mrm %lmmiuh, - Harrow School WW1 Heritage

132
THE mrm %lmmiuh, 1884. J . < W I 1. H E E , 'P.!.), V ]: •( M 11 ^ !! t; o \V s C |1 Till t, . Ids J.

Transcript of mrm %lmmiuh, - Harrow School WW1 Heritage

THE

mrm %lmmiuh,

1884.

J . < • W I 1. H E E ,

'P.!.), V ]: •( M 11 ^ !! t; o \V s C |1 T i l l t, .

Ids J.

H A R R O W C A L E N D A R ,

THE SCHO()i. LISTS, &c.,

FROM

SEPTEMBKR. 1871. TO MA F, 188,.

WITH INITIALS AND HOUSP:.S,

LISTS ov I 'RrZEMEN, AND C O X M P L E T E INDEX

Price ys. (id., hv Post S's

J. C. WILBEE,

ROOKSKI.LRR TO H A R R O W SCHOOL.

THE

prrfltti ^ilmanark,

1884.

HARROW: J . C. •WI L B E E ,

B O O K g X L L E a TO H A R R O W S C H O O L .

1884.

*„* The Publisher will be glad to receive suggestions

and corrections from old or present Harrovians.

HAKSOW,

JANUARY, 1884.

C O N T E N T S .

T

Almanack . . Conmieinoration of the Founder and Benefactors . The Omtio for 1883

Prizemen, 1883 Speech Bill, 1883 . .

University Honours, 1882-3 The Library The Debating Society The Tyro The Harrovian The Musical Society

The Philathletic Club Cricket

School Eleven ChaJnpion Houses House Ties Matches The Lord's Hatch

Harrow and Eton Matches, 1818 to 1883 Harrow and Winchester Matches, 1825 to 1854 Harrow School Gymnasium Prizes

Eacquets Hurdle Races Flat Eaces Jumping Form Hurdle Eaces The Ponsonby Prize

PAGE.

.•5 7

19 25 30 32 34 35 49 52 59 60 60 61 64 68 72

83 90 93 97

FootbaU Eules School Eleven House Ties Matches

Eaoquets . . Ties

Fives Eules for the Buttress Courts Ties

Swimming Rifle Corps..

"Wimbledon Match Ashburton Omllenge Shield Spencer Cup I ^ e s Matches

Champion Houses Ebrington Challenge Cups, 1883 House Elevens, Races, &e.

Dr. Butler's . . Mr. Holmes ' . . Mr. Watson's Mr. Hutton's Mr. Hayward's Mr. Bowen's.. Mr. Bosworth Smith's Jlr . Bushell's Mr. Cruikshank's . . Mr. Stogdon's Small Houses Home Boarders Entrance Scholars, 1883 The Ponsonby Prize

102

103

107

108

111

111

114

114

115

116

117

118

119

120

121

122

123

124

125

126

126

1884. THE HARROW ALMANACK.

ECLIPSES m 1884. In the year 1884 there will be three Eclipses of the Sun, and two of the

Moon:— 1. A Partial Eclipse of the SUN, March 27, invisible at Greenwich. 2. A Total Eclipse of the MOON, April 10th, invisible at Greenwich. 3. A Partial Eclipse of the SUN, April 25th, invisible at Greenwich. 4. A Total Eclipse of the MOON, October 4th, visible at Greenwich.

Begins at fihr. 15m. P.M., and ends at llh. 48m. 5. A Partial Eclipse of the SUN, October 18th, invisible at Greenwich.

NOTES FOR NEXT YEAR, 1885. Ash "Wednesday, February 18. Easter Day, April 6. Ascension Day, May 14

Pentecost or WhitsxmDay, May 25 Advent Sunday, November 29. Sunday Letter, D.

There will be 3 Simdays after Epiphany, and 25 after Trinity.

HER MAJESTY'S CHIEF OFFICERS OF STATE. First Lord of the Treasury ... ... Bight Hon. "W. E. Gladstone Lord High Chancellor ... ... ... Lord Selbome Lord Lieutenant of Ireland ... ... Earl Spencer Lord President of the Council and Lord

Privy Seal ... ... • ... ... Lord Carlingford Secretary of State for Home Department ... Sir "W. Vemon-Harcourt Chancellor of the Exchequer ... ... Rt. Hon. Hugh C. E. CMders Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs ... Earl Granville Secretary of State for the Colonies ... Earl of Derby Secretary of State for War Department ... Marquis of Hartington Secretary of State for Government of India Earl of Kituberley First Lord of the Admiralty ... ... Earl of Northbrook Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster ... Rt. Hon. J. G. Dqdson President of the Local Government Board... Rt. Hon. Sir C. Dilke President of the Soard of Trade ... ... Right Hon. J. Chamberlain

The above form the CABINET. Postmaster-General ... ... ... Right Hon. H. Fawcett Chief Secretaj-y for Ireland ... ... G. O. Trevelyan, Esq. Vice-Pres. Com. of Council on Education... Right Hon. A. J. Mundella Field Marshal Commanding in Chief ... H.R.H. Duke of Cambridge Chief Commissioner of Works, t&c. ... Rt. Hon. J. G. Shaw-Lefevre

/ Herbert Gladstone, Esq. Lords of the Treasury ... ... J C. Cecil Cotes, Esq.

I R. W. Duff, Esq. Joint Secretaries to the Treasury... \ g| * ^Si E^ . ' '' ""'' Secretary to the Admiralty ... ... H. Campbell Bannerman, Esq. Pari. Sec. to the Local Government Board... G. "W. E. Russell, Esq. Pari. Under Sec. for the Home Department J. T. Hibbert, Esq. Attorney-General ... ... ... Sir Henry James Solicitor'General ... ... ... SirFarrerHerschell Judge Advocate-General ... ... Eight Eon. G. Osborne Morgan

SCOTLAND. Lord Advocate ... ... ... ... Right Hon. J. B. Balfour Solicitor-General ... ... ... A. Asher, Esq.

IRELAND. Lord Lieutenant ... ... ... Earl Spencer Lo7-d Chancellor ... ... ... (Vacant.) Attorney-General ... ... ... Right Hon. A. M. Porter. Solicitor-General ... ... ... John Naish, Esq.

THE HARROW ALMANACK. 1884.

B I R T H D A Y S O F T H E E O Y A L F A M I L Y . b o m May 24,1819. b o m Nov. 9, 1841. b o m Dec. 1, 1844.

b o m J a n . 8,1864. b o m J u n e 8,1865.

Q U E E N V I C T O B I A P B I N C E O F W A L E S P E I N C E S 8 OF W A L E S

P R I N C E A L B E R T V I C T O R CHRISTIAN E D W A R D OF W A L E S

P R I N C E GEORGE F R E D E R I C K E R N E S T A L B E R T . . . PRINCESS L O U I S E VICTORIA ALEXANDRA DAGMAR b o m Feb . 20i 1867, PRINCESS VICTORIA ALEXANDRA O L G A M A R Y . . . b o m J u l y 6,1868. PRINCESS M A U D CHARLOTTE M A R Y V I C T O R I A . . . b o m Nov. 26,1869.

P R I N C E S S E O Y A L (PRINCESS IMPERIAL OF PRussiA)bom Nov. 21,1840. D U K E OF E D I N B U E G H , P E I N C E A L F E E D

E E N E S T A L B E R T b o m Aug . 6,1814. P E I N C B S S H E L E N A A U G U S T A V I O T O E I A

(PRINCESS CHRISTIAN OF SCHLESWIG H O L S T E I N ) b o m May 25, 1846. PRINCESS L O U I S E C A E O L I N E A L B E R T A

(MARCHIONESS OF LORNE) . . . . . . . . . b o m Mar . 18,1848. D U K E OF C O N N A U G H T , P E I N C E A R T H U R

W I L L I A M P A T E I C K A L B E R T b o m May 1,1850. P R I N C E L E O P O L D GEORGE D U N C A N A L B E E T

( D U K E OF ALBANY) . . . . . . . . . b o m Apri l 7,1863. P E I N C E S S B E A T R I C E M A R Y V I C T O R I A

F E O D O R E b o m A p r i l l 4 , 1 8 5 7 . Duchess of Cambridge J u l y 26,1797. I Augus t a Caroline Duch, Duke of Cumberland Sep. 21,1846. of Meoklen.-Strelitz Ju ly 19,1822, Duke of Cambridge Mar . 26,1819. M a r y Adelaide of Camb.,

I Duchess of Teek ... Nov. 27,1838, P R I N C I P A L S O V E R E I G N S OF E U E O P E , &c.

Countries.

Great Br i ta in France (Republic) .. Russia Aust r ia Germany Bavaria Belgium Brazil (S. Amer.) Denmark Greece I t a ly Holland , Ot toman Empire Por tugal Saxony Spain Sweden and Norway U. S. America W u r t e m b u i g

Sovereigns.

V I C T O R I A F . P . J . Orevy ( P ) . . Alexander I I I Francis Joseph Wi l l i am Louis I I Leopold I I Pedro n Christ ian r X George H u m b e r t W i l U a m l l l Abdu l H a m i d I I Louis Alber t A l p h o n s o X I I Oscar I I Gen. A r t h u r (Pres.) Charles

May 24, Aug . 15, Mar . 10, Aug . 18, Mar . 22, Aug . 25, Apri l 9, Dec. 2, Apri l 8, Dec. 24, Mar . 14, Feb . 19, Sept. 20, Oct. 81, Apri l 28, Nov. 28, J a n . 21, Oct. 5, Mar . 6,

1819 1818 1845 1880 1797 1845 1835 1825 1818 1845 1844 1817 1842 1888 1828 1857 1829 1830 1823

Began to reign.

J u n e 20, Feb . 1, Mar . 13, Dec. 2, J a n . 2, Mar . 10, Dec. 10, Apri l 7, Nov. 15, J u n e 6, J a n . 9, Mar . 17, Aug . 80, Nov. 11, Oct. 29, Dec. 80, Sep. 20, Sep. 19, J u n e 25,

1837 1879 1881 1848 1861 1864 1865 1831 1863 1863 1878 1849 1876 1861 1873 1874 1872 1881 1864

U N I V E R S I T Y T E R M S , 1884.

Terms.

Michaelmas

Oxford. Begins.

January 14 April 16 May 31 October 10

The Act

Ends. April 5 May 30 July 5 Dec. 17

, July 3.

Cambridge. Begins.

January 12 April 18

October 1 The Comm

Jun

Ends. April 4 June 20

Dec. 19 encement, Bl9.

THE HABROW AIMANAOK.

1884. JANUARY. 31 DAYS.

Tu W T H F S

CIRCUMCISION OP OUR LORD. '

Sev. B. F. Wtstcott installed Canon of Peterborough 1869. [A. Tf. Welch appointed Head Master of Archbishop

Bolgate's School, York, 1883. The Sight Hon. T. H. Sotheron Estcourt d. 1876.1

F.E M Tu W T H F S

SUNDAY AFTER CHRISTMAS.'' EPIPHANY OF OUR LORD.

Viscount Strangford d. 1869.

Sev. M. Middlemist d. 1877.

F.E M Tu W T H F S

1 SUNDAY AFTER EPIPHANY.°

Baron Heath d. 1879.

20 21 22 23 24 25 26

27 28 29 30 31

F.E M Tu W T H F

2 SUNDAY AFTER EPIPHANY.''

Lord Byron b. 1788.

CONVERSION OF ST. PAUL." Earl of Clarendon b. 1800.

Br. 8. Farr b. 17U7.

F.E M Tu W T H

3 SUNDAY AFTER EPIPHANY.' Fev. W.H.Jervisd. Earl of Aberdeen b. 178U.

Rev. E. H. Vaughan d. 1868.

SUNDAY AND S A I N T ' S D A Y LESSONS.

a Genesis—17 v. 9 b Isaiah 60 c Isaiali 51

Romans —2 v. 17 Luke 3 v. 15 to 23 Matt.— 8 to V. 18

eIaalali49tov.l3 1 Isaiah 62

Matt.-Oal.— Matt.-

• 12 to V. 22 1 V. 11

•15 t o V. 21

D e u t . 10 V. 12 l s a . 4 9 v . 1 3 t o v . 2 4 I sa . 52 V. ;13 & 53.

or 54 Isaiah 57, or 61 Jer. 1 tov. 11 Isaiah 65, or 66

Col. 2 V. 8 to V. 18 John 2 to V. la Acts 8 V. 5 to V. 26

Acts 26 to V. 21 Acts 16 V. 16

This month the days increase 27 m. in the mom. and 48 m. in the aft.

THE HARHOW ALMANACK.

1884. F E B R U A R Y . 29 B A Y S .

1 2

3 4 5 6 7 8 9

10 11 12 13 14 15 16

17 18 19 20 21 22 23

24 25 26 27 28

F s F.£ M Tc W T H

F S

F.E M Tu W T H

F S

F.B M Tu W T H

P S

F.JS M T u W

PURIFICATION OP B . V . M A R Y . »

4 SUNDAY AFTER E P I P H A N Y . ' ' JRev. G. T. Warner d. 1869.

Charter for the School given 1571. Rev. W. ir. Drury d. 1878.

SEPTUAGESIMA.'^

Malthus b. 1776.

SEXAOESIMA. ' '

QuiNQUAGESiMA.i" S. MATTHIAS.'' Dr. Wordsioorth \cons. JBp. of Lincoln 1870.

SHROVE TUESDAY.

A S H W E D N E S D A Y . ?

T H

29lF 1

SUNDAY AND SAINT'S DAY LESSONS.

MORNING. EVENING.

a Ex.—13 to 17 Matt. 18 V. 21 to Hag. 2 to v. 10 Acts 20 to v. 17 19 V. 3.

b Job 27 Matt.l9v.3to27 Job — 28, or 29 Acts —20 v. 17 cGten.lana2to Eev.—21 to v,9 Gen. 2 v. i, or E«v. 21 v. 9 to

V. 4 Job 38 22 v. 8 dGen. 8 Matt. 26 v. 31 to Gen, 8, or 8 Eom, 2 tov . 17

57 e Gen. 9 to v. 20 Mark — 1 v. 21 Gen,—12, or 13 Eom, 8 to v. 18 f l S a m . 2v. 27 Is. 22 v. 15

tov . 36 gf Is. 68 to V. 13 Mark2v.l3to23 Jonah ~ 3 Heb,12v.3tol8

This month the days increase 53 m. in the mora, and 49 m. in the aft.

THE HARROW ALMANACK.

1884. M A R C H . 31 D A Y S .

2F.B M T u W T H F S

1 SUNDAY IN L E N T . "

Sir H. Lytton Bulwer raised to the Peerage 1871.

10 11 12 13 14 15

16 17 18 19 20 21 22

F.E M T u W T H F

2 SUNDAY IN L E N T . ' '

Archbishop Manning made Cardinal 1875.

F.E M T u W T H F S

3 SUNDAY I N L E N T . " St. Fatriek's Bay.

Earl Moden d. 1870.

23 F.E 24 M

T u W T H F S

4 SUNDAY IN LENT. '* / . F. Marillier, Esq., resigned [after 50 years 1869.

ANNUN : o r V I R G I N M A R Y . ' L a d y Day . B . S . S . \_Princess Louise^St.Hon. W.F.Gladstone visit Har.188^. Mr. Farmer's Oratorio " Christ and His Soldiers" Jirst

[performed in Speech Moom 1878. Thos. Wood, Esq., Drawing Master to the School d. 1878.

30 31

F.E M

5 SUNDAY IN L E N T . ' '

SUNDAY AND SAINT'S DAY LESSONS. MORNING. EVENING.

a Gen. 19 v. 12 Mark — 5 v. 21 Gen. 22 to v. 20, Eom. —11 v. 25 to30

bGen.27tov.ll

-Gen. 37

d Gen. 42 e Gen. 3 to v. 16 f Exod. 3

or 23 Mark 9 V. 2 to 30 Gen.—28, or 82 1 Cor. 1 v. 26

and 2 Mark 12 V. 36 to Gen.—39, or 40 1 Cor. 8

13 y. 14 Luke — 1 V. 28 Gen.— 43, or 46 1 Cor. 14 to v. 20 Luke — 1 V. 46 Isaiah—62 v. 7 1 Cor.l6tov. 36 Luke — 4 V. 16 Exod. 6, or 6 to 2 Cor. 2 v. 14

V. 14. and 3

This mouth the days increase 1 h. 11 m. in the mom. and 49 m. in the aft.

10 T H E H A R R O W ALMANACK.

1884. A P E I L . 30 D A Y S .

T u W T H

4 F 8

6F.E 7 M

T u W T H

F S

F.E M T u W T H

F

6 SUNDAY I N L E N T . "

TUESDAY DEPORE E A S T E H . ' '

W E D N E S D A Y BEFORE EASTER."

THURSDAY BEFORE E A S T E R . ' '

GOOD F R I D A Y . ' [Grasse 1782.

E A S T E R E V E . ' Admiral Rodney defeats Count de

E A S T E R D A Y . S

Lord Byron d. 18S4.

F.£ M T U

W T H

F S

1 SUNDAY AFTER E A S T E R . ' '

Marquis of Balhousie b. 1812.

S I . M A R K THE EVANGELIST."

F.E M T u W

2 SUNDAY AFTER EASTER.i* Earl of Shaftesbury b. 1801.

James Bruce d. It9It. {Sir Wm. Jones d. 179U.

SUNDAY AND SAINT'S DAY LESSONS.

a E x o d . 9

b L a m . 3 t o v . 34 c L a m . 4 t o v . 21 d Hos . 13 t o y . 15 e Gen . 22 t o v. 20 I Z e c h . 9 g E x o d . 12 t o V. 29

h N a m . 16 t o T . 36

1 I s a . . 62 T. 6

k N u m . 20 t o V. 14

MOBNJNCl.

9 Matt. J o h n —15 t o V. 14 J o h n —16 t o V. 16 J o h n 17 J o h n 18 L u k e 23 V. 50 Eev . 1V. lOto V. 19

1 Cor. 16 t o V. 29

L u k e 18 T. 31 t o 19 V. 11

L u k e —19 t o V. 28

EVENING.

- 1 0 or 11

— 3 y . 34 L a m . — Dan ie l • 9 v . 20 Rosea • 14 I sa . 52 V. 13 & 53 Hos . 5 v . 8 t o 6 v . 4 E x o d . 12 V. 29 or 14

N u m . 16 V. 36 o r 17 t o V. 12

Ezek . —1 t o y . 15

N u m . 20 V. 14 t o 21 or 21 V. 10

L u k e 19 V. 28 or 20 y . 9 t o 21

J o h n 15 y. 14 J o h n 16 y. 16 J o h n —13 t o V. 36 1 F e t e r 2 Kom. 6 t o V. 14 J o h n 20 V. I I t o 19

or R e v . 5 J o h n 20 y. 24 t o

V. 30 P h i l i p . 2

P h i l i p . -

This month the days increase 1 hr. 4 m. in Uie mom. and 49 m. in the aft.

THE HABBOW ALMANACK. 11

1884. M A Y . 31 D A Y S .

1 2 3

4 5 6 7 8 9

10

11 12 13 14 15 16 17

18 19 20 21 22 23 24

25 26 27 28 29 30 31

T H F S

F.B M Tv W T H

F S

F.i: M Tu W T H

F S

F.S M T u W T H

F S

F.JE M T u W T H

P S

S T . P H I L I P AND S T . J A M E S . "

3 SUNDAY APTEE E A S I E R . ' '

S T . J O H N EVANGELIST."^

G. F. Harris, Esq. (late lower Master) d. 1869.

4 SUNDAY AFTEE EASTER. ' ' Spencer Ferceval shot 181^.

5 SUNDAY AFTER E A S T B B . '

ASCENSION D A Y . ' A. S. Lawson, Esq. d. 187S. Lord Dalling and Bulwer d. 187^. Queen Victor ia b . 1819.

SUNDAY AFTER ASCENSION, S

Rev. Dr. Farrar installed Canon of Westminster 1876.

William Baxter d. 172S.

SUNDAY AND SAINTS' DAY LESSONS. MORNING. EVENING.

a Isaiah 61 John 1 v. 43 Zechariah 4 Col. —3 to v. 18 b Numbers 22 Luke —22 v. 64 Num.—23 or 24 1 Thess. 1 c 2 Sam. 7 V. 18 Luke 23 v. 26 to 2 Samuel 9 1 Thess. 3

V. 50 d Dcut Itov "3 John " Dcut 1 v "3 to " Thcaa 3

41 or 5 e Deut. 6 John—6 to v. 22 Deut. —9 or 10 2 Tim. 1 f Dan. 7 V.9to Luke—24 v. 44 2KingB2tov.l6 Hebrews 4

15 g Deut. 30 John 9 to V. 39 Deut.SlorJos.l Philemon

This month the days increase 44 m. in the mom. and 44 m. in the aft. B

12 T H E H A R R O W ALMANACK.

1884. J U N E . 30 D A Y S .

F.E M T u W T H

F

W H I T S U N D A Y . *

W H I T MONDAY.^

W H I T T U E S D A Y . "

M T u W T H

F S

T R I N I T Y SUNDAY. ' '

S T . BARNABAS."

F.E M T U

W T H

F S

1 SUNDAY AFTER T R I N I T Y . ' ' Tercentenary Festival held 11871.

Queen Vic to r i a ' s Accession 1837. 0. Lloyd d. 1876. Capel S. Berger d. 1868. Bishop Colenso d. 1883.

F.E M T u W T H

F S

2 SUNDAY AFTER T R I N I T Y . ^

Sir Wm. Knollys d. 1883. Midsummer Day . Sev. Randall T. bavidson installed Dean of Windsor 1883

[d. 1883. Earl of Clarendon d.l870. Wm.Spottistooode Esq.LL.D. Queen Viclor ia crowned 1838. Rev. F. W. Faber b. ISllt-

29 F.E 3 SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY.•• S T . P E T E R . '

30 M Prince and Princess of Wales visit Sarrow 186^.

SUNDAY AND SAINTS' DAY LESSONS.

MOKNINO.

a D e u t . 16 t o V. 18 R o n i . -

EVENING.

1) Gon. I I t o T. 10 c Joe l 2 V. 21 d I sa . •—G t o V. 11

o D e u t . 33 t o V. 12 f .Joshua 3 V. 7 t o

t v . 15 ff J u d g e s i h 1 Sam. 2 t o v . 27 l E z e k . 3 Y . 4 t o l 5

1 Cor. —12 t o V, 14 1 Thess . 5 Y. 12 Rev. 1 t o V. 9

Ac ts . 1 V. 31 J o h n 21

Acts 5 V. 17

J o h n 2 l Y . I 5 t o 2 3

I s . 11 or Ezck . .% V. 25

N u m . 11 Y.Ki t o 31 Micah 4 t o V. 8 G e n . ] 8 , or l a n d 2

t o V. 4 N a h u n i 1 J o s h . 5v . 1 3 t o 6 Y .

21, o r 24 J u d g e s 5 or 6 V. 11 l S a m . 3 o r 4 t o Y . 1 9 Zech. 3

Ga l . — 5 Y. 16, or Acts 18 Y. 24 tfl 19V.21

I Cor. 12 Y, 27 & 11! 1 J o h n — 4 t o Y.14 Enhes . 4 t o 17, or

* a t t . 3 Acts 14 V. 8 1 Peter—1 t o Y. 22

2 P e t e r 2

Acts — 4 V. 8 t o 23

This month the days increase 2 m. in the mom. and 13 m. in the aft.

T H E H A R H O W A L M A N A C K . 13

1884. J U L Y . 31 D A Y S .

l |Tu W T H

F S

[Sir Robert Peel d. 1850. Longfellow visits Harroio 1868. [Vaughan Library opened 1863. Foundation Stone oj

{new Speech Eooin laid 187i. Sir Robert Feel b. 1788. Sew Speech Room opened 1877.

F.E M T u W T H

Y

i SuKDAY Ai'TER T K I N I T Y . " Fvince and Princess of R. R. Sheridan d. 1816. [ Wales visit Harrow 1871.

Emperor of Rrazil visits Harrow 1871.

13 14 15 16 17 18 19

F.B M T u W T H

P S

5 SUNDAY APTEK T R I N I T Y . ' '

Cardinal Manning b. 1808.

20 21 22 23 24 2.5 26

27 28 29 30 31

F.E M T U

W T H

F S

6 SUNDAY AFTER T R I N I T Y . '

Sir Thomas D. Acland d. 1871, Count de Jarnac d. 11875. F. M. Ralfour d. 188B.

S T . JAMES. ' '

F.E M T U

W T H

7 SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY. '^

MORNING. a 1 Sam. 12 Acts 13 to T. 26

b 1 Sam. 15 to V. 24

c 2 Sam. 1.

SuNj>AY AND SAINT'S DAY LESSONS.

EVENING. 1 Sam. 13 or Matt. —1 v. 18

E u t h l Acts —17 V. 16 1 Sam. 16 or 17 Matt. 6 to v. 19

Acts 21 V. 17 to 2 Sam. 12 to v, 37

d 2 Kings 1 to Luke 9 v. 61 to

-26 V. 16

e 1 Chron. —21 57

Acts-

Matt. 10 to V. 24 or 18 24

Jer. 26 v. 8 to 16 Matt. 13 to v. 24

1 Chron. 22 or Matt. 13 v. 63 28 to V. 21 to 14 V. 13

This month the days decrease 36 m. in the mom. and 34 m. in the aft.

u THE HAKHOW ALMANACK.

1884. A U G U S T . 31 D A Y S .

F.E M T u W T H F

8 SUNDAY ATTEH. T M N I T Y . " [^Herbert d. 1861. Anniversary g/' Shooting for the Silver Arrow. Lord

Rev. G. Butler installed Canon of Winchester 188S.

F.E M T u W T H F S

9 SUNDAY APTEB T K I N I T Y . ' '

F.E M T U W T H F S

10 SUNDAY AFTER TBINITY. '^ [^Foundation 1810. Master of the Bolls' Judgment on the nature of the

F.E M T u W T H F S

11 SUNDAY AFTER T R I N I T Y . ' ' S T . BARTHOLOMEW." [Theodore Hook d. 1841

Lieut. J£. G. Qrihble hilled at Kassassin 1882.

31 F.E 12 SUNDAY AFTER T R I N I T Y . '

SUNDAY AND SAINT'S DAY LESSONS, MORNING. EVENING.

a 1 Chron. 29 v. Romans 3 2 Chron. 1 or 1 Matt. 18 to v. 21 9 to V. 29. Kings 8

b l K l n g s l O t o E o m . 9 t o v . l 9 1 Kings 11 to v. Matt. 22 to v. 15 V. 25 15 or 11 V. 26

o l Kings—12 Bom. 14 & 15 to 1 Kings 13 or IT Matt.—25 v. 31 V. 8

a 1 Kings 18 lC!or.lv.l8&5 1 Kings 19 or 21 Matthew 28 eGen.28v.10to Deut. —18V.15

V. 18 f l Kings 22 to lCor.llv.2tov. 2King82tov.l6 Mark4v. 35to

V. 41 17 or4v.8tov.38 5 v. 21

This month the days decrease 49 min. in the mom. and 1 hr. in the aft.

T H E H A R R O W A L M A N A C K . 15

1884. S E P T E M B E R . 30 D A Y S .

M T u W T H

F

F.E M T u W T H

F S

13 SUNDAY AFTER T R I N I T Y . "

Br. Trench, Archbishop of Dublin, h. 1807.

Lieut. Graham Stirling d. 1882. D. 8. Kays d.

F.E M T u W T H

F S

14 SUNDAY AFTER T R I N I T Y . ' '

Lord Serbert b. 1810. TV. H. Fox-Talbot d. 1877.

H. M. Louis Philippe visits Harrow 18i8.

F.E M T u W T H

F S

15 SUNDAY AFTER T R I N I T Y . '

Theodore Hook b. 1788. S T . M A T T H E W . *

Consecration of School Chapel 1839.

Sev. F. W. Faber d. 1883. S.M. the Queen of the [Netherlands visits Harrow 1867.

F.E M T U

SUNDAY AFTER T R I N I T Y . "

M I C H A E L AND ALL ANGELS.*

SUNDAY AND SAINTS' DAY LESSONS.

a 2 Kings

b 2 Kings 9 2 Cor. 6 & 7 v. 1

c 2 Kingi

d 1 Kings 16

e 2 Chron.

f Gen. —

5

•9

—18

19 V.

—36

—82

NG. EVENING. 1 Cor. 15 V. 35 2 Kings 6 to v. Mark 8 v. 10. to

24 or 7 9 V. 2 2 Kings 10 to V. Mark 12 V. 13 to

32 or 13 35 2 Kings 19 or 23 Mark 15 v. 42 &

to V. 31 16 1 Chron. 29 to

V. 20 Neh. 1 & 2 to V. Luke 4 to v. 16

9 or 8 Dan. 10 V. 4 Eev. —14 v. 14

2 Cor. 12 V. U &13

-6 Gal. -

Acts. 12 V. 5 to v. 18

This month the days decrease 47 m. in the mom. and 1 h. 8 m. in the aft.

16 THE HABROW ALMANACK.

1884. OCTOBEK. 31 D A Y S .

W T H F John Lyon, Founder of the School, d. 1592.

Bryan Walter Proctor [Barry Cornwall) d. 187Jt- Sir \_John Karslake d. 1881.

F.E M T u W T H F S

17 SUNDAY AI'TBR T R I N I T Y . '

F.E M T u W T H F S

18 SUNDAY APTEU T R I N I T Y . ' ' Rev. W. Oxenham [Lower Master) d.

S T . LUKE.'= Lord Palmerston d. 1865.

F.E M T u W T H F S

19 SUNDAY APTEK. T R I N I T Y . * Lord Palmerston b. ITSU.

Fire at Read Master's House 18S8.

F.E M. T u W T H F

20 SUNDAY AFTER T R I N I T Y . " Dr. Longley, Archbishop of Canterbury, d. 1868. S T . SIMON AND S T . J U D E . * Sir Gardner Wilkinson d. 1875.

SUNDAY AND S A I N T S ' D A Y L E S S O N S .

a Jer .—

b Jer. —

c laa. — dEzek.

e Ezek.

-55 -14

-M

Eph. 6 V. 22 to 6v. 10

Col. 1 v. 21 to 2 V. 8

1 Thess. 3 1 Thess. 4

Jer.- -22 or 35

i Isa. 28 V. 9 to V. IT

1 Tim.

I T i m . -

Ezek. 2 or 18 to V. 17

Eceles. 38 to 15 Bzek. 18 or 24

V. 15 Ezek.37orDan.

1 Jer. 3 V. 12 to 19

Luke 7 to V. 24

Luke—10. ¥. 17

Luke —13 V. 18 Luke 14 to V. 25

Luke 18 T. 81 to 19 V. 11

Ltike — 1 9 T . 28

This month the days decrease 53 m. in the mom. and 1 h, 5 m. in the aft*

THE HARKOW AtMANAOK. 17

1884. N O V E M B E R . 30 D A Y S .

I S A L L SAINTS ' D A Y . " Reconteeration of the Ohapel 1857.

F.E M T u W T H F S

21 SUNDAY AFTER Ta iNi iy . ' '

F.E M Tu W T H P S

22 SUNDAY AFTER T R I N I T Y . "

Vice-Chancellor Sir John Wickens d. 1873.

F.E M T U W T H F

23 SUNDAY AFTER T R I N I T Y . ' ' S.M. the Queen visits ^Harrow 18i8.

Enrl ofSarrowby d. 188S.

F.E M T u W T H F S

24 SUNDAY AFTER T R I N I T Y . " Sir B. Brodie d. 1880.

J. F. Marillier, Esq. d.l878. Marqmss of Hastings d.l8S6.

30\F.E\1 SUNDAY IN ADVENT.* S T . A N D R E W . ?

SUNDAY AND S A I N T S ' D A Y LESSONS. MORNING.

a Wisd . 3 to V. H e b . H v. 33 10

b Dan . c Dan . — —

d H o s e a 14.

e Eccl. 11 & 12

f I sa . 1 g Isa . —•——54

12 to V. 7 2 Tim. 3 H e b . 2 & 3 to V.

7 H e b . 10 to V. 19

EVENING. Wisd. 5tov. 17 Eev. 19tov. 17

James -2

J o h n 1 V. 35 to V. 43

Dan . 4 or 6 D a n . 7 V. 9 or 12

Joe l 2 V. 21 or 3 V. 9

H a g . 2 to V. 10 or Mai . 3 & 4

Isa . 2 or 4 V. 2 I sa . 65 to V. 17

L u k e 22 to V. 31 J o h n 1 to V. 29

J o h n 5 t o V. 24

J o h n 8 to V. 31

J o h n 12 V. 20 to V. 42

This mou th t he days decrease 49 m. in t he m o m . a n d 88 m. in the aft .

