Princess Charlotte might end up attending the posh coed prep school Wellington

Princess Charlotte will turn 11 years old in May. Over the years, I’ve sort of learned the difference between American versus British school systems, and it feels like the age of 13 is a big deal in the British system. That’s the age where posh boys and girls are eligible for the poshest prep schools, usually boarding schools. Prince George’s transition to prep school is coming in the late summer/early fall of this year, because he turns 13 in July. We still don’t know which school he’ll attend, either the all-boys Eton or the coed Marlborough. This whole time, during the years-long conversation about George’s schooling, we’ve known that the Princess of Wales favors coeducation because she wants all three of her children to attend the same school. Meaning, if George goes to Marlborough, it’s likely that Charlotte and Louis will end up there too when they turn 13. But not so fast! Apparently, there are rumors about Charlotte attending a completely different prep school.

The prestigious secondary school Princess Charlotte might attend has been revealed, with its eye-watering fees ranging from £15,000 to £20,000 per term. Charlotte, aged 10, currently attends Berkshire’s Lambrook School with her two siblings, Princes George, 12, and Prince Louis, seven, but the prep school only caters for students up until the age of 13. And speculation over which school the princess could be enrolled in next has already begun.

Speaking on HELLO!’s A Right Royal Podcast, Melanie Sanderson, managing editor of The Good Schools Guide, said that Wellington College is certainly a strong contender.

‘I’ve been told Wellington is a possible school for Princess Charlotte,’ she revealed. ‘I suspect with the royals that normal rules possibly don’t apply. I feel as though they may be holding multiple places at different schools.’

Set in the heart of Berkshire, Wellington College is located a short distance from the Waleses’ family home at Forest Lodge on the Windsor Estate, with termly fees set at £15,250 for day pupils and £20,750 for boarders.

Melanie added: ‘If Charlotte is going to a co-ed, it might be that they would want her to be joined by her brother Louis. Logistically, that would work for them really, really well.’

Founded by Queen Victoria, the prestigious co-educational school is set within 400 acres of vast grounds and prides itself on academic excellence.

It comes as questions mount surrounding where her brother, George, could be set to attend in September – with a well-placed source previously telling the Mail on Sunday that ‘all roads lead to Eton’ after the young prince was allocated a house. Although William and Kate were spotted looking around a number of top schools, Eton and rival Marlborough College were clear front-runners. Eton – the alma mater of Prince William, where fees are more than £63,000 a year – is conveniently near the family home in Windsor.

[From The Daily Mail]

It might sound asinine to spend this much time gossiping about the Wales kids’ education, but I feel like the choice or choices of prep schools will be massively indicative of Kate’s power or lack thereof. Kate is really standing up to the monarchy in this one instance, by putting up this kind of massive fight about where her kids go to school. She’s not just going along with what William and Charles want and shuffling George off to Eton. All of which to say, if George ends up at Marlborough, then that’s where Charlotte will go as well and Kate will have won this years-long battle. If George goes to Eton, then… sure, Charlotte will probably end up at some equally posh school. I kind of think Kate’s first choice for all of her kids is Marlborough though.

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12 Responses to “Princess Charlotte might end up attending the posh coed prep school Wellington”

  1. Indica says:

    Every time I read ‘I’ve been told…’ in one of these royal-adjacent stories, I read that as ‘The voices in my head said…’ or ‘My cat told me…’

    Either would probably be just as true.

  2. Jais says:

    It will be interesting to see when it happens. But at this point, until an announcement is made, I’ve gotten to the point of meh. If Wellington is coed then technically all three could go there as well? It’s like Marlborough yeah? Except maybe closer to FL?

  3. Hypocrisy says:

    Like I have said before it truly doesn’t matter where these kids attend school because they will be passed through classes wether they deserve it or not then the same will happen when they attend university.. George already has a his future career and Peggy is making sure Lotte and Louie are financially secure to be future turnips from the sounds of it.

