Total value of bursaries awarded (£’000) Average value of bursaries awarded (£)

Grants and Awards: The Governing Body is determined to maintain the Founder’s intention to off er the best possible intellectual, cultural formation to boys who can best profi t from it, and continues to pursue a policy of redirecting awards out of existing resources towards bursaries and increasing the total value of awards available by building the endowment.

Scholarships and prizes and most other similar awards are awarded on the basis of merit and educational ability; bursaries are determined on the basis of need. All new awards made from the endowment since2011 (whether to parents of Scholars or Commoners) have been by way of a bursary.

In the year to 31 August 2013, 76 boys (2012: 77) received means-tested bursaries worth £1.410 million (2012: £1.311 million), the equivalent of over43 full fees. Scholarships, and other awards totalling £318,000, were given to a further 82 pupils (2012: 104; £746,000). This represents over 8% of gross fee income.

In the current year (2013/14) 82 pupils are receiving bursaries totalling nearly £1.67m, the equivalent of over 49 full fees. Of the 82 awards already made,62 are to existing recipients, and twenty are for newentrants. Fifty-two out of 82 receive bursaries inexcess of 50% of the School fee.

Quiristers currently receive 40% remission of feesat Pilgrims’ School at an annual cost to the School of £175,000 (2012: £178,000). This includes additional bursary support of nearly £6,000 for specifi c pupilsas a result of means-testing. A fundraising campaign to provide additional bursary and day-to-daysupport for Quiristers has to date raised £970,000(including pledges).

Future Capital ExpenditureThe School aims to continue major expenditure on boarding houses with a refurbishment of Morshead’sin 2014. Plans are also well advanced for the conversion of the Warden’s Stables to a museum, and initial plans have been drawn up for the re-development of the southern part of the campus to include the PE Centre and associated sports facilities, Design Technology centre, medical centre and Works Department.

Number of boys receiving bursaries

12/1

3

05/0

6

06/0

7

07/0

8

08/0

9

09/1

0

10/1

1

11/1

2

12/1

3

05/0

6

06/0

7

07/0

8

08/0

9

09/1

0

10/1

1

11/1

2

12/1

3

05/0

6

06/0

7

07/0

8

08/0

9

09/1

0

10/1

1

11/1

2

34

43

38

41

51 50

77 76

305,

216

332,

975

367,6

55

422,

360 62

0,12

3

708,

375

1,31

1,05

0

1,41

0,59

6

8,97

7

7,744

9,67

5

10.3

01

12,1

59

14,16

8

17,0

26 18,3

94

10 Winchester College Annual Report 2013

There is a multi-faceted, cosmopolitan quality to Winchester College, which stands every young Wykehamist ingood stead to go out with confi denceinto an increasingly globalised world.

Photograph taken at the London Stock Exchange.

Winchester College Annual Report 2013 11

I clearly recall the excitement I experienced when, just before taking up my place at Winchester College, I discovered the

real signifi cance of what I was about to do.I found an entry for ‘Wykehamist’ in an encyclopaedia I was leafi ng through. As a 16-year-old South African, this struck me powerfully. It made me feel that I wasabout to step up onto the world stage.

There is a multi-faceted, cosmopolitan quality to Winchester, which stands every young Wykehamist in good stead to go out with confi dence into an increasingly globalised world. The fi ve stories inthis Annual Report examine the perspectives, achievements and recollections of several Wykehamists ranging from a rocket scientist tothe man who made a fortune bottling and sellingfruit smoothies. Notwithstanding the enormous breadth of their career paths or life interests,there are several common characteristics runningthrough them all. The pursuit of excellence is one;a contribution to a broader collective benefi t is another, while others include vision, thoughtfulness, courage, the application of a rigorous intellectual approach and natural curiosity.

Many, if not all, of these qualities everyone strivesto exercise in their professional lives. As a strategic communications adviser to the CEOs and boards of directors of some of the world’s largest and highest profi le companies, I am certainly challenged to draw upon these attributes on a daily basis. My clients operate across a range of sectors, from oil and gasto the music business, and while all have a global presence, their corporate culture is heavily infl uenced by nationality. In the case of my clients this includes several from across Africa, North America and Europe.

Success relies upon an ability to engage on a wide range of issues with people who have reached thevery pinnacle of their industry. We must challenge them and we have to think creatively about howto protect and enhance their reputations with the fi nancial markets, regulators, governments and customers. Delivering this service, particularly tosuch a culturally and geographically diverse client base, requires fl exibility, sound judgment, and the confi dence to think critically and to executewith conviction.

When one considers these imperatives in the context of Winchester’s wide-ranging curriculum, which fosters an elevated love of learning and the courageto challenge an idea, it is perhaps unsurprising that there are several Wykehamists who have risento the top of the global communications industry. The active and well-subscribed Old Wykehamist Communications Guild is testament to that,counting the co-founders of no less than threeof the City’s top communications fi rms in its number.

In addition to considering how Winchester hasshaped me professionally, the process of guest-editing this Annual Report has been a wonderful personal journey of discovery and refl ection. Charity has always been a cornerstone of what Winchester stands for, and this theme runs through a number of these stories. For any South African, Sir Herbert Baker’s architecture features prominently in daily life andhis stature as an architect in my home country is unsurpassed. Jon Wright’s and Freeman Dyson’s imagination and courage to pursue something potentially great is inspirational.

These fi ve stories reveal how Winchester continuesto play a leading role on the global stage, and thatits founder’s vision remains just as relevant todayas it was in 1382.

Playing on the global stageRyan O’Keeff e (C, 1996-98)

Partner, RLM Finsbury

12 Winchester College Annual Report 2013

Gordon Baker (H, 1984-89)

War Cloister:‘We will remember them’

Winchester College Annual Report 2013 13

A s the forces of militarism, imperialism and nationalism started to pull Europe apart during 1912 and 1913, very few

at Winchester could foresee the signifi cant toll that the inevitable war that broke out in 1914 would take on the Wykehamical family. It is appropriate, on the centenary of one of the most defi ning periods in modern political and military history, to refl ect upon the valour of the very many Wykehamists who stepped forward to fi ght for God, King and Country, and the ultimate sacrifi ce made by 500 of them between 1914 and 1918.

‘That’s the equivalent of an entire generationof the School,’ says Michael Baker (F, 1950-55), grandson of the great architect Sir Herbert Baker, who designed Winchester’s War Cloister at the request of his friend Dr. Monty Rendall,Headmaster of the School at the time.

Sir Herbert was born in Kent in 1862, the fourthof nine children. He was educated at Tonbridge,from where, in 1879, he went to work for his cousin Arthur Baker, who put him through the standard architectural training of the day. He graduated topof his class in 1891, winning the Ashpital Prizefrom The Royal Institute of British Architects.The following year he went to South Africa where, over the next two decades, he would go on tohave an unprecedented infl uence on the country’s architecture, designing many of its best-known and most important buildings. He returned to Britainin 1913 on being appointed with Edwin Lutyensto build New Delhi, opening his own practicein London. In 1917 he was commissioned to designWar Cloister, which was fi rst dedicated in 1924,and then again in 1948.

14 Winchester College Annual Report 2013

Asked about his schoolboy memories specifi cally of War Cloister, Gordon’s recollections give away lessof his connection to its famous architect and illustrate more the way in which the typical Wykehamisttakes for granted his magnifi cent surroundings.‘I was always aware of my connection to War Cloister, but mostly it was just the place I sprinted through when I was running late on my way up to books.It becomes a part of your normality – it’s just another place in the School where you might give someonea friendly greeting with a punch on the arm onyour way past each other.’

The reality, which Gordon - like most Wykehamists – now recognises having left the School and spenta working life in the wider world, is that ‘Winchesterhas a beauty which one absorbs just as a part ofbeing there. But if you do choose to pause and look up, there is another layer of beauty and meaning.’His father Michael agrees, pointing to the inscription around the inside of War Cloister as one such example, a recital of which was a part of hisNotions test in 1950.

The wording is lyrical and powerful, but Michael also notes that his grandfather took great trouble to ensure that the word ‘Peace’ appeared in the middle of the north wall, immediately below a sculptured relief

Sir Herbert described the time he spent at Winchester as ‘a glorious experience,’ and in sending his son Henry Baker (F, 1918-24) to the School he continued what is now an unbroken Baker family association with Winchester that, so far, spans four generations and nearly 100 years. His great-grandson Gordon Baker (H, 1984-89), who from his offi ce in Whitehall overlooks Church House, a building designed bySir Herbert in the 1930s for the Church of Englandas its headquarters, says of his time at Winchesterwith his brother David (H, 1984-88), ‘I really loved it.We arrived at the School as two lost souls. Our mother had just passed away and we had just moved back to the UK from America. Winchester is a very inclusive, dynamic place and there was so much going on;so we just got stuck in.’

War Cloister: ‘We will remember them’Gordon Baker (H, 1984-89)

Winchester has a beauty which one absorbs just as a part of being there.But if you do choose to pause andlook up, there is another layer ofbeauty and meaning.

1

2

4

3

Winchester College Annual Report 2013 15

of an angel. It is this subtlety of balance and symmetry, perceptible upon more considered observation, which is characteristic of the Cloister’s architectural charm.

Perhaps with College Chapel, the Cathedral, Chamber Court and School, Winchester is spoiled for choiceof settings for formal occasions. Indeed, Michael recalls that ‘there was seldom a special event in War Cloister,’ although he does recount ‘a very touching moment one Christmas, when the Quiristers were tucked into the far corner of a candle-lit War Cloister singing carols.’ Nowadays, I am pleased to learn,War Cloister is used more regularly for School occasions. Gordon’s most striking memory of his great-grandfather’s creation is one that will resonate with anyone who has played on Canvas: ‘We stood there, eye-balling the OTH team, before walking out, side by side, to the roar of the rest of the School.’

Gordon states that his great-grandfather ‘would have made a good Wykehamist.’ Michael backs up this assertion with a story revealing Sir Herbert’s very Wykehamical sense of humour. As a boy, he was turned down by Haileybury for entrance at 13.

Having established himself as one of the Empire’spre-eminent war graves architects by the mid-1920s, he was asked by Haileybury to design their Memorial

Dining Hall. In an act of poetic retribution,he inscribed the school’s motto above the Hall inancient Greek, the only incidence of its appearancein anything other than English or Latin. Perhaps he did this to have the last laugh, making life a little more challenging for those who had been granted a place there; but maybe he also sought to stamp indelibly his own intellectual superiority upon all Haileyburiansfor eternity – a truly Wykehamical trait.

It is appropriate, on the centenary of one of the most defi ning periods in modern political and military history, to refl ect upon the valour of the very many Wykehamists who stepped forwardto fi ght for God, King and Country.

5 7

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1-4 Photography taken on 11 November 2013 at theSchool’s Remembrance Sunday Parade.

5 Lord Grey (C, 1876-80) at the opening of War Cloister,31st May 1924.The formal opening was performed by theDuke of Connaught; the dedication was performed by theBishop of Winchester; and Grey gave the opening address.

6 View along the south side of War Cloister. 7 A sculptured relief of an angel that appears in the middle of the north wall.

