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Ospringe is a village and area of Faversham in the English county of Kent. It is also the name of a civil parish, which since 1935 has not included the village of Ospringe. The village lies on the Roman road Watling Street (nowadays the A2 road), called Ospringe Street in the village. The historic Maison Dieu is on Ospringe Street.
15 Ospringe Street Ospringe, Faversham: Hospital: 1230: 29 July 1950 ... Church of St Michael Sittingbourne: School: Change of use early 19th century: 10 September 1951
The current school dates from 1967, when the boys and girls schools were merged, forming the first co-educational grammar school in Kent. [135] The Abbey School is a Business and Enterprise Academy formed in September 1983 by the amalgamation of the Ethelbert Road Boys School and Lady Capel School for Girls. It has over 1000 pupils and is ...
St Margaret's CE School, Marden; St Margaret's-at-Cliffe Primary School, St Margaret's at Cliffe; St Mark's CE Primary School, Eccles; St Mark's CE Primary School, Royal Tunbridge Wells; St Martin's School, Dover; St Mary of Charity CE Primary School, Faversham; St Mary's CE Primary School, Swanley; St Mary's RC Primary School, Deal
Maison Dieu ('House of God') is a hospital, monastery, hostel, retirement home and royal lodge commissioned by Henry III in 1234. The timber framed building is located beside Watling Street, now the A2 road, in Ospringe, Faversham, in Kent, England.
In 1251, the Master and Brethren of Ospringe were granted a weekly market on Thursdays and an annual fair at Headcorn on 29 June, St. Peter and St. Paul's Day. In 1482 the Ospringe house was dissolved and in 1516, St John's College Cambridge, was given the Maison Dieu properties. The fair was later held on 12 June, having apparently been merged ...
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Spring Street School was the first public school in the city of Los Angeles. constructed at Second and Spring streets, where the longtime Los Angeles Times building now stands. [1] In 1873 this school housed a hundred pupils and one teacher; in the five schools in Los Angeles there were 14 teachers and 835 pupils, or 60 children per teacher. [2]