18 T H E H A R R O W ALMANACK.

1884. DECEMBER. 31 DAYS.

1 2 3 4 5 6

7 8 9

low

M Tv W TH P s Sev. T. S. Steel d. 1881. Anthony Trollope d.

F.E M Tu

2 SUNDAY IN ADVENT. » Lord Craven d. 1883.

T H F S

14 15 16 17 18 19 20

21 22 23 24 25 26 27

28 29 30 31

F.£ M Tu W T H F S

3 SUNDAY IN ADVENT.'' M. B. Sheridan b. nSO.

Sev. Dr. Fears d. 1875.

Marquis of Dalhousie d. 1860.

F.E M Tu W T H F S

4 SUNDAY IN ADVENT."

Col. Chaplin d. 1883.

ST. THOMAS.'!

CHRISTMAS DAY.* ST. STEPHEN THE MARTYR. ST. JOHN.S Farl Spencer, Founder of Scholarship, d. 1857.

F.E M Tu W

1 SUNDAY AFTER CHRISTMAS.'" Malthus d. 183i.

INNOCENTS' DAY.

a I s a .

b I sa . -

c I sa . 30. t o V. 27 d J o b —42 t o V. 7

SUNDAY AND SAINTS* DAY LESSONS.

1 MORNING.

5 1 J o h n

- 2 5 2 J o h n

e I s a . - —9 t o T. 8

1 t o V. I I — 3 3 V. 9

- 3 5

J o h n 20 V. 19 t o V. 24

L u k e 2 t o V. 15

f Gen . -e E x o d . -h I s a . — i J e r . —31 t o v. 18

J o h n 13 V. 23 t o 36 Bey. — - 1 6

I sa . 11 t o V. 11 or 21

Isa . 26 or 28 V. 6 t o V. 19

I sa . 32 or 33 I sa . • 35

I sa . 7 V. 10. t o V. 17

2 Ohron , 24 v . 15 I s a i a h 6 I sa . 38 or 40 B a n i c h 4 v.21 t o 31

EVENING. J o h n —16 t o y. 16

J o h n —20 to V. 19

J o h n - ^ 1 4 t o V. 8

T i t . 3 V. 4. t o V. 9

! toy. 9 Acta Bev. • Eev,- -18

To the 21st of this month the days decrease 20 m. mom. and 2 m. aft.

1 8 8 4 . THE HARltOW ALMANACK. 1 9

THANKSGIVING FOE BENEFACTORS.

rta lEtjrnal ffiott, tf)C %iic antf lEUautrtction of all rt)em i^ut IteUebt in W)tt, altoaga to bt praiseK as totll for

tl e Wtats aa tt)ost tijat fit •aituc; toe glue ®I)cc moat fttartg ti anfea for our jFounljsr 3o i )n X p o n an5j all otl)fr our IStntfactora, fig toijoat fientSta toe arc i)ere firougl^t up to ffiotflineaa anU t$)f atttlita of fflooK Xcarning, fieaeetfiing ®f)« ti)at toe totU uaing all t'^ese W)Vi ^Blessings to tfje praise ans honour of ®f)» I^OIB iBame mae at lengtl) fie firougfjt to tl)e immortal glorg of tf)e IReaurrection, tJ)rougf) Scans ffif)rfat our XorB. Smen.

COMMEMORATION OF THE FOUNDER AND OTHER BENEFACTORS OP HARROW SCHOOL.

1571. In the year. 1571 Queen Elizabeth granted Letters Patent and a Eoyal Charter to John Lyon, of Preston in the Parish of Harrow on the Hill, for the Foundation of a Free Grammar School at Han-ow.

1590. The Statutes of the School were framed by the Founder in 1590, two years before his decease; soon after which* the western wing of the old School Building was erected.

1819. On the 3rd of June, 1819, the flrst stone of the newer portion of the School Building was laid ; the expense of the building was de­frayed by Voluntary Subscriptions of the Gfovemors, Masters, and Scholars of the School; at the same time the School Library was augmented.

1820. In the year 1820 the Aimual Prizes for Greek Verse, Latin Hexa­meters, and Latin Lyrics, were instituted from the Founder's Estate.

1826. In the year 1826 the Eight Honourable Sir Robert Peel, Bart. M.P. founded the Annual Prize of a Gold Medal for the best Essay in Latin Prose.

1830. In the year 1830 John Sayer, Esq. founded two Scholarships of fifty guineas each for four years.

1838. In the year 1838 Alexander James Beresford-Hope, Esq. M.P. founded an Annual Prize for the best translation into Greek Prose.

On July 4th, 1838, the flrst stone of the School Chapel was laid; the building was erected by Subscriptions from the Governors, MasteiB, and Scholars of the School; and was consecrated by the Visitor, His Grace the Archbishop of Canterbury, on September 24th, 1839.

* iSetween the years 1608 [when Joan, the relict of John Lyon, died] and 1611.

20 THE HAHROW ALMANACK. 1884.

1840. In the year 1840 Eichard Gregory, Esq. foundea a Scholarship of £100 a year for four years.

He also instituted an Annual Prize of a Gold Medal for the best translation into Latin Prose; and bequeathed to the School Library a valuable present of Books.

In the year 1840 Joseph Neeld, Esq. M.P. one of the Governors of the School, founded two Scholarships of £30. a year for three years; to which in 1851 he added a Gold Medal to be given annually to the best proficient in Mathematics.

1845. In the year 1845 a new House was built for the reception of Scholars, the cost being defrayed by Subscriptions of Former Members of the School and Parents of the Scholars.

In the same year an Organ was erected in the School Chapel, mainly by voluntary Subscriptions from the Scholars of the School.

1851. In the year 1851 the Earl Spencer founded a Scholarship of the value of £30. a year for three years.

In the same year large additions and improvements were made in fee School Bathing Place, at the cost of the Head Master, the Eev. Charles John Vaughan.

1852. In the year 1852 Beriah Botfleld, Esq. F.E.S. founded an Annual Prize of a Gold Medal to be given to the best proficient in the study of Modem Ijanguages.

In the same year Viscount Ebrington, now Earl Fortescue, established a second Annual Prize, consisting of Books of the value of £5. for proficiency in the Modem Languages.

1855. In the year 1855 a new School Building was erected in the neigh­bourhood of the School Chapel; the expense was defrayed by Subscriptions of the Masters of the School and the Parents of the Scholars.

In the years 1864-5 the Chancel and North Aisle of a new School Chapel were erected; and being temporarily connected with the former Chapel, were opened for Divine Service on Founder's Day, October 11th, 1865. The Chancel was the gift of the Eev. Charles John Vaughan, D.D. then Head Master of the School; the cost of the North Aisle was defrayed by Subscriptions of the Masters of the School and the Parents of the Scholars.

1866. On the 26th of June 1856 the Foundation Stone was laid for a new South Aisle, designed as a Memorial to those Oflicers educated at Harrow who fell in the Crimean War.

1857. The whole building having been in the interval completed, the Chapel was re-consecrated by the Diocesan and Visitor, the Lord Bishop of London, on All Saints' Day the 1st of November 1867.

1858. A new Organ was erected in the Chapel in January 1868, mainly from the Voluntary Contributions of Scholars then in the School; to which large and impoi'tant additions were made in the year 1868.

1884. THE HARROW ALMANACK. 21

1860. In the year 1860 Walter Beaumont, Esq. instituted four Annual Prizes of the value of £10., £5., £3., and £2. respectively for the promotion of the study of the Holy Scriptures.

1861. On the 4th of July 1861 the Foimdation Stone was laid of a new Building to he called the Vaughan Library, designed to record the signal services rendered to the School hy the Rev. Charles John Vai^han, D.D. throughout the fifteen years from 1844 to 1859 during which he held the post of Head Master. The Vaughan Library was opened on the 2nd July 1863.

1863. In the year 1863 Joseph Jones, Esq. founded an Annual Prize of a Gold Medal for the best exercise in Latin Elegiac Verse. The Prize was instituted in memory of his son Joseph Jones, who died at Harrow on the 25th of September 1862, beii^ at the time Head of the School.

In the salne year Beriah Botfield, Esq. E.R.S. founded by bequest a Scholarship of £60. a year for three years.

In the same year the Hev. "William Oxenham, M.A., Lower Master of the School, founded by bequest two Annual Prizes, each of the value of £3., for the best Greek and Latin Epigrams.

1864. In the years 1864 and 1865 large additions were made to the School play buildii^s, at the expense of the Masters, Scholars and former members of the School.

1865. In the year 1865 a spire was added to the School Chapel as a memorial to the aforenamed Rev. "William Oxenham, for 37 years a Master in the School.

In the same year, Sir Gardner Wilkinson, F.E.S. presented to the Vaughau Library a valuable collection of Egyptian, Greek, and Roman Antiquities, to which in tiie year 1873, he added a large collection of coins and medals.

In the same year, the Vaughan Library was for the first time largely augmented by books purchased with the interest on the Eund raised as a Memorial to the aforenamed Sir Robert Peel, Bart. M.P.

In the same year a new building was erected for the reception of Scholars in time of sickness. The expense was defrayed by Subscriptions of the Masters of the School and Parents of the Scholars.

1866. In the year 1866 a laiK© and valuable Playing Field was purchased for the School by Voluntary Contributions from the Governors, Masters, and former Scholars.

In the same year John Edward Bourchier, Esq., Head Boy, among the Scholars in 1862, founded four Annual Prizes of the value of £10., £5., £3., and £2. respectively, for the encourage­ment of the study of Modem History and Ei^lish Literature.

22 THE HAKBOW ALMANACK. 1884.

1869. In the year 1869 the Lord Charles James Fox Eussell founded an Annual Prize of a Gold Medal, to be called the "Shakespeare Medal," for the encouragement of the Study of Shakespeare.

1870. In the year 1870 Charles John I<eaf, Esq. founded a Scholarship of the value of £70. a year for three years.

1871. In the year 1871 Douglas Edward Anderson, Esq. bequeathed a sum of money, which in 1878 was applied to the creation of a Scholarship, bearing his name, of the value of £50. for three years.

In the year 1871, being the Three Hundredth Anniversary of the Granting of the Eoyal Charterto John Lyon, a Fund was raised, called the " Lyon Memorial Fund," for the purpose of erecting additional School Buildings and providing for the purchase of land. The Fund was raised by Subscriptions among the Governors, Masters, Parents of the Scholars and former Members of the School, and now amounts to upwards of £38,000.

Of this Fimd in the year 1873 a portion was devoted to the erection of a Gymnasium, and in the year 1874 another portion to the construction of Laboratories and Schools for Science and other teaching.

1873. In the year 1873 Cyril Flower, Esq. founded two Prizes of the value £5. each for the best translation into French and German respectively.

1874. In the year 1874, on July 2, the First Stone was laid of a new Speech Eoom; the cost of the site and the building to be defrayed from the " Lyon Memorial Fund."

1876. In the year 1876 Viscountess Strangford founded, in memory of her late husband, Percy Smythe, Viscount Strangford, three Prizes, of the value of £3, £2, and £1 respectively, for the en­couragement of the Study of Geography.

1877. In the year 1877 G. E. Briscoe Eyre, Esq. founded two Prizes of £3. and £2. respectively, for knowledge of Music.

On July 5th, 1877, the new Speech Eoom was opened, having been fitted with a large and valuable Organ, erected by Sub-cription among friends of the School.

1878. In the year 1878 Lady Bourchier founded four Prizes of the collec­tive value of £6., for the encouragement of good Beading in English.

In the same year, 1878, a Scholarship, to be called the " Clayton Memorial Scholarship," was founded by the friends of Captain William Clayton Clayton, for the encouragement of Modem Studies.

1879. In the year 1879 Edward Henry Pember, Esq. Q.C. founded three Pilzes for the encouragement of Greek and Latin Grammar and Classical Philology.

1880. In the year 1880 new and improved Fives Courts were erected at tlie cost of Masters, Former Scholars, and other Friends of the School.

THE HARROW ALMANACK. 23

1881. In the year 1881, large additions were made to the School Bathing Place, the expense being borne in part by Subscriptions from Former Scholai"8 and other Friends of the Sdiool.

In the year 1881 William Eoundell, Esq. founded a Scholarship of £40. a year for three years for the encouragement of Modem Studies.

1882 In the year 1882 Frederick George Brabazon Ponsonby, Earl of Bessborough, founded a Scholarship of the value of £30. a year for three years, for the encouragement of Modem Studies.

In the years 1882 and 1883 a Pimd was raised, called the " Harrow Mission Fund," for the purpose of ministering, spirit­ually and otherwise, to the wants of the poor in London. The Fund was raised by Subscriptions among the Masters, Scholara, Former Scholars, and other Friends of the School, and now amounts to about £4,000.

1883. In the year 1883 a new and enlarged Pavilion was erected on the old School Cricket Ground. I t was the gift of some Former Scholars and other Friends of the School.

- ^ | c ^ 3 } e ^

24 THE HARROW ALMANACK. 1884.

THE

1770. 1771. 1776. 1776. 1777. 1778. 1779. 1780. 1781. 1782. 1783. 1784. 1785. 1788. 1787. 1788. 1789. 1790. 1791. 1792. 1793. 1794. 1796. 1796. 1797. 1798. 1799. 1800. 1801. 1802. 1803. 1804. 1805. 1806. 1807. 1808. 1809. 1810. 1811. 1812. 1813. 1814. 1816. 1816. 1817. 1818. 1819. 1820. 1821. 1822. 1823. 1824. 1825. 1828. 1827. 1828

-ATIN SPEECH DELIVERED JUNE 2 8 T H , 1 8 8 3 , BY L

BEFORE THE GOVERNORS, . M. WOODWARD.

SPBAKBE8* Sayer, sen. Lemon Haggitt Douglas

Hon. Mr. Maude

Malkin Whitwick

E. W. Stackhouse Hon. H. Eyder C. Tower W. Hamilton J . Casamajor J. Wightwick R. Bland Hon. F. Powys C. Ellison Hinxman A. Campbell C. Drury I. Lloyd H. C. Hoare W. Dmry C. Uoyd G. Drury G. Vereker Dawson H. Lloyd H. J. Sperling A. Drury H. Eycroft J. D. L. Birkett F . North J . E. Gray T. H. S. Estoourt C. Causton J. B. Byde C. "W. North H. Merivale E. Sheppard A. Martineau T. D. Aoland E. B. Jodrell E. C. Brooke

•Any one who can supply the names of the

1829. 1830. 1831. 1832. 1833. 1834. 1835. 1836. 1887. 1&38. 1839. 1840. 1841. 1842. 1843. 1844. 1845. 1848. 1847. 1848. 1849. 1850. 1851. 1852. 1858. 1864. 1856. 1866. 1857. 1858. 1869. 1860. 1861. 1862. 1863. 1884. 1865. 1866. 1867. 1868. 1889. 1870. 1871. 1872. 1873. 1874. 1875. 1876. 1877. 1878. 1879. 1880. 1881. 1882. 1883.

Chas. Thorn ton H . Drury G. A. 0 . Onslow I . Leslie E . C. Eger ton A . Mills W . H . Gregory F . E . MiUs E . K . Kars lake H . I . Torre T. Ha l l s G. C. Cherry H . M. WiUdns T. B. Colenso C. Soames A. Gran t C. S. Currer (Eoundell) F . W . Th. Sperling A. S. Hewle t t T. D . P ia t t D . E . Saiirin I . H . D'Arcy H . Montagu But ler J . "W. Hozier C. H . Monro B . W . Sergeant W . J . Hope-Edwardes H . Bothamley G. 0 . Trevelyan H . Y. Thompson J . D . Burne t t J . A . Cruikshank M. W . Hidley E . Eidley J . E . Bourchier H . M . Lindsell C. L . Arkwright Hon. W . T. Kenyon H . N . Abbot t C. H . Pr ior "W. A. Meek G. H . Efindall H . Carlisle C. Haddock H . Leaf E . J . E . Childers G. "W. Tallentg "W, H . P . Eowe H . Eashda l l 0 . Bradley S. C. Wa t son F . W . Pember M . J . Eendal l H . G. W a l t e r s L . M . Woodward

'Oratores'' during tlie missinor years, or for years 1772,1773,1774,,is requested kindly to commnnicute them to the PubHsher.

1884 . THE HARRO-W ALMANACK. '25

CONTIO, &c.

Animadverti, Praesides omatissimi, decessores meos, qui apud vos contionati sunt, pauca prius de re publica referre solitos esse quam ad domestica ag^rederentur; neque ego mutandinn hunc morein tarn inveteratum iudicavi; sed quaeso veniam mihi detis et indulgeatis si in mentione rerum civilium facienda, putida et iam satis cognita vobis exponam. Itaque, ut res externas breviter perstringam, hoc anno civitas nostra, ut omata vlctoriia, ita luctu vario ac diverso conturbata est. Imprimis autem^ imperatori nostro grratidatio est tribuenda quod bellum illud in Aegypto nnper gestum ad eventum tam celerem tamque felicem adduxit, cuius triumphos iam singulatim enumerare perlongum est; sed et ipse dux et milites nautaeque nostri laude maxima digni videntur quia tantam prae se alacritatem tulerunt et fortitudinem. Quanto enim studio, quanta industria, urbem Alexandriam navibus suis circumsessam oppugnaverunt! Deinde, in ilia dimicatione quae victoriarum. summa fuit et extrema, quanto impetu in munimenta hostium irrumpentes adversarium nostrum conterritum pavidumque f ugavenmt! Et qua lauru illius nostri alumni^ tempora sunt exomanda qui, coiTepto gladio, abiectis vestimentia, e balneo quodam in mediam aciem quum festiaasset, voce et exemplo suos est hortatus! Nee mehercule tiunultus ille militaris his nostris umbraculis fuit alienus; viri enim tres,* qui so iactabant esse Harrovienses, dum in acie pro patria versantur, praeclarissima morte sunt ablati; quorum memoria, adfixis in aede nostra monumentis, in aetemum consecrata est.

Sin autem ad Hibemiam oculos converterimus, plena ibi omnia periculi esse videntur. Consedisse sane magna ex parte confltemur atrocem illam caedis humanae aviditatem; sed terra ipsa turbulentissi-morum hominum quasi receptaculum videtur, qui ineendio et machinia quibusdam horrendis aedifleia nostra iam pridem diruere conantur; quorum nonnulli, scelerum damnati gravissimorum, merito nuper supplicio sunt affecti. Illud autem nemo non coniltetur quod Ileigensi-bus illia tribus,* viris optimis, acceptum refcrimua cuncta ibi nunc esse pacatiora.

lam vero, priuaquam de rei publicae mentione recedo, memoranda mihi videtur mors aummi illius Sacerdotis,°qui, diutumi morbi imbecil-iitate confectus, ex corporis tandem vinculia tanquam ex carcere evolavit. Informator quondam Scholae fuerat praeclarissimae, unde-secessit tandem cum magno auorum desiderio ad graviora suscipienda ; praeterea Hergengibus quoque carissimus fuit, qui hunc coUem saepe-

1 Lord Wolseley. 4 Earl Sponcer, K.G., Right Hon. G.O. 2 Lieutenant H. G. Lang. Trevolyan, M.l'., E. G. Jenklnson, 3 Lieutenants Gribble, Graham-Stir- Esq., C.B.

ling, Kays. C> Archbishop Tait.

26 THE HARROW ALMANACK. 1884,

numero adiret, et amore coleret veri^imo. Cuius in locum, vir^ egregius, cum nostra populique universi gratulatione suffectus, sicut decessor suus patronorum nostrorum numero sese addidit.

Praeterea, ne aut Britannos aut alienos omittam qui, suae quiaque patriae "beneficia quum contulerint, defuncti debent propria laude cumulari, virum^ hoc anno illustrissimum Gallia amisit, qui, ingenio singular! praeditus, res paene dicam totius Europae aliqua ex parte moderabatur; is, dolore diu acerbissimo cruciatus, familiaribus suis, immo toti civitati desideratissimus obiit.

Sed, ne in his flebilibus diutius commoremur, duae mihi res, et eae laetiores attir^^endae videntur, quarum utramque necesse eat ad aurea vestras iam perlatam esse, quas tamen non idcirco deterrebor quominus iterum recordemur. Primum enim regius^ ille iuvenis Italicus, qui non solum Hergae alumnus fuit, sed etiam adhunc Matrem euam amore semper et deaiderio prosequitur, uxoi-em nuper iucundissimam cum summo Hergensium gaudio in matrimonium duxit. Quorum utrique vehementer gratulamur, et speramus ambos iongam vitam et florentissi-mam esse exacturos. Deinde, id quod Europaeis omnibus magaae delectationi esse debet, Russia tandem, inter aummum populi studium et i'avorem, praefectus est rex patriae amantissimus, qui non multis abhinc diebus, inter gentium vaiiarum mirabilem concursum, cum apparatu pompaque paene singulafi, perditorum hominum, mortem totiea minantium, coniuratione nullo modo conturbatus, insigne regium assumpsit, et iam expectatione omnium is habetur qui civitatem tumultu et seditione commotam sedet atque componat.

lam vero, Praesides, incipienti mihi de rebus domesticia apud vos contionari primum illud occurit quod, cum nuperrime acciderit, moeroris adhue graviasimi habet acerbitatem. Nam vix qiiatuor abhinc mensibus, cum ingenti nostro et familiarissimi cuiusque luctu, inopin-ata morte abrepta est Informatoris noatri coniux dilectissima, cuius omni lepore venustate benignitate afiluentia mmquam non memoriam summo desiderio universi prosequemur. Ilia enim per viginti annoa ita excraplum conseeravit intcgerrimura, ut amicorum commoda, egentium necessitates, Hergensium deniquo utilitatem famamque suo ipsius otio nullo non tempore anteferendas existimaret.

Sunt lacrimttc rerum et mentcm moitalia tangunt. Illius autem nomen vel ob ipsam mortem nobis dilectius tabula Sacelli nostri parietibus nuper adfixa recens apud nos et inviolatum semper fovebit.

Neque vero ille vir* nobis non merito lugendus st, qui, sanctitate ac probitate insignis, et nostri huius collis lumnus, quum in Indicis gentibus unum modo annum versatus esset superstitiones earum refellendi causa hominumque mentes ad meloria avocandi, in morbum incidit tam. pemieiosum, ut vix in patriam regressuB, florente adhunc

1 Arclibishop Benson. 4 Rev. F. M. Argles, B.D., of the Oxford 2 M. Giiinl)etta. Mission, Oiucutta. 3 H.R.H. The Duke of Genoa.

1884. THB HARROW ALMANACK. 27

aetate et quasi in limine incepti optimi, exstii^ueretur. Qui quidem, et caeteri illi, qui aut, ut supra memoraTi, inter hostium tela in -A-egypto obierunt, aut in bello apud Indos gesto^ pro patria dimicantes defuncti simt, marmoreis pro se quisque moniunentis celebrantur. Insculptum autem eminet viri desideratissimi^ nomen, qui, rerum

scientiae et cognltioni multum. deditus, diun Alpium iUarum altitudines perlustrat repentinam, ad motem est abreptus.

Sed ad laetiora tandem perveniamus. Hoc anno duo^ magistros quasi in gremium Hei^ae fratemo quodam amore excepimus; quorum alter advenit ut muscosorum Sabrinae fontium ubertate nos irr^et atque reflciat; alter, disciplina ipse Hei^nsi exercitus, iterum cum ii^^nti nostro consensu iu hanc rediit societatem. Sed magistrorum numero ut duo nui)er cum siunma nostra laetitia sunt adscripti, ita unum* ilium iam tandem desideramus, qui, post tot annos apud hanc Scholam constantia et diligentia mirabili exactos, postremo, quasi rude donatus, in tranquillioris vitae amoenitatem secessit.

Quo in loco de altero'* mihi magistro loquendiun reor, quem hodie buio curiae deesse videmus. Ab equo enim nuper praecipitatus morbo gravissimo adfectus est; quem tamen speramus, admota medicorum cura, iu bonam valetudiuem se mox reeepturum.

Ecce autem etiam inter scribendum ab Africa nuntius affertur de morte viri^ notissimi qui olim inter Magistros nostros eminebat, cuius etiam frater, praematurae morti destinatus, imo et quadrageeimo abhinc anno coram Ghibematoribus contionatus est. Nihil dixerim, Praesides, de Magistri illius librK mathematicis, quibus etiamnimc alumni nostri utuntur; nihil de Episcopi studiis theologicis et Scriptu-rarum in barbaram linguam laboriosissima translatione; nihil denique de patemo eius erga Afros suos animo et vere Episcopal!, summa sollicitudine illud semper contendentis ut indigenis sua iura sanctissime conservarentur: illud tantum hodie commemorandum exlstimavi, fautorem eundem Harroviae nostrae semper fuisse amantissimum, semper ad placidos illos dies lubentissime respexisse cxun et ipse et frater Harrovienses erant.

Sequitur ut summatim vobis enumerem, Fraesides, quot honores per hunc annimi ab Harrioviensibus reportati sint. Apud Oxonienses imus,7 quem antea memoravi, in litteris humanioribus primam classem meruit; alter,8 qui septimo abhinc annis anno apud vos contionatus eat, praemio Anglicae orationis toti Academiae proposito nuper est potitus; tertius^ etiam honore quodam insignissimo haud multiun abfuit quin omaretur. lam vero, cujn ad Cantabrigiam praevertimur, haud exig^uum ibi decus in alimmos nostros videmus esse cumulatum; unusio

1 AfglmnWar. Lieut.-Col. Brownlow, 9 J . H. P. Pelle, proxime acceesit for C.B., Lieut. Rayner, Lieut. Stay- the Hertford University Scliolur-ner. ship.

2 Professor F. M. Balfour, F.K.K. 10 J. O. F. Murray, First Class in 3 J. C. Moss, Esq., E. Graham, Edq. Theological Tripos, Bachelor's 4 Kev. F . Kendall. Carus Greek Testament Prize, 5 H. O. D. Davidson, Esq. Bcholefleld Prize for Greek Testa-6 EiRht Hev. J. W. Colcnso, Bishop of ment and Septuagint, Crosse

Natal. University Schoftirship (Theologi-7 E. Graham. cal). 8 H. Bashdall.

28 THE HARKOW ALMANACK. 1884.

enim ob divinamm rerum scientiam tribus praemiis, in certamine de Theologia instituto prima classe potitus est; alter,* quem nunc in hac curia sedentem intuemur, in eertamine quodam gravissimo inter primos enituit; et in contentione ilia, quae spectat maxime ad litteras Graecas et Latinas, tres^ primas classes meruerunt; apud S.S. Trinitatis etiam collegium duo* maiores, minores duo* Scholares sunt electi. Denique Harroviensi cuidam^ contigit, ut proximo anno argenteo insigni, ita intra bos paucos menses aureo, a magna ilia yeotficTptKuv societate proposito, decorari.

Et profecto gratiae viro^ cuidam illuslrissimo sunt agendae quod, inter alia multa benignitatia suae e i ^ banc Scbolam exempla, praemium'i' quoque munificum instituit, per quod nomen suum, iam tot milibus Hergensium cognitum et valde dilectum, vineiilo quodam adiaKvT^ coniimgatur cum eo loco quem usque a puero ipse tanto eemper amore prosecutus est. Cuius nuper effigiem Apelles quidams egregiis coloribus, politissima arte, illustravit, ut vultua tam amati pictura parietes nostrae bibliotbecae in perpetuum adomentur.

Nunc vero, Praesides, a^rediar ad cuiusdam rei narrationem de qua, velut de consilio vixdum adumbrato, deceasor mens mentionem fecit levissimam, quae tamen, progresso tempore, favente, ut opinor, Deo Optimo Maximo, aucta est atque ampliflcata. Nam fere nemo, ni fallor, cui rei publicae fortuna et tranquillitas cordi est, ad pauperum mala nisi cum miseiicordia et perturbatione gravissima animttm inten-dit. Quippe tanta hominum multitude, quanta intra plurimas urbis Londinii regiones continetur, in tectis vel sordidissimis cougregata, vestium, vlctus, pecuniae iudigentia confecta, frigore etiam vel umore vel corporis aegritudine sollicitata, nidla doctrina, nulla discipHna exercita, tabescit indies et in detenus praecipitat. Itaque, cum optimi cuiusque civis esse iudiearemus tantae miseriae succeurrere et opem ferre, aemuli exemplorum quae alii iam praebuerunt, nos quoque in parte quadam urbis satis sordida ac flagitiosa refugium quoddam instituiraus, ut e tanta mendicitate et squalore pauperrimum quemque eripiamus, et ad meliorem vitae ac frugaliorem rationem paulatim revocemus. Neque hoc opus ab iis solum est susceptum qui hoc ipso tempore H e i ^ e educantur, sed multi etiam, qui antea in gremio Matris almae requierunt, ita rem laudabilem adiuvare dignantur, ut omnes amoris quadam ffvfiiradeK^ coniuncti esse videamur, eoque laetiores ad hunc laborem tam benevolentem accedamus. Totius autem negotii procuratio optimo cuidam viro9 est commissa qui, et hie et apud Oxoniam 4v &B\oi(Ttv apiaTe^aas, natura etiam ingenuns et houestus, amorem

1 A. Macnamara, Honorobly mention- 6 Earl of Beasborough. ed for the Chancellor's Medals. 7 Ponsonby Scholarship for the en-

2 J. A. I'latt, E. Stewart-Brown, G. W. couragement of Modern Studies. Blenkln. 8 H. Weigall, Esq.

3 M. J. Rendall, G. W. Blenkln. 9 Rev, "William Law, Curate in Charge 4 F. C. Burkitt, L. M. Woodward. of the Harrow Mission in Latimer 5 S. C. Farlow, Gold Medal given by Road, Nottiiig Hill.

the Royal Geographical Society.

1884. THE HARHOW ALMANACK. 29

omnium et observantiam quam maxime sibi conciliavit. Seitote igitur, Praesides, iam tandem satis terrae emptum esse in quae construatur aedes, pecuniamque tmiveraa liberalitate baud exiguam esse collatam; ex quo speramus, si profecerit boc opus tarn faustis auspiciis inceptum, fore ut multorum e plebe miseriis aerumnisque pro viriii parte medea-mur.

lam vero pauca de Sacello nostro libet referre. Nam praeter mon-umenta ea de quibus antea dixi, additum omamentum^ quoddam uniom e magistrorum numero recordatur, qui, quum per plurimos annoa Hei^ae nostrae fidissime inserviisset, summa in senectute vitae sum-mam explevlt. Quinetiam ipsum aedificium, aethere diu impuro umidum, crebris foraminibus aperiendis purgari mox incipiet.

Neque boc loco obliviscenda est campana ilia quae novis iam numeris et dulcioribus percellit aures, quamque, dono ultimo acceptam a coniuge Informatoris nostri, eo maioris aestimamus.

Nunc autem oiKTjfiaTos^ cuiusdam videor meminisse, quod Latine exprimere vix ausim ; quod tamen, Hergae amantium impensa exstrue-tum, praecipue viris illius constautissimi qui cum consilio tum liberali­tate ludos nostros tamdiu fovet, in palaestra ilia graminea ita nunc eminet, ut de sua ipsum utilitate praebeat testimonium.

Sed, ut ad collem nostrum redeamus, illud a vobis poatulo, Praesides, ut, cum ex hac curia egressi eritis, oeulos in dextrum latus convertatis; ibi, ut opinor, notam quandam domum desiderabitis, qiiae per tot annos Custodem nostrum custodivit; nimc autem parietes illos destructos esse videbitis, relicto spatio amplissimo, quod, quocumque veUtis modo, ometis atque apparetis. Q,uod si quaeritis de ipso domino, ciun lacrimis multis, ut lacrimant Custodes, in iuferiorem nescio quem Tartarum et poene Sisypheium expulsus abiit, unde, ut ad solita munera redeat, arduum inter et. quotidianum est perficiendum. Quem quidem &v^pa Tro\vT\'fifjLova ut impense miseramur, ita, quum deait exsuli nee Soo^a vypepitpks nee fieyas opx<!t'ros hr/Ka6Kapvosy sperare audemus solatium aegritudinis aliquando esse babiturum.

