•
Richard Bentley until 1682 • 1883, Rev Oliver Inskip, father of Major-General
Tim Inskip • February 1887, Rev Thomasin Albert Stoodley, aged 40, former headmaster from 1880 of Hereford Grammar School, on Thursday 11 October 1894, at
St Martin-in-the-Fields in London, he married Mary Melesina Chenevix Trench (1848 – 29 November 1912), her uncle was
Richard Chenevix Trench; he became the vicar of
Folkingham, then for
Dowsby from 1898; he died aged 69 on 27 February 1915. • November 1894, Rev Edward Martin Tweed, aged 26, he attended the Perse School and
St Catharine's College, Cambridge; he became the vicar of
Burton Coggles; he drowned in the pond in Burton Coggles on 25 October 1939, aged 71, which was thought to be suicide, connected to the recent outbreak of the Second World War, and that his wife had been ill; his wife, Edith, died in Tinwell, Rutland, aged 76 in October 1940. • May 1909, Mr Ernest Charles Chappell, he attended
Barnsley Grammar School, and died in Bakewell, aged 93 in early December 1965 • 1920, Louis Joseph Driver, aged 35, he joined in 1907 teaching Maths and French, from a school at
Bowes Park; he was paid £600 a year he died in the Johnson Hospital aged 79 on 24 February 1965; his wife was the headmistress of the girls' high school, Miss Jeanne Ouseley, who he married in December 1952; his sister Anne Driver MBE was a broadcaster with
BBC School Radio, so his brother-in-law was the writer
Trevor Blakemore • September 1952, Stanley Wyndham Woodward, aged 41, former headmaster, from 1947, of Wem Grammar School, Shropshire, he was educated at
Tonbridge School from 1925–30 and studied Classics and Modern Languages at
Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, from 1936 to 1947, and had taught at
Bishop Stortford College, and had served as a
Lieutenant Colonel in the
Intelligence Corps in the war, in North Africa, Italy, France, Belgium and Germany; he was married with daughters Susan and Clare, and son Stephen; his wife, Iris Woodward ran youth clubs in East Hertfordshire during the war, and had a degree in Fine Art from
Durham University; at a local meeting, in January 1959, Mr Woodward said that 'equal opportunity should not be confused with equality in intelligence. We were not allowed to be equal in intelligence, and it was stupid to think we were'; the local MP Sir
Herbert Butcher thought that the local secondary modern schools would be giving greater competition to the grammar schools, over time, as the grammar schools had done to public schools; he left in July 1972; he died aged 90 in June 2002 at Saffron Walden Community Hospital • September 1972, John Skidmore Fordham, aged 41, educated at Bishop Gore Grammar School in Swansea, with a degree in Botany, and was a Methodist preacher, married with four children, he had moved from Yeovil Grammar School, being briefly the headmaster; his wife Margaret taught at Pinchbeck East Primary School; he resigned on 20 November 1986, aged 55; his son is Sir
Michael Fordham (judge) (born 1964) • September 1987, Michael John Stewart (aged 42), deputy head of
Oakwood Park Grammar School in Kent for four years, he attended Emanuel School in Wandsworth, and studied Russian and German at Durham University, and was married with a son and daughter ==Notable alumni==