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The school was formed from the combination of Benjamin Outrams Comprehensive School and Ripley Technical School and became known as Mill Hill School. The school gained specialist status in English. Prior to this, Mill Hill specialised in the Media and liberal arts curriculum in 2009. Mill Hill School converted to academy status in September ...
The Ripley Academy (previously known as Mill Hill School, before this, The Benjamin Outram Secondary Modern School) is a secondary school and sixth form located in Ripley, Derbyshire, England. [1] Ripley Academy opened on 8 September 2014 as part of the East Midlands Education Trust, which currently has fifteen schools [ 2 ] in the East Midlands .
The school is run by the Mill Hill School Foundation (now known as The Mill Hill Education Group), [17] a registered charity under English law. [18] The Education Group offers education to boys and girls aged 3 to 18 in seven schools. [19] The Mill Hill Education Group's other schools are: Belmont – a day school for pupils aged 7 to 13.
The Illinois State Park system grew slowly at first. Fort Massac was the state's first park, in 1903, after that additions were sporadic. Starved Rock State Park was added in 1911 and remained, by far, the largest of Illinois' State Parks until the 1930s. In 1917 Illinois Governor Frank Lowden instituted major reforms in government which gave ...
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Illinois Industrial School for Girls (Park Ridge, 1909) The facility was relocated to Park Ridge in 1908 and renamed the Park Ridge School for Girls in 1913. [1] Several of the buildings were funded by Julius Rosenwald, and were designed by Holabird & Roche, the same firm which designed the Chicago Board of Trade Building and Soldier Field. [1]
John R. Oughton House, Dwight, IL - c. 1915 Much of the house's exterior has remained unchanged through renovations. Oughton lived in the home until he died in 1925, at which time his widow had a home built next door and announced that the Oughton House was to become lodging for 40–50 patients at the Keeley Institute.
The Illinois Industrial School for Girls (later, Park Ridge School for Girls; now Park Ridge Youth Campus) traced its foundation to 1877, [1] in South Evanston, Illinois. [2]: 3 The organization received its charter on January 9 and opened on November 1 in a building formerly used as a soldiers' home, with 5 acres (2.0 ha) of land. It was the ...