Eestat, Praesides, ut nobis ipsis gratulemur, quod coronae vestrae tam venerandae est adbibitus Vir* quidam liberaliasimus, et apud nos olim non sine magna gloria educatus, quem hodie intra bos parietes summa laetitia excipimus.

lam vero, ne vos diutius taedio orationis meae obsessoa detineam, gratias ago quod tot tantaaque res exponere conanti tam attentas aures praebuistis, et, si quid erraverim, iuventuti meae precor ignoscatis,

LIONEL MABBOTT WOODWARD.

1 Canopies in the Chapel in memory 3 Hon. Rohert Grimston. of the iHte Rev. T. H. Steel. 4 Henry Francis Pelham, Esq.

2 New I'avllion on the Cricket Ground.

30 THE HARROW ALMANACK. 1884.

HAEROW SCHOOL, FOUNDED A.D. 1571.

THE P R E S E N T S C H O O L ,

Visitors:

Archbishop of Canterbury. Bishop of London.

The Duke of Aberoom, K.G. Earl Spencer, K.G. Earl of Verulam Lord Northwick F. Vaughan Hawkins, Esq.

H. F. Pelham, Esq. C. S. EoundeU, Esq. M.P. W. H. Stone, Esq. Prof. TyndaU, LL.D. F.R.S. Eev. Prof. Westcott, D.D. D.C.L.

ffead Master :

Eev. H. Montagu Butler, D.D.

Assistant Masters in Classics:

C. F. Holmes, Esq. M.A. W. J. BuU, Esq. M.A. A. G. Watson, Esq. D.C.L. H. E. Hutton, Esq. M.A. E. E. Bowen, Esq. M.A. E. Bosworth Smith, Esq. M.A. Eev. J. A. Cruikshank, M.A. J. Stogdon, Esq. M.A. G. H. Hallam, Esq. M.A.

Eev. J. Eobertson, M.A. Eev. E. Gilliat, M.A. C. Colbeek, Esq. M.A. Eev. T. Field, M.A. M. G. Glazebrook, Esq. M.A. H. 0. D. Davidson, Esq. M.A. E. W. Howson, Esq. M.A. J. C. Moss, Esq. B.A. B. Graham, Esq. B.A.

In MatlteMatics:

E.B.HaywardjEsq.M.A.F.E.S. A. C. TosswlU, Esq. M.A. Eev. W. D. Bushell, M.A. F. E. Marshall, Esq. M.A.

J . W. Welsford, Esq. M.A.

In Natural Science:

G. Griffith, Esq. M.A. S. Lupton, Esq. M.A.

1884. THE HAKKOW ALMANACK. 31

In Modern Languages :

Mons. G. Buault. Mons. 0. Masson, B.A. Univ. Gallic. O.F.U.

On the Modern Side ;

E. E. Bowen, Esq. H.A., Master. C. Colbeck, Esq. M.A. H. O. D. Davidson, Esq. M.A. W. G. Guillemara, Esq. M.A.

Drawing Master:

L. J. "Wells, Esq.

Organist and Music Master :

J. Farmer, Esq.

Superintendent of the Gymnasium:

Captain Tudor Eisk.

Fencing Masters:

Messrs. Angelo.

-Jf -f ^

32 THE HAHROW ALMANACK. 1884.

PRIZEMEN, 1883.

Greek Prose {Hope Prize), L. M. Woodward

Mr. C. Flower's P r i z e / o r Translation into German^

C. "W. Firebrace

Latin Alcaics, W. Q. Headlam

English Essay, G. T. Warner

Latin Prose (Gregory Medal), W . G. Headlam

Latin Hexameters^ L. M. Woodward

Latin Essay (Peel Medal), S. W . Meek

Greek Iambic Verse, L. M. Woodward

Greek Epigram (Oxenham Prize), W . G. Headlam

English Poem, B . Pares

Mathematics (Neeld Medal), C. S. Vaughan

„ (Second Prize), E . F. E . Wigram

Problem Prize, C. S. Vaughan

(Second), j ^ rj^ ^_ Cleghom

Arithmetic Prize, G. H. Sanders

French (Botfleld Medal), C. S. Vaughan

Ebrington Prize (German), S. F. Meudl

Latin Elegiacs (Jones Medal), W . R. W . Peel

Latin Prose (Fifth Form), S . H . B u t l e r i J. F. WilUam ^^•

Mr. Watson^s.

Mr. Cruikshank's.

Dr. Butler's.

Mr. Criiikshank's.

Dr. Butler's.

Mr. Watson's.

Mr. Watson's.

Mr. Watson^s,

Dr. Butler's.

Dr. Butler's.

Mr. Button's.

Mr. Bushell's.

Mr. Mutton's.

Mr. Bushell's.

Dr. Butler's.

Mr. Bowen's.

Mr. Mutton's.

Mome Boarder.

Mr. Watson's.

Mome Boarder, Dr. Butler's.

Mr. Watson's. Dr. Butler's, Latin Verse (Fifth Form), { ^ . • ^ • - ^ f / j a ^ , } esq.

Extra Prize for Prose and Verse (Fifth Form),

H . D . Watson

Prize for Chemistry, J. R. Findlay

Prize for Physics, G. T. Warner

Shakespeare (Russell Medal), E. M. Butler

„ (Fifth Form), A. G. Chater

„ (Extiu Prize), S. F . Mendl

„ (Lower School , W. B. Harris

Bourchier Prizes, Modern Mistory and English Literature^

n 1 -n^ ( !• C. W . Firebrace Mr. Oruikshank's. General Pnzes, | ^ g_ ^ ^^^^^^

mnForm, \i:^:t^;^ Lower School, S. H . Hargrove

Mr. Watson's.

Mr. Bushell's.

3Ir, Cruikshank's.

Dr. Butler's.

Mr. Mutton's.

Mome Boarder.

Mr. Bowen's.

Dr. Butler'.

Mome Boarder. Home Boarder.

Mr. Golheck's.

1884. THE HARROW ALMANACK. 33

Lady Boiirohier's Beading Prizes, 1. L. M. Woodward 2. H. J. Torr Fifth Form and (1. M. G. Fleming Lower School^ \ 2. J. H. M. Shaw

Viscountess Stmngford's Prizes/or Geography, C. "W. Pirebrace P. Irwin (Pifth Porm) P. A. Kinglake-Poster ("Lower School)

Mr. Briscoe Eyre's Prizes/or Music, 1. H. W. Poskett 2. A. R. Cox

Mr. Watson^s.

Mr. Gruikshank's.

Dr. Butler^s. Mr. Bowen^s,

3Ir. Cruikshank's.

Mr. MarshalVs,

Mr. B. Smith's.

Mr. Cruikshank^s.

Mr. Hutton^s,

Mr. E. H. Pember*8 Prizes/or Latin and Greek Grammar and Philology,

W. G. Headlam ) „ S. W. Meek (' *-H. D. "Watson (Fifth Form) C. Stevenson (Extra Prize) J. P. "Williams (Lower School)

Beaumont Prizes (Holy Scripture),

OeneralPri.es,\l-f_^-^^-:

H. v . Stuart (Extra Prize) T. J. C. Tomlin (Fifth Form) 0. Whittaker (Lower School)

Dr. Butler's. Mr. WatsoTi's.

Mr. Watsoii's.

Mr. Hallarri's.

Dr. Butler's.

Dr. Butler's. Mr. Watson's.

Mr. Gruikshank's.

Dr. Butler's.

Mr. B. Smithes.

-rl>

34 THE HARROW ALMANACK. 1884.

SPEECH BILL (omitting the Prizes).

Pember..

Firebrace Wilkinson sen.

Stuart "Wigram Headlam Grieve

Joyce

Meek

Stephenson ... Firebrace Grieve

"Woodward Stephenson ... de Quetteville

"Wigram "Vai^han

Chaplin

"Woodward ... Stuart Bovillmaj. ... Ward de Quetteville Headlam All the Speakers

Wigram

Woodward

Charles XII. , Ki i^ of Sweden Johnson,

The Baron Stiefel

Sir Fretful Plagiary Dangle Mrs. Dai^le Sneer

The Beath of Euryalus Nisus

and

The Ball at Biussels before Waterloo

Madame Jourdain M. Jourdain Nicole

Louis XI Martins Galeotti Tristan I'Henuite

Kotzebue.

Sheridan.

Virgil.

Byron.

Moliere.

• Sir W. Scott

Tennyson.

Sir W. Scott.

•Aristophanes.

j The Sleeping Palace ...

The Battle of Flodden..,

Prytanis Mnesilochus Leader of the Chorus ... Wife of Cleonymus Toxotes Cleisthenes Chorus of Ladies

Speech at Toronto on R e s ^ - \ ing the Vice-'Royalty of Can- > Earl of Duffer ada, September 24th, 1878 )

( Speech on Conciliation with) „ , t America, March 22nd, 1775 j •^"^«^-

1884. THE HAREOW ALMANACK. 35

PEIZEMEN AND SCHOLARS OF

THE GOVERNORS' PRIZES

Greek Verse.

1820. Thomas Smith

1821. Isaac Williams 1822. P. Calvert 1823. Herman Merivale 1824. F. Trench 1825. A. Martineau 1826. Ashton Oxendon 1827. Nutcombe Oxenham 1828. Nutcombe Oxenham 1829. Eobert Anderson 1830. H. Drory 1831. A. F. Merivale 1832. W. S. Eichardson 1833. E. C. Egerton 1834. J . "W. FeiKusson 1836. J. W. Fergusson 1836. A. J. Beresford-Hope 1837. E. K. Karslake 1838. a. Butler 1839. W. MiUs 1840. H. M. WilMns 1841. H .M. "Willdns 1842. Hon. P. Smythe 1843. Hon. P. Smythe 1844. Alex. Grant 1845. Edm. Blayds 1846. C. S. Currer 1847. 0. H. Collier 1848. C. S. Blayds 1849. F. v . Hawkins 1850. H. Montagu Butler 1861. H. Montagu Butler 1882. C. H. Monroe 1853. E. D. 'Wilson 1864. W, J. Hope 1865. W. J. Hope Edwardes 1856. St. L. Hope Edwardes

Latin Lyrics,

Isaac Williams Herman Merivale F. Trench C. Wordsworth C. Wordsworth C. Thornton F. L. Popham C. Thornton H. Drury E. Thornton A. G. C. Onslow G. PoUard W. Gregory H. Pearson B. H. Drury B. H. Drury E. K. Karslaie J . B. Blackett H. Dawson F. Peel H. M. Wilkins T. B. Colenso Alex. Grant Alex. Grant Edm. Blayds C. H. Collier H. N. Oxenham F. V. Hawkins F. V. Hawkins C. S. Blayds A. Bloomfleld W. K. Fenton W. J. Hope W. J. Hope

PAST TEAES.

Latin Hexameters.

C. G. BoUaerts ) Isaac Williams j Eobert Dallas Herman Merivale Hobert Sheppard F. Trench A. Martineau A. Oxendon P. L. Popham W. H. Pearson C. Thornton H. Drury A. F. Merivale H. H. Pearson E. C. Egerton H. Pearson W. H. Gregory E. K. Karslake E. K. Karslake J. B. Blaokett S. Cave H. M. Wilkins F. Peel T. B. Colenso Alex. Grant H. Day Edm. Blayds H. N. Oxenham H. N. Oxenham F. V. Hawkins F. V. Hawkins C. S. Blayds A. Bloomfleld W. H. Stone W. J. Hope W. J. Hope

W.J.HopeEdwardesW. Ellis F. Storr G. 0. Trevelyan

36 THE HABROW ALMANACK. 1884.

Greeh Verse.

1857. H. Y. Thompson ) „ F. Storr ( *'

1858. H. Y. Thompson 1859. A. Pretor

1860. F. W. Stow 1861. M. W. Eidley 1862. J. P. Poyer 1868. G. B. Baker 1864. H. M. Lindsell 1886. J. M. Thomson 1866. B. Bosanquet 186T. C. B. Heberden 1868. G. E. Woodward 1869. TV. A. Meek 1870. Q. H. Eendall 1871. M. F. Argles 1872. S. G. Hamilton ) „

E. J . E. Childers \ '**• 1873. S. G. Hamilton 1874. E. J. E. Childers 1876. H. C. F. Mason 1876. G. M. Edwards 1877. J. 0 . F. Murray 1878. B. L. Edwards 1879. B. L. Edwards 1880. F. W. Pember 1881. M. J. Eeudall 1882. H. G. Walters 1883. L. M. Woodward

Latin Lyrics.

G.O.Trevelyan) „

Latin Hexameters.

^ G. 0 . Trevelyan F. Storr j '^i'-H. Y. Thompson A. Pretor

M. W. Eidley M. W. Eidley C. D. Argles W. F. Shaw H. M. Lindsell H. M. Lindsell H. N. Abbot G. E. Woodward A. G. Murray A. J. Begbie E. S. Prior M. F. Argles S. G. Hamilton

S. G. Hamilton E. J. E. Childers

C. H. Hodgson

E. Stewart Brown E. B. Benson E. B. Benson E. F. Every W. G. Headlam W. G. Headlam

H. Y. Thompson A. Pretor ) „ M. W. Eidley ( "'«• A. T. Jebb M. W. Eidley C. D. Argles

J. Cos. Melville H. M. Lindsell B. Bosanquet H. N. Abbot A. G. Murray W. A. Meek

S. G. Hamilton S. G. Hamilton

S. G. Hamilton A. D. Godley G. W. Tallents F. H. Gibb E. Graham

J. A. Piatt E. B. Benson

L. M. Woodward

1884. THE HAKUOW ALMANACK. 37

THE PEEL MEDAL 1826. 1827. 1828. 1829. 1830. 1831. 1832. 1833. 1834. 1886. 1886. 1837. 1838. 1839. 1840. 1841. 1842. 1843. 1844. 1845. 1846. 1847. 1848. 1849. 1860. 1851. 1852. 1853. 1854.

Thomas Dyke Adand Nutcombe Oxenham C. Thornton B. Thornton H, Drury Alexander F. Merivale "W. S. Richardson E. C. Egerton Ben Collins Brodie W. Hen. Gregory B. Kent Karslake A. J. Beresford-Hope G. D. "W. Ommanney Thomas Hall H. M. Wilkins B. Peel T. B. Colenso Alex. Grant Thomas E. Chitty H. N. Oxenham C. H. ColUer H. B. Hutton F. V. Hawkins H. Montagu Butler J. Hyde D'Arcy H. 8. Cunningham W. H. Stone E. D. Wilson Ealph A. Barle

FOR 1865. 1866. 1857. 1858. 1869. 1860. 1861. 1862. 1863. 1884. 1865. 1866. 1867. 1868. 1869. 1870. 1871. 1872. 1873. 1874. 1875. 1876. 1877. 1878. 1880. 1881. 1882. 1883.

LATIN ESSAY. K. B. Digby Evelyn J. Hone G. 0 . Trevelyan St. L. F. Hope-Edwardes A. Pretor M. W. Bidley E. R. Bernard J. Jones G. B. Baker H. M. Linsdell C. L. Arkwright J. F. Gibson C. B. Heberden "W. A. Meek i W. Leaf G. H. Eendall C. Gore D. P. Barton H. 0 . D. Davidson S. G. Hamilton G. M. Edwards W. H. P. Eowe J. 0 . F. Murray A. Macnamara M. J. EendaU C. E. Broughton L. M. Woodward S. W. Meek

THE H O P E P E I Z E POR GREEK PROSE TRANSLATION.

1838. 1839. 1840. 1841. 1842. 1843. 1844. 1845. 1846. 1847. 1848. 1849. 1880. 1851.

•W.Mills I . H. L. Wingfleld C. Lloyd H. M. Wilkins T. B. Colenso Hon. Percy Smythe Alex. Grant C. S. Currer C. S. Currer Joseph S. Scott J. Hyde D'Arcy F. V. Hawkins H. Montagu Butler H, Montagu Butler

1852. 1853. 1854. 1855. 1856. 1857. 1868. 1869. 1860. 1861. 1862. 1868. 1864. 1865.

J. Wallace Hosier Robert C. Green E. W. Sergeant W. J. Hope-Edwardes St. L. F. Hope-Edwardes G. 0 . Trevelyan St. L. F. Hope-Bdwardes F. W. Stow M. W. Ridley M. W. Ridley E. Ridley W. F. Shaw H. M. Lindsell Hon. W. T. Kenyon

38 THE HARROW ALMANACK. 1884.

T H E H O P E P R I Z E P O B G R E E K P R O S E TRANSLATION {continued).

1866.

1867. 1868. 1869. 1870. 1871. 1872. 1873. 1874.

B. Bosanquet Hon. W. T. Kenyon "W. A. Meek W. A. Meek W. Leaf G. H. Eendall M. F. Argles C. G. "Wriglit A. D. Godley G. M. Edwards

1875. 1876. 1877. 1878. 1879. 1880. 1881. 1882. 1883.

G. M. Edwards G. M. Edwards E. Graham B. L. Edwards A. Macnamara E. Stewart-Brown W. H. Shorthose S. W. Meek L. M. Woodward

THE GREGOEY MEMORIAL MEDAL

1846. 1847. 1848. 1849. 1850. 1861. 1862. 1863. 1854. 1865. 1868. 1867. 1858. 1859. 1860. 1861. 1862. 1863. 1864.

FOR LATIN PROSE TRANSLATION. H. Nutoombe Oxenham 1866. Alfred S. Hewlett F. V. Hawkins C. S. Blayds H. Monta^ Butler W. H. Stone Eobert D. Wilson J. AVallace Hosier Lloyd Kenyon E. H. Allen Evelyn J. Hone G. 0 . Trevelyan H. Y. Thompson W. E. Currey J. A. Cruikshank B. E. Bernard E. Hidley H. M. Lindsell C. L. Arwkright

T H E J O N E S

1864. 1866. 1866. 1867. 1868. 1869. 1870. 1871. 1872. 1878.

1866. 1867. 1868. 1869. 1870. 1871. 1872. 1873. 1874. 1875. 1876. 1877. 1878. 1879. 1880. 1881. 1882. 1883.

J. F. Gibson B. Bosanquet T. G. 8. Mahon A. G. Murray W. A. Meek C. Gore M. F. Argles D. P. Barton S. G. Hamilton A. D. Godley G. W. Tallents G, M. Edwards A. Macnamara E. Graham H. M. BuUer F. W. Pember W. H. Shorthose L. M. Woodward W. G. Headlam

M E M O R I A L MEDAL FOR LATIN ELEGIACS.

C. L. Arkwright J. F. Gibson E. G. Tatton H. N. Abbot A. G. Murray A. T. BuUer M. F. Argles C. Gore D. P. Barton S. G. Hamilton

1874. 1875. 1876. 1877. 1878. 1879. 1880. 1881. 1882. 1883.

K. J. E. Childers H. C. F. Mason F. H. Gibb A. Macnamara E. B. Benson M. J. Eendall F. W. Pember L. M. Woodward W. G. Headlam W. H. W. Peel

1884. THE HARROW ALMANACK. 39

THE NEELD MEDAL 1862. 1853. 1854. 18S5. 1858. 1857. 1858. 1859. 1860. 1861. 1862. 1863. 1864. 1865. 1866. •1867.

W. H. Stone Coutts Trotter P. J. Wodehouse E. M'CaU C. Barclay St. V. A. Hammick W. J . B. Harrison Hon. E. Stanhope E. M. Bray J . H. Gibson-Craig J. T. Lang E. W. Walker C. W. Turner C. H. Prior W. A. Meek H. Mitchell

FOR 1868. 1869. 1870. 1871. 1872. 1873. 1874. 1875. 1876. 1877. 1878. 1879. 1880. 1881. 1882. 1883.

MATHEMATICS. A. G. Murray W. Leaf G. H. Kendall E. de C. Welch W. Phillipps H. J . Foster J . G. Lawson B. J . C. Morton E. D. Eendall D. E. Brown B. F. Buxton E. T. Dixon J. T. Best M. J. Eendall F. C. Burkitt C. S. Vaughan

THE BOTFIELD MEDAL FOR MODERN LANGUAGES.

1854. 1855. 1856. 1867. 1868. 1859. 1860. 1861. 1862. 1868. 1864. 1865. 1866. 1867. 1868.

Hon. A. Evelyn M. Ashley Hon. A, Lionel G. Ashley Archer H. Clive E. "W. Monroe J . A. Symonds H. J. L. Graham W. H. Christie F. A. H. Eliott C. G. Browne E.White P. Milbanke W. E. Lamaison Hon. G. W. G. Eussell T. G. 8. Mahon Loid A. Butler

1869. 1870. 1871. 1872. 1873. 1874. 1875. 1876. 1877. 1878. 1879. 1880. 1881. 1882. 1883.

E. J. Kennedy E. Milbanke G. D. Bland E. F. W. Brandt Viscount Anson E. L. Tomlin J. Heard F. S. Stevenson D. B. Brown C. L. Des (Jraz A. Macnamara B. C. V. Wentworth W. H. Shorthose F. C. Burkitt C. S. Vaughan

THE EBRINGTON PRIZE FOR MODERN LANGUAGES. 1854. 1856. 1856. 1857. 1858. 1869. 1860. 1861. 1862. 1863.

A. Waller A. Waller Herman C. Merivale A. E. Northey H. J. L. Graham Archer A. Clive T. ¥. OUffe Eeginald Ames E.White C. G. Browne

1864. 1865. 1866. 1867. 1868. 1869. 1870. 1871. 1872. 1873.

F. A. H. Eliott Hon. G. W. G. Eussell W. E. Lamaison Lord Arthur Butler E. Milbanke E, Milbanke G. D. Bland G. D. Bland E. Broadwood Eon.I.G.N.Keith-Falconer

40 THE HAREOW ALMAWACK. 1884.

T H E E B R I N G T O N P R I Z E F O R

1874. 1875.

1876. 1877. 1878.

1870. 1871. 1872. 1878. 1874. 1876. 1876.

Viscount Anson G. r . Fai rholme 1 „ „ H . W. Denne '^^• F . W. Leaf C. H . Seely A. Macnamara

M O D E R N L A N G U A G E S {continued).

1879. 1880. 1881. 1882. 1883.

C. L . Des Graz B . C. V. W e n t w o r t h B . W . Howard H . Vivian S. F . Mendl

THE RUSSELL MEDAL FOR THE STUDY OF SHAKESPEARE.

G. H . EendaU H . M. Temple E . E . Findlay C. J . 8 . Faulder E . J . B . Childers Hon . E . 0 . A. Milnes J . S. Sandys

1877. 1878. 1879. 1880. 1881. 1882. 1883.

H . Eashda l l T. G. Grahame J . A . P i a t t J . F . Waley G. F . P i a t t S. C. Far low E . M. But ler

VISCOUNTESS STRANGFOED'S PRIZE. GEOGRAPHY. 1877. 1878. 1879. 1880.

J . C. E . Branson C. L . BiokneU C. E . Mal le t t S. 0 . Far low

1881. 1882. 1883.

G. T. W a r n e r A. C. Hecht 0 . "W. Firebrace

THE BEAUMONT PRIZES FOR THE STUDY OF THE HOLY SCRIPTURES.

1861.

1862.

1863.

1864.

1865.

1866.

1867.

1868.

1869.

1870.

1871.

1872.

G. M . Argles M. E . Browne E . Bidley H . B . Hawkins G. B . Baker B . Deedes H . F . Polham J . M. Thomson J . M. Thomson C. L . Tupper H . N . Abbot E . T. Davidson C, B . Heberden 8. Polham liord Monteagle G. T. Pilcher W . A . Meek W . Leaf M. F . Argles M. F . Argles C. Gore W . B . Pa ton G. H . Trench W . 8. Sichel E . Norman

1873.

1874.

1876.

1876.

1877.

1878.

1879.

1880. 1881.

1882.

1883.

E . E . Fin lay J . G. Lawson E . J . E . Ohilders ) „ „ J . G. Lawson j " S -G. M. Edwai-ds E. 0, Elgood A. F . Hil ls J . 0 . F . M u n u y E. Graham B . D . Kendall H . M, BuUer B . L . Edwards \ E . H . Ledward '^'!-6. W . Blcnkin P . 8. Stevenson M . J . Eendal l J . C. HiU W . H . Shorthose H . E . Caldecott E . F . E . "Wigram E . M . But le r S. W . Meek

THE HAEKOW ALMANACK. 41

1865.

1866. 1867. 1888. 1869. 1870. 1871. 1872. 1873. 1874. 1875. 1876. 1877. 1878. 1879. 1880. 1881. 1882. 1883.

1867.

1868.

1869.

1870.

1871.

1872.

1873.

1874.

THE OXENHAM PRIZES.

GreeTi Epigram.

J. M. Thomson B. Deedes H. N. Abbot G. T. Q. Browne C. H. Prior A. J. Evans A. J. Evans C. Gore D. P. Barton D. P. Barton A. B. Godley H. Eashdall C. Torr Hon. J. "W. Portesoue P. W. Pember P. "W. Pember B. B. Benson B. F. Every

W. G. Headlam

1866.

1866. 1867. 1868. 1869. 1870. 1871. 1872. 1873. 1874. 1875. 1876. 1877. 1878. 1879. 1880. 1881. 1882. 1883.

THE BOURCHIER

H. N. Abbot J. Parsons A. W. Welch G. T. Piloher W. A. Meek W. licaf G. H. Eendall P. M. Balfour • A. W. Dunn ( "'«• C. Gore C. Haddock G. W. B. Eussell W. B. Paton) G. A. Duff i "1-W. S. Sichel M. G. Dauglish i B. L. Tomlin (' '«• M. G. Dauglish W. Bmbleton

1875.

1876.

1877.

1878.

1879.

1880.

1881.

1882.

1883.

Latin Epigram.

B. Deedes

C. L. Tapper

—-"W. Leaf D. E. Anderson G. W. E. Eussell G. W. B. Eussell "W. S. Sichel W. S. Siohel S. G. Hamilton H. C. P. Mason G. M. Edwards H. Eashdall P. W. Pember G. W. Blenkin E. B. Benson E. P. Every W. G. Headlam

PRIZES.

H. Eashdall T. B. Harbottle B. Graham T. Cox P. Gore-Browne C. H.,Seely H. M. Holland P. W. Leaf H. M. BuUer P. S. Stevenson C. E. Mallet J . C.HiU 1 B. E. Peto ( «=«• J. P. Waley P. C. BurMtt P. C. Burkitt P. A. Davis C. W. Prrebrace S. C. Farlow

42 THE HARROW ALMANACK. 1884.

MR. C Y E I L FLOWER'S MODERN LANGUAGE

1878.

1874. 1876. 1876. 1877. 1878.

1879. 1880. 1881. 1882. 1883.

1877.

1878.

1879.

1880.

Ji'reiich,

Viscount Anson

H o n . G. A. Anson C. A. Macdonald J . N . Wilkinson D . E . Brown A . Macnamara H . B . Stanford B . C. v . Wen twor th W . H . Shortliose C . E . Mallet H . Vivian

PRIZES.

1873.

1874. 1875. 1876. 1877. 1878.

1879. 1880. 1881. 1882. 1883.

German,

H o n . I . Kei th-Falconer \ W . S. Sichel } "**• J . H e a r d W . B . Fai rholme

F . H . Jackson C. L . Des Graz

B . C. V. "Wentworth F . C. Burk i t t P . H . Jackson C. W . Firebrace

MR. BRISCOE EYRE'S MUSIC PRIZES. 0 . Bradley L . P . M. B . Smith L . r . M. B . Smith B . Crossley E . Crossley F . C. Burk i t t F . C. Burk i t t F . H . Jackson

1881. 1882.

1883.

G. H . Gaudet F . H . Jackson H . W . Fosket t i C. Geiselbrecht \ " * ' H . W . Fosket t A . E . Cox

PEMBEE GRAMMAR AND PHILOLOGY PRIZES. 1879. 1880.

1881.

1845. 1846. 1847. 1848. 1849. 1850. 1851. 1852. 1853. 1854.

F . W . Pember R. B . Benson G. "W. Blenkin \ M. J . Eendal l j "2'-

M. J . Eendal l P . Hol land

1882.

1883.

J . H . F . Peile L . M. "Woodward 8. "W. Meek i "W. G. Head lam { '^«-

THE HEAD MASTER'S PRIZES. English Verse.

R. A . Darwin H . N . Oxenham H . N . Oxenham Viscount Sandon F . V. Hawkins H . S. Cunningham H . Montagu But ler E . D . AVilson E . D . "Wilson E . W . Sergeant

1845. 1846. 1847. 1848. 1849. 1850. 1851. 1862. 1853. 1854.

English Essay,

W, Mackenzie H . E . H u t t o n Thomas D . P i a t t Thomas D . P i a t t Dudley E . Saur in H . Mon tagu But le r H . Montagu But le r W, H . Stone J . "Wallace Hozier Ra lph A . E a r l i A . G. V. Harcour t ) "*•

THE HARBOW ALMANACK. 43

T H E H E A D M A S T E R ' S P H I Z E S

1855. 1866. 1857. 1858. 1859.

1860. 1861. 1862. 1863. 1864. 1865. 1866. 1867. 1868. 1869. 1870. 1871. 1872. 1873. 1874. 1875. 1876. 1877. 1878. 1879. 1880. 1881. 1882. 1883.

1856.

1867.

1868.

1869.

1860.

English Verse,

Q. 0 . Trevelyan G. 0 . Treyelyan Q. 0 . Trevelyan H . Y. Thompson E . F . Boyle -i M. W . E i d l e y j ' ^ * -M. W . Ridley W . J . Courthope H . B . Hawkins Marquis of B u t e B . Deedes B . Deedes C. L , Tupper R. T. Davidson J . W . Dauga r s W . W . Strickland A. J . Evans W . S. Sichel W . S. Sichel W . S. Sichel E . L . Tomlin H o n . R . 0 . A. Milnes A . F . Hil ls

J . A . P i a t t

E . B . Benson G. P . Bidder H . A. Brown B . Pares

{continued).

1855. 1866. 1857. 1858. 1869.

1860. 1861. 1862. 1863. 1864. 1865. 1866. 1867. 1868. 1869. 1870. 1871. 1872. 1873. 1874. 1875. 1876. 1877. 1878. 1879. 1880. 1881. 1882. 1883.

English Essay,

L . A . Tollemaohe G. 0 . Trevelyan F . Storr R. Jamieson J . A . Gruikshank

W . J . Conrthope F . H . J e u n e H . B . H a w k i n s H . F . P e l h a m H . J . Scovell H o n . W . T. Kenyon H o n . W . T. Kenyon H . N . Abbot A. G. Mur ray W . Leaf A . J . Evans 0 . W . B . Russell G. W . E . Russell W . S. Sichel F . W . Headley H . Bashdal l H . Eashda l l H . RashdaU

H . M . Buller F . S. Stevenson J . F . WaJey F . C. Burk i t t G. T. W a r n e r

For Natural Science.

A . T. Pa rke r J . Bradshaw A . M . Channel Capel H . Berger R. C. 0 . Lippincot t R . Jamieson H . M . Rogers E . M . Bray G. M . Aigles R. M . Bray T . W . Gribble

1861.

1862.

1863.

1864.

1865.

1866.

H . B . Hawkins J . Jones E . I . Sparks J . J . Curling F . "W. Longman H . G. Jeffreys L . N . "Walford Hon . H . A. Stanhope J . A . De IMorgau A. W . Welch Hon . F . A. E . Russell

44 THE HAEKOW ALMANACK. 1884.

T H E H E A D M A S T E R ' S P R I Z E S

1866. 1867.

1868.

1869.

1870.

1871.

1872. 1873.

1874.

1875.

1876.

1868. 1860. 1866. 1867.

G. T. Hloher C. H. Prior W. Leaf W. Leaf W. B. Clarke ^ N. T. Everardi'^J' A. W. Dunn E. J . Elgood H. de'C. Welch E. M. Balfour L. Evans C. W. Barclay F. B. Hb-weU E. Mahon J. B. Dugdale E. D. Eendall W. E. Bidiardson E. J. C. Morton J. Cavan C. Torr G. G. Tumbull

{continued).

1877. 1878. 1879. 1880. 1881. 1882. 1883.

1877. 1878. 1880.

1881. 1882. 1883.

, 1855. 1856. 1857.

F. Gore-Browne T. E. Presoott-Decle P. Holland G. P. Bidder Sir M. F. Montagu-Pollock F. C. Burkitt G. T.jWamer

Chemistry. A. Pagan E. T. Dixon H. H. Brown -i H. E. Darlington/'^«-H. G. Walters G. W. S. Farmer J . E. Findlay

For Military Science. Viscount Mahon Hon. E. Aberoromby Hon. E. Abercromby

jRjr General Merit. J. A. Symonds F. "W. Stow J. M. Thomson C. B. Heberden

1869.

1882.

