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The Jewish Teachers' Training College, Gateshead (also known as Beth Midrash Lemoroth) [1] is an all-girls school on Bewick Road in Gateshead, England. [1] [2]It is also commonly known by most people as "Gateshead Old" due to another seminary that opened later in Gateshead which is referred to as "Gateshead New".
Gateshead Jewish Academy for Girls (Hebrew בית חיה רחל), is a two-year post-secondary school college, or "seminary". It was founded in Gateshead , England in 1998; its principal is Rabbi Avrohom Katz, an author and columnist.
Gateshead [1] is the home to a sizable community of what are often called ultra-Orthodox Haredi Jews. The community is acclaimed for its higher educational institutions and is often referred to as the Oxbridge of Britain’s Jewish community. [2] [3] [4] Talmudic students from many countries travel to Gateshead to attend its yeshivas and kollels.
Gateshead is first mentioned in Latin translation in Bede's Ecclesiastical History of the English People as ad caput caprae ("at the goat's head"). This interpretation is consistent with the later English attestations of the name, among them Gatesheued (c. 1190), literally "goat's head" but in the context of a place-name meaning 'headland or hill frequented by (wild) goats'.
The GDST school in Gateshead continued until it was merged into Newcastle in 1907. Moberly retired in 1911. [4] In 1884, The Church Schools' Company decided to open a private girls' school in the North East which focused on a church-based learning environment. A high school for girls in Newcastle was established in 1885 and opened with 59 pupils.
The private school Gateshead High School For Boys opened in 1883 at the junction of Durham Road and Prince Consort Road. It was purchased by Gateshead School Board in 1894 and became a coeducational "Higher Grade School" called Gateshead Secondary School. Publicly owned Higher Grade Schools were a new breed of school, similar to the privately ...
This picture in question, which depicts a group of girls who worked in a linen factory and was taken more than 100 years ago, resurfaced online after a woman named Lynda sent it in to the website ...
Madeleine Hope Dodds was the second of five children of Edwin Dodds, of Home House, Gateshead, County Durham, and Emily (née Bryham). [2] She had three sisters and a brother. One of her grandfathers had a printing business and the other, John Mawson, was Sheriff of Newcastle. [3] She went to a girls-only high school called Gateshead High School.