[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tom_browns_schooldays.png]]
''Tom Brown's Schooldays'', written by Thomas Hughes and published in 1857, is one of the classics of the BoardingSchool genre. The main character is eleven-year-old Tom Brown, the son of a well-to-do country squire.

The early chapters of the novel deal with Tom Brown's childhood at his home in the Vale of White Horse. Tom Brown's first school year was at a local school. His second year started at a private school, but due to an epidemic of fever in the area, all the school's boys were sent home, and Tom was transferred mid-term to Rugby School, where he made acquaintance with the adults and boys who lived at the school and in its environs. On his arrival at Rugby, Tom Brown is looked after by a more experienced classmate, Harry "Scud" East. Soon after, Tom and East become the targets of a bully named Flashman.

In the second half of the book, Dr. Thomas Arnold, the historical headmaster of the school at the time, gives Tom the care of George Arthur, a frail, pious, academically brilliant, gauche, and sensitive new boy.

The book has been highly influential, creating the BoardingSchool genre which also includes well known works such as ''Literature/GoodbyeMrChips'' and the ''Literature/HarryPotter'' series.

Parodies include "Tompkinson's Schooldays" in ''Series/RippingYarns'', "Tim Brown's Schooldays" in ''Radio/ImSorryIllReadThatAgain'', the first episode of ''Radio/BleakExpectations'' and the boarding school sequence in the Literature/{{Discworld}} novel ''{{Literature/Pyramids}}''.

Creator/GeorgeMacDonaldFraser has written an entire series purporting to reveal what the bully Literature/{{Flashman}} got up to after he left school.

Not to be confused with the controversial Japanese {{Anime}} called ''VisualNovel/SchoolDays''.
----
!!''Tom Brown's Schooldays'' provides examples of:
%% * AristocratsAreEvil: Flashman and his father embody the worse side of the aristocracy.
* AuthorTract: Reportedly, when people told Hughes that the book would have been more enjoyable if it were less preachy, he replied that as far as he was concerned the opportunity to preach was the whole point of the exercise. It should be noted that the preaching is strongest in the second half of the book, which is rarely adapted into film or TV (even the ''Classics Illustrated'' comic adaptation ignored it).
* BaseballEpisode: British version and book version: UsefulNotes/{{Cricket}} Episode. These are English boys, after all, so their sport of choice is cricket.
* BoardingSchool: The novel is set in Rugby, a RealLife public boarding school.
%% * BoardingSchoolOfHorrors
%% * TheBully: Flashman
%% * ClearMyName
%% * EvilPoacher
%% * {{Frameup}}
* HistoricalDomainCharacter: Dr. Arnold, the actual headmaster of the real Rugby School at the time the novel is set.
%% * QuintessentialBritishGentleman - To various degrees, most of the upper-class British characters that form the focus of the story.
----