W. A. Meek W. Leaf F. C. Burkitt

T H E H E A D M A S T E R ' S P R I Z E S FOR THE F I F T H F O R M .

1851.

1862.

1863.

1854.

1855.

1886.

1857.

1858.

Latin Prose H. E. Clay E. D. Wilson C. Grant C. Bruce K. Monro E. J. Hone K. H. Barnes H. H. Barter F. Storr St. L. Hope-Edwardes H. J. Monoreiffe E. Arkwright J. Holmes M. W. Eidley E. C. C. Uppincott A. T. Jebb

1859.

1860.

1861.

1862.

1868.

1864.

1865. 1866.

1868.

C. D. Argles H. W. Devas E. Kerrison J . Eussell H. M. Lindsell T. A. Freeman A. K. Finlay M. G. Davidson J. F. Gibson H. N. Abbot J. E. Graham C. B. Heberden Lord Arthur Butler E. E. 0 . Bridgeman L. H. C. Jackson M. F. Ajglea

THE HAEBOW ALMANACK. 45

T H E H E A D M A S T E R ' S P R I Z E S

1868. 1869.

1870.

1871. 1872.

1873.

1874.

1876.

1876.

1862.

1863.

1864.

1866.

1866.

1867. 1868.

1869.

1870.

1871.

1872.

1827.

L. F. Everest F. M. Baker D. P. Barton D. H. I/ambert C. S. Bayley A. D. Gtodley 6. W. Tallents H. C. F. Mason H. L. P. Elles E. P. Crawfurd Hon. G. A. Anson E. M. Merewether) A. I.-Whitaker j " ^ ' F. E. Bushell A. Macnamara R. B. Benson M. J . Eendall

Zatin A. Finlay B. Deedes > J . C. Melvillj'^«-C. B. Black Hon. W. T. Kenyon -i J. E. P. Gooden i '**• J . F. Gibson Marquis of Bute Hon. G. 0 . M. Bridgeman T. G. S. Mahon A. T. BuUer H. Mitehell J . Baillie-Hamllton C. Gore M. F. Argles F. M. Baker J . W. Martin A. T. Kent J. F. Kershaw A. T. Kent J . F. Kershaw H. C. F . Mason H. C. F. M^on Hon. B. 0 . A. Milnes

{continued}. 1877.

1878.

1879.

1880.

1881.

1882.

1883.

Verse

1878.

1874.

1875.

1876.

1877.

1878.

1879.

1880.

1881.

1882.

1883.

M. J. Eeudall F. S. Stevenson J. H. F. Peile E. F. Every L. M. Woodward E. M. BendaU ) A . J . Eichardsonj'^*-W. Q. Headlam S. W. Meek W. G. Headlam E. M. Butler ) B.H. EendaUJ"^*' N.Smith H. H. Joachim S. H. Butler ) J . F. Williams ('^*-

E. M. Middleton E. P. Crawfvird E. P. Crawfurd P. W. St. How •) F. C.E.Childersj*«• F. W. Pember A. Macnamara E. B. Benson M. J . Bendall M. J. Eendall E. F. Every E. F. Every W. H. Grifiath L. M. Woodward H. E. Darlington H. E. Pember W. E. W. Peel W. G. Headlam A. K. Wataon A. G. Peel H. H. Joachim A. G. Peel ) J . F . Williams J ' *-

LYON SOHOLAE. H. Nutcombe Oxenham F. L. Fopham

1828. W. Huyshe Foster B. Jodrell

46 THE HARBOW ALMANACK. 1884.

L Y O N SCHOLARS {continue^.

1829. 1830.

1831. 1832.

1833.

1834.

1835. 1836. 1837.

1888.

1839. 1841. 1842.

1844. 1845. 1846. 1847.

1848.

1849.

1850.

1830. 1831. 1835.

1839. 1844. 1846. 1848. 1850. 1852. 1855. 1856. 1859.

C. T. Cunningliam G. H. Pearson E. Thornton A. F. Merivale J . E. Godley G. S. Eichardson E. C. Egerton J . Leslie T. F. Kent C. T. Wilson W. Gregory G. H. Empson E. K. Karelako A. J . Berestord-Hope J. E. Ourrer G. D. W. Ommanney W. Mills F. Peel T. B. Colenso W. Spotteswoode Alex. Grant Edm. Blayds C. H. Collier Jos. S. Scott F. V. Hawkins A. S. Hewlett J. W. Chui-oh H. Montagu Butler i T. C. Baring j **• J . H. D'Arcy

1850. 1851. 1853.

1854. 1855. 1856. 1857.

1858. 1859.

1860.

1861. 1862.

1863. 1864. 1865.

1866. 1867. 1868. 1869.

1870. 1872. 1874.

H. G. Monroe C. J. Monroe "W. H. Stone E. D. Wilson Coutts Trotter E. MeCaU F. Storr A. N. Channell St. L. F. Hope-Edwardes A. Pretor F. W. Stow W. E. Currey E. M. Bray J. T. Prior F. H. Jeune J . Jones C. D. Argles J . M. Thomson B. Deedes H. M. LindseU A. Latham B. Bosanquet H. N. Abhot W. I«af W. A. Meek A. T. Buller C. Gore Viscount Ehrington G. W. TaUents

SAYER SCHOLAES. H. Drury I. S. Meade B. H. Drury J . W. FerguBson T. HaJls C. Soames E. Haiman Spencer Percival E. T. Hoare C. H. Monro P. J . Wodeliouse H. Y. Thompson H. W. Steel

1860. 1861. 1864. 1866. 1868. 1870. 1871. 1874. 1880. 1881. 1882. 1883.

C. H. Cunningham J. T. Lang H. A. Beechcroft C. H. Prior G. E. Woodward E. S. Prior B. P. Baily F. W. Headley C. E. Broughton C. M. Mintom H. E. Caldecott H. V. Stuart

1884. THE HAKROW ALMANACK. 47

1839. 1840. 1843. 1844. 1845. 1846. 1847. 1862. 1853. 18S5. 1857. 1869. 1861.

1862. 1864.

1840. 1843. 1851. 1856. 1861.

1852. 1866. 1858. 1861. 1864. 1867.

1864. 1867. 1871. 1874.

1870. 1873. 1876.

NEELD SCHOLAES. G. Cherry C. Lloyd H . D a y C. S. Currer H . N . Oxenham H . E . H u t t o n D . E . Saurin A. M. Curteis E . W . Sergeant K . E . Digby E . H . Lockhar t M . W . Ridley E . Eidley G. B . Eeid ' G. B . Baker Hon . W . T. Kenyon

GREGORY H . M. Wilkins Hon . Percy Smythe H . Montagu But ler G. 0 . Trevelyan M . W . Hidley

SPENCER

J . "Wallace Hosier "W. Hudson H . Y. Thompson H . B . Hawkins M. G. Davidson A. G. Mumay

BOTFIELD H . F . Pe lham C. B. Heberden M. E. Argles B . J . E . Childers

1868.

1867.

1872.

1873.

1874.

1875.

1877. 1878. 1880. 1881. 1883.

C. L . Tupper C. B . Heberden H . S. Hoare G. T. Piloher C. G. W r i g h t E . J . E . Childers D . P . Bar ton J . E . GiU W . J . Tanne r M . G. Daugl ish H . W. Greene C. E . Hewle t t H . Eashda l l E . Graham F . S. Stevenson P . Hol land G. C. Joyce

SCHOLARS. 1866. 1869. 1873. 1877. 1881.

J . M . Thomson W . Leaf S. G. Hami l ton A. Macnamara M. J . Eendal l

SCHOLARS. 1870. 1871. 1872. 1876. 1880. 1882.

C. Gore C. G. 0 . Br idgeman C. G. "Wright F . H . Gibb E . Stewart -Brown H . G. "Walters

SCHOLARS. 1875. 1877. 1880. 1883.

H . C. P . Mason J . 0 . F . M u r r a y E . B . Benson L . M . "Woodward

LEAP SCHOLARS. G. H . Eendal l A . D . Godley G. M . Edwards

1879. 1882.

F . "W. Pember J . H . F . Peile

48 THE UARROW ALMANACK. 1884.

HEAD MASTER'S SCHOLAES. 1854. 1855. 1857. 1862. 1869. 18T2.

K. B. Digby E. J . Hone J . Symonds J . P. Powyer B. J. Elgood W. Phaiippa

1873. 1875. 1877. 1879. 1881. 1882.

H. Leaf B. J . C. Morton D. E. Brown B. P. Buxton J . C. HiU J. T. Best

IN MODERN STUDIES. WILLIAM ROUNDELL SCHOLAR.

1881. P. C. Burkitt

ANDERSON SCHOLAR.

1879. G. W. Blenkin S. W. Meek

IN MEMORIAM GUIELMI CLAYTON CLAYTON. 1879. E. T. Dixon 1882. C. S. Vaughan

BESSBOROTJGH SCHOLAR.

1883. E. P. E. Wigram

^ c ^ 3 } e ^ -

1884. THE HAUEOW ALMANACK. 49

UNIVERSITY HONOURS.*

1882-1883.

IN the following list the Houses marked by an asterisk are those which have changed their designations.

The Eev. G. W. Warner's became in 1854 the Eev. S. A. Pears', and the Summer quarter of the same year B. II. Vaughan's, Esq., after the Summer quarter of 1866 W. J. Hull's, Esq., and in Sep., 1880 J. Stogdon's, Esq.

The Rev. J. JV. Simpkinson's became in 1855 the Ecv. 7'. H. Steel's, and in Sep. 1881 E. E. Bowen's, Esq.

The Rev. Dr. VaugJian's became in 1860 the Eev. H. M. Butler's. The Eev. W. Oxenham's became in 1864 the Eev. S. F. WestcoU's, and

in the Summer term of 1870 H. E. Hutton's, Esq.

The Eev. B. H. Drum's became in 1864 C. F. Holmes', Esq.

The Eev. E. H. Bradhy's became in 1868 A. G. Watson's, Esq.

G. F. Harris', Esq. became in 1869 the Eev. F. W. Farrar's, and in 1871 E. B. Hayward's, Esq.

The Eev. F. W. Farrar's became in 1869 the Eev. E. M. Young's, and January 1878 A. 0. Tosswill's, Esq.

The Eev. H. W. Watson's became in May 1866 H, E. Hutton's, Esq., in May 1870 Eev. J. A. Cruikshank's, in Janimiy 1877 J. Stogdon's,'Esq,., and in Sep. 1880 O. Colbeck's, Esq.

B. B. Hayward's, Esq. became in 1871 Geo. Grijith's, Esq.

The Eev. S. Middlemist's became in January 1877 the Eev. J. A. Cruiksliank's.

The Eev. F. Bendall's became in May 1881 the Eev. W. D. Bushdl's.

The Eev. B. F. Westcott's became in January 1864 E. E. Bowen's, Esq., and in Sep. 1881 the Eev. T. Field's.

The Eev. W. D. BusheU's became in May 1881 F. E. Marshall's, Esq.

A new House was opened by G. H. Hallam, Esq., in Sep. 1880.

* For honours of previous years see former Almanacks,

50 THE HARROW ALMANACK. 1884.

J. A. Hat t

Bgerton Stewart Brown

G. W. Blenkin

A. Hacnamara

J . 0 . F. Murray

J . 0 . F. Murray

J. 0 . F. Murray

J. F. 0 . Murray

G. W. Blenkin

M. J . EendaU

L. M. Woodward

F. C. Burkitt

J. A. Hat t

M. J . BeudaU

Hastings Bashdall

J . H. F. Peile

JULY 1882—JniY 1883.

Cambridge.

Dr. Butler's

Dr. Sutler's

Dr. Sutler's

Sir. Watson's

Mr. RendalVs

Mr. SendalVs

Mr. Kendall's

Mr. Sendall's

Dr. Butler's

Mr. SusheU's

Mr. Watson's

Mr. Watson's

Dr. Butler's

Mr. Bushett's

Oxford.

Dr. Butler's

Mr. Stogdon's

First Class in Classical Tripos (Scholar of Trinity)

First Class in Classical Tripos (Scholar of Trinity;

First Class in Classical Tripos (Scholar of Trinity, and Bell University Scholar)

Honourably mentioned for the Chancellor's Medals (Scholar of Trinity)

First Class in Theological Tri­pos and Prize for Hebrew (Scholar of Trinity)

Crosse University Scholarship (Theological) (Scholar of Trinity)

Bachelors* Carus Greek Testa­ment Prize (Scholar of Trinity)

Scholefield Prize for Greek Testament and Septuagint (Scholar of Trinity)

Foundation Scholarship at Trinity College (Exhibitioner of Trinity)

Foundation Scholarship at Trinity College (Exhibitioner of Trinity)

Minor Scholarship at Trinity College

Minor Scholarship at Trinity College

Prize for Beading at Trinity College

Dealtry Prize for Greek Testa­ment at Trinity College (Scholar of Trinity)

University Prize for the Eng­lish Essay (Scholar of New College)

Proxime Accessit for the Hert­ford University Scholarship (Scholar of Corpus Christi)

1884. THE HARROW ALMANACK. 51

Oxford—Continued.

Royal GeographicEft Society.

S. C. Farlow Dr. Butler's Gold Medal for Political Geo­graphy (Strangford Silver Medallist 1880, and Silver Medallist of the Royal Geo­graphical Society 1882)

Royal Military Academy, Woolwich.

H. L. Kirk Dr. J3utle?-'s Passed in Sixteenth J. C. "Wray Mr. Button's Passed in Twenty-seventh

Miscellaneous.

Herbert H. Brown Home Boarder Gk>ld Medal for Practical Che­mistry (Senior Class) at University College, London

Herbert H. Brown Home Boarder Gold Medal for Anatomy Herbert H. Brown Hovie Boarder Gold Medal for Hiysiology Herbert H. Brown Home Boarder Cluff Memorial Prize for the

best Student during Two Years in Anatomy, Physio­logy, and Chemistry

5 2 THE HABEOW ALMANACK. 1 8 8 4 .

HARROW SCHOOL LIBRARY, 1884.

The following regitlations were drawn up on the 13/A Apnl, 1866, hy Mr. J. F. MarillieVj then Librarian.

T H E Libra ry is considered as the sole inalienable proper ty of the Monitors for t he t ime being, and as such is commended to their especial care, assisted by the l i b r a r i a n .

The Library is a t all t imes accessible to those Monitors who may be disposed to read therein .

Books may be taken o u t ; and i t is earnestly requested, wi th a view to the general accommodation, as well as the safe keeping of them, t h a t on no account, t he Monitor removing a volume do omit to enter i ts Title, his own Name, and da te of i-emoval, in t he Librar ian ' s book, and a second da te on his re tu rn ing the same. Note 1. N o Book of general reference, Maps , Chronology, Encyclopcedia,

Lexicon, or Dictionary, can be i-emoved from the L i b r a r y ; and no Book whatever belonging thereunto can be used in School for the purposes of Lessons.

Note 2. The Monitors a r e requested t o confine thei r accustomed privi­lege of lending the Books to those above the Shell, and to hold themselves responsible for the safe re tu rn of Books t hus lent .

I t is ent reated t ha t , accorded to ancient custom, every one who leaves Har row School above the Fou r th Form will contribute some Book or set of Books, for t he benefit a n d progressive increase of t h e L i b i a r y ; and the Senior Monitor is requested occasionally to offer this to the notice of those abou t to leave, and by let ter to those who have left the School.

Tlie Librar ian , Mens . Gustave Masson, Harrow, will receive any present of the above na tu re , enter i t in his Catalogue, and place it in t he Library . I t is fur ther requested t ha t the Donor will, when prac­ticable, inscribe his au tograph in t he volume.

Harrow, January, 1881.

V A U G H A N L I B R A R Y R U L E S , 1866.

ADMISSION.

1. The Monitors alone have t he privilege of access to the Library a t all t imes .

2. Al l the other Members of t he School have access to the Library a t open hours , v i z , :

1884. THE HABROW ALMANACK. 53

On Tuesdays and whole holidays from 10 to 1, from 4 to 6, and fmm 6.30 to 8.

On Half Holidays from 4 to 6, and from 6.30 to 8. On -whole School days from 1.30.to 3.30.

The Libraiy is closed during the time occupied by meetings of the Debating Society.

TAKING OUT BOOKS.

4. The Monitors alone have the privilege of taking out books. 5. No Monitor may have in his possession more tlian five volumes

at a time. 6. Each Monitor on taking out a book must enter its title, his own

name and the date of removal, in tlie book kept for the purpose ; and, on returning it, must place it in the hands of the Sub-Librarian, and enter a second date.

7. All books must be returned at the end of each quarter. 8. The following books may not be taken out: All books of reference, such as Lexicons, Dictionaries, Encyclo-

psedias, Atlasses, &e. All Manuscripts, Illustrated Works, or Collections of Engravings. All copies of Prolusiones. All books directly bearing on any School Work, compulsory on

voluntary, for the time being. 9. Any Monitor transgressing any of the above rules shall pay a fine

of five shillings.

PRESEiJTS.

10. It is entreated that, according to the ancient custom, every one who has the privilege of accossto the Library will, on leaving the Sdiool, contribute some book or set of books, and that the donor will, when practicable, inscribe his autograph in the volume. The Librarian, Mons. G. Masson, will receive any present of the above natui-e for the Library.

The Vaughan Library is commended to the especial care of the Monitors for the time being: and it is hoped that they will always endeavour to secure the faithful observance of these rules.

- ^

54 THE HAEROW ALMANACK. 1884.

BOOKS PRESENTED BETWEEN SPEECH DAY 1882, AND SPEECH DAY 1883.

The Rev. Dr . Chotzner 's M o d e m Juda i sm, a ") Lecture . 8vo. Belfast, 1876

The Bev. Dr . Chotzner 'e Die Lieder des Mirza-Schaffy. 12mo. Breslau, 1868

The Rev: Dr . Chotzner 's H u m o u r and I rony of the Hebrew Bible. 8vo. Har row, 1883 ...

Luehino dal Verne : Giappone e Siberia. 4to. Milano, J882

Fen ton (John) : Ear ly Hebrew Life, a Study in Sociology. 8vo. London, 1880

The Archbishop of Dubl in : Gustavus Adol-p h u s and other Lectures. Second Edi t ion. 8vo. London, 1880

The Archbishop of Dubl in : Synonyms of t he New Testament . N in th Edi t ion . 8vo. London, 1880

The Archbishop of Dubl in : Notes on the Parables . Four teen th Edit ion, 8vo. Lon­don, 1882

The Archbishop of D u b l i n : St. August ine , a n {-The Authors . In te rpre te r of Scripture. 8vo. London, 1851

Bal lard (R) : The Solution of the Pyramid Problem.. 8vo. New York, 1881

Masson (G.) : Choice Readings from French His tory . Vol . 3. 8vo. London, 1882 ...

Thorn ton (P. M . ) : Foreign Secretaries of t he Nineteenth Century to 1880. 3 vols. 8vo. London, 1882

Beresford-Hope (A. J . B.) : Worsh ip a n d Order. 8vo. London, 1883

Beresford-Ho^e (A. J . B . ) : The Brandre ths . Second Edi t ion . 8vo. London, 1883

Rendal l (the Rev. F.) : The Epist le to the Hebrews, in Greek a n d Engl i sh , wi th critical notes . 8vo. Ijondon, 1883

Noel (the H o n . R o d e n ) : A lit t le Child's Mon­umen t . 8vo. London, 1881

Merivale (Herman) : The Whi t e Pilgrim and other Poems. 8vo. London, 1883 ...

The Leisure H o u r for 1882, 8vo. London . Passages from the Life and Wri t ings of

Wil l iam Penn. 8vo. Philadelphia, 1883... Barclay's View of Christ ian Doctrine. 8vo. \ The Edi to r .

Philadelphia;, 1882 Passages from the Life and Wri t ings of

George Fox . 8vo. Philadelphia, 1881 Dr . Badger ' s Engl ish-Arabic Dictionary. 4:to.

London, 1881 Mrs . Alford's Life of Dean Alford. 8vo.

London, 1873 Mrs . LyelPs Life of Sir Charles Lyell . 2 vols.

8vo. Ijondon, 1881 Serpa K n t o : How I crossed Africa (Eng.

Trans.) 2 vols. 8vo. London, 1881 Morley's Life of Cobden. 2 vols. 8vo. L o n ­

don, 1881 H . Melvill.

F . Ayr ton .

J . H . F a r m e r .

A . Whi te l aw.

1884. THE HAKBOW ALMANACK. 55

Encyclopaedia Br i tanniea . Vol . xiv. 4to. Ed inburgh , 1882

Kingsley (the Eev. C . ) : The Water -Babies . 8vo. London, 1882

Howi t t ("W.): Visits to Remarkable Places. 2 vols. 8vo. London, 1856

Hayward ' s E m i n e n t Sta tesmen and "Writers. 2 vols. 8vo. London, 1881

Nordenskiuld 's Voyage of t he Vega. 2 vols. 8vo. (Eng. Trans . ) London, 1881

Morris (Lewis ) ; The Epic of Hades . I l lus ­t ra ted Edi t ion. 8vo. London, 1882

Morris (Lewis ) : The Ode of Life. 8vo. Lon­don, 1881

Repor t of the Ind ian Famine Commission. 4 vols. Fol . London, 1881, 1882

Transact ions of t he New Zealand Ins t i tu te . Vol. xiv. 8vo. Well ington, 1882

Yr iar te (Charles) : Florence. Fol . Par i s , 1881 Shairp 's Aspects of Poet ry . 8vo. London,

1861 Huckin (Rev. Dr.) Sermons. 8vo. London.

(No date.) Houghton (Rev. W . ) : Bri t ish Fresh W a t e r

Fishes . 2 vols. Fo l . London. [No date.) D'Alber t i (H. N . ) : New Guinea : W h a t I did

and wha t I saw. 2 vols. Svo. London, 1880

Saintsbury (G.) : A Short His tory of French L i te ra tu re . Svo. Oxford, 1882

Saintsbury (G.) : Specimens of French Li te r ­a ture . 8vo. Oxford, 1883

Fa raday ' s Exper imenta l Researches in Elec­tricity. 3 vols. Svo. London, 1839, 1844, 1855

Shorthouse's J o h n Inglesant . 2 vols. Svo. London, 1882

D u Chaillii 's l a n d of the Midnight Sun. 2 vols. Svo. London, 1881 ...

Steel (Rev. T . H . ) : Sermons preached in t he Chapel of H a r r o w School, a n d elsewhere. Svo. London, 1882

Kingsley (H.) Novels. 9 vols. 8vo. London. (Nodate.).

L a d y Bloomfield : Reminiscencies of Court and Diplomatic Life. 2 vols. Svo. London, 1882

Let te rs and Papers , Foreign and Domestic, on t he Reign of H e n r y V H I . 4to. Vols. i.—xi. London, 1862—1880

Bai rd ' s Rise of t he Hugueno t s . 2 vols. Svo. London, 1880

Michelet ( J . ) : The Insect (Eng. Ti-ans.) Svo. London, 1875

Michelet ( J . ) , The Bird (Eng. Trans.) Svo. London, 1879

Davenpor t A d a m s : The Bird Wor ld . Svo. London, 1880

Donors.

G. H . HaUam.

H . F . Barclay.

F . C. Burk i t t .

E . M. Daniell .

J . H . F . Peile. \ New Zealand Govern­

ment . F . Davis.

Anonymous.

E . F . Wes ton .

J H. Gr«en.

!Clarendon Press

Delegates.

H . G. Wa l t e r s .

G. A. Whi te law.

Mrs . Steel.

j H . M. Broughton and ( W . Moncreiffe.

I F . H . Jackson.

i The Deputy-Keeper of the Rolls, th rough G. Masson.

V. H . Gat ty .

A. T. Petrocokino.

56 THE HARROW ALMANACK. 1884.

Leslie Stephen 's H o u r s in a Library , series 2 a n d 3. 8vo. London, 1879, 1881

K e a r y {A. and E.) : The Heroes of Asgard. 8vo. London, 1880

F reeman ' s reign of Wil l iam Eufus . 2 vols. 8vo. Oxford, 1882

Fox ' s Acts and Monuments , 2 vols. Fol . London, 1596

Lord Crawford and Balcarres : The Ea r ldom of M a r in Sunshine and in Shade. 2 vols. 8vo. London, 1882

The Duke of Ai-gyll: The Eas te rn Question. 2 vols. 8vo. London, 1879

At las of M o d e m Geography. Fol . London, 1877. (Useful Knowledge Society.)

Fei^Tisson's Tree and Serpent "Worship. Fol . London, 1868

Vaughan (the Rev. D r . ) : Leicester Sermons. 8vo. London, 1853

Skeat ' s Concise Etymological Dictionary of" the English Language . 8vo. Oxford, 1882.

Reclus {Elisee) : Nouvelle g^ographie univer-selle. 8vo. Vols 1—8. Par i s , 1875—1882

Desjardins (Ernest) : G6ographe de la Gaule Eomainc . 2 vols. 8vo. Par is , 1876

Longnon (Augus te ) : G^ographe de la Gaule. 8vo. Par i s , 1878

Long (George) : Engl ish Translat ions of M a r ­cus Aurel ius a n d Epictetus . 2 vols. 8vo. London, 1877, 1881

Arber (Edward) : A n Engl ish Gamer . Vols. 4—7. 8vo. Bi rmingham, 1882, 1883

Eecueil de fao-similes a I 'usage de I'Ecole des Chartps, fascic, 2. fo. Pa r i s , 1882

Godwin's Civil W a r in Hampsh i re . 4to. Lon­don, 1882

D u r u y (Victor) : Histoire des Eomains . 8vo. V o l s . Par is , 1883

" The A u t h o r of ' Mary Powell ,*" A Noble Purpose Nobly W o n . 8vo. London, 1870

Li t t ledale (Rev. Canon) : Pla in reasons agains t joining the Church of Rome. 8vo. London, 1881

Bui^guy (G. F.) : Grammaire de la langTie d 'Ou. 3 vols. 8vo. (bound in one). Berlin, 1869

Gay (Victor) : Glossaire archeologique du moyen Age et de la Renaissance, fascic. 1. 4to. Par i s , 1882

Calvin's Le t te rs (Eng. Tran . ) 2 vols. 8vo. Edinburgh , 1855, 1857

D'HC'ricault (Charles) : L a R(?volution. 8vo. Par is , 1882

M'Quoid (K. 8.) : Through Br i t t any . 8vo. London, 1882

The 8x>eaker's Commentary : New Tes tament , vol. 1, and Old Testament , 7 vols. 8vo. London, IS"^?—1881

Rule 's Life and Times of Saint Anselm. 2 vols. 8vo. London, 1883

Donors.

F . Prescott-Decie.

M . J . RendaU.

H . Brown.

F . Bennet t .

S. C. Far low.

C. Geiselbrecht.

J . C. Wilbee.

Gugtave Masson.

1884. THE HAKKOW ALMANACK. 57

Early English Text 8orAe.ly*s Publications :• ^ The fifty earliest Englisli Wi l l s of t he Court

of Probate . 8vo The English Char lemagne Romances. P a r t s

S a n d ? . 8vo Beowulf: Autotypes of t he tinique Cotton

M8S. 8vo Transact ions and Proceedings of the Society

of Biblical Archseology. 19 vols. 8vo. ... Sixty-four Pamphle t s . Bound in 3 vols. 8vo. Twenty Pamphle ts on Philological Subjects.

Bound in 2 vols. 8vo Ducange 's Glossarium mediae et infimse L a t -

ini tat is . New Edit ion. 4to. fascic i.—vii. The Speaker 's Commentary (New Testaments

V o l . 8 . 8vo. London, 1881 Perry ' s Greek a n d E o m a n Sculpture. 8vo.

London, 1882 Benham(TheBev ."W.) : Catherine and Craw-

f u r d T a i t . 8vo. London, 1882 Mrs . George But le r ' s Life of Oberlin. 8vo.

London, 1882 The Life of J a m e s Clerk Maxwell , by Lewis

Campbell and W . Game t t . 8vo. London, 1883

Annua l Eegis ter for 1882. 8vo. Ijondon, 1883 Weekly Edi t ion of " T h e T imes . " Vol . 6.

Fol . Loudon, 1882 Carl Pe te r ' s Chronological Tables of Greek

History. (Eng. Trans.) 4to. Oxford, 1882 Chromolithographs of the Arunde l Society.

1883 Senior (W. Nassau) : Conversations a n d ^

Journa l s in Egypt . 2 vols. 8vo. London, 1 1882

Picturesque Palestine, Sinai', and Egyp t . V o l . 3 . 4to. London, 1882 ^

Sir Archibald Alison : M y Life and Wri t ings , t 2 vols. 8vo. London, 1883

Eichter (J . P . ) : Li te rary Works of Leonardo da Vinci. 2 vols. 8vo. London, ISSS ...

A r t Jou rna l , 1882 J MS. Sermon preached by the la te Archbishop ^

of Canterbury ('Dr. Tai t ) , a t t he re-conse- J crat ion of the Chapel, Al l Saints* Day, 1857 }

The las t Electoral Le t te r of Wi l l i am P i t t to ) the Vice-chancellor of Cambridge (MS.). [ J a n u a r y , 1804 )

A Gold " L i v r e T o u m o i s " of the K ing of Prance , J e a n I I

Au tograph Le t te r of Lord Nelson to the M a r ­quis Wellesley (Jtuie 3rd, 1802)

Poems recited m Charterhouse School, May 5th, 1825

Classical Educat ion Reforms, by Charles Hann K e n n e d y , M . A . 1837

Monody on t h e Dea th of t he E i g h t H o n . Charles J a m e s Fox , by Eichard Payne Knigh t . 1806—7

Gustave Masson.

Gustave Masson and C. Colbeck.

Dr . But ler .

Dr . But ler .

L ibrary F u n d .

Peel Memorial F u n d .

The Very Rev. the Dean of Windsor .

Percy M. Thornton.

Baron Alphonse Mallet.

Dr . But ler .

E . Walford, M.A.

58 THE HAKKOW ALMANACK. 1884.

Donors. Musre Cantabrigienses. 1810 -- Poema numismate a n n u o d igna tum, e t in

curia Cantabrigiensi reci ta tum, A . D . 1804. Auctore Gtul. Edv . P re tyman Tomline, Tr in . Coll

Oratio mimismate annuo Peeliano d igna ta et in Scholae Harroviensis Auditorio recitata L E . "Walford, M.A. die J u n . 1. A.D. MDCCCXXVI. Auctore Thoma Dyke Aeland. 1826

Poemata , praesidum Scholae Harroviensis praemiis donata , e t ibidem in Auditorio recitata, die J u l . vi. A .D. MDCCCXXVI. 1826..

Ode Aleaica. MDCCCXVI ^

A Chinese Birdcage • Two Naut i lus Shells .. , Pieces of the " R o y a l George," the " Mary / Lady Boui'cliier.

Rose," the " V i c t o r y , " t he " St. Vincent, '" and other interest ing relics ...

A Collection of " Harrow Relics " ; —

Autograph Le t te r of t he Marquis of Da l - 1 housie, Governor-General of Ind ia , to Dr . George Butler , Dean of Peterborough

A set of the " Prolusiones ," from 1823 to 1879. 10 vols. 8vo

A set of the " Contiones." from 1826—1871. !

ary / '.

X vol. 8vo. The Peel Medal Essays from 1826—1837. 1

vol. 8vo. The original "Te rcen tena ry V o l u m e , " wi th

Au tograph s ignatures . 1 v o l . 8vo. A Lis t of Boys admi t t ed to Har row School

by the Rev. Joseph Drury , D .D. , dur ing his head-mastership , 1785—1805

Correspondence respecting t he Foundat ion of the Sayer Scholarship and the Peel Medal, 1825—1827. 1vo l . 4to

"Pro lus iones Har rov iens ium," MS. 1820— 1822. 1vo l . 8vo

Edit ion of Horace used in School by the Rev. G e o i ^ Butler , D .D. , H e a d Master of Har row School 1805—1829. The MS. notes a re in his handwr i t ing

Gillies' Grecian His tory : Piize won a t Sid­ney Sussex College, Cambridge, Novem­ber 1791, by Geoi^e Butler , tet. 17, after­wards Head Master of Har row School 1805—1829 _

L Dr . Butler .

Por t ra i t of the Ear l of Bessborough, by H . "Weigall

A l a i^e number of Fr iends .

1 8 8 4 . THE HAllKOW ALMANACK. 5 9

HARROW SCHOOL DEBATING SOCIETY.

E S T A B L I S H E D 1846.

E X T R A C T F R O M T H E L A W S .