16 Winchester College Annual Report 2013

Winchester College Annual Report 2013 17

Disturbing the Universe:Dreams of Earth and Sky

Freeman Dyson (Coll, 1936-41)

I t does little justice to the remarkable catalogue of achievements of Freeman Dyson (Coll, 1936-41) to state simply

that he is one of the world’s pre-eminent physicists and mathematicians, although any scientist – and even many non-scientists –will tell you he is.

In advance of an interview with Professor Dyson,who resides in Princeton, New Jersey, some background research suggests a colossal intellectawaits me on the other end of the telephone.When I get through, however, what is most strikingis the ease with which our discussion proceeds. Professor Dyson’s natural warmth comes throughin a way that immediately dispels any suggestionof the stereotypically unapproachable scientist inan ivory tower of intellectual superiority.

‘Winchester College has been a part of my life for longer than I can remember,’ he tells me. ‘I was eight months old when we moved into 21 Kingsgate Street in 1924, when my father was appointed Director of Music at the College.’ His earliest childhood memories therefore are of running around Meads, climbingtrees and chasing dogs. ‘We were hooligans!’ he saysof himself and his friends, the young children ofother members of Common Room.

Charting the course of his progress from young hooligan to Professor Emeritus at the Institute for Advanced Study, the position he holds today, is an exercise in the appreciation of the fulfi lment of human potential. Professor Dyson was awarded a Professorship at Cornell University at the age of 28. Had it not been for the war, and two years consequently spent in Operations Research at RAF Bomber Command halfway through his undergraduate degree at Cambridge, he might well have achieved this accolade even earlier. He has had over a dozen books andpapers published, including his 1979 autobiography Disturbing the Universe, in which he discussed his ambitions to travel into space, having set himselfthe timetable of personally reaching Saturn by 1970.He has advised governments on matters ranging from nuclear warfare to climate change. He is one of very few to have been received Ad Portas at Winchester twice, and the list of his awards and honours reads comprehensively, with only a Nobel Prize missing from the list. Although many argue that the committee has committed an oversight in never having awarded him the Nobel Prize for Physics, Professor Dyson counters modestly that he prefers the infamy of never having won it, while also pointingout that ‘people asking why you didn’t get the prizeis much better than them asking why you did!’

18 Winchester College Annual Report 2013

Disturbing the Universe: Dreams of Earth and SkyFreeman Dyson (Coll, 1936-41)

In the midst of all this achievement, the world of science recognises Professor Dyson’s demonstrationof the equivalence of the formulations ofquantum electrodynamics as his single mostimportant contribution.

He explains to me in very clear and simple language that quantum electrodynamics is the study of how atoms and light particles behave, the most spectacular application of which is the laser. ‘The physical ideas were all correct, and the proofs had been comprehensively gone over many times,’ he explains. ‘However, the mathematics was a bit of a mess,so it was diffi cult to be 100% sure that it all worked.I cleaned up the mess. I didn’t need to invent anything. There were three diff erent versions of this set of ideas, all pretty well understood, but they were not at all user-friendly. I just straightened it all out.’

At Winchester, the young Freeman Dyson was quickly identifi ed as mathematically gifted. By his fi nal year there was no Mathm-a don at the School who was able to teach him anything further, and so it was arranged for Daniel Pedoe, a professor from Southampton University to come in each week to tutor him.‘I remain very impressed to this day by the imagination shown by the School in arranging this for me. Travel was not easy during the war, so this was a signifi cant undertaking.’ It was through these tutorials that he fi rst learned about the world of professional mathematics and he attributes these sessions withhis ultimately becoming a mathematician.

The other major infl uences on his early years were three of his contemporaries in College: James Lighthill, (Coll, 1936-41), the aero-acoustic mathematician whose work paved the way for the developmentof the Concorde; Christopher Longuet-Higgins(Coll, 1935-41), the cognitive scientist and theoretical chemist, who as an undergraduate at Oxford proposed the correct structure of the chemical compound Diborane; and his younger brother, the oceanographer Michael Longuet-Higgins (Coll, 1939-43), who introduced the theory of the origin of microseisms. Dyson, Lighthill, and the two Longuet-Higgins brothers all went on to become Fellows of theRoyal Society, in recognition of their achievements

I remain very impressed to this day bythe imagination shown by the Schoolin arranging this for me. Travel wasnot easy during the war, so thiswas a signifi cant undertaking.

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Winchester College Annual Report 2013 19

1 Practical worksheet to fi nd the moment of inertia of a pulley’s wheel. 2 An edge-model of the uniform polyhedra. Part of a collection

constructed between 1941 and 1952 by Michael Longuet-Higginsand presented to Winchester in 2012.

3 Pitch fl ow experiment started in 1906 to show the gradualfl ow of pitch.

4 Solutions to the diff erential equation describing the motion ofa falling body subjected to a retarding force proportional to thesquare of the speed of the body.

5 A 6-inch Meade refracting telescope in the observatory onScience School roof.

in their respective fi elds. ‘We were all Collegemenat the same time. To have had the four of us all there together was quite remarkable really when youlook back on it.’

My brief conversation with Professor Dyson introduced me to a rare breadth of horizon that is unusual. To hear someone speak plainly about hisvery real ambitions in the 1950s to travel into space, and the many years spent designing, building and testing a spacecraft to take him there, is not an everyday occurrence. ‘It was the most romanticperiod of my life, working on my spaceship.I was entranced with the idea, and I was dead seton going myself,’ he tells me. ‘I was going to have 2,000 bombs on board to get me up into the sky.I know it sounds a bit crazy now, but it seemedquite real at the time.’

His sense of scale is remarkable, too. He’s very comfortable talking about the possibility that life exists elsewhere in the universe, but cautions us not to get over-excited. ‘There’s no point in wasting our time trying to guess now – we’ll fi nd out about it one day.’ As for space travel, the idea still clearly excites him. ‘Commercial space travel probably will become a part of daily life… but only in a couple of hundred years’ time. For now, unmanned missions are proving very successful, and we’re gaining a totally new view of the universe all the time. So when it happens, it won’t be very useful, but it will be a great adventure.’

It was the most romantic period of my life, working on my spaceship. I was entranced with the idea, and I wasdead set on going myself.

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20 Winchester College Annual Report 2013

Winchester College Annual Report 2013 21

W inchester’s charitable raison d’être does not enjoy the prominencein public awareness that it should.

The School is known for many things, most notably its academic excellence, long history and beautiful grounds. Too few know of or appreciate how fundamental the charitable tenets of the School are, and why. This is key to understanding Winchester’s position as a global leader among schools.

The original Charter drawn up by William of Wykeham, dated 20 October 1382, sets out hisvision for the School to provide access to educationfor those who would benefi t most from it,irrespective of their social background or fi nancial circumstances. Since the fourteenth century, this approach has been at the very heart of Winchester’s DNA. Today, fulfi lling this vision remains just as relevant, although it is not simply about doing the bidding of our Founder. In a climate of increasingly intense political focus on the role of private education, driving a wider social benefi t is a sine qua non for a school like Winchester, and many would consider charity the independent school’s licence to operatein twenty-fi rst century Britain.

There is, however, more to Winchester’s charitable focus in 2014 than a six-hundred-year-old charter,or the political and social credibility that it may gain the School – as important as both of these are in its historical and contemporary contexts. To consider either of these to be the primary driver behind the bursary programme is to fail to recognise the farmore important point about what allows Winchester to maintain its position at the forefront of the academic world.

Laurie Harris (I, 2008-13) left Winchester with a choral scholarship to Cambridge to read Theology.He is a member of the Clare College mixed-voice choir, which has just returned from a tour of the United States, performing to sell-out audiences around the country. Laurie came to Winchester by the grace of the John Bellamy Trust, set up by the late Mrs Bellamy in her will in memory of her only child who was killed in an accident. Laurie was an active member of Music School as a horn player, pianist and singer. In his fi nal year he made a fi ne Sen. Co. Prae.

Here is a young man who fulfi ls precisely William of Wykeham’s vision of a Wykehamist. However, wereit not for the bursary programme, he says categorically that he would not have been in a position to take up a place at the School. ‘There is no way, not even nearly, that I would have been able to go to Winchester,’ he says.

Just Reward:the benefi ts of the bursary programme

Laurie Harris (I, 2008-13)

22 Winchester College Annual Report 2013

social and cultural fabric that lends Winchesterits unique character.

‘It is critical to have more boys on bursaries. Winchester needs to be ahead of the pace, ratherthan playing catch up,’ says John Sanders (F, 1956-61), a former Sen. Co. Prae. who, together with his son Richard (K, 1984-89), set up the Winchester College Golf Bursary Endowment Fund.

It speaks to the enormous generosity of the Sanders that such an endowment could be made. It is clearly not practical to donate a sum ring-fenced for a specifi c cause if the annual investment yield cannot generate suffi cient cashfl ow to fund the bursary. It also speaks to the open-mindedness and far-sightedness of the School, as John explains: ‘To the Head Man’s eternal credit, he embraced the idea enthusiastically. Sport is an important part of the Winchester off ering.’ John is quick to point out, however, that this is not a sports scholarship. ‘The recipient must, of course, fi rst clear all the usual academic hurdles, but there is an additional hurdle – he must be a talented golfer and his primary extra-curricular activity at the School should be golf.’ The current benefi ciary of the award was fi nally put forward, after a long search, by none other than the Captain of The Royal and Ancient Golf Club in St Andrews, Pierre Bechmann.

Without the bursary that funded his education therefore, the boys in Laurie’s year would not havehad the benefi t of his perspectives while learning alongside him for fi ve years; his fellow Hopperites would not have enjoyed his company and his insights in the debates which ran late into the night in House Library; and Winchester as a whole would have missed his leadership, the enjoyment of his musical abilityand the individual, incremental contribution thatall Wykehamists make to life at the School.

Laurie too is clear that he is the richer for have been at Winchester. ‘Every facet of Winchester life challenges you in every way. It engages you at a very high level,’ he says. ‘I gained a confi dence from Winchester which I lacked before. I cannot say how valuable that is.’

With 82 bursary benefi ciaries currently at theSchool who, like Laurie, have a potential talent,and who without a bursary would have been unableto take up a place at Winchester, the richness of lifeat the School is enhanced immeasurably throughthe bursary programme.

Furthermore, when one considers the number of scholarship and bursary places available, drawingin young men from a wide variety of backgroundswith a multiplicity of talents and interests across the spectrum of Winchester life, the bursary programme is perhaps largely responsible for the diversity of

Just Reward: the benefi ts of the bursary programmeLaurie Harris (I, 2008-13)

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Winchester College Annual Report 2013 23

The Sanders chose golf because it is something both are passionate about, but as John says, endowments could, in theory, be focused in any way that a benefactor wishes. ‘If you wanted a bursary to goto a boy from South Africa, or a good cricketer,it could in theory be possible to donate towardsthat.’ In this respect, the Sanders are pioneers for Winchester, in that their model opens up the possibility of signifi cant new sources of funding for the bursary programme, as benefactors are inspiredto give in a way that is more personal to them.For example, James Ferguson (C, 1961-66), whohas strong connections near Belfast, volunteeredto endow the ‘Northern Ireland Bursary Fund.’As in the case of the Sanders, since the usefulnessof a ring-fenced endowment relies upon its scaleand consequent ability to generate meaningful funds each year, this is an enormously generous donation.

