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The Varnett School Southwest; Sam Houston State University Charter School Cypress Trails [1] Sam Houston State University Charter School Greengate Academy [1] K-5 Meyerpark Elementary School; Ripley's House Charter School; University of Houston Charter School (closing 2021) PreK-4 KIPP SHINE Preparatory School(2004) KIPP DREAM Preparatory ...
The Post Oak School (has one campus in Houston) The Rainard School; School of the Woods (partially in Houston) St. John's School; Houston Sudbury School; The Tenney School; The Village School; Robindell Private School (Kindergarten and grade 1) [55] - In Gulfton; Trafton Academy - In Willowbend, [56] Opened in 1973 [57]
St. Francis Episcopal School (Piney Point Village, Houston) St. John's School; St. Pius X High School; St. Thomas' Episcopal School; St. Thomas High School; School of the Woods; Second Baptist School; Strake Jesuit College Preparatory; St. Stephen's Episcopal School Houston; The Village School; Westbury Christian School; Xavier Educational Academy
Garden Oaks K-8 School (Houston) (zoned for K-5, magnet for K-8) Serves most of Garden Oaks and a section of Oak Forest [5] Thomas J. Pilgrim Academy (zoned school) (Houston) The school was built in 1957, on the sesquicentennial of the birth of Thomas J. Pilgrim, and opened as Thomas J. Pilgrim Elementary School. [6]
Houston Independent School District (HISD) high schools is not a subset of this category because Bellaire High School is outside the Houston city limits, in Bellaire, Texas. Please only include schools within the full purpose Houston city limits .
St. Christopher School (Houston) [15] St. Clare of Assisi Catholic School PK3-8 (Houston) St. Edward School (unincorporated Harris County, Spring address) It is on a 15-acre (6.1 ha) plot of land. As of May 2016 it had 351 students. [16] St. Elizabeth Ann Seton School (Houston) St. Francis de Sales Catholic School (Houston) PK3-8
The University of Houston System's annual impact on the Houston-area's economy equates to that of a major corporation: $1.1 billion in new funds attracted annually to the Houston area, $3.13 billion in total economic benefit, and 24,000 local jobs generated according to studies in 2006.
The club's membership experienced periodic shifts with the changing prosperity of British farmers over the years - there were 700 members in 1876, 275 in 1892, but the club has grown in the 20th century, claiming 1,500 members in the 1920s, and just under 6,000 today. [citation needed] The club frequently moved premises in its first 60 years.