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It was later the Cambridge and County High School for Boys, and then finally the Cambridgeshire High School for Boys. It had around 600 boys in 1970, with 150 in the sixth form. It was transformed into Hills Road Sixth Form College in the 1974 reorganisation of education in Cambridgeshire.
LEAs considered grammar areas are shown filled, while circles indicate isolated grammar schools or clusters of neighbouring schools. This is a list of the current 163 state-funded fully selective schools ( grammar schools ) in England, as enumerated by Statutory Instrument .
This is a list of some of the endowed schools in England and Wales existing in the early part of the 19th century.It is based on the antiquarian Nicholas Carlisle's survey of "Endowed Grammar Schools" published in 1818 [1] with descriptions of 475 schools [2] but the comments are referenced also to the work of the Endowed Schools Commission half a century later.
St Paul's School (London) (1509) Royal Grammar School, Guildford (1509) Wolverhampton Grammar School (1512) Lewes Old Grammar School Lewes, East Sussex founded as Southover Grammar School (1512) Holy Trinity Church of England Primary School, Cuckfield, West Sussex founded as Cuckfield Grammar School (1512) Hutton Grammar School, Lancashire (1512)
Hills Road Sixth Form College was established on 15 September 1974 [3] on the site of the former Cambridgeshire High School for Boys, when education in Cambridgeshire was reorganised on a comprehensive basis, and grammar schools and secondary moderns were replaced by a system of (mainly) 11–16 comprehensive schools and sixth form colleges.
St Alban's RC Primary School, Cambridge; St Andrew's CE Primary School, Soham; St Anne's CE Primary School, Godmanchester; St Helen's Primary School, Bluntisham; St Johns CE Primary School, Huntingdon; St Laurence RC Primary School, Cambridge; St Luke's CE Primary School, Cambridge; St Mary's CE Primary School, St Neots; St Matthew's Primary ...
The school was founded in 1884 as St John's High School for Boys by the Reverend Prebendary Frederick Hall MA of Jesus College, Cambridge, [1] rector of the Parish of St James and St John, Friern Barnet, to educate boys from middle-class families capable of meeting fee payments, as distinct from his efforts to provide the free schooling – financially supported by parishioners – of infants.
The school was formed in its current structure in 1973 by Robert Woodward, [4] Rodney Portman and Nicholas Mander with the aim of applying University of Cambridge-style tutorial teaching to school age students. MPW teaches in small groups (fewer than 10 students per class), which means that students get individual attention.