I . T h a t th is Society consist of the Monitors and Uppe r Six th Form cj; officio, and all such as sliall be elected according to the following regulat ions.

I I . T h a t the Monitors alone shall have all legislative and elective r ights .

I I I . Any member of the elective body may propose a candidate for admission to th is Society, to be voted for by ballot . One vote in five excludes.

I V . Seven electoral members to consti tute a quorum.

V I . No one below the Upper Fi f th Form may be proposed for ad ­mission into this Society.

V I I I . Debates are to be held after 4 p .m. on Tuesday.

I X . There mus t be a t least twelve members present to form a quorum for debate .

X . The Head of t h e School is Pres ident ex officio w i th a cast ing vote. X I I I . I n an adjourned Debate , t he subject shall be re-opened by the

Px-esident,

X r v . The second of t he School is Secretary ex officio. X V I . Every Moni tor failing to speak within the first four t imes of his

a t tendance after his admission, shall be excluded from the elective and legislative body dur ing the current Quar te r . Every other member so failing to be excluded from the Society; the enforcement of th is rule to be ent rus ted to t he President .

X V I I . No member except t he proposer of a motion to speak more t h a n once on the same motion, except to explain himself.

X V i n . N o member shall be allowed to read his speech.

X I X . Any member wishing to propose a subject for t he nex t Deba te is to signify t he same to the President a t the beginning of the meet ing. If more t h a n one subject be proposed, t h a t one shall be chosen which obtains a major i ty of the votes of the members present .

X X . Every member who proposes a subject mus t secure, before t he nex t meeting, a seconder, and a promise of opposition.

X X I I . Al l theological subjects are excluded.

X X V . The votes a t a division are to be t aken singly and verbally, by the Secretary.

60 THE HA Kilo W ALMANACK. 1884.

XXIX. AU members of this Society, after leaving the School, are to be considered as Honorary Members, and admitted to all the privileges of the non-elective body.

XXX. Masters of the School are to be admitted as Honorary Members.

XXXI. Every Monitor is permitted to introduce four strangers sub­ject to the following conditions:

1. They shall be members of the School. 2. They shall be such as have admittance to the Vaughan Library at

open times. 3. They shall not be permitted to address the Society, or to express

approbation or disapprobation of anything said. 4. The President may at his discretion order all strangers to with­

draw.

H. E. Pember G. Stephenson F. D. P. Caiaplin W. G. Headlam G-. C. Joyce A. K. Watson B. M. Butler "W. B. W. Peel B. H. Eendall C. D. Buxton H. E. Crawley 0 . M. Dalton

Fl-esident: S. W. Meek.

Secretary ; N. Ward.

Memhers : R. H. Forster H. K. Anderson K. 8. Andei-son B. Pares C. S. Vaughan P. H. Gates A. E. Cox E. P. Boutcher G-. R. Sandars R. Langdon-Down C. H. Gould H. H. Joachim

R, A. Sanders T. J. C. Tomlin H. A. B. Eattigan O. W. S. Farmer H. W. Armstead C. C. E. Woods C. H. Dent A. J. Rouse W. H. Duckworth W. W. Grantham

THE Tyro is complete in three volumes. This magazine was proceeded by the Triumvirate, the first number of which appeared Oct. 1st, 1859.

The Triumvirate is complete in two volumes. The Harrovian, a Literary and Philathletic School Paper, was issued

periodically from October 16,1869, to July 27,1872, when it ceased, being complete in 3 vols. Another School Paper, bearing the same title, was established ou November 2,1878, but it also ceased to be published with No. 26, on July 30, 1881.

The Han-ow Notes, a Literary and Philathletic School Paper, edited by R. de Courtney Welch, began to be published on February 24,1883, and has continued up to the present date, twelve numbers having been already issued.

1884. THE UAKROW, ALMANACK. 61

MUSICAL SOCIETY.

ESTABLISHED OCTOBER, 1857.

1883.

President: Rev. H. Montagu Butler, D.D.

Committee: Rev. J. A. Cruikshank {I'reasurer) J. Farmer, Esq. (Conductor) C. F. Holmes, Esq. (Auditor) E. "VV. Howson, Esq. (Secretary)

January to July. B. A. F. Grieve [Mr. Hutto7i's) G. W. S. Farmer [Jlr. Stogdon^s) H. W. Foskett (Mr. Cruikahauk's) G. Stephenson (3Ir. IVatsouKt) T. Greatorex (Mr. Bowen\s) A. R. Cox (Mr. Hutton's)

September to December. G. W. S. Farmer (Mr. Stogdori's) H. W. Foskett (Mr. Gruiks?iank's) G. Stephenson (Mr. Watson's) A. R. Cox (3lr. llutton's) N. "Ward (Mr. CruiJcshank^s) E. M. Butler (Dr. Butler's)

Violin Instructor—Herr Peiniger.

Brass Band Master—"Mx. Weston.

Flute and Clarionet Master—Mr. Carey.

Original Members: All the Masters TheVeryRev.C.J.Vaughan,r).D. Mrs. C. J. Vaughan Rev. Edwyn Arkwright H. J. L. Graham, Esq. W. E. Currey, Esq. E. Joy, Esq. J . R. HoUond, Esq., M.P. Rev. F. "W. Stowe T. W. Gribble, Esq. A. Joy, Esq. J. McD. Joy, Esq. E. Masson, Esq. G. Joy, Esq.

C, Deffell, Esq. The Rev. M. E. Browne R. C. Greatorex, Esq. Mrs. Greatorex Capel n . Bei^r , Esq. C. Dalrymple, Esq., M.P, C. Morris, Esq. J . H. Mun-ay, Esq. P. F. Bulkeley, Esq. F. J. H. Skene, Esq. H. R. T. Alexander, Esq. M. "Williams, Esq. T. Usbome, Esq.

62 THE HARROW ALMANACK. 1884.

The Society consists of all the past and present Masters and Members of the School.

The expenses of the Society are defrayed by a charge of three shillings made each Term to every boy in the School; by a fee of six shillings or three shillings respectively from those who use the Music Rooms for lessons on the Piano or other Instruments, by the sale of a few Tickets at each Concert, and by the Balance of Entertainments given in the Speech Room.

Practices are held for the various sections of the Society in places and at hours of which due notice is given from time to time. The Brass Band Practice, in the 1st and 3rd Terms of the Year, is usually on Tuesday Eve td i ^ ; the Orchestral Practice on Thursday Evenings.

One Concert is generally given each Quarter in the Speech Room. The School Musical Society was formed by a few members of the

School in 1857, who were in the habit of meeting together for instru­mental practice. During the first few years of its existence it was mainly supported by the untiring energy and generous liberality of the late Capel H. Berger, Esq.

In 1860, "Vocal Music was introduced and a Choir formed. In 1863, Singing Classes were established in most of the Houses. In 1870, Silking Classes were established at which new boys were to

attend for two Quarters, unless specially exempted. In 1876 this arrangement was so far modified that new boys were to have the alternative of attending Singing or Drawing Classes.

In 1871, a Brass Band was formed in connection with the Rifle Corps. In 1877 the New Organ was completed, and the first Concert given in

the New Speech Room. On the 27th of March, 1878, Mr. Parmer's new Oratorio," Christ and

His Soldiers," was performed for the first time in the Speech Room under the direction of the Society.

On November 23rd, 1883, Mr. Farmer's '* Cinderella," a Fairy Opera in four Acts, was performed for the first time in the School Speech Room under the direction of the Society.

The Glee Prize given annually by the Society was won in 1882 by Mr. Bushell's House.

A Prize for Madrigals, kindly offered to the Houses by Mrs. Hutton, was won by Mr. Bushell's.

PRIZE FOR TWELVE SINGING. GLEE PRIZE. 1881.—JIfr. BushelVs. \m).—Mr. BusJielVs. 1882.—i)r. Butler^a, 1881.—Jfr. BusheWs. 1883—i)r. Butler's. 1882.—Jfr. BushelVs.

1883.~Mr. Bowen's.

The Prize "Wreath, which was formerly awarded to the best Madrigal, will, for the future, be given for the best Glee.

1 8 8 4 . THE HARROW ALMANACK. 6 3

PROGRAMMES OF THE TERMINAL CONCERTS. Saturday^ March 17th, 1883.

H A N D E L ' S " Messiah " was performed instead of the usua l Concert.

Soloists: Miss Eleanor r a m o l , Miss Annie But te rwor th , Mr . Henry-Guy, Mr . H e n r y P y a t t . The Chorus, composed of M r . Stedman*s Choir Boys and a select Choir of Gentlemen. Organist: Mr . Thomas P e t t i t ; Conductor: Mr . J o h n F a r m e r .

Saturday, July 28th, 1883.

1. CHORALK " W a k e ! a w a k e ! " 2. SYMPHONY Andan te , Allegro J, Haydn. 3. SONG * ' 0 I s i s . " W. A. Mozart. 4. M A R C H " C o r n e l i u s . " Mendelssohn. 5. SONG " T h e two Grenadiers ." Schumann. 6. MiNUKT " S a m s o n . " G, F. Handel. 7. SONG " Cats and Dogs ." (E. E . B.) J. F. 8 Andan te . Ballet, and H u n g a r i a n March F. Schubert. 9. W A L T Z " D e r Eoman t ike r . " J. Launer.

S C H O O L S O N G S .

10 " F i v e Hundred Faces . " 11 " Wil low the K i n g . " 12 " B o y . " 1.3 " H o r s e Subsecivee." 14 " F o r t y Years O n . " 15 " Au ld L a n g Syne . " 16 " G o d save the Queen . "

Saturday, December Ibth, 1883.

1. CHORALE " All my hea r t th is n igh t rejoices ." 2. SYMPHONY, E flat Haydn.

(No. 1. Breitkopf and H a r t e l Edi t ion.) Adagio, Allegro, Con spirito and A n d a n t e .

3. G L E E *' In teger Vi tee ." Fleming, 4. SYMPHONY, E flat . . . (No. 2. Menuet to a n d Finale.) Haydn. 5. G L E E " D e p a r t u r e . " 6. SELECTIONS Andan te , Dances Schubert, 7. G L E E " The Red Cross K n i g h t . " Dr. Callcott. 8. SELECTIONS Menuet to and March , Handel. 9 " T h e Blue Bells of Scot land."

10 " Nursery Khymes Quadril les " (2nd set.) J. Farmer, 11. M A R C H W a r March , " A tha l i e . " Mendelssohn.

S C H O O L S O N G S .

12 " L y o n , of Preston, Yeoman, J o h n . " 13 " S h e was a Shepherdess." 14 " H e r o e s Angel ic ." 15 " Fa i r ies . " 16 " Har row u p on the H i l l . " 17 " O l d T o w l e r . " 18 " A u l d Lang Syne . " 19 " G o d save the Queen . "

64 THE HARROW ALMANACK. 1884.

HARROW SCHOOL SCIENTIFIC SOCIETY.

ON November 16th, 1865, a new Society called the Harrow Scientific Society was founded for the purpose of stimulating- an interest in Science and Natural History among the members of the School. The meetings are held once a fortnight on Thursday afternoons and evenings, and at each meeting one of the members reads a paper on some subject of general interest connected with Science. New members, after being proposed and seconded, are elected by the Committee, if they are pre­pared to guarantee their steady assistance in carrying out the aims which the Society has in view. Some of the members at every meeting exliibit various objects of scientific interest,—such as minerals, fossils, rare eggs, plants, butterflies, &c., or preparations for the microscope. It is hoped that chemical or other experiments may also be occasionally exhibited. Any member, on giving notice to the Secretaries, is allowed to introduce one friend.

As it will be one of the objects of the Society to form a Museum of Harrow Natural History and for this purpose to offer at least one annual prize for botanical or other collections, the co-operation of members of the School who are interested in these subjects will be cor­dially welcomed; and the Society will gladly receive communications from any one who has made any interesting discovery or observation in connection with the Botany, Entomology, &c,, of Harrow. The Sub­scription for each Term is one shilling, and the entrance fee one shilling.

RULES [Revised May, imi).

1. That the Harrow School Scientific Society consist of Honorary Members, Members, and Associates, who take sufficient interest in Scientific pursuits to guarantee their steady assistance in carrying out the objects of the Society. i

2. That the honorary members of the Society consist of those Masters who express a desire to join the Society, and others who may be elected by the Society,

3. That ordinary members be elected by the Committee, after having been duly proposed and seconded at an ordinary meeting of the Society.

4. That each member pledge himself to contribute in his turn, or when required by the Committee, a paper on some subject connected with science.

5. That the Committee be empowered to elect any boy as an associate for one term, and that any boy who has been elected as an associate for three successive terms, becomes, ipso facto, a member of the Society (or by reading a paper to the Society, if approved by the president).

1884. THE HARROW ALMANACK. 65

6. That associates shall not be liable to read papers before the Society, and shall have no vote on questions of administration, but shall be allowed to attend any of the ordijiary meetings and excursions of the Society.

7. That each resident honorary member, ordinary member, and asso­ciate, pay an entrance fee of I s . : and that the subscription for each term be Is. for each member, resident honorary member, and associate : which is to be paid to the treasurer at the first meeting of the Society in each term; at which meeting the treasurer shall lay before the Society an account of all expenses incurred.

S. That the affairs of the Society be conducted by a Committee, con­sisting of a president, ex-president, vice-president, two secretaries, treasurer, and five ordinary members of the Society; six members of Committee, of whom one at least shall be an officer to form a quorum for the election.

9. That the president and vice-president be appointed by the Com­mittee, annually, at the end of the summer term, or in the event of the resignation of either before that period, from among the Masters who shall be honorary members of the Society.

10. That it be the duty of the Committee to propose, at the last meeting but one of the summer quarter, members to flU the offices of secretaries, treasurer, and the other vacancies in the Committee for the following year, to be elected at the following meeting.

11. That any vacancy in the Committee, or in the office of secretary or treasurer, occurring at any other time than at the end of the summer term, be filled up in like manner, by a nomination at the ordinary meeting next following such vacancy, and by election at the next succeeding ordinary meeting.

12. That the committee be competent to fix the times of ordinary meetings and the papers to be read at each, and to authorize the ex­penditure of funds; but that all rules affecting the constitution of the society must be passed by a majority of tliose present at an ordinaiy meeting.

13. That any member on giving notice to the secretary be permitted to introduce a friend.

14. That any member or associate of the Society, who absents himself from three consecutive meetings without giving some reason to the president, shall be liable to a fine of one sliilling, which fines shall be collected by the Treasurer.

15. That every member on joining the Society sign the following declaration:—

60 THE HAKROW ALMANACK. 1884.

" I hereby promise to conform to the rulea, and to give my best assistance in carrying out the objects of the Harrow School Scientific Society, so long as I continue a member of the same."

16. That the members and associates endeavour to exhibit, at each meeting of the Society, some object of scientific interest.

17. That the objects of the Society be: to record scientific observa­tions to promote the formation of a Harrow School Museum of Natural; History and to encourage, by offering prizes or otherwise, the pursuit of science in the School.

(April 5th, 1879.) That Papers read before the Society by members or associates be left in the hands of the Secretary to facilitate the publica­tion of annual reports.

L I S T OF M E M B E E B . President: E. Graham, Esq., M.A.

Vice-Presidents: Eev. W. D. Bushell, M.A., G. Griffith, Esq., M.A.,

E. B. Hayward, Esq., M.A., F.E.S., 8. Lupton, Esq., M.A., F. E. Marshall, Esq., M.A.

Honorary Secretaries: G. "W. S. Farmer, H. A. B. Eattigan.

Honorary Treasurer: J. R. Findlay.

Committee: C. S. Vaughan H. W. Armstead H. K. Anderson W. W. Grantham H. W. Foskett

Hon. Members: C. F. Holmes, Esq., M.A. B. P. E. Curzon, Esq. "W. J. Bull, Esq., M.A. Allan Drummond, Esq. A. G. "Watson, Esq., D.C.L. E. Etheridge, Esq., F.E.S. H. E. Hutton, Esq., M.A. Eev. Dr. Farrar, F.E.S. Mens. G. Euault , Prof. Huxley, S.E.8. Mons. G. Masson, B.A. C. J. Leaf, Esq., F.L.8. E. B. Smith, Esq., M.A. C. Lestourgeon, Esq. Eev. J. A. Cruikshank, M.A. F. "W. Longman, Esq. J. Stogdon, Esq., M.A. F. Masson, Esq. G. H. Hallam, Esq., M.A. Prof. H. Nettleship, M.A. Eev. J. Eobertson, M.A. M. de Quartrefages, M.F.I. Eev. E. Gilliat, M.A. Prof. J. Euskin, M.A. C. Colbeok, Esq., M.A. E. Bruce Eussell, Esq. Eev. T. Field, M.A. Soden Smith, Esq. M. G. Glazebrook, Esq., M.A. Earl Spencer, K.G. H. O. D. Davidson, Esq., M.A. M. Tonge, Esq., M.D. E. W. Howson, Esq., M.A. Prof. J. Tyndall, F.E.S. J. W.Welsford, Esq., M.A. A. E. Wallace, Esq., F.L.S. J . Farmer, Esq. E. J . C. Welch, Esq.

. E. de C. Weloli. Esq. Matthew Arnold, Esq., D.C.L. E. N. Buxton, Esq. E. C. Bevan, Esq. H. B. Cotterill, Esq., M.A. Eev-. H. Botha,mley, M.A. Capt. Colomb, E.N. Eev. E. H. Bradby, D.D.

1884. THE IIAUKOW ALMANACK. 07

Members: O. C. Joyce E. H. Forster H. K. Anderson B. Laxigdon-Down

Associates : H. Atherley W. S. Anthony W. W. Ashley J . L. Benthall H. C. Buckingham G. H. Cheetham C. F. Crowden E. S. Clarke S. G. N. Da™ D. Darroch J . L. Findlay C. S. Forbes

The Second Eeport of the Scientiflo Society

A. A. Ainslie H. H. Grogan C. Stevenson H. H, Gordon

W. E. P . Jackson J . S. Leadbetter P. Langdon-Down C. Madver S. A. Mavrojani W. P. M. PoUok P. J. de Putron H. W. Eattigan L. Eobertson E. T. Saulez H. E. D. Wise

was published in Sept. 1868. The Third Eeport of the Scientific Society was published in July 1889. The Fourth Eeport of the Soientifio Society

IWi iMiii

was published in Har. 1871.

THE HARROW ALMANACK. 1884.

THE HAKEOW PHILATHLETIO CLUB.

ESTABLISHED 1863.

B U L E S O F T H E C L U B .

I. THE chief object of the Club shall be the encouragement and pro­motion of all Manly Sports and Exercises, and every Member shall con­sider himself pledged to the attainment of this object by all lawful means in his power. Under the head of manly sports and exercises shall be included Cricket, Eacquets, Football, Eaces, Jumping, Fencing, Gymnastics, Swimming, Skating, Quoits, and any other game that shall meet with the approbation of the Club.

II . The institution of Prizes for distinction in the various School Games shall come under the especial consideration of the Club.

n i . Admission to the Club to be confined to members of the Sixth and first three removes of the Fifth Forms, and those who have been two full terms in the Modem Lower Fifth Form.

rV. The Members of the Club to be restricted in number to thirty. V. The Head of the School shall be President of the Club ex officio. VI. The first ten Monitors and Captain of the Eleven shall be

members of the Club ex officio. V n . The Treasurer shall be that Member of the Committee who has been

longest in the Club {February 6(A, 1866); and it shall be the duty of the Treasurer to present the accounts of the Club to be audited by two or more members of the Committee^ at the end of each Term. {October lOthj 1870.)

1 8 8 4 . THE HARROW ALMANACK. 6 9

V i n . The Committee shall consist of eight Members inclusive of t he President and Treasurer .

I X . A t the end of each Te rm seven Members to ac t on t he Commit tee shall be elected, to hold office dur ing the n e x t T e r m ; a t t h e conclusion of which they shall be re-eligible.

X . The Club shal l have a room, in which al l periodicals approved by the Members shall be t aken in. This room shall be a t a l l t imes provided with a due supply of paper , pens, &c, and al l other mater ia ls for le t ter w r i t i n g ; as well a s all appliances for Chess a n d Backgammon. At tached to t h e R e a d i i ^ - r o o m shal l be a Library , t o be augmen ted by voluntary donations of Members leaving the School a n d others .

X I . Every Member of the Gluh sJiall, on leaving, consider it his duty to present a book to the Club; and every term a Librarian shall be elected by the members of the Cluh, (December 3rd, 1864.)

XII. A book shall be provided in which the names of those who take read-ing-books from the Philathletic Library are to be written, with the date of taking and returning the same; no volumes to he kept more than a week. [March Uh, 1861.)

X m . A Member of the Club shall be appointed every Term (or continued in his appointment) to keep the record of House Matches and School Prizes in a book provided for that purpose, [May Qth, 1861.)

XTV. A m e e t i i ^ of the Members shal l be held wi th in t he first week of each mon th for t he despatch of all business connected wi th t he objects of the Club.

N . B . Attendance at these meetings shall he compulsory, on pain of a fine of one shilling and sixpence.

X V . The President shall have t he power of convening a t any t ime a n extraordinary meet ing of t he Club.

N . B . At the business meetings no remarks shall he allowed not immediately connected with the objects of the meeting, and any member making such remarks shall he called to order by the President.

X V I . The election of new Members shal l t ake place by ballot a t t he monthly mee t ings ; t he elective power being vested in t he whole body of Members . One black bal l in five to exclude.

X V I I . Notice of the proposal of a n y n e w Member m u s t be posted wi th t he names of t he proposer a n d seconder on a board provided for t h a t purpose i n t he Club-room, no t l a t e r t h a n three days previous t o t he mee t ing a t which the Bal lot is to t ake place. {Octdber 10th, 1870.)

X V m . Ail Members shall consider themselves pledged no t to a t t e m p t any previous canvassing on the subject of the election of a new M e m b e r ; a n d any candidate who m a y be convicted of having used such means for obtaining his admission shall be excluded from the Club.

X I X . Mo motion shall he brought before the House without a seconder, unless theproposer ask the permission of the Club. {June 2ud, 1863.)

70 THE HARROW ALMANACK. 1884-

XX. No motion of any kind can be made at a meeting of the Club unless declared at length, with the names of proposer and seconder, on a board provided for the purpose in the Club-room, not later than three days previous to the meeting at which the ballot is to take place. (October 10th, 1870.)

XXI. When the term commences on a Friday^ it will suffice for the first meeMng of the Club, if such notices as are mentioned above be posted before one o^clock on Saturday. {October 10th, 1870.)

XXII. In the discussion of any question whether in Committee or at a general Meeting, in the case of an equal division, the President shall have a casting vote.

X X m . The necessary expenses of the Club to be defrayed by an entrance fee of One Guinea, to be paid immediately after election, and a quarterly subscription of Twelve shillings and sixpence from each Mem­ber, to be paid to the Treasurer within one week after the commence­ment of the Term. (April 23rd, 1866.)

XXTV. Members if elected after the middle of the quarter shall only pag the entrance fee for that Term. {February 28(A, 1855.)

XXV. The names of all Members failing t j pay their subscriptions within the appointed time to be posted on a board in the Room; and any Member failing to pay within a fortnight after the postii^ of his name, to be excluded from the Club until the payment of his sub­scription.

XXVT. Honorary Members are admissible upon the payment of a donation of Three Guineas, or an annual subscription of Ten Shilings to be paid in advance, all, with the exception of Gijvemors, Masters of the School, and Old Harrovians, being subject to the Ballot. Those who have been actii^ members of the Club may on leaving the School become Honorary Members upon payment of a donation of Two Guineas, or an annual subscription as above.

XXVn. A veto on the election of all new Members to be vested in the Head Master.

XXVIH. A fine of one shilling to be imposed on any Member effacing or disfiguring notices of motions, or defacing any property of the Club. {October IBth, 1853.)

XXIX. A majority of Members present at any business meeting has the power of altering or abolishing any former Bule, after the proposal of such a measure in due form.

October, 1870.

LIST OP MEMBERS.—1882-3.

Presidents: L. M. "Woodward {Easter and Midsummer Term^ 1883.) S. "W. Meek {Christmas Term, 1883.)

Treasurer: C. D.Buxton (Easter^ Midsummer and Christmas Term, 1883.)

1884. THE HARROW ALMANACK. 71

Committee: {blaster arid Midsummer, 1883. H. B. Crawley (ex of.) H. T. Hewett H. V. Stuart T. Greatorex W. P. Wakinson F. W. Boyill

Committee H. E. Crawley (ex off.) N. Ward B. H. Bendall

(Christmas, 1883.J F . H. Gates A. E. Cox F . J . K. Cross

Members: B. M. Eendall B. A. F. Grieve A. S. Davis G. Stephenson E. r . E. Wigram H. B. Pember C. "W. Firebrace B. D. Miller Hon. E. C. ToUemaohe W. F. L. de auetteville E. M. Butler A. F. Wright

A. K. Watson H. A. B. Eattigan J . D. Crosbie G. C. Joyce C. S. Vaughan F. D. P. ChapUn W. G. Headlam C. H. Dent E. E. Walker C. E. Kindersley M. W. Kinloch

72 THE HABRO-W ALMANACK. 1884.

1853. 1864. 1855. 1856. 1857. 1858. 1859. 1860. 1861. 1862. 1863. 1864. 1865. 1866. 1867. 1868.

CRICKET.

SCHOOL ELEVEN

H. E. Crawley (Captain.) T. Greatorex H. T. Hewett C. D. Buxton V. Thompson B. M. Butler B. A. F. Grieve F. H. Gates A. E. Cox A. F. Dauglish W. A. E. Young

CHAMPION

Eev. W. Oxenham's

G. E. Hams ' Esq. G. F. Harris' Esq. E. H. Vaughans's Esq. Eev. Dr. Vaughan's Rev. Dr. Vaughan's Eev. T. H. Steel's G. F. Harris' Esq. Eev. W. Oxenham's Eev. H. M. Butler's E. H. Vaughan's Esq. E. H. Vaughan's Esq. E. H. Vaughan's Esq. E6V. F. Eendall's C. E. Holmes' Esq.

f

Dr. Butler^s Mr, Bowen^s Mr. B. Smithes Mr. Watson's Mr. B. Smith's Dr. Butler's Mr, Mutton's Mr. Bowen's Mr. Mutton's Mr. Stogdon's Mr, Stogdon's

HOUSES.

1869. 1870. 1871. 1872. 1873. 1874. 1875. 1876. 1877. 1878. 1879. 1880. 1881. 1882. 1883.

Itev. W. F. Farrar»s Eov. Dr. SuljlGr s W. J. Bull's Esq. Eev. Dr. Butler's Eev. Dr. Butler's H. E. Hutton's Esq. H. E. Hutton's Esq.

A. G. "Watson's Esq. E. B. Hayward's Esq. H. E. Hutton's Esq. H. E. Hutton's Esq. Eev. J . A. Cruikshank's Eev. Dr. Butler's E. B. Smith's Esq.

THE HARBOW ALMANACK. 73

* Mr

* Mr * Mr * Mr.

• Mr.

• Mr. • Mr.

* Mr

* Mr

B. 6mith*8

FIEST TIES

DIVISION 1.

v. Mr. Odd House, Dr. Sutler's

Stogdon's Hat/ward's Crxtikshank'

Divisios 2.

V.

V.

s V.

Mr. Mr. Mr.

Odd House, Mr. Watson

B. Smith's

Stogdon's Hayward's

Stogdon's

B. Smith's

SECOND TIBS.

DIVISION 1.

V.

DIVISION 2.

V.

V.

THIED TIB

V.

FINAL TIE

V.

Dr.

Mr. Mr.

Mr.

Mr

Bowen's

'

Mutton's Holmes* Bushell's s

Butler's

Watson's CruiJcshank's

Hayward's

Stogdon's Champion House, Mr, B, Smith's

74 THE HABBOW ALMANACK. 1884.

MATCHES.

THE SCHOOL ». ME

June Snd,

E. E. BOWEN'S.

1883.

THE SCHOOL.

FIBBT INNINGS.

T.Qreatorex,cTos8WiU,b Morton 5 H. B. Crawley, b Morton 11 C. D. Buxton, b Morton 3 F. H. Gates, b Morton 2 A. F. Dauglish, b Colbeek ... 3 B. A. F. Grieve, b Mort»n ... 0 E.M.Butler, c TosswiU, b Colbeck 61 v . Tbompson, run out 20 0. E. Kindersley, b Tyleeote ... 0 B. H. Eendall, st Bowen, b

Colbeck 19 E. L. Ramsay, not out 3

Byes 2, l b s 10

137

SECOND INNINGS.

not out 0 Tosswill, b Colbeek ...

not out

c Brown, b Morton

Byes

MR. E. E. BOWEN'S ELEVEN.

C. T. Wickham, 0 Crawley, b Rendall 31 A. C. Tosswill, 0 Thompson, Rev. F. Hotham, b Rendall C. B. L. Tylecote, b Rendall

b Rendall 8 2 2

Rev. v . Boyle, c Grieve, b Rendall 10 C. Colbeck, c Thompson, b Ramsay 1 B. J. McNeill, 0 Ramsay, b Rendall 15 A. G. Lyster, b Kindersley 38 P. H. Morton, 0 Ramsay, b Kindersley 18 L. Eoutledge, c Buxton, b Rendall' 2 E. E. Bowen, not out ...

Byes 1,1b 2 10 3

140

... So

... 12

... 6

... 0

. . 2

60

1884. THE HAKROW ALMANACK. 75

THE SCHOOL v. HAEROW TOWN.

June 7th, 1883.

HAEEOW TOWN.

FIK8T INNIKOS.

A. C. Tosswill, b Eamsay ... 25 J.B.8mith,o Crawley,b Thompson 6 F.Walker, o Ciawley.b Thompson 2 S. r . Charles, b Thompson ... 5 C. Colbeck, o Butler, b Hewett... 7 J . P. Charles, not out 63 J . E. A. Greatorex, c Dauglish,

b Thompson 9 J . L. Winkley, b Eamsay ... 11 J . Dobson, b Eendall 0 H. Pyatt, c Crawley, b Greatorex 11 A. Boulton,c Eendall,b Greatorex 0

Byes 1, l b 1 2

131

SECOND INNINGS.

not out St Dauglish, b Eamsay... not out

Leg byes

THE SCHOOL.

C. D. Buxton, 0 S. F. Charles, b Greatorex V. Thompson, b Colbeck T. Greatoiex, st S. F. Charles, b Colbeok E. M. Butler, c Pyatt, b Colbeok H. T. Hewett, 1 b w, b Dobson H. E. Crawley, c and b J . P. Charles B. A. F. Grieve, c S. F. Charles, b Colbeck A. F. Dauglish, c Colbeck, b Dobson B. H. Eendall, b Dobson C. E. Kindersley, c and b J . P. Charles E. L. Kamsay, not out

Leg byes 4, w 4

16 21 81

0 3

106 7 3 2

14 2 8

262

14 . 18 , 9

1

42

76 THE HAKEOW ALMANACK. 1884.

THE SCHOOL v. OAMBEIDaE QUIDNUNCS.

June 9th, 1883.

THE SCHOOL.

V. Thompson, b Fryer 0 C. D. Biixton, c and b Bouverie 107 T. Greatorex, b Morton 64 B. M. Butler, o Morton, b Fryer 21 H. E. Crawley, b Fryer 0 H. T. Hewett, o and b Fryer 9 F. H. Gates, b Anson i H. V. Stuart, o Fryer, b Anson . . . . . 4 B. H. Eendall, b Bouverie 4 E. li. Bamsay, c Bale, b Morton 12 A. E. Cox, not out 8

Byes 21,1 b 3, w 7 31

264

CAJMBEIDGE QUIDNUNCS.

F. B. E. Fryer, run out J . Dale, b Hewett G. Macan, c Crawley, b Thompson 0. G. Bridgeman, not out F. C. C. Eowe, st Cox, b Greatorex L. K. Jarvis, not out

13 40 6

62 22

1884. THE HAERO-W ALMANACK. 77

THE SCHOOL v. M.C.C. AND G.

June leth, 1883.

M.C.C. AND G.

FIRST IKNINaa. SECOND INNINGS.

0 0 Crawley, b Gates 0 7 c Stuart (sub.), b Gates 0

A. C. Lucas, b Thompson ... 7 bEamsay.. . Captain Hornby, st Dauglisb, b

Eamsay 21 bEamsay.. . —Attwell, 0 Grieve, b Thompson 48 Lord Eskdalll, b Grieve Lord Anson, b Grieve L. Prederick, b Eamsay M. T. Baines, b Grieve A. C. Macpherson, b Grieve Lord Belper, c Hewett, b Kinders-

ley 10 A. G. Courage, not out 8 st Bauglish, b Gates H. Eaddiffe (B.H.Eendall, sub.)

b Grieve 4 not out — Hay, b Kindersley 0

Byes 1

107

THE SCHOGL.

