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King's Leadership Academy Hawthornes (formerly The Hawthorne's Free School) is a secondary free school located on Fernhill Road in Bootle, Merseyside, England, about four miles (6.4 km) from Liverpool city centre. The school is located within the Metropolitan Borough of Sefton.
King's Leadership Academy may refer to: King's Leadership Academy Hawthornes, a secondary school in Bootle, Merseyside, England; King's Leadership Academy Liverpool, a secondary school in Liverpool, Merseyside, England; King's Leadership Academy Warrington, a secondary school in Warrington, Cheshire, England
King's Leadership Academy Warrington is a coeducational secondary school based in the Woolston area of Warrington, Cheshire, England. [1] The school opened in 2012 after the closure of Woolston High School but was set up independently as a free school by Sir Iain Hall and 'Great+ Schools' and not as a replacement from the local authority. The ...
In this sense it is not clear whether Hawthorne actually sides with the Puritans or the Merry Mount people, or if he is trying to find some middle ground. It is not too difficult to see the Merry Mounters as the precursors of hippies (Beats, or, perhaps, more accurately free thinkers) or the Puritans as the archetype of the establishment ...
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The school was sponsored by the University of Chester Academies Trust, [2] In 2015, due to ongoing concerns regarding UCATs sponsorship, low exam grade outcomes, and interim leadership and management, the Department for Education changed the sponsor of University Academy Liverpool to King's Leadership Academy in Warrington (now the Great ...
Recreation of the home in Lenox, Massachusetts, where Hawthorne wrote A Wonder-Book. The Hawthornes had moved to The Berkshires shortly after the publication of The Scarlet Letter and it was here that he completed not only A Wonder-Book but also his novel The House of the Seven Gables. [4]
Ironically, Hawthorne hated living in the Berkshires. [1] The Tanglewood neighborhood of Houston was named after the book. The book was a favorite of Mary Catherine Farrington, the daughter of Tanglewood developer William Farrington. [2] It reportedly inspired the name of the thickly wooded Tanglewood Island in the state of Washington. [3]