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Malvern College. Old Malvernians are alumni of Malvern College, an independent day and boarding school in Malvern, Worcestershire, England that was founded in 1865. Originally a school for boys aged 9 to 18, it merged in 1992 with a private boys' primary school and an independent school for girls to become coeducational for pupils aged 3 to 18.
Former pupils of Malvern College in Worcestershire, England. They are known in some circles as "Old Malvernians", and the abbreviation "OM" is sometimes used.
List of people connected with Malvern, Worcestershire includes, in addition to those born in Malvern, the many notable people who came to the town to provide or partake of its hydrotherapy, to be educated or to teach at the large number of independent boarding schools such as Malvern College with its long list of notable alumni, and its elementary school, The Downs, and Malvern St James for ...
Malvern College is a fee-charging coeducational boarding and day school in Malvern, ... Among the alumni of the college since its foundation in 1865 are Nobel ...
List of teachers ("masters") of Malvern College is a list of some of the notable masters and headmasters (past and present) of Malvern College, a UK independent day and boarding school in Malvern, Worcestershire, England. They have gained recognition or excelled in such fields as education, science, culture and sport.
Robert Porch was educated at Malvern College where he was a member of the first eleven at cricket and second eleven at football, and a school prefect. [6] He then studied at Trinity College, Oxford , graduating in 1898.
Old Malvernians Cricket Club is an amateur cricket club for the alumni of Malvern College.For more than a century it has been a tradition to travel to Sussex in the summer on an annual cricket tour, playing regularly with the Old Eastbournians, Lancing, Uppingham Rovers and Eastbourne Town.
Steve Wookey was educated at Malvern College, where he played cricket for the First XI. [1] He went up to Emmanuel College, Cambridge, playing for the university team and winning his Blue in 1975 and 1976. He then went to the theological college Wycliffe Hall, Oxford, to study for the Anglican ministry. [2]