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After the end of the war, the boys relocate to the present site in Cobham in May 1946. Much renovation work is needed owing to war damage. The site had been a Prep School, Sandroyd, purpose built in 1905. They moved to Wiltshire during the war and remain there today.
Just prior to the start of World War II it was renamed Reed’s School and the boys were evacuated to Totnes in Devon - girls to Towcester in Northamptonshire. After the War in 1946, the girls moved to a separate school, Dogmersfield in Hampshire, and the boys took up residency at our current site in Cobham, Surrey.
The school was founded in 1813, [2] by Andrew Reed and incorporated by Act of Parliament in 1845 [3] under the presidency of the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Duke of Wellington and the Marquess of Salisbury.
Reed's School is an independent secondary day and boarding school for boys with a co-educational sixth form located in Cobham, Surrey, England. There are currently around 700 day pupils (620 boys, 80 girls) and 100 full-time boarders (80 boys, 20 girls). The school was founded in 1813, [2] by Andrew Reed and incorporated by Act of Parliament in ...
Reed's School was founded by the Rev Andrew Reed (1787 to 1862) in 1813 and was originally known as the East London Orphan Asylum. In 1815, the word 'East' was dropped from the original...
The new Boys’ School Headmaster, Rev. George Kendall Allen, brings in the House Name System and introduces Rugby. Both innovations play a significant part in the School’s life today. 1939. The School is renamed Reed's School.
Based in Clapton from 1825, in 1871 the school moved to Watford. Just prior to the start of World War II it was renamed Reed’s School and the boys were evacuated to Totnes in Devon - girls to Towcester in Northamptonshire.