Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The following is a partial list of articles for state schools in the unitary council areas of Aberdeen City, Dundee City, City of Edinburgh and Glasgow City in Scotland, United Kingdom. You may also find Category:Schools in Scotland of use to find a particular school.
Woodside has the first and grandest of Glasgow's Carnegie libraries, which were all designed in the Edwardian Baroque style by James Robert Rhind. [1] Joseph Connery, the father of Sean Connery , was born in the district in 1902.
Wikidata has entry Woodside Public School, 311, 313, 315 Woodlands Road, Glasgow (Q17812418) with data related to this item. This is a photo of listed building number 32263 .
Historically, school boards operated in Scotland from 1872 to 1918. [1] A new wave of school boards were established by the School Boards Act 1988, [2] which mandated that they be set up in education authority schools in Scotland. Boards consisted of elected parent and staff members and other members co-opted by the elected members.
[1] [2] As the school roll grew it became necessary to relocate to larger premises. Unused buildings at Berkeley Street, Sandyford (also a site used by Woodside Secondary School until 1999), were identified, and reopened in August 2006 as Glasgow Gaelic School, providing Gaelic medium education for pre-5, primary and secondary pupils.
William Power was born in Woodlands, Glasgow, the eldest of the five children of William Power snr, a commission agent and ship master.He attended Woodside School in Glasgow, but had to leave at the age of fourteen as a result of his father's death at Gibraltar from fever, and found work as a bank clerk at the Royal Bank of Scotland.
Woodlands is an area of Glasgow, Scotland.Situated on the north-west edge of the city centre, Woodlands is located within Glasgow's fashionable West End, east of Hillhead, south of Woodside, north of the Park District and Kelvingrove Park, and west of Charing Cross and Garnethill.
Between 1881 and 1895, she taught for the Glasgow School Board; [1] teaching at Runford Street public school and Shields Road public school. [2]Elizabeth then went on to teach at the Pupil-Teachers Institute, Glasgow, from 1895 to 1907 [1] before moving on to teach at Whitehill Higher Grade school and John Street Higher Grade school from 1907 to 1920.