The fi rst benefi ciary of the award arrived in Short Half 2013, and so already it is creating a positive legacy, both in Northern Ireland and in Flint Court.

Ensuring that the School has the fi nancial wherewithal to maintain and grow the number of bursaries is a signifi cant challenge, and never more so than today in the face of both a fi nancial crisis and the increased cost of providing a top-class education.It is to the very great credit of the School’s leadership that, in the last few years in particular, enormous progress has been made in extending the bursary programme, more than doubling the numberof boys on bursaries since 2006.

It is an insuffi ciently recognised truth that,without this programme, Winchester would not be the institution that it is, allowing it the scope to select the boys who will contribute most positively to its culture of success, rather than simply those whocan aff ord its fees.

And as with all of the most sustainable and worthwhile initiatives, it fosters a mutual benefi t. As Laurie Harris says, ‘The greatest gift you could give someone is the experience I had at Winchester College.’

It is critical to have more boys on bursaries. Winchester needs to beahead of the pace, rather thanplaying catch up.

1-5 Photos taken at Hopper’s and Clare College, Cambridge. 6 The seal of William of Wykeham as attached to his foundation

charter for Winchester College, dated 20 October 1382.

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24 Winchester College Annual Report 2013

Entrepreneurial Fruit:an interview with the co-founder of Innocent Drinks

Jon Wright (K, 1985-90)

Winchester College Annual Report 2013 25

W hat made Jon Wright(K, 1985-90), co-founder of Innocent Drinks, into one of the

most successful British entrepreneurs of thelast few years? He’s full of little anecdotesfrom his past when I speak to him followinghis return from a New Year holiday inSouth Africa. ‘As a young kid I earned myown pocket money, so I was always tryingto shift things on to the other kids…My most profi table venture was a day tripto Boulogne when I was at prep school.I bought a whole load of French bangersand lighters, and then sold them to my mates when we got back. I did very well out of it,but the teachers were not that impressedwith all the explosions going on aroundthe school.’

Although he’s reluctant to credit his entrepreneurial success to any one single infl uence, when he speaksof his time at Winchester, it’s clear that somethingwas nurtured there that pointed him in the direction of a creative and enterprising future. ‘When I visited the School for Election, we were taken into Milland there was a group of boys who were makinga hovercraft. That was very exciting.’

When he took up his place in Beloe’s, Mill continued to stimulate his imagination. Jon and his partner in crime, Rick Taylor (K, 1986-90), decided to make a superconductor one day, and to use it to demonstrate the Meissner Eff ect, whereby the superconductor can be made to levitate above a magnet when cooled by liquid nitrogen.

They spent some time in Science School and inMill putting together the compounds and building their apparatus, and in front of a lecture theatre fi lled with their classmates and other scientists they successfully carried out their experiment. Jon believes that the experience is a fundamental characteristic of a Winchester education. ‘Winchester gives boys an ability to indulge their passions, and it off ers them the facilities, the support and the time to pursue them deeply. The School pushes them to be the best version of themselves, not just a cookie-cut generalist.’

26 Winchester College Annual Report 2013

to try to prevent me from chucking in my very expensive education to go and blend fruit for a living,but otherwise we had a very full YES bin andnot too many in the NO bin.’

So the decision was made, but it wasn’t plain sailingby any means. ‘We obviously needed fi nancial backing but we were three guys with no track record; we couldn’t even decide which one of us would be chief. We were told we were totally uninvestible.’ Banks and venture capitalists turned them away one after the other. It came down to their last roll of the dice, and they sent an email out to everyone they knew, asking if anyone knew anyone who might be interested in investing in their business. They only got one response. As it turned out, that was all they needed. The introduction was made to Maurice Pinto, an American businessman, and the rest is history.It took them ten years to build a £400 million business.

Jon is a member of the Old Wykehamist Entrepreneurs Guild, and he recently hosted the inaugural meeting in Fruit Towers, Innocent’s headquarters, which was attended by nearly 50 Old Wykehamists. ‘It’s great to reconnect with these guys. When you start looking around, there are lots of interesting things that Wykehamists are doing.’ He points to some ofhis fellow Guild members, such as Paul Cleaver(H, 1985-90) who owns a real estate management

Jon left Winchester and went up to St. John’s College, Cambridge in 1991, where on his fi rst night he met two fellow freshers in the student bar – Adam Balon from London, and Richard Reed from Yorkshire. That there were stars aligned when Jon walkedinto that bar is beyond doubt – the three of themwould go on to start and build a business together,and then sell it to Coca-Cola for an undisclosedsum, reported to be in excess of £400 million.

I ask the obvious question: ‘How?’

Jon was working as a management consultant atBain & Company when he, Richard and Adam decided to go on a skiing holiday. ‘We were drivingto Val d’Isère when we came up with the idea.As soon as we got back we started working on it.’

The story of the moment critique in the birth of Innocent Drinks is, by now, quite well known. Having taken the idea as far as they could whilst still holding down serious full-time jobs, the trio decided it was crunch time. ‘Being a consultant, I wanted ‘clip-board’ evidence to support our idea. So we setup a stand and started handing out our smoothies one day. We had a sign up, asking people if they thought we should give up our jobs to start a companyselling them.’ They placed two bins in front of theirstand, one marked YES and the other marked NO.‘I think my mum put a few empties into the NO bin

Entrepreneurial Fruit: an interview with the co-founder of Innocent DrinksJon Wright (K, 1985-90)

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Winchester College Annual Report 2013 27

business, and Sam Critchley (I, 1986-91) who co-founded Spaaza, a business that brings ‘a littlebit of online wizardry’ to the retail industry.

However, he is quick to point out that there is also a diversity within his Wykehamist circle which is just as interesting as those who have started their own businesses. ‘I have friends who are civil servants, clergymen, actors and medics. It was great to seeBill Buckhurst (K, 1985-90)’s name in theSkyfall credits.’

Our conversation begins to meander away fromthe subject of Winchester and Innocent Drinks –we discuss safari in South Africa (‘unbeatable’);the importance of teamwork (‘none of my major achievements has been a solo eff ort.’); most important lessons learned (‘All the lessons I learned while starting up our business were the things people had tried to tell me. Now I’m trying to tell others. I wish people would listen’); how choosing the right people is crucial in business (‘When we were expandinginto Europe, we found that the countries where we were successful were those where we had a strongcountry manager, not necessarily where the market fundamentals were any better.’); and how importantit is to get the details right.

We eventually decide that there is too much todiscuss on one telephone call and we agree to meetfor lunch. Before I hang up, I ask him one last question: ‘Would your fellow co-founders have made good Wykehamists?’ His response is emphatic: ‘Absolutely. They’re both exceptionally smart, they strive for excellence and they want to achieve things.’ It’s a resounding endorsement of Wykehamists,and confi rmation that there are the makings ofan entrepreneur in us all.

Winchester gives boys an ability to indulge their passions, and it off ers them the facilities, the support and the time to pursue them deeply. The School pushes them to be the best version of themselves, not just a cookie-cut generalist.

1-5 Photographs taken at Fruit Towers, the home of Innocent Drinks. 6 The inaugural gathering of the Entrepreneurs Guild, November 2013.

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28 Winchester College Annual Report 2013

Winchester College Annual Report 2013 29

In the summer of 2012, a fl ight fromDelhi touched down in Leh, the capital city of the former Himalayan Kingdom

of Ladakh, today a region of India’s politically troubled state of Kashmir. Thirty young Wykehamists in Sixth Book II stepped off the plane, ready to begin an unusual mission: to help in the construction of a nunnery inthe small village of Basgo, an hour’s driveto the north-west.

Until the group arrived, the local townspeople and the young nuns themselves, who ranged in age from 5 to 26 years old, were undertaking construction of the nunnery. The boys brought their energy and manpower, and their involvement pushed construction ahead by several months in just a couple of weeks. More importantly, however, they werealso responsible for the entire funding of the project.They had raised around £40,000 during the year through a number of self-started initiatives, including running, cycling and rowing in the School gym the 5,000-odd miles that separate Winchester and Ladakh.

Winchester College’s association with the nunneryin Ladakh was brokered by the Lotus Flower Trust,a charity which was formed in 2008 to work in‘remote and impoverished communities in India.’ The Trust’s stated objective for the end of 2013 is to have completed 21 projects, helping more than 2,000 children and their families through the constructionof schools, housing and community centres to promote education, safety and security. With over a third of Indians living on less than $1.25 each day, there is clearly an urgent and considerable need for this type of help.

David Baldwin (Housemaster F, 1981-96) fi rst introduced the School to the Lotus Flower Trust through John Hunt, a former Marks & Spencer plc executive of 25 years, and now CEO of the Trust. Since the School’s fi rst involvement, two projects – including the Ladakh nunnery, lasting two yearseach – have been completed by four groups of Wykehamists. A fi fth group in as many years will be heading out to northern India this summer to begin the construction phase of a third project, the building of The Himalayan International School in Massoorie, also to be run in collaboration with the Trust.

Ladakh:expanding the Founder’s vision beyond our borders

Oli Wettern (G, 2006-11)

30 Winchester College Annual Report 2013

‘There are two key elements to these projectsfrom the perspective of the boys,’ says Oli Wettern,a member of the India team in 2010, and a memberof staff on the Ladakh team in 2012. ‘The fi rst isthat the boys have the opportunity to gain exposureto a part of the world they don’t necessarily knowvery well.’ The value of this aspect of a young Wykehamist’s education is obvious. Broadening horizons and opening minds to the world beyondthe typical English public school has long been a hallmark of a Winchester education, and is oneof the few defi ning characteristics of the otherwise diffi cult-to-describe Div, unique to Winchester.

To this end, although the charitable endeavour was very much the primary focus of the boys’ time in India, the scope of the trip extended beyond it.There was also time for some cultural exploration, including the challenge of climbing the 20,182ft peak, Stok Kangri, which two thirds of the boys achieved.

‘A second aspect of the project is the camaraderie amongst the boys, the leadership skills that are developed, and the friendships that form betweenboys who may not have had much to do with one another at School up to that point,’ says Oli.

It’s clear speaking to him that the experience was not just one that off ered him and his fellow Wykehamists some new perspectives on the world, although no doubt the insights they gained were valuable in themselves. There is something more profound that comes through – a sense of achievement and pride at having accomplished something that few schoolboys can lay claim to.

Ladakh: expanding the Founder’s vision beyond our bordersOli Wettern (G, 2006-11)

A second aspect of the project is the camaraderie amongst the boys, the leadership skills that are developed, and the friendships that form between boys who may not have had much to do with one another at School up to that point.

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Winchester College Annual Report 2013 31

Long after these young Wykehamists have left Ladakh, and even after the second group comes and goes a year later having put the fi nishing touches to the project and inaugurated the nunnery, a real and tangible legacy is established. When William of Wykeham founded Winchester, one of his stated objectives was to educate boys to exercise leadership in society. An integral part of his vision was to provide access to education, irrespective of the social background of the scholars.

Whilst certainly premature to begin to speak of the achievement of the Ladakh teams in similar terms to that of our founder, the fact is that fi fty young girls in northern India will be able to enjoy the gift of an education, by the good grace, hard work and determination of two groups of Wykehamists.There is every hope and expectation that the nunnery will continue to provide a safe and prosperous home for young nuns in the region for many years to come.