  4. Me at home says:

    “‘I’ve been told Wellington is a possible school for Princess Charlotte,’ she revealed.” Sure, everything’s on the table until it isn’t, and the Waleses also considered the local state schools… right before they burst out laughing and slapping their knees.

    But also, Wellington offers day school as well as boarding, and Googlemaps says it’s about 1/2 hour from Windsor castle. Could this be Kate’s gambit to keep the kids at home and keep using the school run as an excuse for another 10 years until Louis goes to uni?

  5. Ocho says:

    There is a key difference in looking for schools for George vs Charlotte.

    Typically boys leave prep (“primary”) school at age 13, while girls typically leave prep at age 11. This is a generalisation. So it depends on her current school: do most girls leave at 11? Is it mainly boys and just a few girls for ages 11-13? I bet her parents are taking that into consideration.

    Also: while families tend to send all their kids to the same prep (primary), it is common to send your kids to different senior schools. There is a lot of talk about “finding the right fit” for each child. Sort of like in the US you wouldn’t think you had to send all your kids to the same university. Yes, it is ridiculous — we are talking about 11 year olds! The truth: it is so difficult to get admitted into a competitive private senior school that is unlikely all children in one family will get admitted into the same school. This is not a problem the Wales will face…

    Yes, this is all a luxury most can not afford.

    BTW, I’m a Brit. I know about elite London privates, but those in the countryside can be a bit different.

    • Mayp says:

      Thank you for that information! That is really interesting about girls usually leaving prep School two years before boys. Is there a historical reason for this?

      Previously, when girls left prep School did they then study at secondary School on through until they were 17 or 18, like the boys? Or, did they study less, if at all, at secondary school and then go to a finishing school?

      I’m of an age where women used to go to finishing schools and the ones I met from the UK who did, didn’t really care about getting a higher education. It is as though they were, even in the ’70s, still being trained to be wives.

  6. Bqm says:

    Poor Prince Albert ignored again. He was more the driving force than Victoria though she was very involved. But he was extremely hands on. He served as its first President and personally chaired all the early Governors’ meetings. He had lengthy correspondence with the first Master and others involved and made numerous official and unofficial visits to the site before and after it opened in 1859. He influenced the choice of the architect, donated hundreds of books to start their Library, financed the Prince Consort’s History Prize, and more.

    His involvement “sprang from his belief that education was the key to creating a better society, and his view that existing British public schools were narrow and backward-looking in their traditions and curriculum. He wished to create a new kind of school in Britain, one which would give its pupils ‘a practical and professional education’ fitting them for all spheres of modern life. He insisted that the new school should teach not only Latin and Greek, but the more modern disciplines of mathematics, sciences, modern languages, and history, hoping that other British schools would follow this example.”

    Their grandson Christian Victor, who died in the Boer War, was a pupil and the first member of the royal family to go to school rather than have tutors. He was followed by his brother Albert and their cousins Alexander, Leopold and Maurice Battenberg. (Maurice was killed in ww1.) Other royals included Queen Mary’s brothers Adolphus and Frank Teck. Modern royals include multiple members of the Greek royal family. It’s why it’s always funny when people say Eton is the royal tradition when Harry and William were the only royals to recently attend. The late Queen’s uncle Henry, Duke of Gloucester attended as did the Duke of Kent, Michael of Kent and the current Duke of Gloucester. But Wellington has more of a royal connection and a longer one.

  7. yellow says:

    I think the “Kate wants the children to go to Marlborough!” talk is to hide the reality that she wants George at Eton.

    There is no way she wouldn’t want her son the future king to go to the grandest school in the land – let’s not forget who her mother is.

    I can picture Louis going to Marlborough if he is not academic.

  8. Isabella says:

    Wait, wait. I’m confused. This whole story is about how Kate does not want George to go to Eton. What gives?

  9. Mrs.Krabapple says:

    It’s been clear over the years that William only cares about George. So I’m sure Kate is free to send the other two kids wherever she wants.

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