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Port Hope High School's mascot is the Bluestars. Port Hope students in grades 6–12 now get their education in Kinde, as the local school board voted in 2014 to contract educational services from North Huron Schools. Port Hope Schools, which had been in operation since 1925, closed its doors in the spring of 2015.
The school's honour roll for those students whom served in World War I and World War II were transferred to Port Hope Archives in 2015. [4] The school shares its building with Dr. M.S. Hawkins, a middle school for Grades 7-8. The High School inhabits the West area of the building, while the Middle School claims the East.
Beatrice Strong Public School Port Hope: 250 JK-6 Sonal Gohil Brighton Public School Brighton: 500 JK-6 John Ford Buckhorn Public School Buckhorn: 173 JK-6 James Brake Burnham Public School Cobourg: 263 JK-6 James Brake Camborne Public School Cobourg: 198 JK-6 James Brake Central Public School Bowmanville: 196 JK-8 Jamila Maliha Charles Bowman ...
Port Hope Township, Minnesota Show map of the United States Coordinates: 47°36′44″N 94°44′54″W / 47.61222°N 94.74833°W / 47.61222; -94
Port Hope High School c. 1871, Public Gr 9-12 - opened in 1853 as Port Hope Grammar School [42] Dr M. S. Hawkins Senior Public School, Public Gr 7–8 (same building as Port Hope High School) Port Hope High School Student to Work Transition Program (SWOT Campus), Public Grade 9–12; Trinity College School, Private Gr 5–12
Trinity College School (TCS) is a co-educational, independent boarding and day school located in Port Hope, Ontario, Canada. TCS was founded on May 1, 1865, more than two years before Canadian Confederation. It includes a Senior School for grades nine to twelve, and a Junior School for grades five to eight.
Many school districts were in existence prior to British Columbia joining Canada in 1871. Some districts were just single schools or even one teacher. Traditionally school districts in British Columbia were either municipal, which were named after the municipality such as Vancouver or Victoria, or rural and given a regional name.
The building itself was designed by the former President of the Ontario Association of Architects, Murray Brown, who oversaw the construction by Thomas Garnet and Sons, a local firm responsible for many landmarks of the area, including the 1927 addition to the Port Hope High School. [5] [6] In 1945 the Capitol Theatre was sold to Premier theatres.