In future years, as long as Winchester can manage to keep the momentum going, more boys will fund and construct further facilities in this needy but beautiful and fascinating part of the world.

It is a great tribute to the School that, more thansix centuries after William of Wykeham realised his vision and founded Winchester College, the young men who benefi t from his initiative go out into the world – far beyond the borders and relative comfortof Hampshire – to deliver their own implementation of that same vision.

The boys brought their energy and manpower, and their involvement pushed construction ahead by several months in just a couple of weeks.

1 Members of the Ladakh 2012 team and nuns, or nunlets asthey became aff ectionately known, at the team’s campsite.

2 Poplar branches being sorted for fi rewood before beingloaded onto the roof for winter storage.

3 Crossing one of the many tributaries of the Indus River. 4 The Ladakh 2013 team outside one of the new buildings

funded by both teams’ eff orts. 5 The view at 20,182 feet on the summit of Stok Kangri.

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32 Winchester College Annual Report 2013

T he academic year 2012/13 was again a good one for the School’s fi nances, and a small improvement over 2011/12.

The key fi gures and factors that have generated this result are analysed in the Bursar’s report on page 6, in which he is careful to remind us that, after depreciation, the education account has a defi cit this year of £984,000. Even that fi gure is fl attered by £412,000 of internal support from dedicated income of the accumulated Bursary Funds. This small, but persistent defi cit is manageable so long as investment returns remain satisfactory and the generosity of the Wykehamical community through donations and legacies does not waver.

The Finance Committee has a steady fl ow of basic reviews: annual budgets, termly accounts, the all important level of pupil numbers, fee recommendations, capital projects, current cost controls, matters arising from the Works and Investment Committees, and balance sheet management. I mention this in contrast to three special areas of the Committee’s recent activity.

First, our developing cashfl ow model which shows a reasonably comfortable liquidity position for the next fi ve years, even after the £6 million refurbishment

of New Hall, and an accelerated programme of work on Commoner Houses to keep them fi t-for-purpose and safe. The following fi ve years become more challenging, as we hope to be re-building the School’s PE Centre and other facilities in Kingsgate Park,in addition to the groundswell of capital projects.

Second, developing data and models to inform a renewed consideration of policy on bursaries. This work confronts issues of aff ordability, fairness, and, more fundamentally, the make-up of the pupil body.

Third, a restructuring of our pension arrangements for the non-teaching staff . The Committee recommended, and the Governing Body accepted, that maintaining the defi ned benefi t pension scheme was an unacceptable long-term risk. As a result, a new defi ned contribution scheme was set up, at similar cost to the School, with the full agreement of the staff aff ected. Given that payroll costs represent 57% of the total expenditure of the School, managing pension cost remains an important focus for the Committee, while acknowledging the importance of pension saving for every employee.

Our fundraisers had another good year, and many readers of this Annual Report will have been telephoned by young Wykehamists this last summer, and charmed into becoming donors. The boys were challenged (with matching funds) by a small group of Wykeham Patrons, to encourage both new donors and donors making regular contributions. They rose to both challenges.

A report from the Chairman of the Finance Committee

Charles Sinclair (B, 1961-66) Chairman of the Finance Committee

Winchester College Annual Report 2013 33

On our investments, our fi nancial assets were valuedat £18.8 million at 31st August 2013, and returned 11.5% during 2012/13. This portfolio is largely invested under an absolute return mandate, so under-performed the index, but we would expect itto out-perform in weaker markets. Our residential investment properties were valued at £7.7 million, generating a return of 39% including the unrealized valuation gain on Wharf Mews, a small development of 6 residential units now valued at £2.55 million after a construction cost of £925,000, yielding £86,000 rent. Our agricultural holdings, excluding Barton Farm, generated a return including unrealized valuation gains of 19.1%, refl ecting consistent improvements to our farms where they enhance rental yields. As the Warden explains earlier, Barton Farm may provide a further boost to these returns overtime. The overall, like for like, return on these three portfolios was 18.5%. Our forebears have done us well. According to Savills, over the last ten years, agricultural land has been an outstanding asset class at 15% annual returns, second only to forestry at 16%. Residential property and equity have not matched them.

The Investment Committee which supervises these assets has been led since inception by Mark Loveday (H, 1957-62). Mark became a fi nancial adviser to the Warden in 1994, serving Wardens Morse, Younger, Large and Clementi. He has sat on the Finance

Committee for twenty years. In that role, he suggested that there was insuffi cient time in the agenda for proper attention to investment matters. The inevitable result was that he became a Fellow in 2008 and the founder Chairman of a new Investment Committee. He has been a fearless advocate for the discipline of proper returns in all aspects of the School’s life,not merely fi nancial. Mark retires at the end of Cloister Time. We shall miss him.

Andrew Joy, our new Fellow, will take on the Chairmanship of the Investment Committee from Mark. He is eminently qualifi ed: his six early years at Hill Samuel found him drawn towards Development Capital as it was then known; in 1992, he joined Cinven, one of the outstanding performers in European Private Equity, and built its funding baseand investment returns. After twenty-one good years, he has moved to Fleming Family and Partners.

In summary, our fi nances are sound for the time being,but we depend on the commitment of our donors and the performance of our fundraisers and investment management to make ends meet. Signifi cant,but engaging, challenges lie ahead, including our Founder’s, that no pupil capable of enjoying a Winchester education should be prevented fromso doing by a lack of resources.

Andrew Joy, (C, 1970-74) Chairman elect of the Investment CommitteeCharles Sinclair (B, 1961-66) Chairman of the Finance Commitee

34 Winchester College Annual Report 2013

Summary statement of fi nancial activitiesfor the year ended 31 August 2013

Unrestricted Restricted Endowed 2013 2012 Funds Funds Funds Total Total (£’000) (£’000) (£’000) (£’000) (£’000)

INCOMING RESOURCESIncome from charitable activitiesGross School fees receivable 22,504 – – 22,504 21,634Scholarships and bursaries (1,951) – – (1,951) (2,057)Contributions to bursaries from endowed funds and donations 412 – – 412 417

Net School fees receivable 20,965 – – 20,965 19,994

Other income 752 – – 752 784

Income from generated funds Trading income 561 – – 561 644Other activities 89 – – 89 22Investment income 74 2 1,423 1,499 1,503Capital applied to income 1,861 371 (2,232) – –Bank and other interest 428 16 – 444 282Grants and donations 309 607 1,838 2,754 3,056Other development income 214 – – 214 143

Total incoming resources 25,253 996 1,029 27,278 26,428

RESOURCES EXPENDEDCosts of generating fundsTrading costs (265) – – (265) (378)Financing costs (141) – – (141) (176)Investment management – – (478) (478) (327)Development costs: – Fundraising (475) – – (475) (467) – Other activities (429) – – (429) (404)

Total costs of generating funds (1,310) – (478) (1,788) (1,752)

Charitable activitiesEDUCATION AND GRANT MAKINGTeaching (8,991) (63) – (9,054) (8,933)Welfare (3,846) (51) – (3,897) (3,617)Premises costs (6,119) (7) (635) (6,761) (6,972)Support costs of schooling (1,473) – – (1,473) (1,399)Grants, awards and prizes – Quiristers (134) (41) – (175) (178) – Contributions to bursaries from – (412) – (412) (417)

endowed funds and donations – Other awards (13) (28) – (41) (76)

(20,576) (602) (635) (21,813) (21,592)PRESERVATION OF ANCIENT BUILDINGS AND CONTENTS (714) (121) – (835) (298)

Total charitable expenditure (21,290) (723) (635) (22,648) (21,890)

GOVERNANCE (53) – – (53) (50)

Total resources expended (22,653) (723) (1,113) (24,489) (23,692)

Net incoming resources 2,600 273 (84) 2,789 2,736Transfers between funds 58 (58) – – –

Revaluation gains and losses 199 3 61,617 61,819 3,338

Net movement in funds for the year 2,857 218 61,533 64,608 6,074Opening fund balances 15,803 1,853 120,648 138,304 132,230

Closing fund balances 18,660 2,071 182,181 202,912 138,304

Winchester College Annual Report 2013 35

Summary balance sheetat 31 August 2013

2013 2012 (£’000) (£’000)

FIXED ASSETSTangible fi xed assets 69,968 69,465Investments 131,852 70,789

201,820 140,254Net current assets 8,930 6,766

TOTAL ASSETS LESS CURRENT LIABILITIES 210,750 147,020

Other liabilities and provisions (7,838) (8,716)

NET ASSETS 202,912 138,304

Represented by:Endowed funds 182,181 120,648Restricted funds 2,071 1,853Unrestricted funds 18,660 15,803

202,912 138,304

The summarised fi nancial statements on pages 34 and 35 are extracted from the full annual Report and Financial Statements, which were approved by the Warden and Fellows and signed on their behalf on 7 December 2013 and on which the auditors Crowe Clark Whitehill LLP gave an unqualifi ed audit report on 16 December 2013.

The auditors have confi rmed to the Warden and Fellows that, in their opinion, the summarised fi nancial statements are consistent with the full fi nancial statements for the year ended 31 August 2013.

These summarised fi nancial statements may not contain suffi cient information to gain a complete understanding of the fi nancial aff airs of the charity. The full Report of the Warden and Fellows,Financial Statements and Auditors’ Report may be obtained from the Chief Accountant at the College.

Signed on behalf of the Warden and Fellows.

Sir David ClementiFebruary 2014

Report by the trustees on the Summarised Financial Statements

Refl ections of the Director:Looking back on his ten years ‘in Development’

David Fellowes (I, 1963-67)

36 Winchester College Annual Report 2013

O h, I see; so you’re going to be involved in fundraising now,are you?’ This was one of the early

reactions to my appointment in March 2004 as Secretary of Wykehamist Society, in succession to Patrick Maclure. My immediate and ill-considered reaction is probably unprintable,but little did I know how far-sighted that observation was to become, as I gradually discovered and embraced the true meaningof the term ‘Development’.

Fast-forward to March 2007 and the birth of Winchester College Society. I was undoubtedly lucky in not having to cope with any ‘baggage’ in the form of a heavily constituted and independently minded alumni society, as still seems to be the norm elsewhere. I was also most fortunate in being encouraged by an inspirational and most supportive group of volunteer OWs, who became the founding members of Win Coll Soc’s Council, so ably chaired, fi rst by Peter Stormonth Darling (C, 1945-50), then William Eccles (C, 1973-77) and now Alasdair Maclay (Coll, 1986-91). I remain indebted to them and their colleagues on the Council.

The Society’s stated aims have remained unchanged ever since, namely to maintain and build good relations amongst the worldwide Wykehamical family,

to foster support for the School and pride in all it seeks to achieve, and to encourage the culture of giving.I have often described our structure, recently regarded by some other schools as the ‘gold standard’, as beinga ‘fully integrated’ Development Offi ce, where alumni relations and fundraising are seen as seamless and natural functions; those aims would be far less easily achieved without such complete integration.

But things only really began to happen with the appointment of a truly fi rst-class Director of Development in September 2008, to be followed six months later by her Deputy Director. Lorna Stoddart and then Tamara Templer both joined us from the National Trust for Scotland – the cavalry had at last arrived and the Wykeham Campaign could start in earnest! Through hard work, patience, a thoroughly professional approach and a healthy team ethic, strong relationships right across the length and breadth of the Wykehamical community are being built and sustained by your Society, such that we invariably fi nd our supporters enjoying witnessing the benefi ts that their generosity has enabled, whether given in terms of a donation or of time. This is immensely rewardingfor our team as, in return, we are able to enjoy our supporters’ ongoing interest, and sometimes involvement, in what is happening at Winchester.

