Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Originally named The Hulme Grammar School, in 1939 it changed its name to William Hulme's Grammar School. [4] Until 1975 it was a direct grant school; when this scheme was abolished, it chose to become independent. [5] In 2006, the school announced that it was joining the state sector, abolishing all tuition fees and selection.
The Hulme family's pedigree was recorded by the Heralds in a Visitation in 1567 but relatively little is known about Hulme's life. [1] He is recorded as having been baptised at Bolton in 1631, the son of William Hulme (d.1637) of Hulme Hall, Reddish , Lancashire .
The doorway of the original Oldham Hulme Grammar School building with its date stone and a window were incorporated into the current school building in the 1920s. [1] When the school was refounded in 1887 it obtained some money from a charitable trust created in 1691 by a bequest from William Hulme , after whom the new school was named.
Sir William Turner's Grammar School (Coatham) - "Gaudiamus Igitur]] "Stamford High School — “Within these walls of grey” The Judd School — "And_did_those_feet_in_ancient_time" The Skinners' School — "The Leopard Song" Tonbridge School — "Of Him Who Dreamed of Founding" [4] William Hulme's Grammar School — "The Hulme Song" and ...
Former pupils of William Hulme's Grammar School, known in some circles as "old Hulmeians". Pages in category "People educated at William Hulme's Grammar School" The following 25 pages are in this category, out of 25 total.
William Hulme Lever, 2nd Viscount Leverhulme, DL (25 March 1888 – 27 May 1949), was the son of William Hesketh Lever and Elizabeth Ellen, daughter of Crompton Hulme of Bolton. He was educated at Eton College and graduated from Cambridge University ( Trinity College ) in 1913 with a master's degree in the Arts.
Niall Noígíallach is placed by Medieval texts as a legendary Goidelic High King of Ireland (the Annals of the Four Masters dates his reign as 378–405) 431: Palladius is sent as the first bishop "to the Irish believing in Christ" by Pope Celestine I [11] [12] 432: According to the Annals of Ulster (and other chronicles), Saint Patrick ...
The school's crest dates from c.1840. ... Hulme; named after the ... Home Office and Northern Ireland Office [64] W. Geoffrey Arnott: 1930 2010