C. D. Buxton, b Hay 4 v . Thompson, b Attwell 1 T. Greatorex, c Attwell, b Hay 80 H. E. Crawley, c Attwell, b Hay 8 E. M. Butler, run out . . 32 E. L. Eamsay, b Attwell 10 H. T. Hewett, b Hay 3 B. A. F. Grieve, b Attwell . . 6 F. H. Gates, b Hay 1 A. F. Dauglish, b Attwell 6 C. E. Kindersley, not out 6 F. W. Bovill, absent 0

Byes8 , l b2 10

167

14

0

2

6

, 6

. 8

34

78 THE HABKOW ALMANACK. 1884.

THE SCHOOL v. OXFORD HARLEQUINS.

June Ust, 1883.

OXFOBD HARLEQUINS.

T. S. Pearson, b Grieve E. B. Prothero, at Cox, b Grieve J . H. Savory, o Qreatorex, b Grieve ... Eev. V. F. Eoyle, b Grieve H. Q. Tylecote, o Grieve, b Tbompson J, H. Starling, c Hewett, b Greatorex E. V. Herbert, o Buxton, b Greatorex Lord Eakdaill, b Greatorex W. W. Whitmore, b Grieve Capt. Frederick, not out •W. H. Grenfell, b Greatorex A. J . Webbe, not out

Byes 2, l b 1 ..,

... 24

... 12

... 1

... 25

... 3

... 6

... 3

... 31

... 24

... 29

... 0

... 1

... 3

162

THE HARROW ALMANACK. 7 9

T H E SCHOOL v. LORD BESSBOROXJGH'S E L E V E N .

June SSrd, 1883.

THE SCHOOL.

F. H. Oates, c and b Lucas 53 H. T. Hewett, c Pember, b Thomas 10 T. Greatorex, o Sanderson, b Lucas 41 E. M. Butler, b Lucas 19 H. E. Crawley, b Lucas 25 B. A, F. Grieve, b Sanderson 24 A. F. Dauglish, 1 b w, b Martineau 20 V. Thompson, c Lucas, b Sanderson 0 H. V. Stuart, b Baines 18 E. L. Ramsay, not out 23 H. B. Pember, b Lucas 8 A. R. Cox, c Macan, b Sanderson 14

Byes 8,1 b 5, w 2 15

273

LOED BESSBOEOUGH'S ELEVEN.

G. Maoan, o Stuart, b Pember 28 D. Q. Spiro, b Pember 0 F. W. Pember, b Pember 0 M. T. Baines, run out 59 F. G. L. Lucas, o and b Qreatorex 47 F. Gore, not out 17 P. H. Martineau, c Pember, b Greatorex . . . . 2 L. Sanderson, o Cox, b Pember 7 T. K. Taphng, b Pember 0 P. W. Thomas, o Dauglish, b Bamsay . . . . 12 E. Matthews, o Hewett, b Grieve 2 W. Long, absent 0

Byes 4,1 b 4, w 2 10

184

80 T H E H A R R O W A L M A N A C K , 1884.

T H E S C H O O L v. I Z I N G A R I .

June 30th, 1883.

I ZINGAEI.

FIRST INNINGS. SECOND INNINGS.

W.Evetts.o Crawley,bGreatorex 26 c Gtreatorex, b Hewett.. . . 1 1 Eev. W. Law, b Pember . . . . 17 b Hewett 32 R. G. Hargreaves, nin out . . 18 o ToUemaobe, b Hewett . . 45 G. Portal, b Greatorex . . . . 3 not out 3 P. E. Crutchley, b Greatorex . . 4 c and b Eamsay 42 Hon. H. Hardinge, b Thompson 3 Lord Anson, c and b Gxeatorex.. 0 G. W. " Simpson," run out . . 6 not out 12 W. H. Grenfell, b Thompson . . 4 W. C. Denison, b Hewett . . 3 W. Long, not out 13 c Grieve, b Pember . . . . 5

Byes 7, w 1 8 Byes 8,1 b 4 . . . . 12

105 162

THE SCHOOL.

v . Thompson, retired hurt 2 r . H. Gates, b Portal 19 C. D. Buxton, b Portal 4 T. Greatorex, o Portal, b Denison 17 E. M. Butler, c "Simpson," b Portal . . . . 7 H. B. Crawley, b Denison 5 B. A. F. Grieve, b Law 10 H. T. Hewett, o and b Denison 0 E. L. Ramsay, b Portal 11 A. F. Dauglish, not out 0 H. B. Pember, b Portal 4 Hon. R. C. ToUemaohe, b Portal 3

Byes5 , lb2 , w2 9

91

1884. THE HARROW ALMANACK. 81

THE SCHOOL v. OLD HARROVIANS.

Juli/ 7th, 1883.

THE SCHOOL.

F. H. Oates, c and b Henderson V. Thompson, b Henderson C. D. Buxton, c "Walker, b Fryer H. E. Crawley, c Law, b Walker E. M. Butler, c Kemp, b E. M. Hadow H. T. Hewett, b Law T. Greatorex, c Spiro, b Monereiffe ... A. F. Dauglisb, St Kemp, b "Walker ... E. L. Ramsay, b Henderson B. H. Rendall, not out "W. A. E. Young, c Greatorex, b "Walker . B. A. P. Grieve, b "Walker

Byes9 , Ib2 , w l

OLD HAEEOYLANS.

FIRST INNINGS. 8EC0N

A. A. Hadow, o Efindall, b "young 10 b Oates ... R. Moncreiffe, c Greatorex, b

Young 12 St Cox (sub.). R. Henderson, c and b Young ... 5 F. B. R. Fryer, b Grieve SO I . D. "Walker, c Young, b Grieve 21 M. C. Kemp, b Grieve 9 Rev. "W. Law, e Hewett, b Young 18 E. M. Hadow, not out 35 not out J. E. A. Greatorex, c Buxton, b

Ramsay 13 D. G. Spiro, 1 b w, b Buxton ... 5 Lord G. Hamilton, c Hewett, b

Buxton 2 e Oates, bBu. A. F. Kemp, o Cox (sub.), b

Grieve 0 Byes4, I b l , w l 6 Byes2, l b 2

161

... 14

... 0

... 4

... 72

... 10

... 26

... 30

... 43

... 6

... 17

... 7

... 9

... 12

247

D INNINGS.

b Thompson

ston

.. 18

.. 1

.. 34

.. 1

.. 4

58

82 THE HAKBOW ALMANACK. 1884.

ETON V. HARROW.

July 13th and Uth, 1883.

ETON.

A. H. Studd, b (Meve F. Thomas, b Young E. H. Pemberton, b Young F. Marchant, b Grieve B. J . Lucas, c Thompson, b Young A. C. Richards, b Grieve J . Haigreaves, c Crawley, b Thompson Hon. C. M. Knatchbull-Hugessen, b Grieve C. A. Grenfell, b Young H. W. Forster, st Cox, b Heurett Hon. A, B. Parker, not out

Noballa 1

HAEEOW.

PIE8T INNINGS. SECOND

F. H. Dates, b Thomas 22 -notout ... V. Thompson, run out 5

... 64

... 9

... 0

... 93

... 12

... IS

... 14

... 0

... 19

... 6

... 0

... 1

231

INNINGS.

C. D. Buxton, b Parker 38 c Thomas, bEidiards ... T. Greatorex, not out 37 not out H. E. Cravpley, o Uarchant, b

Parker 3 E. M. Butler, o Hargreaves, b

Parker 2 H. T. Hewett, b Parker 1 A. F. Dauglish, b Parker 0 B. A. F. Grieve, bParker ... 4 A. E. Cox, l b w,b Parker ... 0 W. A. E. Young, b Parker ... 0

ByesBjlbS 8 Byes6, w l

120

... 22

... 7

... 40

... 7

76

1884. THE H A U E O W A L M A N A C K . 83

RESULTS OF THE MATCHES HITHERTO PLAYED BETWEEN HAEROW AND ETON, FROM 1818 TO 1883.

H a r r o w E t o n

H a r r o w E t o n

1818, July 29, 30, at Lord's.

... 53 ... ... 74 ...

Har row winning by 13 r u n s .

1822, August 1, 2, at Lord's.

... 99 ...

... 65 ... H a r r o w winning by 87 r u n s .

1823, July 31, at Lord's.

Har row ... ... ... 24 ... E t o n ... ... ... 148

E t o n winning in one innings and 33

H a r r o w E t o n

H a r r o w E ton

Har row E t o n

E t o n winning by

1824, July 30, 31 , at Lord's.

... 103 ...

... 123 ... E ton winning by nine wickets.

1825, July 29, 30, at Lord's.

... 90 ...

... 76 ... E ton winning by seven wickets

1827, August 3, 4, at Lord's,

... 155 ...

... 166 ...

114 80 .

105 . 52 .

91 .

runs .

71 . 52 .

91 . 106 .

64 . 50 .

. 167

. 154

. 204

. 117

. 115

. 174

. 175

. 181

. 182

. 219

. 218

six wickets. By a n error of the scorers th is match was no t properly finished, E t o n want ing four more rung committee of the M.C.C. decided in favour of E ton .

H a r r o w E t o n

1828, July 31, at Lord's.

... 68 ...

... 68 ... E ton winning by six wickets.

63 . 55 .

to win. The

. 121

. 123

84 THE HARROW ALMANACK. 1884.

Harrow Eton

1892, August 3, 4, at hordes. ... 49 ... 44 ... 249

Eton winning in one innings and 166 runs.

1833, August 2, at Lord's^ Eton Har row

Harrow E ton

Eton Har row

E ton Har row

... 88 ... ... 118 ...

Har row winning by eight wickets

1834, July 31, August 2, at Lord^s

... 69 ...

... 103 ... Har row winning by 13 r u n s .

1836, Julg 30, 31, at Lord's.

... I l l ...

... 48 ... E ton winning by 168 r u n s .

1836, Julg 28, 29, at Lord's.

... 49 ... ... 97 ...

67 . 27 .

97 . 50 .

149 . 47 .

68 . 21 .

. 143

. 145

. 166

. 168

. 260

. 95

. 117 .. 118

Harrow Eton

Eton Harrow

Harrow winning- by nine wickets.

1837, August 3, 4, at Lord's. ... 89 ... 62 ... 151 ... 104 ... 49 ... 153

Eton winnii^ by eight wickets.

1838, August 3, 4, at Lord's.

... 157

... 56 ... 71 ... 127 Eton winning in one innings and 30 runs.

1839, August 1, 2, at Lords.

Har row E ton

Eton Har row

... 69 ...

... 104 ... E t o n winning by eight wickets .

1840, July 30, 31, at Lord's.

... 122 ... ... 68 ...

E t o n winning by 31 r u n s .

66 . 22 .

86 . 119 .

. 124

. 126

. 208 . 177

1884. THE HAREOW ALMANACK. 85

1841, July 30, 31, at Lord's Eton ... ... ... 308 Harrow ... ... ... 98 ...

Eton winning in one innings and 175

Harrow Eton

Harrow Eton

1842, July 29, 30, a( Lord's ... 141 ... ... 79 ...

Harrow winning by 66 mns.

1843, Augtist 5, at Lord's^ ... 99 ... ... 38 ...

Harrow winning by 20 runs.

1844, August 2, 3, at Lord's. Harrow ... ... ... 60 ... Eton ... ... ... 220

Eton winning in one innings and 69

1845, August 1, 2, at Lord's. Eton ... ... ... 261 Harrow ... ... ... 82 ...

Eton winning in one innings and 174

1846, July 30, 31, at Lord's.

Eton ... ... ... 279 Harrow ... ... ... 62 ...

Eton winning in one innings and 135

Harrow Eton

Harrow Eton

Harrow Eton

1847, July 31, August 2, at Lord' ... 27 ... ... 119 ...

Eton winning by nine wickets.

1848, August 4, 5, 7, at Lord's. ... 100 ... ... 08 ...

Harrow winning by 41 runs.

1849, August 3, 4, at Lord's, ... 157 ... ... 112 ...

Harrow winning by 77 runs.

35 .. runs.

121 . 118 ..

52 . 95 ..

91 .

runs.

65 .. runs.

82 .. runs.

! 103 . 12 ,

68 . 57 .

Il l . 79 .

. 133

. 262

. 197

. 151

. 131

. 151

87

. 144

. 130

. 131

. 166

. 125

.. 268 . 191

86 THE HARROW ALMANACK. 1884.

H a r r o w E t o n

E t o n Har row

Har row E ton

E ton H a r r o w

1850, August 2, 3, at Lord's.

... 100 ... 108 . ... 106 ... 104 .

E t o n winning by seven wickets.

1851, August 1, 2, at Lord's.

... 126 ... 92 .

... 184 ... 35 . H a r r o w winning by eight wickets.

1852, Julg 30, 31, August 2, at Lord's.

... 215 ... 108 .

... 142 ... 110 . H a r r o w winning by 71 r u n s .

1863, July 29, 80, at Lord's.

... 58 ... 79 .

... 63 ... 85 . Har row winning by three wickets.

. 208

. 209

. 218

. 219

. 823

. 252

. 187

. 138

Harrow Et«n

Eton Harrow

1854, August 5, 7, 8, at Lord's. ... 130 ... 128 ... 71 ... 89

Harrow winning by 98 runs.

1865, August 3, 4, at Lord's. ... 35 ...

191 90

Harrow winning in one innings and G6 runs.

In 1856 and 1867 no matches were played.

1858, Julff 9, 10, at Lord's. Eton ... ... ... 44 ... 97 ... Harrow ... ... ... 148

Harrow winning in one innings and 7 rung.

1859, July 8, 9, at Lord's. Harrow ... ... ... 242 Eton ... ... ... 91 ... 103 ...

Harrow winning in one innings and 48 runs.

1860, July 13, 14, at Lord's. Harrow Eton

83

TTnflnished.

271 221

357 319

1884. THE HABKOW ALMANACK. 87

Eton HaiTow

Eton Harrow

Eton Harrow

1861, July 12, 18, at Lord's. 135 229 164 53

TJnflnished.

1862, July 11, 12, at Lord's. 97 155 68 142

Eton winning by 54 runs.

1863, July 10, 11, at Lord's. 184 285 268

Unfinished.

1864, July 8, 9, at Lord's. Harrow 242 Eton 63 113

Harrow winning in one innings and 66 runs.

1866, July 14,15, at Lord's. Harrow 248 Eton 86 I l l

Harrow winning in one innings and 51 runs.

1866, July 13, 14, at Lord's.

Harrow 302 Eton 124 42

Harrow winning in one innings and 136 runs.

Eton Harrow

Eton Harrow

1867, July 12, 13, at Lord's.

228 221 173 78

"Unflmshed.

1868, July 10, 11, at Lord's.

116 128 179 62

Har row winning by seven wickets.

1869, Jul:/ 9, 10, at Lord's. Eton 237 Harrow 91 127

Eton winning in one innings and 19 runs.

Eton Harrow

1870, July 8, 9, at Lord's.

189 151 206 114

E ton winning by 21 runs .

364 217

252 198

469

176

197

166

449 251

239 241

218

340 319

88 THE HAUKOW ALMANACK. 1884.

Eton Harrow

Eton

Eton Harrow

Eton Harrow

Harrow Eton

Eton Harrow

Eton Harrow

Eton

Harrow Eton

Harrow Eton

Eton Harrow

Harrow Eton

1871, July 14, 15, at Lord's. 808 133 98 ....

winning in one innings and 77 nms.

1872, Jut;/ 12, 13, at Lord's. 110 127 .... 126 I l l ....

Eton winning by six wickets.

1873, Juli/ 11, 12, at Lord's. 145 168 .... 146 167 ....

Harrow winning by five wickets.

1874, Jul!/ 10, 11, at Lord's.

165 146 .... 143 159 ....

Eton winning by ftve wickets.

1875, Jul!/ 9, 10, at lord's. 202 110 155

Unfinished.

1876, Jail/ 14, 15, at Lord's. 308 167 127 ....

winning in one innings and 24 i-uns.

1877, Jul!/ 13, 14, at Lord's.

167 193 .... 163 78 ....

Unilnished.

1878, Jul!/ 12, 13, at Lord's. 119 224 .... 117 206 ....

Harrow winning by 20 runs.

1879, Jul!/ 11, 12, at Lord's. 99 85 .... 67 69 ...

Uniinished.

1880, Jul!/ 9, 10, at Lord's. 148 142 ... 107 S8 ....

Harrow winning by 95 runs.

231

237 236

311 313

300 302

284

860 241

343 323

184 136

290 195

1884. THE HARROW AlMAJfACK. 89

1881, July 7, 8, at Lord's. Harrow ... ... ... 140 ... 202 ... 342 Eton ... ... ... 64 ... 166 ... 230

Harrow winning by 112 runs.

1882, July 14, 15, at Lord's. Harrow ... ... ... 187 ... 141 ... 328 Eton ... ... ... 140 ... 132 ... 272

Uniinished.

1883, July 13, 14, at Lord's. Eton ... ... ... 231 Harrow ... ... ... 120

Uniinished.

Of tlie Single Innings Victories claimed by Eton and Harrow re­spectively, tlie result has been as follows:

Eton won in one Innings in the years 1823,1832,1838, 1841, 1844,1845, 1846,1869,1871, 1876.

Harrow won in one Innings in the years 1855, 1858,1859,1864,1865, 1866.

Majority in favour of Eton 4. *'In addition to the above matches one was played on Old Lord's

between Elevens out of the two Schools, Lord Byron being one of those who played for Harrow. But he was not in the Eleven, and the two sides were not confined to actual members of the School. It has always been considered by Harrovians that if the match to which we next allude, viz., the match of 1857, is to be omitted from the list of matches after being included in it without objection for several years, this match of 1805 must be treated in a like manner."

In 1857, in consequence of the regular Match not taking place, a game was played (on July 29, 30) at Lord's, between Old Harrovians under 20 and Old Etonians under 20, of which the following is the score:

Eton ... ... ... 70 .,, 59 ... 129 Harrow ... ... ... 118 ... 12 ... 130

Harrow winning by ten wickets. In referring to the Match of 1857—" Etonians under 20 v. Harrovians

under 2 0 : "

' ' This match was not strictly regular, but was played in order to keep up the old match as nearly as possible during the time that the authorities at Eton objected to the regular mateh at Lord's. I t was considered at the time to be, and in fact was, The School Match as near as circumstances would permit. As some of the Eton Eleven who were returning to the School after the holidays were forbidden to play, Harrow agreed to play on the same conditions, and therefore seven of the Eton Eleven and eight of the Harrow Eleven (who were leaving their respective Schools) took part in the match. Each side was allowed to take substitutes for the absent out of those who had lately left and were under twenty years of age. As it happened the Etonians were allowed to play two who had passed that age.''

*»• Several matches were played between 1806 and 1818, of which the scores have not been preserved.

90 THE HARROW ALMANACK. 1884.

RESULTS OF THE MATCHES PLAYED BETWEEN HARROW AND WINCHESTER FROM 1825

1825, July 27, 28, at Lord's. •Winchester... ... ... 113 ... 211 .. Harrow ... ... ... 112 ... 73 ..

Winchester winning by 139 runs.

1826, August 2, at Lord's. Winchester... ... ... 174 ... 380 .. Harrow ... ... ... 29 ... 141 ,.

Winchester winning by 384 runs.

1830, Jtdy 30, at Lord's. Harrow ... ... ... 36 ... 63 .. Winchester... ... ... 158

Winchester winning in one innings and 59 runs

1834, July 30, at Lord's. Harrow ... ... ... 48 ... 40 .. Winchester... ... ... 48 ... 43 ..

Winchester winning by one wicket.

1835, July 29, 80, at Lord's. Winchester... ... ... 243 ... 103 .. Harrow ... ... ... 144 ... 114 ..

Winchester winning by 88 runs.

1836, July 27, at Lord's.

Harrow ... ... ... 29 ... 24 .. Winchester... ... ... 61

Winchester winning in one innings and 8 runs

1837, July 18, at Harrow.

H a r r o w ... ... ... 128 ... 127 .. Winchester... ... ... 65 ... 51 ..

Harrow winning by 139 runs.

1838, August 1, 2, at Lord:'s. Harrow ... ... ... 206 Winchester... ... ... 66 ... 86 ..

Harrow winning in one innings and 54 runs.

TO 1854.

324 185

554 170

99

88 89

346 268

53

255 116

152

1884. THE HAHKOW ALMANACK. 9 1

1839, August 2, 3, at Lord's.

Harrow 81 71 162 Winchester 52 77 129

Harrow winning by 23 runs.

1840, July 29, 30, at Lord's.

Winchester 118 86 204 Harrow 54 189 193

Winchester winning by 11 runs.

1841, July 28, 29, at Lord's.

Harrow 197 Winchester 73 106 179

Harrow winning in one innings and 18 runs.

1842, July 27, 28, at Lord's.

Har row 89 152 .. Winchester 126 68 ...

Har row winning by 28 r u n s .

1843, August 2, 3, 4, 5, at Lord's.

H a r r o w 96 135 ... Winchester 86 181 ..

221 ,, 193

231 ... 217

Harrow winniug by 14 runs.

This match was spread over four days, owing to bad weather.

1844, July 31, August 1, 2, at hordes.

Harrow 169 30 199 Winchester 63 135 198

Winchester winning by 3 wickets.

1846, July 30, 31, at Lord's.

Winchester 96 156 252 Harrow 62 178 240

Winchester winning by 12 runs.

1846, July 29, 30, at Lord's.

Harrow Winchester

Winchester Harrow

Harrow winning in one innings and 24 runs.

102 107 ... 110 85 ...

Har row winning by 14 r u n s .

1847, July 28, 29, at Lord's.

54 49 ... 127

209 196

, 103

92 THE HABKOW ALMANACK. 1884.

1848, at Lord's. Harrow 79 76 Winchester 86 101

Harrow winning by 18 runs.

1849, Auffltst l,2t at Lord's.

Harrow 155 126 Winchester 82 43

Harrow winning: by 156 runs.

1850, J^uly 31, Auffust 1, at Lord's. Harrow 207 Winchester 99 103

Harrow winning in one innings and 5 runs.

1851, Julj/ 30, SI, at Lord's. Harrow 78 62 Winchester 77 84

Winchester winning by 2 wickets.

1852, Jul!/ 28, 29, 80, at Lord's. Winchester I l l 286 Harrow 167 112

Winchester winning by 68 runs.

1853, Jul;/ 27, 28, at Lord's.

Harrow 92 184 Winchester 82 74

HaiTow winning by 70 runs.

1854, August 2, 8, 5, at Lord^s. Harrow 119 134 Winchester 81 55

Harrow winning by 117 runs.

155 187

281 125

202

140 141

347 279

226 166

263 136

No match has been since played between Harrow and Winchester.

lYom these two lists it aiJpears that Harrow won both matches against Eton and against Winchester in 1842, 1843, 1848,1849, 1858,1854.

1884. THE HAHKOW ALMANACK. 93

HARROW SCHOOL GYMNASIUM.

Superintendent: Captain E. Tudor Bisk.

Instructor: Corporal J. H. Titchener.

Secretary: F. E. Marshall, Esq.

THE Gymnasimn was opened in May, 1874, having been built and fitted up -with a portion of the money subscribed to the Lyon Memorial Fund.

Any boy who wishes to do so may Join the Gymnasium, but after joining he must attend regularly for instruction with his class two hours a week throughout any term for which he has volunteered.

There are also about ten hours in the week during which all who be­long to the GjTnnasium may attend for Voluntary Exercises, but tiiere is at these times no regular mstmction.

A system of Certificates has been established with a view of granting special privileges to such boys as are more advanced in their work. The Certificates are of two degrees, viz.: " J^" conferred on those boys who act as " class leaders " and are sufficiently qualified to be allowed to use the Gymnasium whenever it is open and are not obliged to attend with the classes to which they beloi^, and "B" consistmg of such boys as are less proficient but yet sufficiently advanced to be permitted to practise without supervision, provided the Gymnasium is oi>en and no classes are at work.

All boys are compelled to attend for two terms (at present, their third and fourth terms in the School). Any boy who, at the conclusion of these two terms work has earned either certificate, will not be obliged to continue attendance at the Gymnasium for a third. The Superintendent will, however, be glad if he vrill continue as a volunteer.

In December 1877 the School Eight was instituted, and, by permission of the Head Master, give an annual performance in the GjTimasium.

The following composed the E ^ h t for 1883 :— Archibald ICinloch Haygarth-Brown Lynch Barwell Burke Daniell (sen.) Cross (mi.)

At the close of the tenn '83.^ the following names were recorded on the respective lists of Certificates of qualffication :—

Bowker Richards Galsworthy (sen.) Tattersall (sen.) Grogan Tattersall (jun.) Harrison (sen.) Walker (sen.) Hall Young (maj.) Lafone Horley Leaf Cotterill KoncreifFe

94 THE HARROW ALMANACK. 1884.

Brooks Bruce (sen.) Clarke (sen.) Cox (ma.) Cox (mins.) Gilroy (jim,) Heaton-Ellis Izard Jarvis Langdon-Down (jun.) Mosenthal Norris Pember Poole (sen.) Poole (jun.) 3?owys Eicaxdo Bussell (jun.) Surteeg Sowerby

"Ward "Wright (sen.) Hutchinson

Atkinson (sen.) Ling-ard Benton Macdonald Hutton "Wright (jun.) Crawshay Vachell Staveley Stewart (mi.) Galewortiiy (jun.) Collins Henry (jim.) Townshend Holland Young (jun.) Straight Mr. Bouverie Mackie Clayton East Sanders (jun.) Mr. "Ward "Walker (jun.)

EXJLES FOR THE GYMNASIUM.

I . No boy to pass through the swing doors nnless he is either a member of one of the classes, or has had his name placed by the Superin­tendent on the list of those qualified to practice. During Class Work those only -who compose the classes under inetaniction, or are on the " A " list, can be allowed to enter.

H . No boy to pass beyond the salle d'armes except when wearing his Gynmastic Shoes and Belt, which must all be distinctly marked with the owner's name in large letters.

m . Diunb and Bar Bells to be carefully replaced after use. Slippers and Belts to he returned to their respective owners* lockers in the dressing room at the conclusion of each Lesson.

JCV. No boy to attempt, during class work, any exercise other than that set by the Instructor; or to leave his class witiiout permission, but to endeavour to benefit himself by paying attention to the success or failure of others.

V. No boy to attempt to do on one machine any exercise which properly belor^ to another.

VI. No boy to use any Dumb or Bar Bell other than that which has been a s s ^ e d to him by the Instructors.

"Vn. No boy (unless his name be placed on the list of those qualifled) to work in the G^ymna8ium during the hours of recreation, except in the presence of the Superintendent, Instructor, or one of t^e Masters of Harrow School.

1884. THB HAKKOW ALMANACK. 95

v m . Boys who wish ,to look on at the exercises may remain in the Gallery on the clear understanding that there is no disorder of any kind,

IX. Immediate obedience and strict attention to be shown to all directions given by the Superintendent or Instructor.

Prizes. A Challenge Shield was given in February, 1876, by a sub­scription amongst the Masters, to be held by the C3hampion House at Gymnastics. This Shield to be competed for once in every year and not to become the property of any House however frequently it may be won in succession. This rule applies equally to all challenge prizes in the Gymnasium.

Two prizes of £2 and £1 value respectively were also voted by the Philathletic Club in 1875, for the Champion of the School, and for the Champion Small Boy. These prizes were given in 1875 (marks for the work being awarded by Col. F. Hammersley) and the former is now annual.

A Cup was given by the Superintendent in 1876, for the Champion of the School, the work being judged by Captain Groves, 18th Hussars, then Superintendent of the Cavalry Gymnasium at Canterbury.

A Cup was given by the Secretary and the Philathletic Club, jointly, in 1877, for the Champion of the School, the work being judged by Captain Groves.

The Cup for the Champion was given by the Philathletic Club in 1878; a Cup for the Second Champion was also given by E. N. Baynes, Esq., the work being judged by Captain Onslow, 20th Hussars, then Superintendent of the Cavalry Gymnasium at Canterbury.

The Cup for the Champion was given by the Philathletic Club in 1879, the work being judged by Captain Onslow, 20th Hussars, and in 1880,1881, the work being judged by Captain Tudor-Bisk for Captain Onslow. In 1882 and 1883 the work was judged by Colonel Cleather.

The Challenge Shield was competed for in 1875,1876,1877,1878,1879, 1880,1881, and 1882 and 1883, by four representatives from each House; the work being judged in 1875 and 1876 by Colonel E. Hammersley, Inspector of Military Gymnasia, in 1877 by Major Gildea, in 1878 by Colonel Hanunersley, in 1879 by Captain Annesly Gore, for Major Gildea, and in 1880 and 1881 by Colonel Cleather, present Inspector of Gymnasia, and in 1882 and 1883 by the Superintendent.

A Challenge Cup for Mr. Bosworth Smith's House was given by P. Gore-Browne, Esq., in 1878, and a Challenge Cup for the Home Boarders was given by Charles "W. Wood, Esq., in 1879, and challenge cup for the Eev. J. A. Cruikshank's was given by P. H. Lloyd, Esq., in 1883.

96 THE HARROW ALMANACK. 1884.

Champion Houses at Gymnastics, 1875. E. B. HaTward's 1880. Home Boarders 1876. Eev. F. Eendall's 1881. Home Boarders 1877. A. G. Watson's 1882. Home Boarders 1878. E. B. Hayward's 1883. Home Boarders 1879. Eev. J . A. Cruikshank's

Champion of the Gymnasium, 1875. 1876. 1877. 1878. 1879. 1880. 1881. 1882. 18S3.

A. H. Cochrane W. H. Davis J . F. Maunder E. Johnson £ . Jolmson C. H. Oakes C. M. Wood C. Enthoven C. F. Archibald

Mr, button's Mr, RendalVs Mr, Cruikshank^s Mr, Bull's Mr, Bull's Mr, Watson's Home Boarder Home Boarder Mr, Cruikshank's

"Winner of Mr. Bosworth Smith's House Challenge Cup, 1883, E. K. Cross.

Winner of Home Boarders' Challenge Cup, 1883, M. "W. Kioloch.

HOUSE TIES, 1883. The * denotes the Wiiming House.

First Tiea. * Mr, HuUon*s v. Mr. B. Smith's * Mr. Holmes* v . Mr. Hayward's * Small Houses v. Mr. Walsall's * Home Boarders v . Mr. Bowen's * Mr. Cruikshank's v . Mr. Stoffdon's

Odd House, Dr. ButUr^s.

Second Ties.

* Dr. Butler^s v . Mr. Holmes' * Home Boarders v. Mr. Cruikshank\<i * Mr. Hutton*s v. Small Houses

Third Ties. * Home Boarders v. Dr. Butler^s

Odd House, Mr. Hutton's.

Final Ties.

* Hom£ Boarders v. Mr. Hutton's The Home Boarders thus becoming Champion House for 188*.

The Inspector of Military Gymnasia, Colonel Cleather, has kindly consented to continue the Annual Inspection of Harrow School Gymna­sium, formerly held by Major General F. Hammersley.

