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Debenham is a village and civil parish located 11 miles (18 km) north of Ipswich [2] in the Mid Suffolk district of Suffolk, England. [3] The River Deben rises in the parish, and flows along a prolonged ford through the village. [4] In 1086, Debenham was a comparatively large village of 69 households in the hundred of Claydon. [5]
The university was established in 2007 as University Campus Suffolk (UCS), founded as a collaboration between the University of East Anglia and the University of Essex. [2] The university's current name was adopted after it was granted independence in 2016 by the Privy Council and was awarded university status.
Date/Time Thumbnail Dimensions User Comment; current: 08:54, 24 February 2011: 427 × 640 (89 KB): GeographBot == {{int:filedesc}} == {{Information |description={{en|1=University Campus Suffolk , Ipswich Waterfront As part of the redevelopment of the Ipswich Wet Dock area, this new buildling for University Campus Suffolk was been built on the NE corner of the dock
This is a list of colleges and universities entirely in, or with a campus in, Nassau or Suffolk County. For institutions in the Long Island sections of Brooklyn and Queens , two of New York City 's five boroughs, see the separate List of colleges and universities in New York City .
East Coast College is a Further Education (FE) college which has campuses in Lowestoft, Suffolk and Great Yarmouth, Norfolk.Following a six-month pilot area review in 2014, it was proposed that the merger of Great Yarmouth College and Lowestoft College would result in improved education and training provision locally.
Sawyer Library, 2007 Ridgeway Building, housing Suffolk's Reagan Gymnasium and the campus book store. Nathan R. Miller dormitory built in 2005. Suffolk University College of Arts and Sciences is the undergraduate and graduate division of Suffolk University in Boston, Massachusetts.
Debenham High Schools is a secondary school located in the village of Debenham in Suffolk, UK. The school accepts students who are between 11 and 16 years old [ 1 ] and live in the catchment. Any spare places are then allocated to students outside of the catchment.
On 3 May 1902 Westerfield almost became a four-way junction when a sod-cutting ceremony for the Mid-Suffolk Light Railway was held adjacent to the north side of the goods yard. The original plan was to link up with the Mid-Suffolk Railway at Debenham and a short section of this line was built at the Debenham end. It was never completed.