The college was founded in 1874. Its first headmaster, Cormell Price, took twelve boys with him to the new school from
Haileybury College, where he had been a housemaster. For its home, the school occupied a terrace of twelve substantial villas, recently built, which still survive under the name of Kipling Terrace. In his book
Schooldays with Kipling (1936),
George Beresford noted that, as the villas and hotels of Westward Ho! were not a thriving township, it was easy for the school to lease "ample acreage for football and cricket fields"., c. 1905
Rudyard Kipling was a boy at the school from 1878 to 1882, and his book
Stalky & Co. (1899), set in a school referred to as "the Coll.", was based on his years at the United Services College. Cormell Price retired as headmaster in 1894, and this event was marked by a speech by Kipling, already the most notable former pupil, on 25 July 1894. The speech was later printed in ''Kipling's College'' (1929). The College suffered financial difficulties in 1903, and after rumours about its future had circulated, came newspaper reports in July of that year that "The United Services College. Westward Ho! ... is to be merged in an Imperial Service College, which is to be built." It was still at Westward Ho! under the headmastership of the Rev. F. W. Tracy, M.A., in February 1904, but in April 1904, the Senior Division of the school was re-opened at
Harpenden, in
Hertfordshire, and the Junior Division at
Bognor,
Sussex. At Harpenden, the school took over the empty buildings of St George's School. Only temporary arrangements were made at first, while the Imperial Service College Trust raised funds. It did not stay there long, as it could not come to terms with its new landlord. Between 20 and 22 June 1904, a public auction of the school's furniture and equipment at Westward Ho! took place. The school remained divided between Harpenden and Bognor in 1905. In April 1906, there was an announcement that the Senior Division, still under F. W. Tracy, was to move to Onslow Hall,
Richmond Green, on 4 May. In the event, it stayed there only for the Summer term. It was then renamed as "Imperial Service College", and this was merged with
Haileybury College in 1942. As at virtually all boys' schools of its era,
corporal punishment (strokes of the
cane) was used, but USC was very unusual in that the cane was applied to the student's upper back (as described by Kipling) rather than the buttocks. ==Notable former pupils==