1894. TBB HARBOW ALMANACK. 97

PEIZES. Champion Hacquet, H . E . Crawley Champion Gymnaat, C. F . Arc^bald

F E N C I N G :

Ut Prke^ J . F . Lynch 2nd Prize, H. E . Pember Zrd Prize, S. A. Mavrojani

BOXING :

PHzCt M. "W. Kinloch

STICKS :

Prize,

Champion Hurdle Bace, TV, P . WiUdnson Champion Hurdle Race (SmaH), F . W . Jarvis Flat Mace (100 yards) , H. A . B. Rattigan Quarter Mile Bace, F . J . K . Cross Half Mile Mace, F . J . K. Cross Champion Mile Mace, F . J . K . Cross High Jump (Big), A . F . Wright (4/ee( 9 i inches)

„ „ (Small), R. K . Cross {4/ee( 6 inches) Broad Jump, F . J . K . Cross

Dr. Butler'a Mr. Oruikahank*s

Mr. Holmes* Mr. Watson's Mr. Field's

Home Boarder

Dr. Butler's Mr.JIayward's Mr, Stogdon's Mr. B. Smith's Mr. B. Smith's Mr, B. Smith's Mr. Cruikshank's Mr. B, Smith's Mr. B. Smith's

Lord Besshorough's Prize for talcing up and depositing in a basket 20 stones, W. F , Willdnson

Throtving Cricket Ball, A . J . Peters (86 ifds l.ft. 7 in. Putting Weight, Q. F . 0 . Cresswell {26 feet 9 inches) Throvnng Hammer, H . T . Hewe t t (JXfeet 3 i inches) Sack Bace, A . Stir l ing Consolation Bace, E . Joicey Mr. Bowen's Pnzefor best Catch, H . E . Crawley

HuBDLK RACES :

Sixth Form. 1. W, F . Wilkinson 2. T. Greatorex

Fifth Form. 1. T. Harr i son 2. W . W . arantham

Bemove and Shell. 1. F . W . Ja rv i s 2. v . Thompson

Fourth Form. 1. R. K. Cross 2. V. S. Galsworthy

Dr. Butler's \ Mr. Holmes*

Mr. Watson's Mr. B. Smith's Mr. Cruikshank's Mr. Cruikshank's Dr. Butler's

Dr. Butler's Mr. Bowen's

Mr. Cruikahank's Mr. Hutton's

Mr. Hayward's Mr, B. Smith's

Mr. B. SmUh's Mr, Colhech'a

98 THE HARROW ALMANACK. 1884.

1853 1854 1855 1856 1857 1868 1859 1880 1881 1882 1863 1864 1886 1888 1867 1888

FOOTBALL.

C H A M P I O N

Itev. J . N . Sinipkiiisoii*8 B . H . Vaughan ' s Esq. Eev . E . Middlemist 's G. F . H a m s ' Esq. Eev. F . Eendal l ' s Eev. B. H . Drury ' s E . H . Vaughan ' s Esq. Eev. "W, Oxenham's Eev . "W". Oxeuham's Eev. H . M. But ler ' s Eev. H . M. But ler ' s Eev. T. H . Steel's Eev. E . Eendal l ' s G. F . Ha r r i s ' Esq . G. F . H a r r i s ' Esq . Eev . T. H . Steel 's

HOUS

1869. 1870. 1871. 1872. 1873. 1874. 1875. 1878. 1877. 1878. 1879. 1880. 1881. 1882. 1883.

Eev. F. "W. Parrar's H. E. Hutton's Esq. W. J . Bull's Esq. H. E. Hutton's Esq. Eev. Dr. Butler's E. B. Hayward's Esq. Rev. F. Bendali's Eev. T. H. Steel's Eev. T. H. Steel's Eev. J. A. Cruikshank'fi Eev. J, A. Cruilcshank'fi E. B. Hayward's Esq. E. B. Smith's Esq. E. B. Hayward's Esq. E. B. Hayward's Esq.

FOOTBALL EULES.

HABROW GAME.

I. The choice of Bases is determined, in Matches, by tossing; but in the ordinary School (James that side has the choice on which the Head of the School (or in his absence the highest in the School present) is playing.

H. The Bases are 18 feet in width, and the distance between them must not be greater than 150 yards. The width of the ground must not be more than 100 yards.

N.B.—If the first day's play result in a tie the distance between the poles shall be doubled.

m . Tlie Ball must be kicked off from the middle of the ground, half way between the two Bases.

XV. "When the Ball is kicked, any one on the same side as the kicker will be entitled to kick or catch it, provided that at the time of the delivery of the kick he be not nearer the line of the enemy's base than the kicker. If he be nearer he is behind, and is virtually out of the Game till the Ball has been touched by one of the opposite side. Nor must he interfere with any one of the opposite side, or in any way prevent or obstruct his catching or kicking the Ball.

"V. The Ball may only be caught if it has not touched the ground since it was last kicked by the leg below the knee, or the foot.

VI. "Whoever catches the Ball is entitled to a free kick if he calls Three yards; but whoever catches the Ball, and does not call Three yards, is liable to have the Ball knocked out of his hands.

1884. THB HARROW ALMANACK. 99

N.B.—The Ball must be kicked without delay; and the preliminary run, must not he longer than Three yards (i.e., the utmost length to whicii Three running strides would extend).

v n , "Wlien a player catches the Ball he may take his Three yards in any direction he likes.

VIII. If a player catch the Ball near the opposite Base, he may try to carry the Ball through by jumping the Three yards. If he fail in this attempt, no second try is allowed, but he may return in the direction of the spot where he caught the Ball, and from any point in this direction may have a free kick at the Base; none of the opposite side may in this case get in his way nearer than tiie spot to which his jump brought him.

IX. The Ball when in Play must never be touched by the hand or arm, unless close to the Body^ except in the case of a Catch, as above stated.

X. The Ball if kicked beyond the prescribed limits of the ground, must be thrown in again (at least twelve yards from the thrower) by one of the opposite side to the player who shall have last touched the Ball, and this throw may be made in any direction.

N.B.—From behind his own Base a Player may kick the Ball instead of throwii^ it. From behind the enemy's Base the throw must be straight in, and may be of any length.

XI. All Charging is fair, but no Holdingt Tripping^ Pushing with the hands, Shinningf or Backshinning is allowed.

XII . After a Base has been obtained, or if no Base has been obtained by three o'clock, the Sides change their respective Bases.

XIH. There must always be Two Umpires in a House Hatch, and if possible in School Matches.

Their decision shall be final in matters of factf but they are at liberty to refer any question of law to the Committee of the Philatiiletic Club, if they feel unable to decide it a.t the time.

N.B.—In the absence of Umpires the Head of a Side, who is always responsible for the regularity of the play, shall act as Umpire himself for his own side.

XTV, It shall be the duty of the Umpire in all Football Matches to take away or award a Base, if clearly and certainly obtained or stopped by unfair means, and in House Matches to put out of the game any player wilfully breakii^ any of the Football Rules,

XV. No nails are allowed in Football boots within an inch of the toe or half-an-inch of the sides, and none at all at the heel; no spikes whatsoever may be used.

XVI. The above Eiiles should be put up conspicuously in every House at the beginning of every Football Quarter, and new boys should be required to make themselves thoroughly acquainted wil^ them.

Corrected to Septerriber, 1888.

100 THE HABKOW ALMANACK. 1884.

SCHOOL E L E V E N .

CHRISTMAS T E E M 1883.

B. H . Rendall [Captain) F. J , K. Cross A. E . Cox A. P . Wrigl i t M. W. Kinloch J . D . Crosbie J . B . Wl i i t taker E . M. Lafone F . W . Jai-vis H . W . Ra t t igan F . H . Mosenthal

HOUSE

The * denotes t he

* Mr. Watson^s * 3Ir. Ilutton's * Mr. B. Smith's * Mr. Stogdon's • Mr, Hayward's

* Mr. Watson's * Mr, Hayward's

Mr. BiiaheWs Mr, B. Smith's Mr. Hutton^s Mr. Cruikahank's Home Boarder Mr. B. Smith's Mr. B. Smith's 3fr. Gruikshank's Mr. Hayward's Mr. Stogdon's Mr. Hayward's

TIES.

winning House .

F I R S T T I E S .

V.

V.

V.

V.

V.

Mr. Bushell's Mr. Bowen's Mr. Cruikshaiik's Mr. Holmes' Dr. Butler's

SECOND T I E S .

V.

V.

Mr. B. Smith's Mr. Stogdon's

Odd House, Mr. Hutton's,

* Mr. HuUons

T H I E D

V.

Odd House, Mr

* 3Tr. Hayward's

F I N A L

V.

T I E S . Mr. Watson's

, Hayward's,

T I E S .

Mr. Hutton's

Home Boarders beat Small Houses. Champion House, Mr, Hayward's.

1884. THE HAKROW ALMANACK. 101

MATCHES.

October llih, Founder^a Day.

School V. Mr. Colbeck's.

School won by three bases to none.

October 27th,

School V, Old Harrovians.

School won by four bases to one.

November 17th.

School u, Oxford.

A tie ; one base each.

November 2^th.

School V. Cambridge.

School won by four bases to none.

Vecemher 1st.

School V. Rev. W. Law's Eleven.

Sdiool won by four bases to two.

Twelve v. Twenty.

Drawn. One base all.

Classical v. Modem.

Classical won by two bases to one.

102 THE HAKKOW ALMANACK. 1884.

RACQUETS.

The f olIowiDg is the list of Public School Winners :—

1868. 1869, 1870. 1871. 1872. 1873. 1874. 1875. 1876. 1877. 1878. 1879. 1880. 1881. 1882. 1888.

* D

Eton Eton niigbtj Harrow Harrow Harrow Harrow Eton Harrow Eton Eton Harrow Harrow Harrow Eton Harrow

. Butler's * Mr. Watson' * 3f * M • M • M

* M • J /

: B. Smith '. Stogdon' : Bowen's

C. J. Ottaway C. J . Ottaway H. W. Gardner A. A. Hadow A. A. Hadow P. F. Hadow P. D. Leyland J. Oswald H. E. Meek Hon. I. Bligh C. A. Ponsonby M. C. Kemp M. C. Kemp B. M. Hadow R. H. Pembei-ton H. E. Crawley

FIRST TIES

V.

? V.

S V.

! V.

V.

•. Hayward's v.

•-. B. Smith '. Watson'^

* Dr. Butler's

* M

" D

: Watson'

: Butler's

D,

W. P. Tritton J . P. Rodgera T. S. Pearson a. A. Webbe G. A. Webbe P. D. Leyland C. W. M. Kemp D. Lane L. K. Jarvis C. A. Ponsonby J. Cobbold Hon. F. de Moleyns E. M. Hadow A. F. Kemp A. C. Richards C. D. Buxton

3fr. Hutton's Mr. Bushell's Small Houses Home Boarders Mr. Grnikshank's Mr. Holmes'

SECOND TIES.

S V.

V.

V.

THIRD TIB

V.

Mr. Stogdons Mr. Bowen's Mr. Hat/ward's

Mr. B. Smith's.

Odd House, Dr. Butler's.

FINAL TIE

V. Mr. Watson's

. Butler's, Champion House.

1884. THE HARROW ALMANACK, 103

KULES OF THE GAME OF FIVES.

On Wall and Off Wall respectively denote the Court above and tiie Court below the Step^

The vertical face of the step does not reckon as part of the floor of the Court.

The Pepper-box is the Buttress. With the step it encloses a small por­tion of the floor, called the Hole.

The Line is the lower angle of the Ledge running across the front wall at the height of 4 feet 7 inches.

A ball is not up unless it hits the front wall above " the line; " or if it hits on the line it must perceptibly rise from it. Any ball, except the service, which pitches out of Court, or touches any object outside the Court before it pitches, counts against the striker.

The Beginning of a Game.

1.—When all four players are on the Court and ready to begin, the first who cries holes and innings takes his place " on wall" near the pepper-box. In a match this is decided by tossing.

2.—Whichever of his opponents is the first to cry holes takes his place below the step, ready to return the service, and both he and the server are said to be " up " or " on wall."

3.—The other two players stand " off wall," the partner of the player who serves taking the right hand side, and the partner of the player " in holes " the left hand side.

The Service,

4.—The player who has the innings must serve so as to make the ball hit first the front wall above " the line " and then the right hand side and pitch " off wall."

5.—He is bound to serve to the satisfaction of the player in holes; and serving a ball " out of Court" does not count against him.

The First Cut.

6.~The player *' in holes " may refuse to return any service, and if he fails in returning it, it does not count against him,

7.—The player "in holes" miist hit the ball on its first bound, so that it shall hit either (1) first the right hand wall, and then the front wall

104 THE HARROW ALMANACK, 1884,

above " the line," or (2) the froat wall above "the line," and to the right of the vertical line marked on it.

8.—A " first cut," which is *' up," but not in accordance with these conditions, is called a Uackguard cut. The player who put it up, or his partner, may catch or touch a " blackguard cut" before the first bound, in which case the ball is dead. If the ball is not thus touched or caught it may be taken by the opposite side, but it does not count against them, if they return it below the line. I t does count against them if they return it out of Court.

9.—A "first cu t" may be stopped from going out of Court by the player " in holes " or his partner catching or touching the ball, provided either that he be standing on the Court, or that, if he jumps, he alight on the Court with the foot which first touches the groimd. [This rule applies to first cut only.]

10.— If " the player in holes " loses two points to the opposite side otherwise than by the ball falling in and being trapped by " the hole," he is said to be two out or pumped^ and he and his partner change places. This change, however, does not interfere with the regular succes­sion to innings. [See R, 19.]

NOTE.—For the purposes of this Rule all balls which fall " on wall" are regarded as belongi;^ to the " player in holes," and all balls falling " off wall" to his partner.

The Bully.

11.—After the "first cu t" the ball is hit up by the two sides alter­nately. The ball may be hit before the first or before the second bound, and must be hit once only,

12.—The ball is counted " not up " if it touches the striker or his partner before or after he hits i t ; but it is counted " up " if after the stroke is made it strikes an opponent and then goes up.

13.—The ball may not be held.

Lets,

14.—A let may be claimed— (a.) If a ball after going" u p " hits the last player or his

partner, when it may be returned or not by the other side at their option. If they fail in an attempt to return it a let is allowed.

(&.) If a player is prevented or impeded in his attempt to return the ball by one of his opponents, or if a ball which would otherwise have been up is intercepted by an opponent.

15.—A let cannot be claimed, excepting under Rule 20, if the player actually puts the ball u p ; or in any ease on account of any bystander or subject outside the Court.

1884, THB HAHROW ALMAKACK. 105

NOTE.—Claims for " le t" are usually allowed but should be avoided aa much, as possible. In a match the umpire decides these and other doubtful points.

Succession to Innings.

16.—"When one partner is put out the second takes his place; when the second is put out their opponents go in, the player whose turn it was to be " i n holes " having first innings. [This rule applies both to the beginning of the game and subsequently.]

17.—If a player goes in when it is his partner*s turn, or when it is the turn of the other side, the error may be corrected at any time during his innings, or before the commencement of the succeeding innings, but not afterwards; and any points made in the interval are not counted,

18.—At the beginnii^ of each game the player who has the first inn­ings is also, when his side is put out, the first to go into '* holes.**

19.—After the first time it is the player who has the second innings who goes into "holes" when his side, is put out.

Game Ball; Blackguard Cut.

20.—When the side **in*' has reached fourteen points, the player serving must have one foot " on wall," and the other foot in the " hole," out of which he may not remove it until the player " in holes *' has hit the ball. If the player serving fails to do this the player in holes may claim a let, even if the ball has been put ** up."

21.—If the player serving serves the ball without thus stepping, and his opponents can catch or touch the ball before him or his partner, and before it reaches the ground, he is out. A player may remind his partner to " step."

22.—At fourteen, or game hall, the player " in holes '* is at liberty to return a blackguard cut [see E. 8] which his opponents are bound to take.

PAIR "WALL GAME.

When only two are playing both players stand " on wall." The "in*' player stands on the right hand side with one foot " o n

wa l l " ; and serves, by making the ball hit first the right hand side wall, and then the front wall above the line.

106 THE HARROW ALMAHACK. 1884.

The player taking the service stands near the "pepper box," and must return the ball by making it hit either the left hand side wall and front wall, or the front wall and light hand side wall in succession.

No change is made in the service or the return at game ball. If the ball bounds " oflF wall" in the course of the play a let may be

claimed; or the ball may be taken at the player's own risk.

*MT. Holmes^ *Mr. B. Smithes "Dr. Butler's "Mr. Watson's "Mr. BusheWs *Mr. Hutton's

"Mr. Watson*s *Dr. Sutler** "Mr. Button's

F I V E S T I E S .

FinST T I E S .

V.

V.

V.

V.

V.

V. ,

SECOND T I E S .

V.

V.

V.

Mr. Stogdon's Mr. Hayward*s Mr. Bowen's Small Houses Mr, Cruikskauk^s Home Boarders

Mr. B. Smith's Mr, BuskeWs Mr. Holmes*

T H I R D T I E S .

"Dr. Butler^s v . Mr. Watson's Odd House, Mr. Hutton's

F O U R T H T I E S .

"Dr. Butler* Mr. Htttton*s

1884. THB HARROW ALMANACK. 107

SWlMMINa.

IN 187G a Pass in swimming was instituted for tlie whole School. The names of all boys who have not passed are printed at the end of the Summer Term.

CHAMPION HOUSE IN SWIMICNG, 1883.

1. Sig

2. Small

Ehrington Cup : Junior Ehrington : Diving: 1.

2. Headers: 1.

2. Diving /or Eggs: Eorm Maces :

Fifth Form

Big. Small. Big. Small.

Jiemoves & Shell 1.

("W. A. E. Young ) G. P. Annitage >

( A. R. Whitehead ) (C. B. Johnson ) \ C. M. Young \ { 0. B. Barter }

A. E. Whitehead... D. G. Price J. D. Crosbie T. Sowler A. Broraet C. M. Y o u i ^ H. A. Lafone

C. Maclver W. A. R.Young...

Shell 3 and 4 and Fourth Form.

Beginners : C.M.Young D.M. Straight ...

... Mr, Stogdon's

... Mr, BushelVs

., Mr. Stogdon's

... Dr. Butler^a

. . . Mr, B. Smith's ... Mr. Hay ward's ... Dr, Butler's ... Mr. BushelVs ... Mr. GruikshanK's

... Mr. Cruikshanh'a

... Mr. Stogdon's

... Mr. Buahell's

... Mr. BuauU'a

The number of boys who passed in swimming in 1883, was 194.

108 THE HARROW ALMANACK. 1884.

RIFLE CORPS.

THE SCHOOL EIGHT.

Lieutenant T, F. V. Buxton (Capt.) Mr. Wat8on*s Captain E. F. Hayward Mr. Haywardh Lance-Corporal A. E. East Mr. Hayward's Private H. E. Gale Mr. Watson*s Corporal W. F. Egerton Dr. Butler^s Lieutenant "W. Willana Dr. Butler's Private David Mr. B. SmitWs Private S. F. Saunderson Mr. Ilutton's

PUBLIC SCHOOLS MATCH AT "WIMBLEDON.

1861. Rugby, Harrow, Eton. 1862. Harrow, Ri^by, Eton, Marlborough. 1863. Eton, Eugby, Harrow, Marlborough, Winehester, Cheltenham. 1864. Harrow, Cheltenham, Ei^by, Eton, "Winchester, Marlborough. 1865. Harrow, Marlborough, Rugby, "Winchester, Eton, Cheltenham. 1866. Harrow, Eton, Cheltenham, Marlborough, Rugby. 1867. Harrow, Rugby, Cheltenham, Eton, Eossall, Marlborough, "Win­

chester. 1868. Eton, Marlborough, Cheltenham, Rugby, Harrow, Winchester,

RossaU. 1869. Harrow, Eugby, Eton, Marlboroi^h, Cheltenham, Eossall, Derby,

Winchester. 1870. Harrow, Eossall, Rugby, Eton, Winchester, Marlborough, Derby,

Cheltenham. 1871. Winchester, Harrow, Ei^by, Eton, Rossall, Cheltenham, Marl­

borough, Derby. 1872. Winchester, Rugby, Marlborough, Cheltenham, Harrow, Eton,

Rossall. 1873. Winehester, Harrow, Marlborough, Cheltenham, Eton, Rugby,

Derby. 1874. Marlborough, Harrow, Charterhouse, Rugby, Cheltenham, Derby,

Rossall, Winchester, Eton. 1875. Harrow, Derby, Marlborough, Cheltenham, Winchester, Charter­

house, Eton, Eugby, Eossall. 1876. Winchester, Charterhouse, Cheltenham, Derby, Harrow, Marl­

borough, Eton, Eugby, Eossall. 1877. Cheltenham, Eton, Harrow, Charterhouse, Derby, Winchester,

Eugby, Marlboroi^h, Eossall.

1884. THE HAKROW ALMANACK. 109

1878.

1879.

1880.

1881.

1882.

1883.

Eton, Chapterhouse, "Winchester, Harrow, Eossall, Marlborough, Eugby, Clifton, Cheltenham, Derby, Whitgift, Dulwich, Glen-almond.

Harrow, Charterhouse Cheltenham, Bossall almond.

Eton,

Winchester, Marlborough, Eton, Clifton, Eugby, "Whit^t,

Cheltenham, "Winchester, Harrow, borough, Dulwieh, Bossall.

Cheltenham, Harrow,

Dulwioh, Derby, Glen-

Charterhouse, Marl-"Whitgift, Glenalmond, Clifton, Derby,

"Whitgift, Marlborough, Dulwich, Win-Chester, Charterhouse, Clifton, Derby Bugby, Bossall.

Charterhouse, Clifton, Harrow, Cheltenham Dulwich.

, Glenalmond, Eton,

Eton, Eossall, Glenalmond, Winchester, , Marlborough, Bugby, Derby, "Whitgift,

Cliarterhouse, Winchester, "Wellington, Eton, Clifton, Harrow, Glenalmond, Marlborough, "Whitgift, Dulwich, Bossall.

Bugby, Cheltenham,

THE ASHBUBTON CHALLENGE SHIELD.

1861. 1862. 1868. 1864. 1865. 1866. 1867. 1868. 1869. 1870. 1871. 1872. 1873. 1874. 1875. 1876. 1877. 1878. 1879. 1880. 1881. 1882. 1883.

Eugby ... . HaiTOw ... . Eton Harrow ... . Harrow ... . Harrow ... . Harrow ... . Eton Harrow ... . Harrow ... . "Winchester .. Winchester Winchester Marlborough .. Harrow Winchester Cheltenham . Eton Harrow ... . Eton Cheltenham . Charterhouse . Charterhouse.

Score. 91 ...

234 ... 246 ... 228 ... 216 ... 268 ... 244 ... 248 ... 268 ... 268 ... 299 ... 318 ... 424 ... 429 ... 648 ... 493 ... 393 ... 403 ... 414 ... 427 ... 404 ... 846 ... 405 ...

Highest possible Score. 276 440 440 440 440 440

... 440 440 440 616 616 616 616 770 770 770 560 560 560 560 560 560 560

110 THE HARROW ALMANACK. 1884.

1861.

1862.

1883.

1864.

186S.

1866.

1867.

1868.

1869.

1870.

leri .

1872.

1873.

1874.

1875.

1876.

1877.

1878.

1879.

1880.

1881.

1882.

1883.

SPENCER CUP.

— Howard

EarlofEIdon

Sergeant Deedes

Corporal Thornton ...

Sergeant Jones

Ensign Jones

Sei-geant Collier

Piivate Hon. E. Bruce

Private Sim

Private Hemery

Ensign Formby

Private Cowan

Sergeant Mellish

Lieutenant Sladen ...

Captain Philpot

Private Lamb

Sergeant Lamb

Private Montgomery...

Lance-Corp. Foulkes...

Private Eliot

Private Hayne

Private Scott

Sergeant Caldwell ...

.. Eton

.. Eton

.. "Winchester...

.. Cheltenham

.. Harrow

.. Harrow

.. Cheltenham

... Eton

.. Cheltenham

.. Harrow

.. Eton

.. Cheltenham

... Eton

.. Cheltenham

... Marlborough

.. Cheltenham

.. Cheltenham

.. Glenalmond

.. Harrow

.. Marlborough

... Whifgift ...

.. Glenalmond

.. Glenalmond

Highest possible Score. Score.

8 ...

19 ...

24 ...

12 ...

19 ...

15 ...

22 ...

21 ...

24 ...

23 ...

23 ...

28 ...

21 ...

28 ...

80 ...

26 ...

81 ...

27 ...

31 ...

27 ...

28 ...

25 ...

29 ...

.. 14

.. 28

.. 28

.. 28

.. 28

.. 28

.. 28

.. 28

.. 28

.. 28

.. 28

.. 28

.. 28

.. 35

.. 85

.. 35

.. 35

.. 35

.. 35

.. 35

.. 35

.. 35

.. 35

1884. THE HAHKOW ALMANACK. I l l

L I S T O F P E I Z E S .

Winner of Lord Korthwklc's Bifie^ Capt. K. F. Hayward Mr, Haywardh Winner of Drill Prise, G. Stephenson Mr. Watson*»

CHAMPION HOUSES, 1883.

Football, Mr. Hayward^s Cricket, Mr. B. Smith's Racquets, Dr. Butler's (^rd year.) Five^, Dr. Butler's Shooting, Mr. Hayivard's Gymnastics, Home Boarders Swimming, Mr. Stogdon's Torpids, Mr. Stogdon's

EBEINGTON CHALLENGE CUPS.

Batting, T. Greatorex 3lr. Bowen's Bowling, B . A. F . Grieve Mr. Button's Fielding, A . F . Dauglish Mr. Stngdon's Banquets, H . E . Crawley {3rd year) Dr. Butler's Munning, H. A. B. Eattigan Mr. Stogdon's Swimming, A . R. Whitehead Mr. Stogdon's Rifle Shooting, T. F. V. Buxton Mr, Watson's

112 THE HAKKOW ALMANACK. 1884.

EIFLE CORPS

THE SCHOOL v.

Lieut. B. Stokoe l ieut . J . E. Vinoeiit Private J . Jefferies ... Corp. J . Williams ... A.S.M. E. Collinson Col.-Seigt. J . Cookie L.-Corp. J . Battcock Sergt. E. Newton ... C.-Sergt. C. Augustus Private O. Shephard

Lieut. iT. H. Hawkins Seigt. E. J . Hubbard

200 19 25 26 25 24 21 25 25 20 27

23 22

500 17 22 18 12 21 21 29 24 17 21

9 21

2HD

Agte. 36 47 44 37 45 42 61 49 37 61

82 43

282 235 517 less 2 lowest scores 68

449

.—MATCHES.

TOWEE HAMLETS.

Lieut. T. F. V. Buxton L.-Corp. A. E. East Private N. M. David Capt. E. F. Hayward Private F. H. Pigou Corp. W. F . Egerton Private H. E. Gale ... Private 'W.E.W.Peel Lieut. W. Willans ... Private M.H.W.Hay-

ward Corp. W. W. Ashley Private A. E. Sladen

200 coo Agte. 28 26 26 28 23 22 26 21 23

22 26 12

24 62 20 45 18 44 16 43 18 41 18 40 12 37 14 36 12 36

12 34 7 33

15 27

281 186 466 less 2 lowest scores

Tower Hamlets winning by 43 points.

THE

Private H . E . Gale ... Lieut. W. Willans ... Corp. W. F. Egerton Capt. E. F. Hayward Private N. M. David L.-Coip. A. E. East Lieut. T.P.V.Buxton Private S. E.Saunder-

Bon Corp. W. W. Ashley Private M.H.W.Hay-

ward

3CH00L V.

200 27 26 23 24 28 23 27

25 21

16

soo 25 25 26 23 19 21 16

17 19

12

Agte. 62 60 49 47 47 44 43

42 40

28

239 203 442

9TH MIDDLESEX.

Corporal Savage Corporal Short Mr. East Seigt.-Inst. Gilder ... Private Smith Private J. Bllement Private F. N. Cowell

Private Q. EUement Corporal Kindell ...

Captain Bridgwater

200 28 25 27 27 24 25 26

21 21

21

60

406

500 Agte, 19 47 21 46 19 46 18 45 19 48 17 42 16 42

17 41 16 40

11 35

251 173 427

1884. THE HABROW ALMANACK. 113

T H E SCHOOL v. I N N S O F COtTET E.V.C.

Corporal Bradford .. P r iva te Locock Sergeant Spencer .. L i e u t e n a n t Sankey „

Corporal Gibbons ... Col.-Sergt. SimmondB Pr iva te Logan Pr iva te Blackburn ... P r iva te Eobinaou .. Sergeant James

I n n

20O 500 Agte 28 19 47 29 21 60 28 19 47 29 24 63

29 19 48 27 19 46 27 14 41 28 15 43 25 19 44 26 26 62

276 195 471

Lieut . T. F . V. Bux ton Pr ivate N . M . David Pr ivate H . E . Gale ... Pr iva te S.F. Saunder -

son Lieu t . W . 'Willans ... Corp. W . F . Eger ton Corp. W . W . Ashley Pr ivate TV. E . Pee l . . . Capt . E . F . H a y w a r d L.-Corp. A. E . E a s t

s of Court winning by 17 points .

T H E SCHOOL t>. A

Lieut . T . F . V . B u x t o n Pr ivate N . M. David P r i v a t e W . E . P e e l . . . Pr iva te S.F. Saunder -

son Corp. W . F . Eger ton L ieu t . W . 'Wmans ... Capt . E . F . H a y w a r d L.-Corp. A . B . Eas t . . .

200 600 Agte. 27 22 49 28 22 50 22 22 44

28 25 53 23 0 23 28 21 49 29 29 68 23 23 46

208 164 372

C A M B E I D G E T E A M

Capta in Smith Corporal Simpson ... L i eu tenan t Bradley. . .

Corp. Ashley (sub.) . . . Pr ivate Heywood ... Lanoe-Corp. B u m e y Col.-Seigt. PoUock. . . L ieu tenan t Collins ...

The School winning by 26 points .

T H E SCHOOL v. 23RD

Captain Knigh t Corporal Sherrell ... Captain Beame Sergeant Maokay ...

Corporal Holloway ... Sergeant Alley P r iva te G. Eisley ... P r i v a t e P . Eisley ... Col.-Sergt. Buckland Corporal Lowe

less 2 lowest scores

200 500 Agte. 27 28 65 28 26 63 26 26 52 26 21 47

24 21 46 25 11 36 24 22 46 20 22 42 27 12 39 28 13 41

265 201 458 76

381

M I D D L E S E X E,V.C

L ieu t . T . F . V .Bux ton Pr iva te N . M. David Pr iva te W . E . P e e l . . . P r iva te S. F .Saunder -

son Pr iva te W . W . A s h l e y Pr iva te H . E . Gale ... Corp. W . F . Bger ton L ieu t . W . WiUans ... Capt . E . F . H a y w a r d L . - Corp. A . E . E a s t

less 2 lowest scores

200 31 25 24

21 27 26 21 22 26 23

500 Agte. 21 62 17 42 16 40

19 40 26 62 26 51 20 41 29 51 9 35

27 60

246 209 451

200 26 26 29

26 23 11 28 29

500 Agte. 16 40 23 48 15 44

20 46 26 49 10 21 19 47 23 62

195 161 346

200 23 20 28

30 24 21 25 20 29 23

500 Agte. 13 36 19 39 15 43

23 53 11 36 21 42 13 38 26 46 16 44 19 42

243 176 418 71

347

114 THE HARROW ALMANACK. 1884.

HOUSE ELEVENS, EACES, &c.

DE. BUTLEE'S HOUSE.

FOOTBALL ELEVEN, 1883. CEICKET ELEVEN, 1883. E. M. Butler [Capt.) F. W. Bovill {Capt.) H. "W. Armsteod E. M. Butler H. B. Crawley H. E. Crawley H. H. Grogan W. F. Wilkinson Hon. E. C. Tollemaohe Hon. E. C. ToUemaohe E. J . M. Ijaxken G. L. Pares 8. Baldwin J . P. Dickson-Poynder A. Bromet JS. Crawley E. F. Boutcher G. B. Bovill

F. E. Seely C. E. Grey H. E. White liOrd Dminlanrig

HOUSE HUEDLE EACES. Big. 1. G. L. Pares Small. 1. S. N. Bevington

2. Lord Drumlamig 2. •

HOUSE FLAT EACES. Big. 1. W. F. Wilkinson Small. 1. S. N. Bevington

2. L. C. M. Eustace 2. A. Bromet

HOUSE EACQUET PLATEES. H. E. Crawley B. M. Butler

HOUSE FIVES PLAYEES. Hon. E. C. Tollemaclie W. F. Wilkinson

MISCELLANEOUS. In the School Cricket Eleven, H. E. Crawley (Oapt.), E. M. Butler.

In the School Shooting Eight, W. F. Egerton, W. Willans. In the School Cadets, T. J. 0. Tomlin.

In the School Gymnasium Eight, F. E. Seely. In the Philathletic Club, W. F . Wilkinson, H. E. Crawley, F. W. Bovill, B. D. Miller, Hon, E. C. ToUemache, E. M. Butler, W. F. L. de Quet-

teville, F. E. Seely, G. C. Joyce, W. G. Headlam. School Racquet Player, H. E. Crawley.

Champion House at Racquets (3rd year). Champion House at Fives, Cham­pion House at Twelve (Singing), Champion House at Tug~of-War.

Winner of Champion Hurdles, W. F. Wilkinson. Winner of Lord Besshorough^s Prize for picking up Stones, W. F.

Wilkinson. Winner of Sixth Form double Fives Ties, F. W. Bovill.

