• Even if you have not been back for five years, much has changed. Walk with me through the front arch and see what has happened in one generation of College boys and girls.

    As we enter the front quad a sense of peace and calm immediately settles on you after the busy Eastern Road traffic, (so long as you don’t visit in the chaotic drop off and pick up times at the start and finish of the school day). From the front quad nothing seems to have changed. The same graceful mid-nineteenth century buildings designed by Gilbert Scott. The roofs of those old buildings and those of the chapel are now being re-tiled, a testament to the quality of work all those years ago in an aggressive salt laden coastal environment. Let’s hope the new roof will last another 150 years!
  • Prior to a recent show in London, Pablo Picasso’s “Le Train Bleu” curtain was last seen at Brighton College as part of the Brighton Festival of 1982. The 10.3 x 11.7m curtain formed the centrepiece of The Burstow Gallery’s “Picasso and The Theatre” exhibition organised by Gavin Henderson (L.1960-65 and later overall Director of The Festival) and assisted by my father, Nick Bremer (Director of Art 1969-2000). The show attracted 7,200 visitors to the College – “The publicity is beyond price” Headmaster Bill Blackshaw proudly told the Council.

  • More than 80 ‘old girls’ celebrated 30 years of co-education at Brighton College at a special dinner on Saturday 29th November 2003.

    Speakers included Bill Blackshaw, the former Headmaster who introduced girls to the College and Lucinda Harris (F. 1973-75) who was one of the first girls to join the school. Jane Haviland (F. 1979-81), currently President of the Old Brightonians Association and the first lady elected to this post, also spoke.
  • A PERSONAL JUBILEE 2

    Friday, 28 January 2005
    “I have been young, and now I am old.” (Psalms XXXVII; 25)
    posted - 28th January 2005

    In the last issue of the Pelican I wrote about the Remembrance Service in November 2004 and the changes since my first in 1954. I had been appointed in January of that year to help with the four members of the Sixth Form who were taking Latin at A Level. Norman Frith, a Classical Exhibitioner at Corpus Christi, Cambridge, had started the course but found it too much of a commitment in addition to his duties as Head of the History Department. The small class included Timothy Bavin and Robert Alexander, and intellects like theirs needed little extra instruction. For their essays on Roman History I used titles I had been set four years previously and, more importantly, the notes I had taken down when my Greats tutor had tried to remedy some of the inadequacies in my own efforts.
  • It may have taken 160 years but Brighton College finally knows how to throw a really good party!

    After a rainy start to the day it was decided to abandon the planned Reception on the Lawns, opting for the safety of the Great Hall. Around 450 guests filed past the ‘living statue’ to enjoy a glass or two of Champagne as the College Swing Band demonstrated why it is in such high demand. Street entertainers mingled among the dinner jackets and gowns to create a truly joyous atmosphere.
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