Name   William Byngham Party   Federalist Party  | ||
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Role   Former United States Senator Died   February 6, 1804, Bath, United Kingdom Spouse   Ann Willing Bingham (m. 1780) Education   The Academy and College of Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Similar People   Ann Willing Bingham, Thomas Willing, Robert Morris  | ||
Previous office   Senator (PA) 1795–1801  | ||
William Byngham (also William Bingham) (c. 1390 – 17 November 1451) was the founder of the first secondary school training college in Britain.
Byngham became vicar of St John Zachary in the City of London on 25 May 1424, where, along with other prominent clergy such as Worthyngton St Andrew, Holborn, Lychefield (St Mary Magdalene, Old Fish Street) and Cote (St Peter-upon-Cornhill), he petitioned wealthy aldermen, and indeed the King himself, to restore the grammar schools. The foundation of God's House in Cambridge in 1437 (with financial backing from a former Lord Mayor of London John Brokley) should have been a triumphant conclusion to his long campaign, but it took a further decade before his foundation was finally given the royal seal of approval.

