Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This is a sub-article of Durham School. Durham School, tracing its history back to Langley in 1414 and earlier, has had a number of Headmasters (but, to date, no Headmistresses). 1414 to 1541 This incomplete list comes from The Durham School Register, 1991. The list is derived from The Account Rolls of the Receiver General which show that two chaplains, the forerunners of the Headmasters, were ...
In 1927, Hope Valley School was built for grades 1 through 11. It was the first public school in Southwestern Durham. Changes to the Hope Valley School facility were made in 1941 and 1952. the school was subsequently downgraded to an elementary school with the opening of Southern High School in the fall of 1956.
The history of Durham School can be divided into four sections. Firstly there is the time from its founding by Langley in 1414, then in 1541 Henry VIII refounded it, the period from 1844 when the school moved from its site on Palace Green to its current location across the river Wear, and finally from 2021 when the school became part of the Durham Cathedral Schools Foundation.
The school on Roxboro Road had been scheduled to open to students with the rest of DPS’s traditional-calendar schools on Monday. The school’s open house will now be held from 5 to 7:30 p.m ...
Melissa Feimster Lido, center, a teacher at Riverside High School, was one of the many who gathered for a rally at Durham Public Schools Staff Development Center in Durham, N.C., Wednesday, Jan ...
The Durham Education Association on Sunday announced a list of seven schools that will be impacted Monday by the group’s latest “Day of Protest,” prompting closures.
By the 1980s, Durham High School was no longer a majority white school. In 1992, the Durham City and County School Districts merged to become Durham Public Schools. Durham High School would close as a traditional high school in 1995. In 1995, Durham Magnet Center for Visual and Performing Arts opened, and was later renamed Durham School of the ...
Schools whose headteachers are members of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference, the main representative body for independent secondary schools in the United Kingdom. Most of them are in the United Kingdom, but there are also a number of international member schools, most of which are in Commonwealth countries and the Republic of ...