I have always enjoyed a good party, so it was a real bonus to fi nd that a signifi cant part of my role

Winchester College Annual Report 2013 37

was to arrange them! How better to re-engage the Wykehamical family with Winchester and its aspirations, and thereby to develop (there’s thatword again) relationships with them, than by fi nding good reasons to bring the two together at a party?In addition to the ‘hardy annuals’, such as the OW Reception in London and the former Wykeham Day in Winchester in September, now replaced as themain Wykehamical event by Winchester Match in June, I have found that the most popular events are invariably those with a theme to them; reunionssuch as the ‘Years-on’ gatherings, the undergraduate ‘pizza evenings’, the under 25s and 25s-40s Dinners, the regional events, the Beloeite centenary in 2005, the individual House 150th celebrations (A, B andC so far, and I already look forward to being able to enjoy the Hopperite celebrations in 2019 from among the pack!), the Reception in May 2010 to celebrate high-achieving OW sportsmen, the lunch in June 2012 to mark the life of Tiger Pataudi, the parents’ ‘Win Co Sum Pa’ (yes, even parents can create a Notion!), and the newly re-constituted ‘Goddard Day’, in September.

Some personal highlights for me? Of course, but there have been too many to incorporate in these pages, beyond mentioning the following: witnessing the rekindling of dormant relationships at the

Years-on Reunions; observing the most encouraging development of the recent Guilds initiative; enjoying the undoubted pleasure that parents, both presentand past, seem to derive from their involvementand re-connection with the School; overseeing the expansion of the Goddard Legacy Society membership; stewarding the Wykeham Patrons(home and especially away, ‘in the footsteps of ’an interesting and invariably ‘unpigeon-holeable’ OW!); fi nding themes by which groups of OWs choose to and come together once more.

But the real highlight for me has been the privilege of being entrusted with this fascinating role for these past ten years. What the School itself has achieved and where it now stands should be the cause for considerable pride amongst all members of the Wykehamical family. As the Headmaster has written earlier in this Report, ‘we are indeed in a good place’, to which I would like to add, ‘and are worthy of your support’. May I encourage you either to continue with your support for this extraordinary place or to give serious consideration to doing so, no matter how small this may be – you may be surprised at how much of a kick it will give you. To my surprise, I have ended up extracting quite a kick out of being involved in fundraising after all!

Lorna Stoddart, Michael Wallis and Tamara Templer The Development Team

David Fellowes (I, 1963-67) Director of Winchester College Society

38 Winchester College Annual Report 2013

Acknowledgements:donations and legacies

David Fellowes (I, 1963-67)Director of Winchester College Society

We off er our most sincere thanks to all our donors and legators.

Lorna StoddartDirector of Development & Director of Winchester College Society

Winchester College Annual Report 2013 39

Honoured Wykeham BenefactorsDonors whose total donations toWinchester College (including pledges)are greater than £500,000

Anonymous (2)Professor & Mrs P Baldwin Past ParentsM D S Donovan A 1954-59J G D Ferguson D 1961-66M A Loveday H 1957-62 & Mrs E LovedayMr & Mrs J T McAlpine Past Parents J R Sanders F 1956-61 & R A Sanders K 1984-89P Stormonth Darling C 1945-50

Wykeham BenefactorsDonors whose total donations to the Wykeham Campaign (including pledges) are greater than £250,000

Anonymous (3)A J D du Boulay C 1943-46D F Gordon E 1968-69Viscount Gough G 1955-59Dr S H S & Mrs A Ho Past Parents D H Hunter E 1950-54The Hon Sir David Li Past ParentsR S Morse K 1972-76 & Mrs C MorseR W d’A Orders E 1967-72A J M Spokes Coll 1978-82

Honoured PatronsDonors whose total donations to the Wykeham Campaign (including pledges)are greater than £100,000

Mr & Mrs T C H Chan Past ParentsK Chatikavanij D 1978-82P G G Dear C 1974-79W M Ginsberg I 1981-85W N M Lawrence C 1948-53Mr & Mrs T Y Ou Past Parents J D F M Thornton D 1943-48C B Williams G 1951-56 & Mrs C Williams

Wykeham Patrons (members as at 31 August 2013) Donors whose total donations (including pledges) are greater than £25,000 over a fi ve-year period and who have joined our Patrons group

Sir David Clementi E 1962-67 Senior Patron

Anonymous (3)G B Davison A 1971-75P G G Dear C 1974-79M D S Donovan A 1954-59A J H du Boulay C 1943-46W D Eccles H 1973-77J G D Ferguson D 1961-66N E H Ferguson C 1961-66B J Ginsberg I 1982-87W M Ginsberg I 1981-85D F Gordon E 1968-69Viscount Gough G 1955-59M M Humbert B 1990-95D H Hunter E 1950-54N M H Jones B 1960-65A N Joy C 1970-74Sir John Kemp-Welch E 1949-54Sir Andrew Large F 1956-60W N M Lawrence C 1948-53M A Loveday H 1957-62 & Mrs E LovedayA C Lovell B 1967-72Mr & Mrs J Lupton Q Past ParentsMr & Mrs P G C Mallinson Past Parents Mr & Mrs J T McAlpine Past ParentsR S Morse K 1972-76 & Mrs C MorseG W Morton Coll 1966-70J B W Nightingale D 1973-77R W d’A Orders E 1967-72D R Peppiatt E 1944-48H S K Peppiatt E 1944-48Ms P Pinismontee Chapman Parent

H M Priestley E 1955-60J R Sanders F 1956-61R A Sanders K 1984-89M J S Seymour K 1961-66C J F Sinclair B 1961-66A J M Spokes Coll 1978-82P A Stables Coll 1947-52P Stormonth Darling C 1945-50R H Sutton Coll 1966-71C W Taylor-Young F 1947-52

J D F M Thornton D 1943-48Mr & Mrs G White Past Parents Mr T Wolf & Mrs M Chin-Wolf ParentsR B Woods G 1960-64R E A Younger F 1979-84

DONATIONS RECEIVED

During the fi nancial year ending31 August 2013 *Donors who have given twice or more over a period of three years since 1 September 2010

1933 The late F A K Harrison* Coll1937 J D Majendie* I J I Watson* F1938 D V Bendall* D P M Luttman-Johnson* C1939 M T Barstow* G E H Griffi ths* C C G W Pilkington E1940 R P Norton* G The late C F Popham* A C H B Reynolds* Coll1941 Anonymous (1) E D Armstrong* H Sir Hugh Beach* G H A G Brooke* I M H A Finch* I R O C Stable* B I W Stoddart* E H S R Watson* F The late A R H Worssam F1942 J C P Boyes-Watson* D P de F Delaforce* B The late J S Herbert* C The late C Hill* I J T F Patrick F Professor Sir Bryan Thwaites* C J F Vernon* H1943 C F Badcock* Coll G H G Doggart* E M L Hichens* H H A Lillingston K A R Longley* C M S Longuet-Higgins* Coll1944 C S Alexander F Sir Christopher Audland H R S Gibson* G J R Rigby* C

Bearing in mind that 2011/12 was a record fundraising year by some margin (at £3.2m) and included the bulk of the Museum Appeal donations, 2012/13’s total of £2.97m is no mean achievement: we are delightedby the way the Wykehamical community continuesto support the School in what it is seeking to achieve.

We value each donation highly, and have taken great heart from the degree of increasing generosity from across the board. The following statistics from last year compared with the bracketed comparisons from 2008/09 serve admirably to prove the point. Of this last year’s 1,033 donors (727), there were 43 who gave donations of over £10,000, totalling £2.205m

(£911k from 15), whilst 990 gave under £10,000, totalling £522k (£469k from 712). The average donation was £2,640 per donor (£1,898).

The 2013 Telephone Campaign contributed£189,000 thanks to the eff orts of our young OW callers. Over £2 million have been raised from our10 campaigns. This year we will be approaching parents in addition to OWs.

Membership of the Goddard Legacy Society continues to expand at an encouraging pace. There were 215 members at 31st August 2013, (149), whilst the declared value of the ‘legacy book’ has increasedto £4.4m (£2.4m).

40 Winchester College Annual Report 2013

Donations

Sir Aubery Trotman-Dickenson D H W C Wilson* K1945 C E Bruce-Gardyne* H J A Fergusson* H J M A Gurney* K G S Hill* Coll Lord Howe of Aberavon* E D Middleton* K P H S Wettern* G1946 The late K A Alexander I A J H du Boulay* C A J Chalmers Coll Sir Ralph Dodds* F M H Heycock* H Sir Patrick Moberly* Coll Viscount Montgomery* I1947 The late Earl Ferrers D J B H Francis* F J R Lucas* Coll I B Ramsden* I T Snow* C R W L Wilding* Coll R J Woodward* B1948 H G Ashton E P H de Rougemont* C J Denza* Coll F W Edwards D The late A D G Milne Coll The late E N C Oliver G D R Peppiatt* E D J B Rutherford* D G F W Swan* H J D F M Thornton* D D St J R Wagstaff * Coll J J H Wilson* A The late D A H Younger* I1949 W M Fernie* F A D B Gavin* I T R Hines* K A C R Howman* E C R Streat* K J H V Sutcliff e* C Sir Michael Turner E J F Willmer* C1950 R H Bird* Coll D A Cross* F L E Ellis* Coll C F Foster* C P T Hancock* Coll R M Lodge* A N F McCarthy* I

P Stormonth Darling* C1951 J B Barton* H J H D Briscoe* Coll P H F Bullard* G R M J Burr* C O J Colman* G R H Hardy Coll D A N C Miers* B R H Y Mills* G C J W Minter* Coll Sir Harold Walker* F1952 J R F Adams* A I R Anderson* F M S Evans* C R C Gray* I M Harvey* I J E Keville* K P de N Lucas* Coll T G S Maxwell E The late I H McCausland B F C McDowell* C R H Petley* D M B Sayers* Coll D M Shapiro* Coll T M B Sissons* Coll P A Stables* Coll C White* G C W Taylor-Young* F1953 T F M Bebb* A G R H Bredin* G A L Coleby* Coll (& Q) M L G Dane* I P G Davey* A T H Drabble* G J C Dreyer* D R D K Edwards* B T M Farmiloe B K W Habershon D M F Harcourt Williams* H W N M Lawrence* C R A Moss Coll J A L Myres A A J Redfern K J W Roskill* D R C Southwell D J G H Thwaites* F A D J Turner* F1954 Anonymous (1) Sir Simon Cooper* B R N R Cross* F J C R D’Albiac Coll

