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The Satellite mascot for the consolidated secondary school was chosen in 1957 and the school itself first opened on land between Fenton and Lone Rock in 1959. [2] In 2008, the Sentral district began a grade-sharing arrangement with the North Kossuth Community School District, [3] resulting in a new North Sentral Kossuth High School in Swea City ...
This is a list of schools in the Hunter and Central Coast regions of New South Wales, Australia.The New South Wales education system traditionally consists of primary schools, which accommodate students from Kindergarten to Year 6 (ages 5–12), and high schools, which accommodate students from Years 7 to 12 (ages 12–18).
Francis Greenway Correctional Complex, formerly John Morony Correctional Complex is an Australian minimum security prison complex for males and females located in Berkshire Park, 5 kilometres (3 mi) south of Windsor in New South Wales, Australia.
View north-east along Elizabeth Street of the Greenway/Harris-designed courthouse with St James' Church pictured right (John Rae, 1842). The original Old Supreme Court House was designed by the colonial architect Francis Greenway under Governor Macquarie. Designed in 1819 and building began in 1820, Greenway was dismissed before the building ...
The Port Macquarie Campus of Hastings Secondary College is a government-funded co-educational comprehensive secondary day school campus, located in Port Macquarie in the Mid North Coast region of New South Wales, Australia.
Greenway was born in Mangotsfield, Gloucestershire (near the English city of Bristol), the son of Francis Greenway and Ann Webb. [3] Greenway became an architect "of some eminence" in Bristol and Bath. His only remaining building in the United Kingdom is the Clifton Club in Bristol, originally the Clifton Hotel and Assembly Rooms.
Established in 2019 through the merger of Griffith High School and Wade High School, [3] the former schools enrolled approximately 1,250 students in 2018, from Year 7 to Year 12, of whom eleven percent identified as Indigenous Australians and 26 percent were from a language background other than English.
[31] On 20 May 1926, the school was visited by the Governor-General of Australia, Lord Stonehaven, who declared that it was the "finest war memorial in the British Empire". [32] [33] The first headmaster of the school was Leslie Ethelbert Penman, BA, who served from 1918 until 1925, when he was appointed to be headmaster of Goulburn High School.