Winner of Fifth Form double Fives Ties, Hon. E. C. Tollemaohe. Winner of Shell double Fives Ties, B. Crawley.

Winner of Ebrington Racquet Cup (ird year), H. E. Crawley. Winner of Mr. Bowen*s Prize for best Catch, H. E. Crawley.

Winner of Average Bat in Second Fifth Form Game, G. B. Bovill. Big Headers, A. Bromet.

Winner of Ebrington Swimming Gup {Small), D. G. Price. Winner of Football Cup, E. Bush.

House Half-MUe, 1. S. C. Farlow (66 yds.); 2. L. C. M. Eustace (45 yds.)

J

1884. THE HABBOW ALMANACK. 115

ME. HOLMES' HOUSE.

FOOTBALL ELEVEN, 1883.

W. H. Norris (Capt.) B. Brooks J . F. Lynch E. T. B. Simpson N. T. Holmes C. E. Eussell H. A. Johnson

S. A. Williamson E. B. H. Parkes E. a. Baphael H. 0. Blackwood

CBICKET ELEVEN, 1883.

E. Brooks (Cajpt.) E. T. B. Simpson N. T. Holmes E. G. Eaphael H. 8. Bring A. Williamson H. B. Galton C. E. Eussell

J. S. F. Fair A. C. Sturgis C. E. Atkinson

HOUSE HUEDLE EACES.

Bi;/. 1, B. T. B. Simpson 2. H. S. Bring

Big.

HOUSE FLAT EACES.

1. W. H. Norris

2. A. J. Peters

Small. 1. W. G. Drew 2 ( F. Barbour ' ( G. Alexander

C. E. Eussell

E. Brooks

HOUSE EACaUET PLAYERS.

E. T. B. Simpson

HOUSE FIVES PLAYEES.

E. T. B. Simpson

MISCELLANEOUS.

School Gymnasium Eight, J . F. Lynch. Winner of School Fencing Prize, J. F. Lynch.

House MUe, 1. H. S. Dring (40 yds.); 2. J . F. Lynch (15 yds.) House Quarter Mile, 1. "W. H. Norris (scratch); 2. E. Brooks (12 yds.)

116 THE HAEKOW ALMANACK. 1884.

ME. "WATSON'S HOUSE.

FOOTBALL ELEVEN, 1883. CEICKET ELEVEN, 1883.

C, D. Buxton fCajjf.J C. D. Buxton (CVt jf.) S, W. Meek H. B. Pember H. B. Pember A. K. "Watson A. K. "Watson A. A. "Wolfe-Murray "W. E. "W. Peel E. E. "Walker C. H. Dent C. H. Dent E. B. "Walker H. T. Williams G. C. Forester M. Moncreiffe E. Peel J . A. "Wilson-Patten L. M. "Woodward M. Monereiffe 8. W. Meek

F. D. P. Chaplin

HOUSE HUEDLE EACBS.

Sig. 1. H. E. Pember Small. 1. C. C. Heywood 2. 2. "W. H. Duckworth

HOUSE FLAT EACBS.

Big. 1. H. B. Pember Small. 1. C. C. Heywood 2. E. Peel 2. "W. H. Duckworth

HOUSE EACQUBT PLAYBES.

C. D. Buxton H. B. Pember

HOUSE FIVES PLAYBES.

C. D. Buxton H. E. Pember

MISCELLANEOUS.

School Cricket Eleven, C. D. Buxton. PMlathletic Club, S. "W. Meek, G. Stephenson, H. E. Pember, F. D. P.

Chaplin, A. K. "Watson, C. D. Buxton, C. H. Dent, E. B. "Walker. School Racquet Player, C. D . Buxton.

House Mile, H. E. Pember. House Half-Mile, G. F. 0. Cresswell.

School Shooting Eight, T. P. V. Buxton, H. E. Gale. Drill Prize, G. Stephenson.

Winner of Ehrington Challenge Cup for Shooting, T. F. V. Buxton.

1884. THE HAKKOW ALMANACK. 117

ME. HUTTON'S

FOOTBALL ELEVEN, 1883.

A. E. Cox (Oapt.) J. Galsworthy D. A. Smith-Ouninghame B. C. Lucas E. H. Kinahan W. W..Grantliam G. Grinling G. A. Hall C. S. Vaughan

W. P. Jones H. B. Gilroy

HOUSE.

CEICKET ELEVEN, 1883.

B. A. F. Grieve (Ca^pt.) A. E. Cox E. H. Kinahan H. H. P. Dundas H. F. Sulivan "W. AV. SkUbeok 8. Eoutledge B. C. Lucas

G. Grinling H. A. Spalding J. S. Eobinson

HOUSE HUEDLE RACES.

Big. 1. E. H. Kinahan 2. W. W. Grantham

HOUSE FLAT EACES.

Big. 1. H. F. SiUivan 2. B. C. Lucas

Small. 1. W. C. L. Jay 2. J. S. Eobinsoa

HOUSE EACQUET PLAYEES.

S. F. Saunderson B. C. Lucas

HOUSE FIVES PLAYEES.

E. H. Einahan B. A. F. Grieve

MISCELLANEOUS.

In the School Football Eleven, A. K. Cox (2nd year). In the School Cricket Eleven, B. A. P. Grieve, A. E. Cox.

In the School Shooting Eiyhty S. F. Saundersou. In the Fhilathletie Club, B. A. F. Grieve, A. E. Cox, C. S. "Vaughan, E.

H. Kinahan, J. Galsworthy. Winner of Ebrington Bowling Prize, B. A. F. Grieve.

House Mile, 1. J. Galsworthy (25 yds.); 2. W. "W. Skilbeck (scratch) ; 3. J. S. Eobinson (200 yds.)

House Quarter Mile, 1. J. Galsworthy (5 yds.) ; 2. "W. "W. Grantham, ,-- , . i D. B. Eichardson (10 yds.;; 3. | H . F. Sulivan.

118 THE HARROW ALMANACK. 1884.

ME. HAYWAED'S HOUSE.

FOOTBALL ELEVEN, 1883. CEICKET ELEVEN, 1883.

E. W. Jarvis (Oapt.) N. Smith (Capt.) W. L. Philipps H. F. Mosenthal E. H. Gumey H. Gumey H. F. Mosenthal 0. C. E. Woods E. D. Mackie H. M. Latham H. J. Bowerby F. W. Jarvis N. Smith G. E. Sandars E. F. Hayward H. C. St. George F. H. Mowatt

E. H. Gumey H. Gumey E. D. Maekie H. Lazenby H. Lazenby

HOUSE HUEDLE RACES.

Big, 1. F. "W. Jarvia SmalU 1. H. Gumey 2. B. H. Gumey 2. H. J. Sowerby

HOUSE FLAT EACES.

Big. 1. N. Smith Small. 1. H. M. Latham

2. E. L. Calverley 2. P. B. L. Taylor

HOUSE EACQUET PLAYEES.

N. Smith H. F. Mosenthal

HOUSE FIVES PLAYEES. H. W. Becher A. N. Becher

MISCELLANEOUS.

Champion House at Football^ Champion House at Slwoting, In School Football Eleven, F . W . Jarvis , and H . F . Mosenthal .

In School Shooting Eight, E. F. Hayward, and A. E. East. In School Gymnasium Eight, H. "W. Penney.

House MiU, 1. "W. Bindloss (800 yds.); 2. H. "W. Becher (10 yds.)

1884. THE HARROW ALMJXACK. 119

M E . B O W E N ' S H O U S E .

r O O T B A L L E L E V E N , 1883.

F . H . Dates (Capt.) F . H . 3. Underwood "W. S. Sydney F . Worniald

W . Tat tersa l l B . S. Johnson W . V. Surtees E . W . Lewis H . A. Bellville F . H . Toller A. M. •Wilson

C E I C K E T E L E V E N , 1883.

r . H . Dates {Capt.) T. Greatorex ^ . L . Lneena G. T. E a t o n W . S, Sidney

F . H . J . Underwood J . E . Clarke J . A. Hardcas t le W . Tat te rsa l l H . A. Bellville E . H . Toller

Big.

H O U S E H U E D L E E A C E S .

Big. 1. T. Greatorex 2. G. N . Hardinge

Small. 1. S. L . Lucena 2. H . V . El l io t t

1. T. Greatorex 2. H . T. F rase r

H O U S E F L A T E A C E S .

Small, 1. S. L . Lucena 2. H . V. El l io t t

H O U S E E A C Q U E T P L A Y E E S .

F . H . Dates G. T. Ea ton

H O U S E F I V E S P L A Y E E S .

F . H . Dates T . Greatorex

M I S C E L L A N E O U S .

In the School Cricket Eleven^ T. Greatorex, F . H . Dates. In the School Gymnaaium Eight, T. Greatorex.

In the Fhilathletic Club, F . H . Oates, T. Greatorex. House Steeplechase, T. Greatorex (scratch.)

Bouse Half-Mile, F . Worma ld (72 yds.) House Quarter Mile, T. Greatorex (scratch.)

Winner of Mr. Bowen^s Football " Ones," T. Greatorex. Winner of Ehrington Baiting Cup, T. Greatorex.

Winner of Shell Fives Ties, S. L . Lucena.

120 THE HARROW ALMANACK. 1884.

MR. BOSWOETH SMITH'S HOUSE.

FOOTBALL ELEVEN, 1883. CEICKET ELEVEN, 1883.

F. J . K. Cross (Gapt.) E. L. Eamsay {Cajtt.) J. D. Crosbie H. T. Hewett J. D. "Whittaker C. E. Kindersley E. K. Cross • V. Thompson F. W. "Wingfleld-Digby F. J. K. Cross C. E. Kindersley J. D. Crosbie F. W. Heard F. W. "Wingfleld-Digby E. S. Evans A. D. Eamsay A. D. Eamsay E. K. Cross

K. M. McKenzie C. M. Usher C. M. Usher J. D. "Whittaker

HOUSE HUEDLE EACES.

Big. 1. F. J. K. Cross Sirmll. 1. S. C. Burke 2. H. T. Hewett 2. V. Thompson

HOUSE FLAT EACES.

mg. 1. F. J. K. Cross Small. S. C. Burke I

2. H. T. Hewett E. S. Evans i

HOUSE EACQUET PLAYERS.

C. B. Kindersley J. D. Crosbie

HOUSE FIVES PLAYBES. H. T. Hewett F. J. K. Cross

MISCELLANEOUS.

Champion House, at Crichei. In School Criclcet Eleven, H. T. Hewett, V. Thompson, 12th man, C. E.

Kindersley. In the School Football Eleven; F. J. K. Cross, J . I). Crosbie, J. B,

Whittaker. In the Philathletie Clui, H. T. Hewett, F. J. K. Cross, J. D. Crosbie, E.

L. Eamsay, C. E. Kindersley, F. "W. "Wingfleld-Digby. School Ilile, F. J. K. Cross. School Half-Mile, F. J. K. Cross.

School Quarter Mile, F. J. K. Cross. School Broad Jump, F. J. K. Cross. House Mile, 1. F. J. K. Cross (scratch) ; 2. V. Thompson (220 yds.)

House Half-Mile, p . J. K. Cross (scratch). House Quarter Mile, 1. F. J.K.Cross (owes 10 yds.) ; 2. B.K.Cross (34 yds.) Champion Long Dive, J. D. Crosbie. School Shooting Eight, N. M. David.

School G-ymnasmm Eight, S. C. Burke, R. K. Cross.

1884. THE HAKROW ALMANACK. 121

ME. BUSHELL'S HOUSE.

FOOTBALL ELEVEN, 1883. CEICKBT ELEVEN, 1883.

B. H. Eendall (Cafl.) B. H. Kendall (Caiit.) H. C. Buckingham E. F. B. Wigram E. M. Lowis S. Mills W. E. P. Jackson B. E. Warren C. L. Graham C. F. Hutton E. F. Nicholson C. B. Johnson T. B. A. Clarke T. M. Young O. M. Dalton

E. M. Lowis J. A. Stewart E. F. Nicholson T. M. Young \ O. M. Dalton S. Mills j T. B. A. Clarke

HOUSE HUEDLE EACES.

Big. 1. E. F. E. "Wigram Small. 1. C. L. Graham 2. E. M. Lowis 2. H. C. Buckingham

HOUSE FLAT EACES.

Big. 1. B. H. Eendall Small. 1. C. L. Graham 2. A. N. Davis 2. H. C. Buckingham

HOUSE EACQUET PLAYEES.

W. W. Ashley E. E. Hill

HOUSE FIVES PLAYEES.

B. H. Eendall E. F. E. "Wigram

MISCELLANEOUS.

Champion House at Madrigal Singing {3rd year). Champion House at "Ducklings.'*

In the Philathlelic Club, E. M. Eendall, A. N. Davis, E. F. E. "Wigram, B. H. Eendall.

House Mile, 1. B. H. Eendall; 2. C. L. Graham. Half-Uile, 1. "W. E. P. Jackson; 2. E. M. Lowis.

122 THE HARROW ALMANACK. 1884.

ME. CEUIKSHANK'S HOUSE.

FOOTBALL ELEVEN, 1883. OBICKET ELEVEN, 1883.

N. "Ward (Capt.) H. V. Stuart (Ca'pt.) A. E. "Wright N. "Ward E. M. Lafone C. P. PhilUps "W. H. Dent A. F. "Wright J. T. Sanderson J. T. Sanderson H. "W. Foskett "W. H. Dent K. H. "Wright G. T. "Warner F. A. Daniell H. "W. Foskett C. Melver H. F. Kemp 0. F. Archibald J . G. T. Bruce

E. B. Izard E. M. Lafone

HOUSE HUEDLE EACES.

Big. 1. T. Harrison Small. 1. C. H. "Weekes 2. H. V. Stuart 2. E. B. Izard

HOUSE FLAT EACES.

Big. 1. E. Joicey Small. 1. E. M. Lafone 2. H. H. A. Hoare 2. H. F. Kemp

HOUSE EACQUET PLAYEES.

H. F. Kemp J. T. Sanderson

HOUSE FIVES PLAYEES.

G. T. "Warner C. H. de Eougemont

MISCELLANEOUS.

In the PUlatMetic Olul, H. V. Stuart, N. Ward, C. "W. Firebrace, A. F. "Wright.

In the. School Football Eleven, A. F. "Wright, E. M. Lafone. In the Scfiool G'/mnasium Eight, C. F. Archibald [Capt.), F . A. Daniell.

Winner of School High Jump, A. F. "Wright. Winner of School Sack Race, A. Stirling.

Winner of School Consolation Race, E . Joicey. Winner of School Hurdles [small), T. Harrison.

Winner of Mr. Farmer^s Prize for Treble Solo Singing, E. M. Lafone. School Champion Gymnast, C. F. Archibald.

Bat for Fielding in V. 1. Game, J . T . Sanderson. Winner of Average Bat in V. 2. Game, H. F- Kemp. Winner of Fifth Form Swimming Race, C. Maclver.

Winner of Fifth Form Hurdles, T. Harrison.

1884. THE HARROW ALMANACK. 123

ME.

FOOTBALL ELEVEN

STOGDON'S

1883.

H. A. B. Eattigan (Oapt.) G. W. S. Farmer A. A. Ainslie H. "W. Eattigaa H. G. Clarke M. J. Dauglish W. A. E. Young H. M. Hftskins E. H. Thompson

F. Knowles A. Blain

HOUSE.

CEICKET EI/EVEN, 1888.

E. T. Saulez (Oapt.) A. F. Daugliah A. T. •Williams H. A. B. Eattigan A. A. Ainslie H. W. Eattigan M. J. Dauglish W. A. E. Young C. F. P. McNeill

A. D. Dixon-Brown E. H. Thompson

HOUSE HUEDLE RACES.

Big. 1. H. W. Eattigan Small. 1. G. P. Armitage 2. H. A. B. Eattigan 2. A. E. Whitehead

HOUSE FLAT EACES.

Big. 1. H. W. Eattigan Small. 1. G. P. Armitage 2. H. G. Clarke 2. P. W. Eemnant

HOUSE EACaUET PLAYEES.

C. G. Malleson H. W. Eattigan

HOUSE FIVES PLAYEES.

G. W. S. Farmer M. J. Dauglish

MISCELLANEOUS. Champion House at Torpids (Winners of Mr. Stogdon^s Challenge Cup.)

Champion House at Swimming. Champion House at Criclcet {2nd Division.) School Cricket Eleven, A. F. Dauglish, W. A. E. Young.

School Foothall JSleven, H. W. Eattigan. Philaihletic Club, H. A. B. Eattigan, H. W. Eattigan.

Ebrington Running Cup, H . A. B . Eattigan. School 100 Yards Flat Mace, H. A. B. Eattigan.

Ebrington Fielding Cup, A . F. DaugKsh. Ebrington Swimming Cup, A . E . "Whitehead.

Home 200 Yards (Handicap Flat), 1. H . A. B. Eattigan ('scratch) ; 2. H. G. Clarke (5 yds.); 8. H. M. Haskins (8 yds.)

House Mile Handicap, 1. A. F. Dauglish (40 yds.); 2. A. Blain (112 yds.) House Half~Mile (Handicap), 1. E. H. Thompson (56 yds.);

2. A. Blain (76 yds.) House Quarter Mile {Handicap), 1. H. W. Eattigan (26 yds.);

2. H. G. Clarke (11 yds.)

124 THE HARROW ALMANACK. 1881.

SMALL HOUSES.

FOOTBALL ELEVEN, 1883. CRICKET ELEVEN, 1883.

H. K. Anderson (Oapt.) 1. K. Ashworth (Oapt.) 8. H. Hargrove C. H. Eenwiok K. 8. Anderson L. H. Morgan J . r . Fyfe-Jamieson P. Ashworth J . H. Ismay C. E. Staveley V. S. Galsworthy —

E. L. Sanderson Hon. J . P. Bouverie H. H. Gray "W. A. Smithers W. WMtelaw J. M. Coimige A. M. "Wilson P. Ashworth R. C. Poskett T. Powler E. H. Gorton

HOUSE HURDLE RACES.

Big. 1. V. S. Galsworthy Small. 1. J . Q. Calverley 2. C. R. Staveley 2. L. L. Cox

HOUSE FLAT RACES.

Bisf. 1. V. S. Galsworthy Small. 1. J . G. Calverley 2. L. D. Woodiu 2. T. K. Ashworth

HOUSE RACQUET PLAYERS.

P. Ashworth E. L. Sanderson

HOUSE FIVES PLAYERS.

L. H. Morgan J . B. Seely .

MISCELLANEOUS.

Mile, 1. H. B. Gilroy ; 2. L. D. Woodin; 3. S. H. Hargrove. CM J, presented hy G. H. Hills, Esci.,for the best attendance at Mouse

Games, — Gumey.

1884. THE HABHOW ALMANACK. 125

HOME BOABDBES.

FOOTBALL ELEVEN, 1883. CBICKET ELEVEN, 1883.

B. Q. Haygarth-Brown (Oapt.) F. W. Crawshay (Capt.) M. W. Kmlooh M. W. Kinloch A. L. Barwell A.L. Barwell F. W. Ci'awshay E. G. Haygaith-Brown C. L. Beddington H. A. Brown

J. P. de Putron E. T. Sandys E. P. Jessel A. C. Fisher A. L. Isaacs C. L. Beddington C. D. Chambers J. P. de Putron H. T. S. Farmer W. G. H. Bradford L. E. Crawshay L. E. Crawshay

HOUSE HUEDLE EACES.

Big. A. L. Barwell Small. C. T. Horley

HOUSE FLAT EACES.

Big. H. A. Brown Small. C. T. Horley

HOUSE EACQUIET PLAYEES.

F. W. Crawshay M. W. Kinloch

HOUSE FIVES PLAYEES.

M. W. Kinloch G. M. C. Black

MISCELLANEOUS.

Champion School Boxer, M. "W. Kinlooh. House Mile (Handicap), H. A. Brown. Half-Mile '^Handicap), H. A. Brown.

House 120 Yards {Handicap), M. "W. Kinloch. Winner of Home Boarders Champion Gymnasium Gup, M. W. Kinloch.

In the School Gymnasium Eight, M. W. Kinloch, E. G. Haygarth-Brown, A. L. Barwell.

Champion House at Gymnastics {ith Year.)

126 THE HAEKOW ALMANACK. 1884.

ENTRANCE SCHOLARS, EASTER, 1883.

J . F. Williams G. B. J. Hopkins F. M. S. Cassel S. H. Butler H. A. Cohen C. a. H. Fawoett

THE PONSONBY PRIZE.

This Prize of Five Pounds worth of Books is ^ven to the Member of the School Cricket Eleven who, for general good conduct and School work (including Trials), shall be considered by the Head Master (after consultation with the other Masters) to be the most deserving.

1865. 1866. 1867. 1868. 1869.

1870. 1871.

1872.

1873. 1874.

1876. 1876. 1877. 1878. 1879. 1880.

1881. 1882. 1883.

H. H. Montgomery J. H. Ponsonby S. Pelham

A. J . Begbie ( W. Law ( W. L*w H. Carlisle / G. Macan i A. A. Hadow \ B. Bovill [ H. I^af ' H. Leaf Lord Anson i E. H. HiUs } C. W. M. Kemp A. I. Whitaker r . C. C. Eowe F. W. Leaf M. C. Kemp F. "W. Pember j M. C. Kemp )

B. M. Butler

Mr. HendalVs Dr. Butler'3 Mr. Bull's

Mr. RendaWs Mr. SteeVs Mr. SteeVa Mr. Watson's Mr, BendalVs Mr. Watson's Dr. Butler's Mr. Bendall's Mr. Bendall's Mr. Bowen's Mr. Oruikshank's Mr. Middlemist's Mr. Hutton's Mr. Hayward's Mr. Watson's 3Tr. Cruikshanh's Mr. Watson's Mr. Oruikshank's

Dr. Butler's

HARBOW : PUINTED BY J . C. W H B E E .

H A R R O W S C H O O L

O R G A N I S T A N D M U S I C M A S T E R TO H A R R O W S C H O O L .

N.B.—In ordering by Post, Stamps must accompany the Order, and One Halfpenny additional for Single Glee or Song. One Penny Postage will defray four or

five Glees or Songs.

C K I .

H A R R O W S C H O O L G L E E By Post,

Comprising the follorvivi)^ it

l o Tr iumphe Herga ]

Do. {Second .Setting) ' Decor Integer ^ v i IwCnimcn dulce laboruni Strenua no.s exercet inertia 1. I^orelev, 3d. 2. Tlie Mill, 2d. 3. The Brook, 2d. 4. The Fisherman'.s Tint, 3d. 5. "VVanderlied, 2d. fi. 'J he Happiest Land, 3d. 7. Hunt ing Song, 2d. 8. Annie of Tharaw, 2d. 9. Drink to me onlv, 2d.

V O L , I. Ci.oTH 4s. B O O K . 4s. 4d.

]tich can he had scparoiely :

10. Through the Empyrean (Carol), 2d.

11. Farewell to Harrow, 3d. 12. The Good Comrade, 2d. 13. Robin Adair, 2d. 14. The Three Students, 2d. 15. The Soldier, 2d. 16. Constant , 2d. 17. Xai'pere, 2d.

The Fisher Boy, 3d. The Rosebud, 2d. Battle Song, 2d. A R e d R e d Rose , 2d. For the sake of Somebody,

2d.

18 19 20 21 22

H A R R O W S C H O O L G L E E B O O K . Vol.. 2. By Post , 4s. 4d.

Cl.OTH 4s

Coniprifting the following, which can be had separately :

30. In the field with their flocks abiding, 2d.

31 . Sweet and low, 2d. 32. Adeste Fideles, 2d.

Wal tzes . " T a k e C a r e . " i s . Quads. Nursery Rhymes . IS. Burial March of D u n ­

dee. IS. Gipsy Life. i s .

2^. 24. 2S.

26. 27. 78. 29.

Christmas Eve, 2d. If I had wings to flv, 2d. If doughty deeds my Ladv

please, 2d. Thuringian Volkslied, 2d. Onward, 2d. Must I , then, 3d. Whi ther , 2d.

H A R R O W S C H O O L S O N G S . Vol. . i . C L O T H 4s. By Post , 4s. 4(1.

Comprlnng the fulloic'Dxj Soi/r/s, uh'ich can be had separateli/. 3d. each.

I. Litt le Pa t and the Parson. 2. J o h n Peel . 3. Lyon of Preston, Yeoman John. 4. The Island. 5. Bill is a Bright Boy. 6. .Sow not in sorrow. 7. Wil low the K i n g . K. Toll for the Brave. 9. A d Hergam.

10. A Song of Harrow. I I . Underneath the Briny .Sea. 12. T h e Voice of the Bell. 13. For ty Years on.

14. In the Days of Old. 15. S t . I'atricUwas a Gentleman. 16. O l d T o w l e r . 17. The Massacre of Macpherson 18. Casablanca. 19. T h e Chesapeke and the

Shannon. 20. Swiss Song. 21. The K i n g in Thule . 22. The Vicar of Bray. 23. W i ' a hundred Pipers. 24. H o p e the Llermit and Robin

Hood.

H A R R O W S C H O O L S O N G S . Vol . 2. Cloth 4s. By Post , 4s . 4d.

Comprising the JoUou-iiHj I'ionys, irliich can he had separatelij. 3d. each.

\ 25. Giants. ] 26. Horse Subseciva?. i 27. Queen Elizabeth.

28. Heroes Angelic. 29. Fairies. 30. Harrow Blue. 3 1 . Jack and Joe . 32. She was a .Shejihcrdess. 33. Down the Hil l . 34. Harrow.

36. Jesus Christ wasbornto-day. 37. October. 38. Euclid. 39. Good Night . 40. T o m Bowling. -41 . Bay of Biscay. 42. Hea r t s of Oak. 43. The Sailor 's Consolation.

H u n t i n g Quadrilles, Is . Singing Quadrilles, is .

35. When Rale igh Rose . '

H A R R O W M A R C L I E S . i V O L . 2S. 6d. , or separately.

No. PRICE. 1 I . The Volunteer March . . Od.

2. The Wimbledon Maicli 3. The Victory March . . i s . 4. The Best Score March . .

No. PRICE. 5. The Cricketers' M a r c h . . 6. The .Swiss Alarch . . . . Is. 7. The Tercentenary March Is.,

! N . B . — Only thiosc icith the prices affixed can he had separately.

O R A T O R I O .

C H R I S T A N D H I S S O L D I E R S . A Sacred Oratorio. By John Farmer . Price : Paper cover, 3s., by j^ost, 3s. 3d. ; Cloth 4s., by .

j post , 4s. 4(1. Jiook of Words, fCoi;yri/)htJ, 2d. Orchestral Parts, 7s. nett. Strinii I'arts—First Violin, Second Violin. Viola, Vio­loncello and Bass—Is . each nett ; Wind Farts—Cornet, Flute, Clarionet, Oboi, Trombone, and Drum —6d. each nett. By Post, 2d. each e.xtra. C H O R U S E S O N L Y . Price is . complete, by Pos t , IS. id .

Separate Par ts of the Oratorio niav be had in F O L I O size as follows : i'UICK N B T T .

2. Solo and Chorua. Ha rk 1

3. Solo and Chornn. In tlie Field with their Flocks 2s.

PRICE NETT.

9. Solo. Bv" Jesus ' G r a v e . . 2s.

20. Solo. R o c k of Aijes . . 25.

Also to be had separately in small form : Soldiers of Christ, 3d. () come, all ye Faithful, 3d. Tile People stood beholdint;, 3d. Hark ! the Glad Sound, 3d. Hark 1 a thrilling voice, 6d. W h e n I survey the Wondrous Kock of Ayes , 3d. Cross, 6d. W h o are these like stars appearing ••' The Son of God goes forth to

4d. W a r , 6d.

C I N D E R E L L A . A Fai ry Opera, in Four Ac ts . Composed for Orchestra and Voices, by John Farmer , arranged for Piano and Voices. Price, paper covers, 4s. ; cloth, 6s.

C I N D E R E L L A . B O O K O F W O R D S of above. The W o r d s by Henry S. Leigli. Illustrations by Heywood .Sumner. P a p e r cover, IS. ; clotli, 2s.

H O U S E C H O I R S O N G B O O K , without Music. Paper i s . ; or Half-bound, is . gd.

W A L T Z E S . " T A K E C A R E . " Composed for Orchestra and Voices, by J o h n Farmer , arranged for Piano and Voices, Price i s .

W A L T Z E S . " C O M E LIVE WITH ME AND BE MY L O V E . " Composed for Orchestra and Voices, by John Farmer. Arranged for Piano and Voices, Price Is . 6d.

X U R S E R Y R H Y M E Q U A D R I L L E S . F I R S T S E T . " J a c k and J i i l . " Composed for Orchestra and Voices, by J o h n Farmer , arranged for Piano and Voices, Price Is. Orchestral Partx com-plete, 7s. 6d., or separately, (id. each. Strinq VartH—First Violin, Second Violin, Viola, Cello and Bass. Wind Parts—Cornet, Clarionet, F lu te and Piccolo, P'irst and Second Horns, Oboi, Euphonium, Fagot t i , First and Second Trombone, Bass T rom­bone, Bass Drum, and Triangle.

N U R S E R Y R H Y M E Q U A D R I L L E S . S E C O N D S E T . C o m ­posed for Orchestra and Voices, introducing " H u m p t y D u m p t y , " " T h e North Wind doth b low," etc. , and dedicated by special permission of Her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales to H e r Roya l Highness's Children. Arranged for P . F . Duet and Voices. P i ice 3s. nett. Orchestral Parts , complete, 6s. nett , or separately, 6d. each. String t'art.s—First Violin, Second Violin, Viola, Cello, Bass. Wind I'arts—Cornet, F lute , Clarionet, Trombone, Oboi, Fagot t i , Horns, and Side Drum.

N U R S E R Y R H Y M E Q U A D R I L L E S . S E C O N D S E T . Arranged as P iano Solo, is.

H U N T I N G SONG Q U A D R I L L E S . T H I R D S E T . " The H u n t is u p . " Music composed for Orchestra and Voices, by John Fa rmer , arranged for Piano and Voices. Price Is .

SINGING QUADRILLES. FOURTH SET. " Boys and Girls come out to play." Composed for Orchestra and Voices, by John Farmer, arranged for Piano and Voices, is. Orchestral Parts, complete, 7s. 6d. nett, or separately, 6d. each, Striiiq Parts— First Violin, Second Violin, Viola, Cello and Bass. Wind Farts —Cornet-a-Piston, Flute, Clarionet, Euphonium, Trombone, Oboi, Bassoon, Corni I . & II. , Tympani, Side Drum, Bass Drum.

GIPSY LIFE. Words translated from the German, by J. 0.\enford ; and used by kind permission of Messrs. Novello and Co. Music composed for the Orchestra and Voices, by John Farmer, arranged for Piano and Voices. Price is.

THE BURIAI , MARCH OF DUNDEE. Words taken from Avtoun's Lays of Scottish Cavaliers, by kind permission. Music composed for Orchestra and Voices, by John Farmer, arranged for Piano and Voices. Price is.

GIPSY LIFE AND BURIAL-MARCH together. Cheap Vocal Eciition. 6d.

" I WANDERED BY THE BROOKSIDE." N E W SONG. Folio size. Words by Lord Houghton, used by kind permission. Music by John F"arnier. Price Is.

" A CAPTAIN SAT ON HIS DECK ONE DAY." Song. Words by W. Flith. Music by J. Farmer. Price nett. Is. 6d.

THE ROSEBUD, arranged for the "Tonic Sol F a " system, by request, id.

FAITHFU' JOHNIE. Glee No. 33, arranged from Beethoven's Scotch Songs. 2d.

THE ASH GROVE. Glee No. 34. Arranged by John Farmer, from Welsh Melody. 2d.

THE SINGERS. Glee No. 35. Words by Longfellow. Music by John Farmer. 3d.

JUNE AND THE SCHOLAR. Glee No. 36. Words by E. E. Bovven. Music by Joim Farmer. 2d.

CHRISTMAS HAS COME. Glee No. 37. Words by Rev. J. A. Cruikshank. Music by John Farmer. 3d.

AS W E T H I N K OF TIMES OLDEN. (Forty years on). Song No. 44, Words by Edith Kemp. Music by John Farmer. 3d.

P A R T SONGS F O R PUBLIC SCHOOLS. Parts i and 2, taken from the Harrow School Glee Book. Price is. 6d. each.

H A R R O W : J. C. WILBEE, lioolcselhr to Harrow School.

LONDON : NOVELLO, E W E R & CO., i, Berncrs Slreit.