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The 1870 buildings then took the names Fawcett School for Boys and Margaret Hardy School for Girls, and when these transferred to new premises in Patcham in the 1960s Brighton Technical College (now City College Brighton & Hove) acquired them. The stone-banded red brickwork is in Simpson & Sons' "typical Brighton Board School manner". [3] [4 ...
This is a List of Old Brightonians, notable former students – known as "Old Brightonians" – of the co-educational, public school, Brighton College in Brighton, East Sussex, United Kingdom. This list is incomplete ; you can help by adding missing items .
School officials considered admitting boys during 2007. [8] St Mary's reported £1.93 million in debts in 2008, as well as losses in four of the previous five years. [ 9 ] Eventually, St Mary's Hall, Brighton, was merged with Roedean School in 2009 due to "economic circumstances" that "left it with no choice but to close and end 173 years of ...
Roedean School (/ ˈ r oʊ d iː n /) is a private boarding and day school founded in 1885 in Roedean Village on the outskirts of Brighton, East Sussex, England, and governed by Royal Charter. It is for girls aged 11 to 18.
William Adamson – grain merchant, Brighton City councillor (1897–1913), Brighton City Mayor (1901–1902), Member of the Victorian Legislative Council (1910–1922) Dylan Alcott – Paralympian [1] Francis Henry Joseph Archer – headmaster at Caulfield Grammar School 1923–1954, teacher at Brighton Grammar School 1955–1957 [2]
Falmer High School was a community mixed-sex non-denominational comprehensive school for pupils aged 11 to 16 in Brighton, East Sussex, England. It closed on 31 August 2010 and was replaced by Brighton Aldridge Community Academy on the same site, sponsored by Rod Aldridge .
Aldrington CE Primary School, Hove; Balfour Primary School, Brighton Benfield Primary School, Portslade Bevendean Primary School, Bevendean Bilingual Primary School, Hove ...
Brighton: William Porden's Indo-Saracenic riding school and stables, built for King George IV, had an 80-foot (24 m) diameter glass and wood dome, which has given its name to the theatre and concert hall which now occupies the building. The conversion took place in the 1930s.