Felsted was founded in 1564 by
Richard Rich, 1st Baron Rich (also known as Riche) who, as
Lord Chancellor and Chancellor of the
Court of Augmentations, acquired considerable wealth from the spoils of the
Dissolution of the Monasteries including the nearby
Leez Priory where he lived. The school became a notable educational centre for
Puritan families in the 17th century, numbering a hundred or more pupils, under Martin Holbeach, Headmaster from 1627 to 1649, and his successors (see below).
John Wallis and
Isaac Barrow were educated at Felsted in this period, as were four of
Oliver Cromwell's sons. Another era of prosperity set in under the headmastership of William Trivett between 1778 and 1794; but numbers dwindled under his successors . Thomas Surridge (headmaster 1835–1850) discovered from research among the records, that a larger income was really due to the foundation, a re-organisation took place by
Act of Parliament, and in 1850, under the headmastership of the Rev.
Albert Henry Wratislaw, the school was put under a new governing body (a revised scheme coming into operation in 1876). Thereafter, Felsted rapidly developed into one of the regular public schools of the modern English type, under the Rev. W. S. Grignon. New buildings were built on an elaborate scale, numbers increased to more than 200, and a complete transformation took place, which was continued under Grignon's successors, like Frank Stephenson, who ordered large extensions to the buildings and playing-fields. This allowed admittance up to 475 pupils, nearly all of whom were boarders. The school was evacuated to three Herefordshire houses near
Ross-on-Wye during the Second World War at the owners invitation to be out of the way of German bombing. Most of the school was in
Goodrich Court and Windsor's and Ingle's Houses occupied
Hill Court Manor. On 25 July 1953 the school's
Combined Cadet Force armoury was raided by the
Irish Republican Army (1922–69), making off with 8
Bren guns, 12
Sten guns, an anti-tank gun, a mortar and 109
rifles. Their van was stopped by a police patrol and
Cathal Goulding, Sean Stephenson, later known as
Seán Mac Stíofáin and
Manus Canning each received 8 years in prison. Major building works took place for the 400th anniversary celebrations in 1964, when
the Queen Mother laid the foundation stone for the then new Music School, subsequently opened by Felsted governor
Lord Butler of Saffron Walden. In 2008 the building was replaced by a larger building, which was opened in 2009 by
Dame Evelyn Glennie.
The Princess Royal opened the new Lord Riche Hall in 1989. Girls were admitted into the Sixth Form in 1970 and into the whole school in 1993. ==Architecture==