Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Robert Bateman High School (also known as Robert Bateman, or Bateman) operated in Burlington, Ontario, Canada from 1970 to 2020. The school was part of the Halton District School Board, and was established as Lord Elgin High School. After a merger with General Brock High School in 2004 it was renamed Robert Bateman High School.
General Brock High School is a former high school in Burlington, Ontario, Canada operated by the Halton District School Board. The school was merged with Lord Elgin High School to form Robert Bateman High School in 2004. [1] The site of the high school was then used for Gary Allan High School, an adult and continuing education school. [2]
The Elgin Bridge in Singapore, and Elgin Street, Carlton, State of Victoria, and Elgin Street, Hong Kong, are also named for Bruce, as is the Lord Elgin Hotel in Ottawa. [ 15 ] Elgin's legacy in Canada was the subject of a National Film Board of Canada short docudrama, Lord Elgin: Voice of the People (1959), directed by Julian Biggs.
Northampton Grammar School (1541) - later renamed to Northampton School for Boys; Dauntsey's School (1542) Prescot Grammar School (1544) King Henry VIII School, Coventry (1545) Christ Church Cathedral School (1546) Archbishop Holgate's School, York (1546) Colyton Grammar School (1546) King James's School, Almondbury (1547) Malton School (1547)
The biggest items in the $375 million bond proposal in Elgin and the $649.5 million plan in Georgetown are constructing schools, purchasing buses and buying land for future buildings.
The Hanover County School Board's 4-3 vote was a fitting culmination to a contentious, decades-long debate over the names of Lee-Davis High and Stonewall Jackson Middle School.
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us more ways to reach us
Sydenham Public School in Kingston, Ontario, which has operated as an educational facility since its construction in 1853 as the Kingston County Grammar School, was renamed in the 1890s in memory of Lord Sydenham. It is in downtown Kingston, and is an Ontario-designated heritage building.