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The school was established on 2 February 1787 as Hull Trinity House Marine School. [2] Originally a private school, Hull Trinity House later became a state-funded technical school and was renamed Hull Trinity House Engineering School. The school was renamed Hull Trinity House School when it became a comprehensive.
Trinity House building, built c. 1753. The Hull Trinity House, locally known as Trinity House, is a seafaring organisation consisting of a charity for seafarers, a school, and a guild of mariners. The guild originated as a religious guild providing support and almshouses for the needy, and established a school for mariners in 1787.
It is now Hull Trinity House Academy, Hull's only boys' school. In 1962 the city had 20,000 secondary school pupils at 44 schools. 64% were in secondary modern schools, 10% in grammar schools, and 10% in technical schools.
Trinity House, a UK private corporation governed under a Royal Charter, functions include the official Lighthouse Authority; Trinity House of Leith; Trinity House Pilot Station, a former Port Tower in Folkestone Harbour; Newcastle-upon-Tyne Trinity House; Hull Trinity House. Hull Trinity House Academy, an associated marine training school
In 1906, the school purchased a property, "Roxeth" (now Henty House), a small distance to the south of the church, on the corner of Wellington Street and Charles Street. Trinity quickly built Arnold Hall, the first classroom block, completing it in 1907. In the same year, Trinity was registered as a public school of the Church of England. The ...
Trinity House, London (2007) A meeting at Trinity House c. 1808 The Corporation of Trinity House of Deptford Strond, [3] also known as Trinity House (and formally as The Master, Wardens and Assistants of the Guild Fraternity or Brotherhood of the most glorious and undivided Trinity and of St Clement in the Parish of Deptford Strond in the County of Kent), is the official authority for ...
The open house as we know it started in 1978, Stearns wrote, three years after it was deemed a historic landmark. Before then, guided tours were offered on an "ad hoc basis." Now, tours are self ...
In 2005 Hull City Council proposed closing and consolidating Newland School with Hull Trinity House School, but after outcries from both schools the plan was shelved and modernisation of the facilities was begun. [6] On 28 August 2007 the school celebrated its centenary.