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Mother Cabrini High School – All-girls' school opened in 1899 by Mother Frances Xavier Cabrini; staffed by the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus; closed in June 2014. Monsignor Kelly Jr. High School – All-boys' school for gifted and the highest-I.Q. New York County students; closed in 1972.
A series of images from the era have emerged more than a decade after they were almost thrown away. Skip to main content. 24/7 Help. For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ...
Rosa Bassett School was a grammar school for girls in South London. Established in 1906 in Stockwell as the Stockwell County Secondary School , in 1913 it moved to Welham Road on the boundary between Streatham and Tooting .
The school originated in the Middle Ages as an educational foundation for children in Canterbury, emerging as a separate school for girls in 1881. Its brother school is Simon Langton Grammar School for Boys which resides a mere half mile away. The school is selective in its intake, with prospective Year 7 students having to take the Kent ...
The Hanson Grammar School was designed by Charles Henry Hargreaves and opened on Byron Street, near Barkerend Road, in 1897. The boys' and girls' schools were next door to each other. In 1967 the girls' school had moved to a new building on Sutton Avenue. In the early 1970s, although retaining the name of a grammar school, the intake was ...
The building was occupied on the left side by Kettering High School (for girls) and on the right side by Kettering Grammar School (for boys). [2] After the school moved to Windmill Avenue, to the east of the town north of Wicksteed Park, in 1965, [3] the Bowling Green Road building became the Kettering Municipal Offices. [4]
Newport Girls' High School is an all-girls grammar school with academy status in Newport, Shropshire, England. [1] The school was opened in the 1919 by a group of female governesses as a single-sex day school for local girls. The school is selective and is an all-girls intake with an intake of 120 students per year. Until 2003 the intake was 32 ...
It was a direct grant grammar school until 1977 when it became a Voluntary Aided 13–19 Girls' School under the trusteeship of the Diocese of Leeds, which owns the buildings and grounds, and appoints the majority of the Governors. In 1995 due to Bradford Catholic re-organisation the College became an 11–19 Catholic Girls' School.