Established | 1861 |
---|---|
Closed | 1967 |
Type | Independent school |
Religion | Roman Catholic |
Founder | Society of Jesus |
Location |
Old Windsor Berkshire England |
Motto |
Aeterna Non Caduca Not for this life alone, but for eternity. |
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Established | 1888 |
Type |
Preparatory school Day & Boarding school |
Religion | Roman Catholic (Jesuit) |
Headmaster | Giles Delaney |
Location |
Priest Hill Old Windsor Berkshire SL4 2JN England |
Local authority | Windsor and Maidenhead |
DfE number | 936/6422 |
Students | 300~ |
Gender | Boys |
Ages | 3–13 |
Affiliation | IAPS |
Website | www |
Beaumont College was a Jesuit public school in Old Windsor, Berkshire, England. In 1967 the school closed. The property was later used as a training centre, a conference centre and a hotel. The preparatory school for boys aged 3–13, St John's Beaumont, continues.
The estate lies by the River Thames on the historic highway from Staines to Windsor, near Runnymede. It was originally known as Remenham, after Hugo de Remenham, who held the land at the end of the 14th century. The estate was then owned for a period by the Tyle family, and subsequently by John Morley, Francis Kibblewhite, William Christmas and Henry Frederick Thynne (clerk to the Privy Council under Charles II) in the 17th century.
In 1714 Thomas Thynne, 2nd Viscount Weymouth, inherited the estate. In the mid-eighteenth century it was acquired by Sophia, Duchess of Kent. In 1751 the Duke of Roxburghe purchased the land for his eldest son, the Marquess of Bowmont and Cessford (then a boy at Eton College), and renamed it Beaumont in his honour. In 1786 Warren Hastings, the first Governor-General of India, acquired Beaumont Lodge at the cost of £12,000. He lived at Beaumont for three years. In 1789 the estate was sold to Henry Griffith, an Anglo-Indian, who had the Windsor architect Henry Emlyn rebuild the house in 1790 as a nine-bay mansion with a substantial portico.
In 1805 the Beaumont property was bought for about £14,000 by Henry Jeffrey Flower, 4th Viscount Ashbrook, a friend of George IV. After his death in 1847, his widow continued to reside there until 1854, when she sold it to the Society of Jesus as a training college.