Location Image

Cargilfield Preparatory School

Cargilfield Preparatory School is a Scottish private co-educational boarding and prep school in Edinburgh, Scotland.

1. History

Cargilfield was founded in 1873 by Rev Daniel Charles Darnell an Episcopalian and former master at Rugby School and was the first independent preparatory school in Scotland. Originally, the school was located at Cargilfield, a large villa on South Trinity Road in the Trinity area of Edinburgh. It was sometimes referred to as Cargilfield Trinity School. It largely served as a feeder school to nearby Fettes College. In 1899, the school relocated to Barnton. In the period 2003–2012, the headmaster was John Elder. Among the changes he made to the school was the abolition of homework. In 2014, the UK government named the school in a list of 25 UK employers which had failed to pay workers the national minimum wage, for underpaying an artist in residence by £3,739. The school responded that it had rectified this situation as soon as it was made aware of it, and apologised. The school has reached the finals of the UKMT Team Mathematics Challenge competition in five consecutive years (2013, 2014,

2015,

2016, and

)

1. Notable alumni

See also Category:People educated at Cargilfield School James Balfour-Melville (1882–1915), cricketer and soldier Robin Barbour KCVO MC (1921–2014), Church of Scotland minister and author Torquhil Campbell, 13th Duke of Argyll (born 1968) John Lorne Campbell of Canna (1906-1996) landowner and folklorist Alan Archibald Campbell-Swinton (1863–1930), electrical engineer Euan Hillhouse Methven Cox (1893–1977), botanist and horticulturist George Denholm (1908–1997), Second World War flying ace Thomas Gillespie (1892–1914), Olympic rower Sandy Gunn, photographic reconnaissance Spitfire pilot, executed in 1944 after the Great Escape Sir William Oliphant Hutchison (1889–1970), portrait and landscape painter Douglas Jamieson, Lord Jamieson (1880–1952), Unionist politician and judge Logie Bruce Lockhart (1921–2020), Scotland international rugby union footballer and headmaster Hugh Mackenzie (1913–1996), Royal Navy officer Donald M. MacKinnon (1913–1994), philosopher and theologian Sir Thomas Stewart Macpherson (1920–2014), soldier Duncan Menzies, Lord Menzies (born 1953), judge of the Supreme Courts of Scotland Victor Noel-Paton, Baron Ferrier (1900–1992), soldier and business man William Robert Ogilvie-Grant (1863–1924), ornithologist Lewis Robertson (1883–1914), Scotland rugby footballer and soldier William Roy Sanderson DD (1907–2008), minister, Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland in 1967 Sir Samuel Strang Steel of Philiphaugh Bt, landowner and Conservative politician. George Younger, 4th Viscount Younger of Leckie (1931-2003), Conservative politician and banker

1. References


1. External links

Official Website Profile on the Independent Schools Council website Media related to Cargilfield School at Wikimedia Commons

Nearby Places View Menu
Location Image
845 m

Cramond Tower

Cramond Tower is a fifteenth-century tower house in the village of Cramond to the north-west of Edinburgh, Scotland.
Location Image
880 m

Cramond Roman Fort

Cramond Roman Fort is a Roman-Era archaeological site at Cramond, Edinburgh, Scotland. The settlement may be the "Rumabo" listed in the 7th-century Ravenna Cosmography. The fort was established around 140 AD and occupied until around 170 AD, with a further period of occupation from around 208 to 214 AD. Among the many archaeological finds, one of the most famous is a sculpture known as the Cramond Lioness.
Location Image
888 m

Cramond Kirk

Cramond Kirk is a church situated in the middle area Cramond parish, in the north west of Edinburgh, Scotland. Built on the site of an old Roman fort, parts of the Cramond Kirk building date back to the fourteenth century and the church tower is considered to be the oldest part. Next door to the Kirk there is the Manse which has been a home for the Minister of Cramond Kirk for centuries. The existing Manse was constructed in three parts, as extensions were needed to the original building.
Location Image
900 m

Barnton, Edinburgh

Barnton (Scottish Gaelic: Baile an t-Sabhail) is a suburb of Edinburgh, Scotland, in the north-west of the city, between Cramond and Corstorphine Hill and west of Davidsons Mains. Part of the area was traditionally known as "Cramond Muir" in reference to Cramond to the north.