Wray Castle - The historic home of Wray Castle Training

If you’re interested in our training programmes, please explore Wray Castle’s courses. To learn more about the Castle’s rich history, feel free to read this article.

Wray Castle Limited is a globally recognised leader in telecommunications training, with a rich history that traces back to its origins as a maritime college established in 1958.  This video created in the late 1980’s captures some of our rich history.

In our current form, Wray Castle Limited has been at the forefront of empowering the telecoms industry by developing the specialist knowledge, skills, and competencies that organisations need to build, maintain, optimise, and operate the advanced communications networks that support critical national infrastructure. Our comprehensive training programmes have upskilled over 300,000 industry professionals from more than 85 countries worldwide, reflecting our extensive global reach and robust portfolio.

Our clients include major mobile and fixed operators, vendors, regulators, consultants, rail operators, energy suppliers, government organisations, and numerous noteworthy partnerships. This wide-ranging clientele is a testament to the rigorous and comprehensive training we provide, which is deeply rooted in the legacy of the Wray Castle training college for Merchant Navy Radio Officers.

The iconic building that housed the training college, Wray Castle, is situated in Claife, Cumbria, on the shores of Lake Windermere in the Lake District, England. Designed by the notable architect H. P. Horner, construction of the castle began in 1840 as a private residence for Dr. James Dawson, a retired Liverpool surgeon. Wray Castle is a quintessential example of Gothic Revival architecture, featuring turrets, battlements, and intricate stonework that reflect the Victorian era's fascination with medieval and romantic aesthetics.

Throughout its history, Wray Castle has been associated with various notable figures, including Beatrix Potter, who stayed there with her family in 1882. This stay deeply influenced her love for the Lake District, a setting that frequently appears in her beloved children's books.

In the twentieth century, Wray Castle transitioned from a private residence to public ownership when the National Trust acquired the grounds in 1929. The Castle served multiple purposes over the years, from being a youth hostel to hosting the offices of the Freshwater Biological Association under a twenty-year lease starting in 1931.

After the Second World War, the building was leased to the General Post Office (GPO), which later became British Telecom. From 1958 until 1998, it served as the training college for Merchant Navy Radio Officers (RMS Wray Castle). The college offered a three-year Marine Electronics course, training hundreds of cadets in the skills needed to become Radio Officer Engineers for ships, oil rigs, or inland coastal radio stations. The programme included two years of residential study, residing in the Castle, culminating in an OMD in Marine Telecommunications, followed by a final year focused on electronic and communications engineering.

The college's pedagogy, approved by the Business and Technician Education Council, emphasised a blend of theory, practice, and fault-finding, producing trainees that became experienced engineers. Professors and practising engineers regarded these disciplines as crucially interdependent. Before graduation, students demonstrated their proficiency in radio engineering, operating equipment, repairing circuit boards, and participated in simulations like sending Morse code communications from ship to shore. Graduates went on to pursue diverse careers, from serving as radio officers for the British Merchant Navy and foreign fleets to roles at the BBC and research positions with the British Antarctic Survey team.

The introduction of the Global Maritime Distress and Safety System in 1988, with its mandatory rollout phase completed by 1999, led to the phasing out of the radio officer position. However, Wray Castle Limited has continued its legacy in telecommunications training, carrying forward the prestigious Castle and college name as a marker of gold-standard, cutting-edge training and methodologies.

 Moving forward to today, Wray Castle training courses support all of the major communications technologies, both past, present and future. With our specialist knowledge we help our clients maintain cutting edge communications networks. Our specialist technical trainers help telecommunications companies, government organisations, rail and energy companies manage and operate critical national infrastructure. Courses cover the latest network technologies related to the global telecoms world. Wray Castle helps keep national critical infrastructure safe, secure and up to date, a good example is the company's partnership with the International Union of Railways (UIC.org) for the replacement of aging GSM-R technology for FRMCS. Explore our UIC Rail Academy here.

Over the years, our clients within the telecommunications industry, energy suppliers and government have recognised that our telecoms training has built lasting competencies within their organisations delivering a tangible return on their training investment. Our training solutions provide a thorough grounding and knowledge transfer to support learners to become the experienced engineers required by the global telecoms industry. Frequently our clients are competencies organisations, who find that Wray Castle courses and our training material meets their telecoms training requirements in relation to major global communications technologies.

Wray Castle's knowledge skills and competencies helps suppliers and government organisations support national critical infrastructure throughout the global telecoms world. Radio engineering specialists trained by Wray Castle working at suppliers and government organisations maintain some of the most advanced cutting edge communications networks in the telecoms world by developing network virtualisation solutions.

Wray Castle experienced specialist course developers create telecoms training solutions which operate at the cutting edge, including a diploma level programme, developing the specialist knowledge to support learners meet their telecoms training requirements.