Please enjoy reading about the formation and history of the College, the grounds and the Chapel. This timeline is a work in progress, so if you have photographs you think it would be nice to include, or suggestions of key dates we might have missed, please email the Foundation Office on foundation@lancing.org.uk
We would like to thank Lesley Edwards, Lancing College Archivist for providing the photographs on display in this timeline, most of which have been sourced from the Lancing College Digital Archives.
www.lancingcollegearchives.co.uk
St Mary’s School is opened in Shoreham.
Nathaniel Woodard, the founder of Lancing College and the Woodard Corporation, publishes ‘A plea for the middle classes’.
The first Master and the boys of St. Nicolas’ School – as it was formerly known – officially met together in the new Shoreham Church, where the school would be based for the next nine years.
Henry Jacobs is named the first Head Master.
R C Carpenter begins designing the College buildings.
The schools combine to form the College of SS Mary and Nicolas.
Football begins to be played at the College. At the time, Lancing played by different rules than many other schools, and is rumoured to have been instrumental in the formation of the modern rules of Football.
John Branthwaite becomes Head Master (1851–1859).
Lancing introduces the earliest scholarships: the Tritton and Branthwaite Scholarships.
St Benedict’s Day: Nathaniel Woodard, the Masters and the boys walk up to Lancing Hill to lay the first stone of the new College buildings at Burwells Farm (located at the base of the central buttress on the western side of the Lower Quad).
The Foundation of Lancing Cricket: The earliest matches recorded are against Hurst and Brighton Grammar School, led by captain and son of the founder, G Woodard.
Official ceremony for the occupation of the new school grounds. By August 1857 the Upper School is moved, followed by the Lower School in March 1858.
Head’s House and School House are formed.
School House is opened by Nathaniel Woodard.
Dr Robert Edward Sanderson becomes Head Master (1862–1889).
The Revd Edmund Field becomes Chaplain (1863–1892).
Foundation of the Debating Society.
William Russell becomes Head of Music (1865–1868).
School House (now the Dining Hall) is completed.
The Foundation Stone of the Chapel is laid and building commences.
The Sussex Pad is purchased (the first time).
The Crypt is dedicated for use as the school chapel. It will be used as the chapel until 1911.
The tennis courts are levelled; tennis starts to be played at the College.
A Musical Society is formed, as well as a Madrigal Society and a Symphonic Society.
The Shakespeare Society is formed and named These Mortalsby Players.
The Lancing College Magazine is first published.
The Lancing Club is founded.
The Gymnasium is built (now part of the Theatre).
Official opening of Great School (under the old name of School Room) kindly donated by Henry Martin Gibbs. The opening was accompanied by a public exhibition of all sorts of talents of staff and pupils.
Harry Ward McKenzie becomes Head Master (1889–1894).
Death of the founder, Nathaniel Woodard.
Pupils begin building the old swimming pool (now the Theatre).
Ambrose J Wilson becomes Head Master (1895–1901).
The first Five Mile run, beginning the long tradition.
Arthur Lyttelton becomes Provost.
The College's Golden Jubilee is the first ever service in the unfinished Upper Chapel.
Bernard Henry Tower OL becomes Head Master (1901–1909).
Officers' Training Corp is formed (now CCF) by Allan Haig-Brown.
Science Labs are built under the guidance of Billy Woodard.
Canon Henry Thomas Bowlby becomes Head Master (1909–1925).
Gibbs’ House is formed, named after Henry Martin Gibbs.
News House becomes Sanderson’s House.
The organ is installed in the Chapel and building ceases.
The Foundation Stone of the Cloister is laid in memory of those who died in the First World War.
Manor House is converted from the original Lancing Manor.
Cuthbert Harold Blakiston becomes Head Master (1925–1934).
The official opening of the New Block of classrooms.
The Head Master’s House is built at the front of the College. It will later become Teme House.
Frank Cecil Doherty becomes Head Master (1935–1953).
‘Parity of esteem’ between subjects is established.
The College is evacuated to Teme Valley, Shropshire. The naval training establishment HMS King Alfred occupies the College.
Churchill meets with General Montgomery for the first time, at Lancing.
Lancing welcomes the first female member of the Common Room, Dr Barbara Russell-Wells.
Teme House is introduced in what was originally built to be the Head Master’s House.
Centenary Service with a performance of St Nicolas Cantata by Benjamin Britten.
John Christopher Dancy becomes Head Master (1953–1961).
The Crypt Art School is formed (succeeded by the Reeve Art School in 2008).
Sir Erskine William Gladstone Bt., KG becomes Head Master (1961–1969).
The Music School is opened by Yehudi Menuhin.
The Centenary of the Chapel is celebrated.
Ian David Stafford Beer becomes Head Master (1969–1981).
Co-education is introduced with the first girls admitted to the Sixth Form.
Sankey’s House is formed for Sixth Form boys. It became a girls’ day House in 2006.
The Sports Hall is erected.
The Chapel's rose window is completed, designed by Stephen Dykes Bower.
Dedication of the Chapel's west wall and rose window by the Archbishop of Canterbury.
Manor House, the first purpose-built girls’ boarding house, is completed and opened by HRH Prince Charles.
James Stephen Woodhouse becomes Head Master (1981–1993).
The new Swimming Pool is built.
Lancing's first expedition to Malawi.
The Theatre is opened by Sir Tim Rice OL.
The Walker organ is installed in the Chapel, by Carlo Curley.
The great storm of '87 hits the College.
Day pupil numbers are allowed to increase to nearly 50%.
Christopher John Saunders becomes Head Master (1993–1998).
The new Design and Technology centre is opened.
150th Anniversary celebrations, attended by the Princess Royal.
Peter Tinniswood becomes Head Master (1998–2005).
Lancing Preparatory School at Hove joins the Lancing family.
Field’s House becomes a girls' boarding House.
Head’s House becomes a boys' day House.
Richard Biggs steps in as Acting Head Master (2005–2006).
Sankey's House becomes a girls' day House.
Jonathan Gillespie FRSA becomes Head Master (2006–2014).
The Huddleston Window is dedicated by Archbishop Desmund Tutu, named for anti-apartheid activist Bishop Trevor Huddleston OL.
Lancing Preparatory School at Worthing joins the Lancing family.
Dominic Oliver becomes Head Master (2014–present).
Lancing College Equestrian Centre is opened by Harry Meade, son of Richard Meade OL.
Saints', Lancing's first co-educational day House, opens.
Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, current President of the Republic of Ghana and former pupil, visits the College.
Campaign for the completion of the Chapel starts
By December 2020 the appeal target – the final £350,000 of a total price of £1.2 million – was reached.
Construction on the west porch progresses between 2019 and 2021, when the 'topping out' stone is placed on the northern buttress of the west porch.
The completed west porch is dedicated on 23 April 2022.