Background
Edward Bowen was born in Glenmore, County Wicklow, Ireland. His elder brother was Charles Bowen, a well-known judge.
cricketer association football player
Edward Bowen was born in Glenmore, County Wicklow, Ireland. His elder brother was Charles Bowen, a well-known judge.
He was educated at Blackheath Proprietary School and King"s College, London before entering Trinity College, Cambridge.
He was appointed an assistant master at Marlborough College in 1858, and moved to Harrow in 1859. As a schoolmaster, Bowen believed that boys must be interested in his lessons and at ease with him. This was in contrast with the grave formality typical of the Victorian era.
Bowen was also an enthusiastic sportsman and pedestrian.
Bowen is perhaps best remembered as the author of the Harrow school song, Forty Years On, which is still sung today, and to which an extra verse was later added in honour of Winston Churchill. He also wrote many other Harrow School songs along with the then Master in Charge of Music, many of which are sung by the school to this day at occasions known as songs every term.
While at Harrow, he was housemaster of The Grove boarding house. He died at Moux, Côte-d"Or, France.
Cyril Norwood said of him that he had "kept the eternal boy alive within his own breast to the very end".