A rare collector’s item, The History of Royal College, reprinted
A reprint of “The History of Royal College”, a 1932 biography of the school authored by students was launched at the BMICH yesterday in an event organised by the Royal College 1960 Group, in association with the Royal College Union.
The chief guest was Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, a member of the 1960 intake of Royal College.
The book is recorded to be the second history of a school written by its students, the first being the biography by students of the Merchant Taylors’ school in Northwood, Hert fordshire- wh i ch served as a model for the Royal students.
Twenty boys, aged 15 to 19, compiled the book under the guid guidance of four masters and the then Principal H. L. Ree Reed. It was launched by the o old boys on the eve of Mr. R Reed’s departure as Princi Principal, at the Galle Face Hotel on March 12, 1932 1932. The book later bec became a rare collecto tor’s item.
A search for the book began in recent years following a reference in S. S. Pere r a ’ s ‘ History of Royal College’ published in 1985 in connection with the 150th year of the school. A digital copy was consequently discovered by a member of the 1960 Groupan online version of a volume preserved at the Library of the University of Michigan, USA.
Originally published by H. W. Cave and Company, the second edition has been published by Vijitha Yapa Publications. Reproduced as a facsimile of the original, the history begins with an appraisal of “Education in Ceylon before the time of Royal College”. The first chapter is devoted to the prototype called the “Hill Street Academy”, run in the back veranda of a Pettah church for twenty boys. It is a record of the school’s progress from being t he “Colombo Academy” to Royal College and ends with the role the school played in ‘ the Great War’ (the first world war).