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    Philip Thicknesse

    Philip Thicknesse’s twentieth century biographer wrote of him that ‘to anyone who has made a close study of Philip Thicknesse, there come occasions when he can but marvel that nobody ever shot him or bludgeoned him to death’.[1] Two of his sons would end up estranged from him, with the extent of Thicknesse’s quarrelsome nature evident in the title of his…

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    The Tobin Family

    Old Westminsters from the periods of missing records, mainly under Head Master William Markham, have been identified in a large variety of ways, including newspapers, memoirs, or lists of enrolment to post-Westminster education. We cannot, however, rely solely on an individual’s testimony that they attended the school, as occasionally people fraudulently claimed to be an Old Westminster to embellish their…

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    The Dasent Family

    For three generations, the Dasent family sent their sons from the West Indies over to London to be educated at Westminster School. John Dasent (1735-1787), born in Nevis, was admitted in January 1749 and studied until 1751, when he returned to Nevis. He became Attorney-General there, going on to become Chief Justice of Nevis from 1768. Upon his death in…

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    George Rose

    George Rose’s surname would later serve as ammunition for political cartoonists wanting to make sure their depictions of him were correctly identified but, before his career as a politician, it linked him to Clan Rose, originating in the Scottish Highlands. Born in 1744, Rose was adopted at the age of four by his maternal uncle after his father was implicated…

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    Matthew Gregory Lewis

      Matthew Gregory Lewis (1775-1818) was described by his friend, Romantic poet Lord Byron, as both ‘an excellent man’ and ‘tedious, as well as contradictory, to everything and everybody’.[1] Lewis’ own journal presents a similarly paradoxical image: an owner of five hundred enslaved people who criticised the slave trade whilst extolling his own virtues as a compassionate ‘master’. That Lewis…

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    The Beckford Family

    The Beckford family sent seven brothers to Westminster School in the early eighteenth century: Peter (born 1704, likely admitted 1715), William (b. 1709, adm. 1718), Thomas (b. 1711, adm. 1721), Richard (b. 1711, adm. 1721), Nathaniel (b. 1713, adm. 1721), George (b. 1715, adm. 1724), and Julines (b. 1718, adm. 1725). In total Peter Beckford (1672-1735) and his wife Bathshua…

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    William Murray and Dido Elizabeth Belle

    When William Murray travelled from Scotland to Westminster on a highland pony at age fourteen, never to return to the country of his birth, it may have seemed obvious that he would go on to live a rather interesting and, in many respects, unconventional life. Born to on March 2nd 1705 to David Murray, 5th Viscount Stormont and his wife…

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    The Fuller family by Bethany Duck, Archives and Records Management Assistant

    Three members of the Fuller family attended Westminster School in the middle of the 18th Century – Henry (1724-c.1773), Peeke (c.1732-1798), and Charles Beckford (1739-1825). They were all born in Jamaica, where their father, Thomas Fuller, owned a total of 6,292 acres of land and 376 enslaved people, all of which was left to his three sons as tenants in…

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    Robert Dalzell by Bethany Duck, Archives and Records Management Assistant

    It likely comes as no surprise that the history of Westminster School is dominated by white men. For the majority of our history there has been limited diversity amongst our pupils. It is difficult to single out an individual as the first to break the long line of racial homogeneity but Robert Dalzell perhaps stands as a contender. In The…