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1.8 School and College Chaplaincies. ... There is an extensive network of Catholic Chaplains and Chaplaincies working within higher education in the UK.
A small primary school, Sacred Heart Catholic Primary School, was built to the rear of the church. [5] The Jesuits also started a nearby secondary school, Leeds Catholic College on 18 September 1905. In 1933, it became St Michael's College.
The school became Notre Dame High School in 1978, a catholic comprehensive school for ages 13–19 with around 650 girls. [4] All the other Catholic direct grant schools in Leeds also changed this year. The sixth form college was formed in September 1989 as the sixth form centre for Catholic education in Leeds.
Leeds Trinity is an independent Roman Catholic foundation, and until earning the right to award its own degrees in 2009 was accredited by the University of Leeds. Overall responsibility for the activities of Leeds Trinity University rests with its Board of Governors. The ex officio Chair of the Board is the Rt Revd.
It later became a comprehensive school, St Michael's Catholic College. It was a Jesuit college which opened as Leeds Catholic College on 18 September 1905, becoming St Michael's College in 1933. It had the motto "Quis ut deus" (Who is like God), a translation of the Hebrew "Mikha'el", meaning God like.
A coeducational comprehensive 13–18 school was established in September 1978, when the two adjoining schools, Saint John Bosco RC Secondary Modern School and the grammar school were merged to create Cardinal Heenan High School, as it was then known (the word 'Catholic' was added at a later date.). It had 1,200 boys and girls and around 150 in ...
Cambridge University Catholic Chaplaincy; Chapel at College of St Mark and St John; Chapel of King's College London; Chester College Chapel; Christ's Hospital Chapel; Church of Ireland and Methodist Chaplaincy, Belfast
1880 Charles Lamb came to the church and was also appointed as chaplain to the adjacent Leeds Infirmary. When Charles Lamb left the church in 1887, the chaplaincy was taken over by Leeds Parish Church. 1881 A chapel, Emmanuel, was built to serve the northern end of the parish. This later housed the Anglican chaplaincy of the University of Leeds.