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RUGBY

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V23, Page 821 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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RUGBY  , a

market
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town in the Rugby
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parliamentary division of
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Warwickshire, England, finely situated on a tableland rising from the S.
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bank of the
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Avon, near the Oxford Canal . Pop. of urban
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district (19or), 16,83o . It is an important junction on the
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London & North-Western railway, by which it is 8z in . N.W. from London; it is served also by the
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Great Central railway and by a branch of the Midland railway from Leicester . The boys' school, ranking as one of the most famous public
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schools in England, was founded and endowed under the will (1567) of Laurence
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Sheriff, a merchant
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grocer and servant to Queen Elizabeth, and a native either of Rugby or of the neighbouring
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village of Brownsover . The endowment consisted of the parsonage of Brownsover, Sheriff's mansion house in Rugby, and one-third (8 acres) of his estate in Middlesex, near the Foundling Hospital, London, which, being let on
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building leases, gradually increased to about £5000 a
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year . The full endowment was obtained in 1653 . The school originally stood opposite the parish church, and was removed to its
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present site on the S. side of the town between 1740 and 1750 . In 1809 it was rebuilt from designs by Henry Hakewill (1771'—1830); the
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chapel, dedicated to St Lawrence, was added in 18zo . At the tercentenary of the school in 1867 subscriptions were set on
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foot for founding scholarships, building additional schoolrooms, rebuilding or enlarging the chapel and other
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objects . The chapel was rebuilt and reconsecrated in 1872, and further additions were made in 1898 . A swimming bath was erected in 1876; the Temple
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observatory, containing a
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fine
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equatorial refractor by Alvan Clark, was built in 1877, and the Temple
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reading-
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room with the
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art museum in 1878 .

The workshops underneath the gymnasium were opened in 188o, and a new big school and class-rooms were erected in 1885 . From about 70 to 1777 the

numbers attending the school have increased to nearly 600 . A great impulse was given to the progress of the school during the headmastership of Thomas Arnold, 1827—42 . Among Arnold's successors were Archibald Campbell Tait and Frederick Temple, both after-wards archbishops of Canterbury . The parish church of *St Andrew was rebuilt from designs by W . Butterfield and reconsecrated in 1879 . A tower and
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spire were added in 1895 . An aisle commemorates John Moultrie (1799—1874), rector, widely known as the " poet pastor." The church of
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Holy Trinity is by
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Sir G . G . Scott, and the
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Roman Catholic church of St
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Marie by A . W . Pugin .

Trade is mainly agricultural; there is a large cattle market, and several fairs are held annually . The early
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history of Rugby is obscure, but a settlement of the Danes is presumed from the name, and from the neighbouring tract of Dunsmore Heath (Danesmoor) . Rugby was originally a
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hamlet of the adjoining parish of
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Clifton-on-Dunsmore, and is separately treated of as such in Domesday
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Book . Ernaldus de Bosco (Ernald de Bois), lord of the
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manor of Clifton, seems to have erected the first chapel in Rugby, in the reign of Stephen, about 114o . It was afterwards granted by him, with certain lands, to endow the abbey of St Mary, Leicester, which grant was confirmed by his successors and by royal charter of Henry II . In the second year of King John (1200) a suit took place between Henry de Rokeby, lord of the manor of Rugby, and Paul, abbot of St Mary, Leicester, which resulted in the former obtaining possession of the
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advowson of Rugby, on condition of homage and service to the abbot of Leicester . By virtue of this agreement the chapel was converted into a parish church and the vicarage into a rectory .

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