*** Welcome to piglix ***

Stoke College

Stoke College
Motto Sub Hoc Signo Vinces
Type Other Independent School
Headmaster Frank Thompson
Location Ashen Lane
Stoke-By-Clare

Sudbury
Suffolk
CO10 8JE
 England
52°03′34″N 0°32′19″E / 52.05954°N 0.53867°E / 52.05954; 0.53867Coordinates: 52°03′34″N 0°32′19″E / 52.05954°N 0.53867°E / 52.05954; 0.53867
Local authority Suffolk
DfE URN 124865
Students 200
Gender Coeducational
Ages 3–18
Houses Lions & Unicorns
Website www.stokecollege.co.uk

Stoke College in Stoke-by-Clare, near Haverhill, Suffolk is a co-educational day school for children aged 3 to 18, with boarding for children aged 9 to 18. It is built on the site of a major medieval monastic college.

The College traces its name back to 1415, when a college for priests was founded on the site. The medieval College had been founded on the earlier site of a Benedictine priory, originally located in Clare Castle, but moved to Stoke-by-Clare in 1124. Under the patronage of the powerful de Clare family, it was one of the wealthiest monastic houses in Norman England, until a disastrous fire in the 1390s. The college annexed Chipley Priory in about 1468.

In 1534 Dr Walter Haddon, writing in a letter from Cambridge, says of the College "how that place seemed in a manner to be made on purpose for scholars, both to learn themselves, and to teach others: and that its situation was such that above all others it is best suited for honest and ingenious pleasures." The last Dean was Matthew Parker, future Archbishop of Canterbury under Elizabeth I, and a founder of the Church of England.

The buildings had been abandoned after the Dissolution of the monasteries in the 1540s; the site was bought by the Elwes family around 1660, who created the surviving main house and stables. The Elwes did not always keep the premises in fine style – one member of the family, John Elwes was so mean that he served as Dickens's model for Ebenezer Scrooge in A Christmas Carol.

In 1897 the estate was bought by Henry Loch, 1st Baron Loch, a Victorian army officer and colonial administrator. He brought in his wife's nephew, the noted architect Edwin Lutyens, to add a wing in his distinctive Arts and Crafts style, as well as gardens in the style of his friend and co-designer Gertrude Jekyll. The Lochs struggled to keep up the estate during and after World War Two; in 1950 they abandoned the house.


...
Wikipedia

...