M H Freeman* I D H Hunter* E Sir John Kemp-Welch* E C M Mallett* D C A Park* I A J M Perkins B R E E Stewart-Smith* Coll G A Stobart* D J F Taylor* B H White* G D J Wilson* I1955 A L Askew* K M D Barton H The late C A A Black* K R N Dobbs* D N M Fawssett* B R T Fox* A S M Gordon Clark* G S T Grandage* G J C Harrison* G P J Loveday* H D R McCarthy* I Sir David Miers* B B L Reed* C N A Ridley* K D C Stewart* C T C Ulrich* Coll J Vintcent* D J J des C Virden* C J G Wyatt* I1956 Anonymous (1) S P Allison* B D C D J Baird-Smith* Coll A M Collett* G G D Dean* A P A Dillingham* G R M Formby* E P R Gordon-Smith* K A C Gulland* K P L A Jamieson* F P G Littlehales A H R W Murray* D R Rawlence* Coll The late J J B Rowe* A A B Shipp B N Warrack* H C B Williams* G1957 Anonymous (1) R E F Ballantyne* D R S Carver* D T F W Dilke C

Total amount donated (£’000)

OWsNon OWsGA ClaimableOther Income

11/1

2

08/0

9

09/1

0

10/1

1

12/1

3

3,20

0

1,51

7 1,67

5

2,31

3

2,96

8

Winchester College Annual Report 2013 41

J M Dunn* Coll C S Hebditch* G J A L Hulbert* D P S W K Maclure* I M E Ponsonby* Coll A S Robinson H D E Scott* H C W Thompson* D C H Van der Noot* K R M L Webb* C D R Woolley* Coll (& Q)1958 A R Beevor* E A F Best* I J A C Don* H R D de V Gaisford* H D M S Hampton* F F W Heatley* F C H Howard* C D M Jackson A W Marsden* F T J Milligan* E Lord Napier of Magdala* G V A L Powell* A J D A Wallinger* G1959 G V Blachford* D C J R Elton* F M W T W Fiennes* D N J T W Fiennes* Coll C J W Gutch* A P G Johnston* A D T Morgan* A C O Newton* Coll J M G Roberts* F J F Stein* C M Stephens* F The late J Tiley Coll The late J K Toulmin I C N Villiers* E C P W Willcox* K1960 Anonymous (1) S Bann* Coll R A Beecham* G M J V Bell* Coll C M Brett* A T R Cookson* I G M A Crawford* K J G U Daniels* A P A Davis* E C V Dinwiddy* C J S Finney* C R A S Gray* A

S M de F Harcourt Williams* H P B Hay* A Sir Andrew Large* F Lord Maclay* G D R Markham* K M V Pampanini* G H M Priestley* E J M A Ross* I C E M Snell* A A J Strong* Coll J T M Williams* H P G K Wilson* H P J L Wilson* G1961 G G F Barnett* H H G Beevor* F R T Best* F J M Budd H M R Dreyer* Coll P H P Harris Coll M S Henderson* K L D Heriot Maitland* K A W P King* I J R Knight* G P N Legh-Jones* B A P L Minford* Coll C J T Nangle H N O Ramage* H R H Sykes Coll J R A Townsend* I1962 Anonymous (1) J D Birney* C D A S Cranstoun* G W J S Date* E Sir Andrew Longmore* E M A Loveday* H L R Maclean* E M J Mullane* B H R Oliver-Bellasis* K J P Quirk* A S V Toynbee* D C G C Vyvyan* G J A C Watherston* B1963 H R Angus* E W Benham* D (& Q) G T K Boney* E I R F Cameron* B A W Dawson* Coll W G T W Fiennes* D M R M Foster* E G R C Kingsbury* A W M C Martin B

D K Parkinson* C A G Post* A D C Sykes* G G W Wingate-Saul F1964 J L Beynon* B J P Dancy* Coll J H Dixon* K G I T W Fiennes* D M J C Hawkes* C A C Pembroke* Coll1965 Anonymous (1) C W Daws* Coll A A H Forsyth* Coll C I W Hignett* E N A F Pritchard Coll M C S-R Pyper* D M R Stanley Price G T M Verity K W M Wood* H1966 M J P Cullen* Coll J G D Ferguson* D A J C Harper* A J G Pringle* I M J S Seymour* K C J F Sinclair* B R S Tangye* I C W Tulloch* B T D Welsh Coll1967 Sir David Clementi E D W L Fellowes* I J K A Gibbs* I J M Gibson* B S H Large* F G P C Macartney* H F C T Markham* K P J Phair* Coll J E Pinsent* E1968 M J Barstow G C D Brims* K A N G Maclean E J J D McArthur* I D A J Morton* F J N Scott-Malden* Coll1969 R V Brims* K N R Davidson* Coll C K F Evans* E C O Mason* C T W Newbolt A P M Oates* A O P Richards* G J Roundell F

OWsNon OWs

Total number of donors

11/1

2

08/0

9

09/1

0

10/1

1

12/1

3

727

979

1,16

6

1,06

8

1,03

3

C D Taylor* F A K M Young* I1970 A H R M Brown* F D G G Davies F T H Doak Coll R P J Foster* K R G Griffi th Coll H R Jacobs* D C N Rowell* K P G P Stoddart* I P R Wilks* D J J Wood* Coll P J L Zinkin* C1971 Anonymous (1) P H Chamberlain* H H R Cookson* C C E J Jerram H A M H Simon* Coll R H Sutton* Coll1972 Anonymous (1) N C L Beale* Coll P R Gammell* G S J Hathrell* Coll T N N Hone* F J H Hornby* I M R V Johnston* A A C Lovell* B R H A MacDougald* B M H McCall* Coll R W d’A Orders E J K Shearer* Coll N I Shepherd-Barron Coll P E Spendlove* D G F Stott* G C N Wilson* D1973 C E Beer* Coll W S Dawson* C J A H Lawden K M A J Parker* K C J H Scott* K P H B Sykes* D1974 J R Adams* F D J L F Anderson* Coll H N Cookes* C J A Crisp* Coll P W W Disney* B R M Gray* D Sir William Hanham* H A N Joy* C C M Peake H J N Pepper* H

S J Tabbush* Coll A H Wettern* G D M Wilson D N A Winch G1975 Anonymous (2) J G Armstrong* E J P F Churchill E J H Davies* Coll G B Davison* A J Holtby* I H F R Marsh* K N K Meek* K M S Middleditch* I E F Quinton* F I D Roxborough* G1976 D M G Fletcher* I R W J Howard* G J H E Laing* F R M U Lambert* F R S Morse* K J M N Neill-Fraser I W M Owton* I A D Scott-Malden* A L J Wilson* E1977 W R Charlwood* B W D Eccles* H M J M Foot* K R H F Fuller* H A M Grant Duff * G J G Grundy* H M L Moore* D J B W Nightingale* D T W Stubbs* E1978 Anonymous (1) J N Archer* D J S Cope* B A R Hammerton* H C G McAndrew* Coll A J Romanes* A N A Udal* H I D M Vellacott* K R P Wordie* K1979 Anonymous (1) S J Chambers* F P Convey* I W S de Wied* C P G G Dear C W J S Dunnet* C S D Fowler* A P E H S Gale* A (& Q) W N-W Garton-Jones* H

M R Gray* I D I Hough* H G C F Newcombe* E C M Pinder* B C W Wickham* C1980 T J B Baker* H E W Byers F D J Foster* H J A H Geary* I P R Hall* K F B M Hamilton* C S J Morse* G J R Taylor* D A D Walters* D1981 Anonymous (1) G J C Ashton* K J R Bracken* Coll M D Cornish* I H W Dunlop* Coll P R Fabre* B B J R Moate* A A J C Normand* F T E Pendlebury* D A C Phillips* B R E Romanes* Coll1982 Anonymous (1) M P Botes* D K Chatikavanij* D A Maschio* B A F Sedcole* F J R C Smith C R A G Stobart E A C Viswanathan* F S D E Weeks Coll S J Willmer* C1983 A J Ballsdon* F A C Barklam* A J J G Case* F J W Collings* Coll J W Gardiner* C J R J Harrison-Topham* F R B M Heyworth* G J M Overland* D S H W Pilcher* K A G P Tusa* G (& Q) P D F Vernon* F1984 W G Audland* H (& Q) M J Broome* F R C E Burgess* E M A S Davis* H T F Dennis* A

42 Winchester College Annual Report 2013

Donations

New Donors giving for the fi rst time

11/1

2

08/0

9

09/1

0

10/1

1

12/1

3

166

316 32

5

220

104

C E R M Hall* B R G McCarthy* I W S Mills* K C E S Robottom* E S J H Whitehead* K J F Wild* B R E A Younger* F1985 J Davies-Jones* A H J Goulding* F S J Gregory* Coll M P Krone* Coll J G Milligan* B G K Peppiatt* K H T Price* A1986 F A C Ilchman D M A Jones* D W W Y Kwong* E A G Morley K J R Peppiatt* K E P E Thomas* H B D Thornycroft* H M J Ware B T H Q Wilson* H1987 Anonymous (2) J E G L Bracey* E J P Byrne H D R D Cornell* K A M Gazzard* A B J Ginsberg* I J S Jadav* D G K W James H H G J King* Coll N J Kitson* H C C Rawlings* H S C Rye Coll1988 D W Baker* H A J Baldock* G C P Barker* F R Boyns* A J E Collett* G J S Dawkins* D N Entwistle* H P J Habertag* D M E Hunter* B J A G Inglis* B S P Jebb* G C S Lightbody* Coll W J Lockett* I J A Park* Coll T H Van Every* A G H L Walsh* D

R J M Weissen Coll J R Zawoda-Martin* G1989 G H Baker* H H A C Bruce-Gardyne* K R A L Chipperfi eld* H J H Cronly Coll G W King Coll S H J Macdonald* G L P M Schwartz* I D A D Still* G1990 N R Abbott* D P A Cleaver H R E A Collins* G A B Donald* I R Field* Coll F N Garcia* Coll E F Godson* D A V Howell* E R C Inglis B B L Marnham* I H C J Ormond Coll R N G Pavry* F M J Sabben-Clare* I T E L Williams* A1991 R D Blight* Coll A J Cross* H J P Hamilton* G J R Le Bouedec* H C P Macdonald* D A W Maclay* Coll H J Macnamara* F N C Mills* I J Y Y Tan* E D R B Taylor* A1992 D M Avery-Gee* D A N Edmondson* Coll E G K Fenn-Smith* A J G T W Fiennes* E P J Goulston* F N R Hall* B F M Jackson* A J J B Jenkins K M R M Julien* E B M-B Li* E D A J Lloyd* Coll N C Lutener* E D M Maclay* G D J R Sanders* K R R Thomas Coll A R Witcomb* B1993 J E S Barton* G

D A Bowers* B R I Brasher* B N G Casey* K R A J T Chaff ey G S D Croft-Baker* B C A de Oliveira* F E R Haines* Coll J E A J Huggler Coll E G R King* Coll N E Kinloch* C F S Knox* C R A Simpson* B A N Skinner* H A K Thomson* Coll J C Willis* D M D Woolley* Coll1994 W H Darwin* D A J M Foulkes* G W N Harley* Coll F P A Pilbrow* G S A Shivji* K F Sweeney A O R H Twinch* B I A Van Every* A N C W Wong* E1995 B R G Board* D T A L Burns* I D N M Chapman* A D J J Currie* C C A Forsdyke* Coll M M Humbert* B N G J Keenan* Coll J H Large* Coll F E M Lee* D J E S Norris-Jones* C M P Thorneycroft* F M N Toone* E E J S Townend* K A M Tucker* D N H Walmsley* Coll1996 A J D Brown* H G C Byford* H P Dougherty* A W W Gossage* K T O V Hanson* H C F W Hurd* I R B Keeton* F J G Midgley* A A A A Odutola* F T D Perry* A M S T J Peters* Coll

