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Pages in category "Church of England private schools in the Diocese of Lincoln" The following 3 pages are in this category, out of 3 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
During his nine-year-long tenure, Casey established a chancery building, a school for special needs children, a retreat house, several high schools and grade schools, and a Newman Center. [21] His most prominent accomplishment was the erection of the Cathedral of the Risen Christ in Lincoln; he broke ground on the new cathedral in June 1963 and ...
St Peter and St Paul's Catholic Voluntary Academy (formerly St Peter and St Paul's Catholic High School) is a coeducational Roman Catholic secondary school and sixth form with academy status, situated in Lincoln, England. It is one of only two Catholic high schools in Lincolnshire and the smallest secondary school in Lincoln.
By virtue of the 2009 scheme of delegation, [2] whilst the Bishop of Lincoln exercises general oversight, the Bishops of Grimsby and of Grantham [3] were seen as leaders in mission in the north and south of the Diocese respectively until that scheme lapsed upon the 6 April 2013 retirement of the Bishop of Grimsby, which was followed by a review of roles of bishops in the diocese. [4]
Pages in category "Church of England secondary schools in the Diocese of Lincoln" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
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Lincoln Diocesan Training School for Mistresses was founded in 1862. It occupied the premises of an earlier, unsuccessful training establishment for female teachers, which had been built in 1842 with a chapel, lecture rooms and a school for teaching practice.
The diocese was the largest in England, extending from the River Thames to the Humber Estuary. In 1072, Remigius de Fécamp moved the see of Dorchester to Lincoln, but the bishops of Lincoln retained significant landholdings within Oxfordshire. Because of this historic link, for a long time Banbury remained a "peculiar" of the Bishop of Lincoln.