Race row as elite schools REFUSE to take £1m donation

Race row as elite schools REFUSE to take £1m donation because of stipulation it could only be spent on underprivileged white boys

  • Sir Bryan Thwaites wanted to give to Winchester School and Dulwich College
  • The offer was apparently refused for fear that it would break equality laws 
  • A scholarship at Cambridge University was funded by star Stormzy last year

Two leading public schools have turned down gifts worth more than £1million for scholarships for poor white boys.

Sir Bryan Thwaites, 96, wanted to leave the money to Winchester School and Dulwich College because he had attended both on scholarships.

He planned to help poor, white students because research has shown that they are among the lowest achievers in education. The offer was apparently refused for fear it would break equality laws.

Sir Bryan Thwaites, 96, wanted to leave the money to Winchester School and Dulwich College (pictured) because he had attended both on scholarships

Last year a scholarship at Cambridge University, funded by grime star Stormzy, offered financial support for black British students.

Sir Bryan told The Times: ‘If Cambridge University can accept a much larger donation in support of black students, why cannot I do the same for under-privileged white British?

‘Winchester said it would harm its reputation by accepting my bequest, but in my opinion it would gain enormously by being seen to address what is the severe national problem of the underperforming white cohort in schools.’

Last year a scholarship at Cambridge University, funded by grime star Stormzy, (pictured) offered financial support for black British students

Last year a scholarship at Cambridge University, funded by grime star Stormzy, (pictured) offered financial support for black British students

Sir Bryan, who was a leading university professor, wanted to give £800,000 to Winchester in Hampshire (pictured) and £400,000 to Dulwich in south London

Sir Bryan, who was a leading university professor, wanted to give £800,000 to Winchester in Hampshire (pictured) and £400,000 to Dulwich in south London

Trevor Phillips, the former chairman of the Equality and Human Rights Commission, said in the online magazine Standpoint that a ‘lethal cocktail of inverted snobbery, racial victimhood and liberal guilt’ was the reason for the reluctance to help poorer white pupils.

Sir Bryan, who was a leading university professor, wanted to give £800,000 to Winchester in Hampshire and £400,000 to Dulwich in south London.

A Winchester spokesman said: ‘Acceptance of a bequest of this nature would neither be in the interests of the school as a charity nor the interests of those it aims to support through its work.’

A spokesman for Dulwich College said: ‘Bursaries are an engine of social mobility and they should be available to all who pass our entrance examinations.’

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