Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Godolphin and Latymer School is a private day school for girls in Hammersmith, West London. The school motto is an ancient Cornish phrase, Francha Leale Toge, which translates as "frank and loyal art thou". The school crest includes a double-headed white eagle, Godolphin in Cornish signifies a white eagle. [1]
Former pupils of Godolphin and Latymer School call themselves Old Dolphins. The abbreviation OD is sometimes used. The abbreviation OD is sometimes used. Pages in category "People educated at Godolphin and Latymer School"
Godolphin School is a private boarding and day school for girls in Salisbury, England, which was founded in 1726 and opened in 1784. The school educates girls between the ages of three and eighteen, and will begin to admit boys in September 2025.
Coat of arms of Edward Latymer in All Saints' Church, Edmonton, London. Edward Latymer (1557–1627) was a wealthy legal official in London. His will established both Latymer Upper School and The Latymer School and is associated with Godolphin and Latymer School.
Latymer was established in 1624 on Church Street, Edmonton by bequest of Edward Latymer, a London City merchant in Hammersmith. [1] Although most of his wealth passed to the people of Hammersmith and the Parish of St Dunstan's (now Latymer Upper School), he named certain properties and estates to fund the education and livelihoods of "eight poore boies of Edmonton" with a doublet, a pair of ...
Remaining single-sex until 1996, when Sixth Form admissions were opened to girls, the school transitioned to full co-education in the first decade of the 21st century. Latymer's alumni include members of both Houses of Parliament, winners of Olympic medals, actors, musicians, and many figures in the arts and sciences.
Godolphin is a Cornish aristocratic family name and may refer to: . Baron Godolphin, an English title of nobility; Earl of Godolphin, an English title of nobility; Godolphin and Latymer School, an independent school for girls in London (formerly the Godolphin School)
The decision of Godolphin to go independent in 1976 as a result of local reorganization led Bishop to raise substantial bursuary funding for it through the Godolphin and Latymer Bursary Fund. [1] [4] Bishop was the United Kingdom's representative at the UNESCO conferences in Geneva and Montevideo in 1954. [3]