By 1859 he was considering emigrating to
New Zealand, when he came across a complex of dilapidated
neo-Gothic school buildings in the nearby village of
Bloxham. Egerton had been considering starting a school for several years, and immediately purchased the buildings for £1,615. Egerton would go on to devote most of the rest of his life to the school, of which he was the first headmaster. A boarding house at Bloxham School is named after the school's founder and Egerton's portrait hangs in the school dining hall. Egerton's political patron was
William Ewart Gladstone, who said of Egerton: "England, perhaps, owes as much to him in the matter of religious education as any man." ==Cricket==