Those seven are those that were specified as, and regulated as, public schools in the 1868 Public Schools Act. I don't know, but given Durhams' historical association with the cathedral (it used to be opposite the cathedral, it was founded when the cathedral was founded, and their website hints at the suggestion that it's actually a continuation of the monastery at Lindisfarne destroyed by Vikings*), it was probably still a church school back then. Church schools couldn't be public schools, because their entrance was restricted to members of that denomination, and often of that parish or diocese, and hence they were not truly public. Interestingly, although Durham's in the HMC, it wasn't one of the original 14 members (another restrictive definition of 'public school'). I don't know when it joined.Frislander wrote: ↑Tue Sep 24, 2019 8:49 amI'm slightly surprised by this specific list, in particular the inclusion of Shrewsbury to the exclusion of Durham
To put a number on it, looking it up, apparently around 1/4 of private school pupils are from neighbourhoods with lower than the average national income.the kinds of non-stereotypical public students Sal is talking about
Sure, but it's not like we ALL go to public schools! Only a tiny percentage go to Eton and the like!TBF, given that there is a significant both reputational skew in public schools towards the South of England (as the above narrow list of 7 shows) you can't blame a northerner such as myself for thinking of the south as especially posh (I certainly had a bit of a culture shock in my first year at Cambridge realising just how many such schools there are).
Well, Rugby is obviously in The North, and Shrewsbury basically is. And even Eton, Harrow and Westminster are north of the Thames, so they're sort of semi-Northern...Plus I'm not sure about the wider knowledge of the northern public schools outside of the region (probably the one most people in the south have heard of will be Ampleforth, and that's weird in its own way cause it's also a Catholic monastery)
One thing not mentioned here is the existence of equivalent schools in Scotland. Fettes, where Tony Blair went, is basically an English public school that happens to be in Scotland**, and therefore not officially called a public school.
*even if that were true, it still wouldn't be the oldest public school - the King's School in Canterbury was founded in the 6th century.
**it is indeed a school and not, as one might imagine from its architecture, a dark temple to satan (see here...). Although I suppose opinions may differ...