The Victorian Public School
By (Author) Trevor May
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Shire Publications
10th November 2009
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Independent schools, private education
European history
371.02094109034
64
Width 149mm, Height 210mm, Spine 8mm
Public schools were in the business of producing leaders in national government, in the Empire, and in the armed forces. Their impact on society was immense, and they provided the vehicle by which the sons of the middle classes could be assimilated into the gentry. Historian Trevor May examines the development of the Victorian and Edwardian public school, covering their defining characteristics, their slowly evolving curriculum, and the often-notable headmasters. The spartan, and often brutal, life of the schoolboy is examined, and account is taken of the role of fagging and the prefect system.
Trevor May was educated at the universities of London and Exeter and is now a professional historian, writer and educator. He has written over a dozen books on social and economic history topics, including books in the Shire Library series. He lives in Devon.