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In 2021 the school updated its name to St George’s School, Edinburgh. [2] to reflect the addition of boys in the younger years of primary up to the end of Primary 3 by 2024. [3] The school is an all-through [4] school from 3–18 years on one self-contained campus in the heart of Edinburgh. The size of the whole school is typically around 700 ...
This page was last edited on 7 February 2023, at 15:54 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
1938 James Black (Edinburgh: St George's West) 1939 Archibald Main (Glasgow) 1940 James Rae Forgan (Ayr: Trinity UF) 1941 J. H. Cockburn (Dunblane Cathedral) 1942 Charles William Gray Taylor CBE (Edinburgh: St George's) 1943 John Baillie (Professor of Divinity, University of Edinburgh) 1944 Edward James Hagan OBE (Edinburgh: Warrender)
The east end of George Street with St Andrew's Church, and Lord Melville's Monument, c. 1829 The west end of George Street, looking towards Charlotte Square and St George's Church, c. 1829. George Street is the central thoroughfare of the First New Town of Edinburgh, planned in the 18th century by James Craig. [1]
In June 1879, he resigned and his position at St George's was filled by Rev Archibald Scott. [1] He died on 15 November 1886 and is buried near the centre of the northern 19th-century extension of Dean Cemetery in western Edinburgh. He is buried with his wife and his son-in-law, the artist Alexander Garden Sinclair (1859–1930).
The building was erected as St Paul's Church, replacing a chapel in the Cowgate. It was designed by Archibald Elliot between 1816 and 1818, and was extended by Peddie and Kinnear in the 1890s. [2] In 1932 the congregation merged with that of St George's Church, also located on York Place. The York Place tram stop is near to the church building.
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