Winchester College Annual Report 2013 43

Average donation (£)

OWsNon OWs

11/1

2

08/0

9

09/1

0

10/1

1

12/1

3

943

899

958 2,

271

1,83

1

7,960

6,67

9

4,43

4

3,50

2

5,92

6

44 Winchester College Annual Report 2013

Donations by House (£)

A

Donations

C M Wheatcroft I G H E Winkworth* K D C Woo I 1997 J P Axcell* C B Benoit* D J H Bertram* Coll T J G Davies* C R W Dharamshi* G R E Hicks Coll W R F Sinclair* K M R Taylor* E1998 M D W Best D A R Bradley* K J A Habgood* D L B E Quintavalle* B J H J Wheatcroft* B K C-W Wong* E1999 A W D Cheyne* I A L P M Emo Capodilista F J S Eynon* H M J Fabricius* K M C Parfi tt* Coll C W R Pitt I J E S Ramsay* K G D J Spalton* K2000 O F G Phillips* G J S Rodrigues* D R W Whelton* C J G Williams* Coll2001 C R Jacobs C J A Jeevaratnam* C H J Pettingell* A2002 P C H Stagg G F-C F Tham C2003 A R M Bird* F L S Chan B S S M Ho* K A M Murray-Lyon* K J H Sekimori B2004 H J Walker* K2005 C J Kerr* Coll W Kerr-Muir* I2006 J H Cartwright* H H G Harris* E T P Hosking* K P A Jeevaratnam* C2007 G D Apperly* I T J M Davenport* E G C Nash* K2008 O E Fenn* I2010 J C K Woo K

2011 J S Apthorp C J A Johnston* G 2012 J C H Wong I

Quiristers (Q)Anonymous (2)1952 A J Heap1954 C Willcox*

Fellows, parents, past parents, staff , former members of staff and other donorsAnonymous (5)A A MarqueesMs M AbbottMr & Mrs F Akhundova*

Mr S P Anderson*

Mr & Mrs I Andrews*

Mr & Mrs R Ash*

Mr A J P Ayres*

Mr & Mrs D R Baldwin*

Mr & Mrs D Beaves*

Mr & Mrs G BlackburnMr & Mrs R BoissierMr S Bonfi glio & Ms R de la CruzMrs E Botes*

Mr G R Bourne & Professor J Mossman*

Mr I BurnsideMr & Mrs C ButcherMr & Mrs I Cammack*

Mr & Mrs G F Casey*

Mr & Mrs G Cassir*

Mr & Mrs T C H Chan*

Mr W Chen & Mrs P Wang*

Mr & Mrs G Clapp*

Mr & Mrs A Cockell*

Mrs J CorrieMrs C Corson*

Mr & Mrs B Coste*

The Courtauld Institute of ArtMr & Mrs L Cureton*

Mr & Mrs G Davenport*

Mr & Mrs M Davey*

Mrs V Davis*

Mr & Mrs J P DavisonDeutsche Morgan Grenfell PLC*

Ms R DrewerMr & Mrs N J Duncan*

English National OperaMr E FitzwilliamsMr & Mrs J FrancisFuller’s Brewery

Mrs C GoadMr & Mrs J GoodmanGrange Park OperaMr & Mrs R Gray*

Mr & Mrs W J HellerLady Hervey-Bathurst*

Dr S H S & Mrs A Ho*

Miss A HodgsonMr & Mrs G Hong ChoyThe Hong Kong Friends of Winchester College*

Mrs A Jones*

Mr & Mrs N Jones*

Mr & Mrs T JonesMr & Mrs I B Kathuria*

Dr & Mrs W Kerck*

Mrs M L Kerr*

Mr J M King*

Ms D KongMr & Mrs T KorossyMr W M A Land*

Mr & Mrs G A Levinson*

Mr T O LloydMr W H Lowe*

Mr & Mrs G Maitland-JonesMrs P H Marriott*

Mr & Mrs A MayorovMrs C MiddleditchMorgan StanleyDr & Mrs S MossahebMr P MouldMr E T Ng & Ms Y F LeongMr S Nzsdejan & Dr K Kovacs*

Mr & Mrs B J O’Keeff eMr & Mrs T Y Ou*

Mr & Mrs J Perlitt*

Mr & Mrs P Phatraprasit*

Mr D G Pierce & Ms W N WongMs P Pinismontee Chapman*

Mrs J PowerQuadrangle Group*

Dr R M Reid*

Miss J Ritchie*

Mr & Mrs H Ritchotte*

Mrs B W RobinsonDr A SamokhvalovaSavills Winchester*

The late Mrs M ShearerMr & Mrs E Shirvani*

Mrs D V Snowden*

Mr A SollarsSotheby’s

B C D E F G H I KColl

142,

375

54,4

85 76,5

74

256,

266

247,9

59

228,

582

40,6

08

24,3

70

290,

874

118,

137

37,7

70

Winchester College Annual Report 2013 45

Donations from OWs by ‘Class of ’ Decade (£)

Dr K Sparke-Rogstad*

Mr & Mrs A SpearmanMr & Mrs S Speeks*

Mrs A Stow*

Mr & Mrs I Streat*

Mr & Mrs T Sweet-Escott*

Mr & Mrs I R TempleMr A H Thompson*

Mr & Mrs T Throsby*

Dr & Mrs R D Townsend*

Mr & Mrs S Troop*

Mr E G I F Truell*

Mrs S P Tulloch*

Mr & Mrs E M TurnerMr & Mrs A TysonMr & Mrs P Uahwatanasakul*

Mr & Mrs M UnwinMr & Mrs M van den Driessche*

Mr & Mrs K Wattanavekin*

Mr & Mrs A West*

Mr S F Wheatcroft*

Mr & Mrs C P WillfordMr T Wolf & Mrs M Chin-Wolf*

Mr & Mrs P Wordley*

The Hon Mrs WrightMr R J Wyke

Charitable TrustsAnonymous (5)The American Friends of Winchester College*

Angela Leong Charitable Foundation*

Anglo-American Charitable Foundation Limited*

Anthony Du Boulay Charitable Trust*

Awards for Young MusiciansB C Partners FoundationBebb Charitable Trust*

Buttle UK*

Clarkson Jersey Charitable Trust*Connaught Drill Halls Trust*Cookson Charitable Trust*

Cray Trust*

Cruach Trust*

David & Julia Hunter Charitable Trust*

Eccles Family Trust*

Greendale Charitable Foundation*

Jonathan Smithie’s Charitable Trust*

Lisbet Rausing & Peter Baldwin Trust*

Maclay Charitable Trust*

Minos Trust*

NJT Foundation*

O J Colman Charitable Trust*

Orinoco FoundationPeter Stormonth Darling Charitable Trust*

Reverend W N Monteith’s 2004 Charitable Trust*

Royal National Children’s Foundation*

School Fees Charitable TrustSeymour Strang Charitable Trust*

Thornton-Smith and Plevins Trust*

Toynbee Family Trust*

W O Street Educational Trust*

The American Friends of Winchester CollegeThe American Friends of Winchester College is an independent American 501(c)(3) ‘non-profi t organisation’ which exists to support the School.Winchester College is most grateful for the continued assistance of the many donors who help the School through their gifts to AFWC.

ChairmanAndrew Watt B 1976-81

DirectorsGideon Agar C 1978-82Meg Bradt Past ParentJonathan de Lande Long I 1964-69Michael Donovan A 1954-59Daniel Gordon E 1968-69Richard Gridley C 1948-53Michael Pass Former Winchester Junior FellowKatharine Steinmetz Former Winchester Junior Fellow

Ralph Townsend, HeadmasterMary Emerson, Executive DirectorSteven Little, TreasurerLorna Stoddart, Secretary

Wykehamist Supporters to The American Friends of Winchester College1951 N W Daw Coll1953 F F R Fisher* A R C Gridley* C1959 M D S Donovan* A1960 R W G Raybould* G1962 Anonymous (1)1963 C F Robinson H1965 H E Shaw A1966 G H Clark* I1969 J de Lande Long I J B Decyk* I D F Gordon* E

1970 M J D’Eath* A E J Podell* I L C Ross* K1971 L Remmel* C1973 T B Lloyd* E1975 C T Munger* D A K W Powell* C1976 J Y Campbell* Coll J K L Simon* K1980 G E Asher* G D N Herskovits* A1981 A P Watt* B1982 A J M Spokes* Coll1985 W M Ginsberg* I1986 P J G Brook* A1987 T P V Mammen* I1992 S G Aldridge H1993 R A J T Chaff ey* G1995 S H C Lewis* G2001 S M Duncan* F B R Perkins* H2002 M K F Chan* E2009 O R Joost* H

Fellows, parents, past parents, staff ,former members of staff and other supporters to The American Friendsof Winchester CollegeAnonymous (1)Dr B T B Brown*

Mr C P Cheung & Ms K Osada*

Mr E Ferguson*

Mrs M Higgs*

Mr K T Hoff man*

Mr & Mrs D H Kallman*

Morgan StanleyMrs J Power*

Mr D G Pierce & Ms W N Wong*

Mr & Mrs D StewartMr F E Storer Jr*

Mr N Wapshott & Miss L Nicholson*

Charitable TrustsDeutsche Bank Americas Foundation U.S.Donovan Foundation*

Drumcliff Foundation*

Fine Foundation*

Lois Stewart FoundationTowerBrook Foundation*

40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 00s 10s30s

4,35

4

169,

349

272,

299

589,

337

274,

896

170,

967

27,9

82

6,60

0

2,21

6

46 Winchester College Annual Report 2013

Legacies pledged (£’000)

Legacies

LEGACIES

Members of the Goddard Legacy Society on 31 August 2013

CollegeAnonymous (3)D J L F Anderson 1969-74C F Badcock 1939-43S Bann 1955-60R H Bird 1945-50D C Bonsall 1969-73Sir Jeff ery Bowman 1948-53J C R D’Albiac 1949-54G S Hill 1940-45D P A Hogan-Hern 1994-99G P A Howe 1948-53B Jensen 1949-54D Kingston 1943-48M P Krone 1981-85A D McLachlan 1948-53C J W Minter 1946-51Sir Patrick Moberly 1942-46M P O Morford 1942-48R A Moss 1948-53R Rawlence 1951-56M B Sayers 1947-52P A Stables 1947-52C D Stewart-Smith 1954-59W R Stewart Smith 1955-60R H Sutton 1966-71T C Ulrich 1951-55D R Woolley 1953-57

Chernocke House (A)Anonymous (1)J R F Adams 1947-52The late W J Albery 1949-54T F M Bebb 1949-53C M Brett 1955-60G D Dean 1950-56R T Fox 1950-55J J Graff tey-Smith 1948-53P B Hay 1955-60P G Littlehales 1952-56J A L Myres 1949-53C F Popham 1935-40V A L Powell 1953-58R J Priestley 1960-65

