The History of Farleigh
Founded in 1953 by the late Jocelyn Trappes-Lomax as a Catholic boys
prep school, the school was first based at Farleigh House, the home of
the Earl of Portsmouth, near Basingstoke. There were 35 boys on the
opening day and more joined during the term.
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| The emblematic 'Farleigh Tree' |
Famous
Old Boys include Lord Stafford, the Marquess of Bute, columnist and
satirist Craig Brown, the actor Rupert Everett, rugby international
Hugh Vyvyan, BBC presenter and producer of Planet Earth, Huw Cordey,
the climber and explorer, Tarka l'Herpiniere. Robert and James Bruce
appeared in 1997 Wisden having bowled in tandem after lunch - Eton v
Harrow at Lords.
Farleigh moved to Red Rice just south of Andover in 1982 and is
situated in a Georgian country house, which was built in the early 19th
century by General Webb. The house stands in 60 acres of magnificent
parkland and landscaped woodland and the trees in the arboretum have
been planted in the troop formation of the Battle of Malplaquet of 1709.
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