Navigation links at the bottom of this page

Introduction
by A. W. Cockerill

This site provides Dukies and ex-Dukies with historical facts, figures, data, records and reports about their alma mater, the Duke of York’s Royal Military School. It is a potpourri, a collection of odds and ends having to do with the school’s history including the early history of the institution that was once known as the Royal Military Asylum.

The Duke of York’s Royal Military School was founded in 1801 and opened its doors in August 1803 as a haven to the orphaned children of soldiers who had fallen in the Great War with France that began in 1793 and ended with the Battle of Waterloo in 1815. Its first intake came from a privately run orphanage for military children on the Isle of Wight – the present-day site of Parkhurst Prison – organised and managed by General George Hewett. Twenty-seven children from General Hewett’s orphanage made the four-day journey to their new home in Chelsea, escorted by General Hewett, a sergeant, and Nurse Bold who helped the General run the IOW orphanage in a rented farm house, which is believed to be a place known as Noke (or Noake Farm), which still exists.

   
  RMS Main building (circa 1840) showing Admiralty signalling semaphor on roof. Drawn by Thos. H. Shepherd, engraved by T. Barber. (Original image is B&W)  
The RMA, as the Asylum was then known, was based on its existing sister institution the Royal Hibernian Military School (1760-1924), Dublin. What is known of the history of the RHMS is dealt with in another part of this site. Anyone interested in what we have been able to discover of the RHMS is invited to follow the link to the Royal Hibernian pages.

These history pages of the Duke of York’s school are rich with facts, photographs and images of the school’s past. We know, for instance, that the phrase ‘sons of the brave’ originated in Boston in 1765, that Philip R. Morris popularized the epithet with his famous painting Sons of the Brave, that Thomas Bidgood, composed the march of the same name, that words for the song were written in Sydney, Australia, and that Peter Dawson, the famous Australian bass baritone recorded this stirring song for HMV records in 1932. This site describes how these and other little known facts about the school came into existence. They also dispel some of the myths connected with the school.

Visitors to the site can find their way from one article of information to the next via the navigation block provided at the bottom of each page. The block has links to all the pages on the site. Other links will take you to the main web page.

Most images are thumbnail with links to a larger format; click on the thumbnail picture and a larger version pops up in a window for you to see. Close the new window by clicking on the picture or clicking the box off.


Table of Contents - Duke of York's Royal Military School

Introduction
1793 Saving the life of York
1801-48 News Reports
1803-15 Admissions and discharges
1803-80 Admissions Ledgers
1803-92 Early History
1803-92 Early Images
1807 The cherry pickers
1812 The Royal Hospital, Chelsea
1814 Miss Corporal
1816 King's German Legion
1815-21 Cotton Weavers
1821 QMG Report
1825 Ann Vanpine, cotton apprentice
1826 Colonel Pasley's complaint
1830 Apprentices flee Chitty Farm
1830 Inhuman Treatment
1838 Indentured Apprentices
1841-51 Census Records
1846 A school inspector's report
1846 The Corps of Army Schoolmasters
1848 Children's Assets
1849 Adjutant W. Siborne
1850 Committing a nuisance
1850 Good Conduct Medal
1850 Good Conduct Medal II
1852 Crime and punishment
1852 National Education
1854 Crime & retribution
1856 The sins of Pte Enos Seth
1865 Professors of Music
1873 Religion
1874 Crime and punishment
1880 Bidgood and Morris
1897 New Colours
1897 Temperance medals
1888 Professor A. J. Phasey
1888 The way we were then
1895 George William Hanna, MM
1899 Summary of reports on army educ'n
1901 Centenary year
1904 Corporal punishment
1908 Public Plea
1909 Making a new start

1909 Prince of Wales
1910 Demolishing the RMA
1913 Tableau Vivant
1914 An unsung hero

1917 Trench warfare
1920 Honour Guard for Unkown Soldier
1924 Hibernian colours
1927 Company names
1928 Olympia
1932 Dawson recording
1939 Army Educational Corps
1940 George Cecil Gardiner
1940 Radio towers on the cliffs
1940 Benhall Farm, Cheltenham

1940 Retreat to Dunkirk
1941 A Dukie at QVS
1942 Saunton Sands
1943 Sinking of the Marnix
1943 Who was who at Saunton Sands?
1945 Major R. Grantham MC & Bar
1946 Return to Dover
1947 School in 1947
1949 A headmaster's life
1950 Post-war dress
1950 Scenes from school life
1951 Berets blue or khaki?
1952 Debroy Somers
1953 Homage to a fallen comrade
1954 True confessions
1955 Nick of the River
1956 Sesquicentennial year
1965 Monitors and prefects
1967 General Nye
1968 Anatomy of S.T.A.Y. magazine
1978 Dictionary of slang
1986 Last of the CSMs
1986 Looking smart in an overcoat
NEW
1996 The Soldier boy - review
2001 The end of an era
2002 My Children
2003 Envelope
2003 Reminiscences
2004 Archival material
2004 Public Records
2005 Downunder August Newsletter
2005 Morris seeing red
2005 Voices from the past
2006 In memoriam
2007 Grand Day
2008 Guston Cemetery
2008 Staff bios - editorial NEW
2008 Staff biographies A - M UPDATED
2008 Staff biogrpahies N - odd UPDATED

2008 Yankee Doodle Dukie


Duke of York Home

Delta Tech Systems Inc
HOME PAGE
Army Education in the 19th Century
Bomber pilot's wartime log
Duke of York's Royal Military School
Royal Hibernian Military School
World War I letters and Reports
Books and Militaria
Publications and Papers
Wellington on Waterloo
Correspondence
Related Links
Contact

© A. W. Cockerill 2008

Site Map    Contact