Actually Steve, you may have touched something quite significant there. For many, I suspect Greshams was a great place and a great opportunity -the first stepping stone en route to an illustrious career. There was no such career mapped out for the boy who, just prior to being "sent away" had learned of his adoption and possibly thought he was being removed to prevent others from learning this "terrible" knowledge. It would have changed the whole ethos of what Greshams was really about -didn't he once say that prison was easier?- in that it wasn't a place which expanded young minds and broadened horizons (no point in his being broadened, all he was marked out for was being a glorified farm-labourer) but a place of confinement until such time as he was old enough to be set to that work and remain living with his parents. Where was the point, to an 8 year old, in being educated to degree standard to work on a farm? If that mind set had taken hold then, educationally, he was on a hiding to nowhere.
He was sent to a top quality school to get the best start in life. To give him the chance to do what he wanted to do with good academic qualifications. Not just to be a farm labourer.
However Bamber either rejected this chance outright. Or simply didn't have any academic skills. Leaving with no qualifications.
Neville and June then generously paid for Bamber to go on extensive travelling trips and didn't complain when he worked elsewhere. Bamber eventually and reluctantly decided himself to work on the farm.
Bamber obviously resented going to Gresham's. Mary Mugford saying he never forgave June for sending him away. Bamber has tried to play this down, saying he only found it hard at the start, like all boys would. He is being a bit of a cry baby to be honest. Schools have months of holidays every year where he would go back to WHF.