Sandroyd School was founded as a school for boys by L. H. Wellesley Wesley at Sandroyd House, Fairmile, in
Cobham, Surrey in 1880. He was a great-grandson of
Charles Wesley. In 1939, in anticipation of the Second World War, the school moved to Rushmore House, home of the
Pitt-Rivers family. The house lies in the centre of
Cranborne Chase on the borders of Wiltshire and Dorset. A link between the two sites is that Sandroyd House was built in 1860 for the pre-Raphaelite painter
John Roddam Spencer Stanhope by the architect
Philip Webb (1831–1915), the friend of
William Morris, and it was Webb who remodelled the interior of Rushmore for
General Pitt Rivers twenty years later. In the 1960s the school purchased the freehold of the school site. In 1995 the school started to accept day pupils, and in 2004 it became coeducational. == Nursery and pre-prep school ==