J O Udal 1939-44A N E Wilson 1988-90

Moberly’s (B)D N Beevor 1954-59J L Beynon 1959-64Sir David Davies 1953-58P W W Disney 1969-74A S G Drew 1952-57R D K Edwards 1948-53S F Every 1943-47Lord Hannay of Chiswick 1949-54P F Hilken 1950-55N M H Jones 1960-65R H A MacDougald 1968-72Q N J Marshall 1986-91M Maynard 1940-45C M Moore 1958-62A J M Perkins 1950-54C J F Sinclair 1961-66R N E Smith 1960-65J F Taylor 1949-54J A C Watherston 1957-62R J Woodward 1943-47

du Boulay’s (C)M Bicknell 1949-54R M J Burr 1946-51C V Dinwiddy 1955-60J P O Gibb 1949-54N J Hallings-Pott 1951-56I N M Hardy 1952-57W N M Lawrence 1948-53A R Longley 1939-43P M Luttman-Johnson 1933-38J E Norton 1941-46J H M Peel 1962-67J R Rigby 1939-44T Snow 1943-47P Stormonth Darling 1945-50Professor Sir Bryan Thwaites 1941-42J J des C Virden 1950-55J F Willmer 1943-49A S W Winkworth 1952-56

Fearon’s (D)Anonymous (1)R E F Ballantyne 1952-57J C P Boyes-Watson 1937-42

G D Clay 1960-64F W Edwards 1943-48H R W Murray 1951-56J B W Nightingale 1973-77J H Silley 1950-55A R W Smithers 1951-55R C Southwell 1948-53P C Stevens 1953-58G A Stobart 1949-54M J L Stow 1934-39J C Willis 1988-93

Morshead’s (E)Anonymous (2)H G Ashton 1943-48G T K Boney 1958-63Sir David Clementi 1962-67W J S Date 1956-62P A Davis 1955-60G H G Doggart 1938-43R M Formby 1951-56J L Galpin 1942-46W N J Howard 1945-50Lord Howe of Aberavon 1940-45A C R Howman 1945-49D H Hunter 1950-54Sir Andrew Longmore 1958-62T G S Maxwell 1947-52B K Peppiatt 1947-52D R Peppiatt 1944-48C G W Pilkington 1934-39H M Priestley 1955-60J Remington-Hobbs 1965-70R M O Stanley 1944-49J J Thring 1950-54Sir Michael Turner 1945-49C N Villiers 1954-59

Hawkins’ (F)Anonymous (2)J B H Francis 1942-47D C E Helme 1934-39I L M Henry 1980-85P L A Jamieson 1951-56Sir Andrew Large 1956-60M J P Martin 1932-38J T F Patrick 1938-42R N Philipson-Stow 1950-55J R Sanders 1956-61

11/1

2

08/0

9

09/1

0

10/1

1

12/1

3

2,37

3

2,42

0

2,96

6

3,92

7

4,41

7

Winchester College Annual Report 2013 47

Number of GLS Members

C W Taylor-Young 1947-52J G H Thwaites 1948-53C J C Wyld 1970-74

Sergeant’s (G)Anonymous (2)Lord Aldington 1961-66M T Barstow 1934-39M A Bond 1956-61J T S Bower 1948-53P H F Bullard 1947-51A M Collett 1951-56T H Drabble 1948-53G G Ferguson 1947-52M Ferguson 1949-54A H Gordon Clark 1948-52C S Gordon Clark 1957-61Viscount Gough 1955-59S T Grandage 1950-55J N Hornsby 1948-53J D V Phipps 1943-48R W G Raybould 1954-60J V H Robins 1952-56P N Trustram Eve 1943-48Sir Roger Vickers 1958-63C G C Vyvyan 1958-62P H S Wettern 1941-45H White 1949-54R B Woods 1960-64

Bramston’s (H)E D Armstrong 1936-41Sir Christopher Audland 1939-44J B Barton 1947-51M H Heycock 1942-46M L Hichens 1939-43C E J Jerram 1967-71M A Loveday 1957-62G F W Swan 1943-48J L F Wright 1947-52

Turner’s (I)Anonymous (1)G D Apperly 2002-07R A O Apperly 2006-11N C H Falls 1958-63D W L Fellowes 1963-67D Hill 1940-45P S W K Maclure 1952-57

N F McCarthy 1945-50Viscount Montgomery 1942-46C A Park 1949-54E J Podell 1969-70F D S Rosier 1964-69D J Wilson 1950-54J G Wyatt 1950-55

Kingsgate House (K)Anonymous (3)M C Clarke 1954-59P R Gordon-Smith 1951-56R J Gould 1936-41J M Haldane of Gleneagles 1954-60S J N Heale 1966-71Sir Jeremy Morse 1942-46N A Ridley 1951-55G G E Stibbe 1971-76D R Strangwayes-Booth 1951-55C H Van der Noot 1953-57H W C Wilson 1939-44

Quiristers (Q)G I Grange 1958-60

Fellows (non-OWs)Miss J RitchieMr M St John Parker

Past ParentsCommander & Mrs C B DaweMr E R DayProfessor A Elliott-KellyMrs V A FellowesMr C GadsdenMrs M GadsdenMr D JonesMr R J JonesMrs S JonesMr W H LoweMrs C MiddleditchDr A Olliff -CooperMrs D V Snowden

Former Members of Staff Mr A J P AyresMr P J KrakenbergerMr A H Thompson

Other MembersAnonymous (1)Mrs M NortonMr R PerryMrs M Stables

Legacies receivedDuring the year to 31 August 2013 we received the legacies from the estates of the following

Mr R Aldington (Former member of theFriends of Winchester College)K A Alexander (I, 1942-46)Earl Ferrers (D, 1942-47)I H McCausland (B, 1947-52)A D G Milne (K, 1970-74)Mrs M Shearer (past parent)J K Toulmin (I, 1954-59)A R H Worssam (F, 1938-41)

We remain indebted to them and to their families for having committed their generous contributions towards securing the School’s future.

11/1

2

08/0

9

09/1

0

10/1

1

12/1

3

157 17

1 182

215

149

48 Winchester College Annual Report 2013

The VisitorThe Lord Bishop of Winchester (The Rt Rev Tim Dakin)

Governing BodyStatute V of the College provides that the Fellows of the College, in addition to the Warden, shall be:• The Warden of New College Oxford (a)

• One Fellow elected by the Warden and Fellows of New College Oxford (b)

• One Fellow elected by the Council of the University of Oxford (c)

• One Fellow elected by the Council of the Senate of the University of Cambridge (d)

• One Fellow elected by the President and Council of the Royal Society (e)

• One Fellow appointed by the Lord Chief Justice of England (f )

• Up to eight Fellows elected by the Warden and Fellows (g), provided the total number (including the Warden) does not exceed fi fteen.

The Fellows of Winchester College who held offi ce during the year to 31 August 2013 and subsequently are listed below with the yearand origin of their appointment and departure:

Sir David Clementi, MA, MBA, FCA Warden (2008) (g)

Robert Sutton, BA Sub-Warden (2003) (g)

Dr John Nightingale, MA, DPhil (2002) (c)

The Rt Hon Sir Andrew Longmore, PC, MA (2006) (f )

Michael St John Parker, MA, FSA (until 31 December 2013) (g)

Robert Woods, CBE, MA (2007) (d)

Mark Loveday, MA (2008) (g)

Jean Ritchie, QC, LLM (2008) (g)

Professor Sir Curtis Price, KBE, AM, PhD (2009) (a)

Professor Christopher Sachrajda FRS, PhD FInstP CPhys (2010) (e)

Charles Sinclair CBE, BA, FCA (2010) (g)

Peggy Frith, MD, FRCP, FRCOphth (2011) (b)

Major-General Jonathan Shaw, CB, CBE, MA (2012) (g)

Clarissa Farr MA (2013) (g)

Andrew Joy MA ( from 1 September 2013)

Offi cersRalph Townsend MA, DPhil HeadmasterJeff rey Hynam MPhil, BEd, ACP Bursar & Secretary to the Governing Body

Governing BodyCommittee StructureDuring the year, the activities of the Governing Body were carried out through six primary committees and one sub-committee. Those who served on these committees during and subsequently were:

Academic and Pastoral CommitteeProfessor Sir Curtis Price ChairmanDr John NightingaleMichael St John Parker (until 31 December 2013)Professor Christopher SachrajdaPeggy FrithClarissa FarrHeadmasterBursarSecond MasterDirector of StudiesMaster in College

Finance CommitteeCharles Sinclair ChairmanRobert SuttonRobert WoodsMark LovedayAndrew Joy ( from 1 January 2014)HeadmasterBursarDeputy Bursar & Chief Accountant

Works CommitteeMichael St John Parker Chairman (until 31 December 2013)Jean Ritchie Chairman (from 1 January 2014)Robert SuttonPeggy FrithJohn Stanwyck AdviserMartin Drury AdviserHeadmasterBursarSecond MasterWorks Bursar

Development CommitteeRobert Woods ChairmanDr John NightingaleCharles SinclairRichard Morse AdviserAlasdair Maclay AdviserHeadmasterBursarDirector of DevelopmentDirector of Winchester College SocietyDeputy Director of DevelopmentDirectors of The FriendsDomestic Bursar

Nominations CommitteeSir David Clementi ChairmanRobert SuttonJean RitchieHeadmasterBursar

Audit and Risk CommitteeSir Andrew Longmore ChairmanRobert SuttonJean RitchieJonathan ShawBill Holland AdviserHeadmasterBursarDeputy Bursar & Chief Accountant

Investment CommitteeSub-committee of Finance CommitteeMark Loveday ChairmanRobert SuttonAndrew Joy AdviserAndrew Sykes AdviserHugh Priestley AdviserRupert Sebag-Montefi ore AdviserPatrick Disney Adviser ( from 1 September 2013)Roger Gray Adviser ( from 1 September 2013)BursarDeputy Bursar & Chief AccountantEstates Bursar

Senior Management Committee

Current MembersDr Ralph Townsend HeadmasterJeff rey Hynam BursarRobert Wyke Second MasterSteven Little Deputy Bursar & Chief AccountantStephen Anderson Senior TutorJohn Cullerne UndermasterDavid Fellowes Director of Winchester College SocietyEmma Macey Child Protection Offi cerAndrew Shedden RegistrarLorna Stoddart Director of Development & Director of Winchester College SocietyLiam Taylor Senior HousemasterMichael Wallis Director of the FriendsDr James Webster Director of StudiesJohn Wells Works BursarLaurence Wolff Chairman of Common Room

Others who served during theyear to 31 August 2013 Tom Lawson Under Master Giles Munn Child Protection Offi cer Tim Parkinson Head of External Aff airs Keith Pusey Registrar

Governing Body and Committees

Winchester CollegeCollege Street Winchester Hampshire SO23 9NA

Tel: +44 (0)1962 621100 Fax: +44 (0)1962 621106www.winchestercollege.org

Winchester College SocietyDevelopment Office 17 College Street Winchester Hampshire SO23 9LX

Tel: +44 (0)1962 621217 Email: [email protected]

Design

Contagiouswww.contagious.co.uk

Photography

Kin Howww. kinho.com

Bernard Fallon

Ken [email protected]

Charlotte Armitage [email protected]

Oli Wettern and John Wright

Special thanks to

Ryan O’Keeffe Gordon BakerFreeman DysonLaurie HarrisJon WrightOli Wettern

REGISTERED CHARITY NO: 1139000www.winchestercollege.org