The
idea of the 'Public School', which carries so clear an image today, did
not exist in 1859 in India and the history of Bishop Cotton School is of
public interest for the part it played in the development of public
schools and in the wider history of education in this country.
In the 1840's the great schools numbered not more than half a dozen in
England, and Eton, the largest, catered for fewer than 500 boys. In India,
there were a handful of private schools and Military Asylums, educating
the children of their neighborhood rather than the public at large.

Bishop Cotton School, Shimla, is the one of the oldest boarding schools
in Asia, having been founded on 28th July, 1859, by Bishop George Edward
Lynch Cotton, son of an Army Captain, who died leading his Regiment in
battle. A scholar of Westminister, and a graduate of Cambridge, in 1836 he
was appointed Assistant Master at Rugby by Doctor Thomas Arnold, one of
the founders of the British Public School system. It was the young Mr.
Cotton who is spoken of as the "the model young master" in Thomas
Hughes' famous book "Tom Brown's School Days" which gives an
insight to school life at Rugby.
After having taught for 15 years at Rugby, in 1852, he was appointed
Master of Marlborough, where he established organized games and the House
and prefect systems. He believed that " the prefects are and shall
be, long as I am the Head, the governors of the school. As soon as I see
this impracticable I will resign….." He was consecrated Bishop at Westminster
Abbey by the Archbishop of Canterbury. Queen Victoria personally selected
Bishop Cotton as Bishop of Calcutta and Metropolitan Bishop of India,
Burma and the Island of Ceylon, keeping in view the critical period in
India around 1857.
As Bishop of Calcutta, on 28TH July, 1859, he conducted a service for
the foundation of a public school at a hill station. Collections were
made. in most of the Churches of the Diocese for this purpose. The
collections were utilized to found the Bishop's School at
Jutogh, Shimla.
The land and the buildings on it were a gift from the Viceroy. Three
private houses were purchased by Bishop Cotton out of the India Public
School Fund for Rs.17,000/- The school opened for students on 15th March,
1863. Though mentioned in correspondence as the Simla Public School, it
never actually bore this name. The first boy, Frederick Naylor, joined the
school on 16th March, 1863, "creeping like a snail, unwilling to
school," watched by the staff in curiosity and amusement. 35 boys
were
admitted that year and the school increased its strength to 65
students by the year 1864. This was the highest number the buildings and
grounds permitted. A change of site was then deemed necessary because the
Jutogh site was divided by a public road which was inconvenient. Bishop
Cotton personally reconnoitered ten sites in September and October 1864,
and finally approved the South end of Knollswood Spur which belonged to
the Rajah of Keonthal. After lengthy negotiations the site was acquired
through the intervention of the Viceroy and the foundation stone for the
new buildings was laid on 26th September 1866, by H.E. the Viceroy, Sir
John Lawrence, elder brother of Sir Henry Lawrence, founder of the
Military Asylum at Sanawar (now known as Lawrence School). In September
1868, the school moved to Knollswood, our present site.
A fortnight after laying the foundation stone, Bishop Cotton drowned in
an accident on 6th October, 1866 while touring Assam in the Governor's
yacht on the river Gorai. To perpetuate the memory of its founder, the
name of the school was changed to Bishop Cotton School in 1867. Also one
of the houses, both at Rugby and Marlborough, was named Cotton House. Two
Schools, one in Bangalore and the other in Nagpur were also established in
his memory and St. Paul's School, Darjeeling, (founded in 1823 and shifted
from Calcutta to Darjeeling by Bishop Cotton) also erected a Cotton Hall
in his memory.
Bishop Cotton School is the first of its kind in this part of the
world, to start the house system, organized games and the prefect system
which were begun almost at the same time as they were developed in
England. At the old schools in England, boys from a distance lodged at
private, commercially run houses and attended the schools as day scholars.
The 1840's saw a transition between the old style Dames' Houses, and a
system whereby masters augmented their teacher's income by running
boarding houses, doing business directly with the parent, and being known
therefore as "Housemasters".
The school grew from strength to strength under the stewardship of the
first Headmaster, Rev. Samuel Slater, who had been brought from St, Paul's
School in Calcutta, and who went on to serve Bishop Cotton School for
twenty-two years, thereby laying a solid foundation and transforming
the School into a prestigious institution which grew to attract students
from among the Indian elite as well. By the turn of the century the
reputation of the School was undeniable and greatly helped by staff who
were mainly educated at Oxford and Cambridge.
On Sunday, 7th May, 1905, whilst most of the boys were on "Khud
Leave", the school caught fire. The complete school was burnt except
the Headmaster's Lodge (1868), the Hospital (1868) and the Senior Master's
House (1873). The school was rebuilt and occupied in July 1907. The school
Chapel which was originally consecrated on 21st September 1871, was
rebuilt and used from 3rd April, 1908.
In 1926 a hostel was constructed for the Simla Hill Chiefs' sons and
relatives at a cost of Rs. 41,000/- financed entirely by the Hill Chiefs.
Later the hostel was expanded and nine more rooms were added and became
the College Section of the school, preparing the boys for the Intermediate
Examinations. In 1959, the Centenary Year, dormitories were constructed on
the first floor to house one hundred and forty small children.
In 1937 a Prep School was opened by buying the Ayrcliff Girls' School, (now
the Tibetan School in Chotta Shimla) for Rs. 35,000/-. In December 1947
the Prep School was closed as 42 Pakistani and 98 British and European
boys left India and the School. The Prep School was finally sold in 1961
to the Dalai Lama, having been on rent to the Government from 1948 .

The first Indian boys permitted to join the school were Suren Tagore in
1881 and Vishnu Singh in 1883. The first four Indian School Captains were
RJ Gandhi in 1928, Harry Chukerbuti in 1936, Jahengzeb Khan in 1941 and
Hasan Agha in 1946-47. These four boys were prominent examples of the
predominance of a student body that was being groomed for leadership of
Indian affairs, which training was proof of the far-sightedness of the
Founder and successive Headmasters.
A school is judged by its products. Bishop Cotton has produced
Ambassadors, UN Contingent Commanders, Politicians, M.P.'s in England and
India, about a dozen Generals/ Admirals/ Air Marshals, leading
industrialists, authors, a Chief Minister, Secretaries and an Air Chief.
Cottonians have donned the Indian colors in Golf, won national gold medals
in Air Rifle Shooting, boxing and Taekwondo. They have broken the national
broad jump record, represented England and Malaysia in hockey, and
Malaysia in cricket, won the second highest Indian decoration in war and
have been knighted. The School has also produced the most decorated
officer in the history of all Armies, Maj. Roy Farran (Curzon). Many
Cottonians have also made the supreme sacrifice in defense of their
country.
