Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Queen Mary's Grammar School (QMGS) is a boys' grammar school with academy status located on Sutton Road, Walsall, England, about a mile from the town centre and one of the oldest schools in the country. [citation needed] The sixth form is coeducational.
Pages in category "People educated at Queen Mary's Grammar School" The following 23 pages are in this category, out of 23 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
After obtaining his BA at Oxford in 1959, Warburton was unable to stay there to complete his DPhil, due to lack of funds. In 1960, he started work as a music teacher at Queen Mary's Grammar School for Boys, Basingstoke, Hants. Warburton continued working at Queen Mary's Grammar School until 1964, when he completed his DPhil . [1]
LEAs considered grammar areas are shown filled, while circles indicate isolated grammar schools or clusters of neighbouring schools. This is a list of the current 163 state-funded fully selective schools ( grammar schools ) in England, as enumerated by Statutory Instrument .
Queen Mary's Grammar School, Walsall (1554) Boston Grammar School (1555) Gresham's School (1555) Ripon Grammar School (refounded 1555, although thought to date from the 7th century) Hampton School (1556) Oundle School (1556) Tadcaster Grammar School (1557) Repton School (1557) Hampton School (1557)
Queen Mary's School for Boys (QMSB) was a maintained (state funded) grammar school in Basingstoke, Hampshire, England for boys aged 11–18. The school existed between 1556 and 1970 and was latterly funded by the Hampshire County Council Education Authority .
Walsall Grammar School: Queen Mary's Grammar School, Walsall 1554 Grammar School Academy George and Nicholas Hawe endowed the lands of the parishes of Walsall, Tipton and Norton, Staffordshire from dissolved chantries, with an income arising of £400 p.a and some coal mines. The boys' grammar school has opted for academy status. [63]
Queen Mary School's motto was 'Semper Fidelis, Semper Parata', which translates as 'Always Faithful, Always Prepared'. The two former schools each had a coat of arms, but despite the two schools being separate they shared the same governing body, which itself had a coat of arms, that consisted of the two schools' coats of arms impaled .