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{{Infobox Secondary school
| name = Radley College
| native_name =
| logo =
| motto = "Sicut Serpentes, Sicut Columbae"<br>("Like Snakes, Like Doves" or "As Wise As Snakes, As Calm As Doves")
| established =[[1847]]
| address =
| city =[[Radley]] Nr. [[Abingdon, Oxfordshire|Abingdon]] and [[Oxford]]
| state =[[United Kingdom]]
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| district =
| oversight =
| accreditation =
| mascot =
| colors =
| colour = Red
| newspaper = The Radley College Chronicle
| yearbook = The Radleian
| free_label_1 = Ages
| free_1 = 13 to 18
| free_label_2 =
| free_2 =
| free_label_3 =
| free_3 =
| website =[http://www.radley.org.uk/ www.radley.org.uk]
| footnotes =
| picture =
}}
[[Image:Radley_College.JPG|thumbnail|230px|Mansion, Originally Radley Hall]]
'''Radley College''' (founded as St Peter's College, Radley) is an [[England|English]] [[Public school (England)#Terminology|public school]] situated on the edge of the village of [[Radley]] near [[Abingdon, England|Abingdon]] in [[Oxfordshire]]. It was founded in [[1847]] by [[William Sewell]], and is one of only four schools remaining in the United Kingdom which admits only boys and at which all students are boarders. The site was previously Radley Hall.
The current Warden ([[headmaster]]), Angus McPhail (appointed in [[2000]]), is a member of the [[Headmasters Conference|Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference]].
==Overview==
The school places some emphasis on what might be described as traditional strengths — Anglican Christianity (chapel attendance is compulsory for boys on five days a week), sporting prowess (notably [[cricket]], [[Rugby Union]], [[Racquets (sport)|racquets]] and [[sport rowing|rowing]]), and preparation of boys for entry to [[Oxbridge]], the [[Russell Group of Universities]] and, increasingly, universities in the US.
Music, Art, and Drama too play an important role in the life of the school. Many scholarships are awarded each year - over 20 in March 2007 - for music, art, drama and all-round skills as well as academic excellence and sport. Sixth Form Organ Scholarships will be awarded for the first time in 2007, to support the successful Chapel Choir and new Choristership scheme.
The prevailing ethos is of respect for authority as vested in senior boys, masters — known as "dons" - the Anglican Church (with [[Evening Prayer (Anglican)|Evensong]] during weekdays and a Sung Eucharist every Sunday), and the institutions of the British establishment.
==Socials==
The pupils live in one of eight boarding houses — "Socials" in the school vernacular — named A–H. Some students additionally spend some of their time resident in 'Orchard House', not a "Social" in itself but a smaller boarding-house providing alternative accommodation for some of the older pupils. The socials are sometimes known by the name of their house-master or 'Tutor'. For example, ‘B Social’ is also known as 'Greed's' after its Tutor of the same name. Two more socials (imaginatively named J and K) are due to be opened in September 2008 with the buildings of Orchard House becoming incorporated into J Social. As a result the number of boys in each social will drop from around 80 to about 65. The socials compete against each other constantly in sports and extra-curricular activities from debating to chess, bridge, recycling and singing. For the first years there is a Drama Prize called the Haddon Cup which was won in October 2006 by H Social.
Many Socials put on an annual social play, performed and perhaps directed by boys in that social. Alternatively or additionally they might have a "Cultural Evening" which usually consists of musical performances, dances and some drama.
==Television series==
During the [[1979]] summer term, the school's activities were filmed by the [[BBC]] for a series called "Public School", broadcast on [[BBC2]] early in [[1980]]. Capturing the end of a period when such schools felt genuinely afraid that the [[British Labour Party|Labour]] government might push through legislation to close them down (there is a memorable scene of the headmaster expressing his delight in [[Margaret Thatcher]]'s first election victory), the programme nevertheless now seems like a period piece, if only because it shows certain teaching methods and values that would never be allowed today.
==Former pupils==
*[[Peter Cook]], comedian
*[[Desmond Llewelyn]], Actor who played [[Q (James Bond)|Q]] in many [[James Bond]] films
*[[Lord Scarman]], judge
*[[Clive Stafford Smith]], campaigning lawyer
*[[Andrew Strauss]], cricketer
*[[Ben Hutton]], cricketer
*[[Jamie Dalrymple]], cricketer
*[[Ted Dexter]], cricketer
*[[Peter Wildeblood]], journalist and playwright
*[[Brough Scott]], racing broadcaster and journalist
*[[Andrew Motion]], poet and [[Poet Laureate]]
*[[Alexander Downer]], the [[Minister for Foreign Affairs (Australia)|Australian foreign minister]],
*[[Richard Wilson, Baron Wilson of Dinton]], former UK [[Cabinet Secretary]],
*[[Martin Asser]], Middle East correspondent for the [[BBC]].
*[[Sir Ivan Ewart, 6th Baronet]], Northern Irish business man and charity worker.
*[[Charles Howard, 20th Earl of Suffolk]] Pionering bomb disposal expert in WW2. Featured in ''The English patient'' by Michael Ondaatje.
Former Wardens include [[Dennis Silk]].
==
* Christopher Hibbert, ''No Ordinary Place: Radley College and the Public School System 1847–1997'', 1997, London: John Murray General Publishing Division, ISBN 0-7195-5176-5.
==External links==
*[http://www.radley.org.uk/ Official School website]
*[http://www.isinspect.org.uk/reports/2002/0886_02_r.htm Independent School Inspection Report on Radley College]
[[Category:Boarding schools in the United Kingdom]]
[[Category:Racquets venues]]
[[Category:Public schools in Oxfordshire]]
[[Category:Schools with Combined Cadet Forces]]
[[Category:Educational institutions established in 1847]]
[[Category:Members of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference]]
[[Category:Old Radleians|*Radley College]]
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