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The school is named after George Beck who was Archbishop of Liverpool from 1964 to 1976. [citation needed] It is a voluntary aided school administered by Liverpool City Council and the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Liverpool. [2] Archbishop Beck Catholic High School gained specialist Sports College status in 2000, and was renamed Archbishop ...
St John Fisher Catholic High School, Wigan; St John Rigby College, Wigan; St Julie's Catholic High School; St Mary's Catholic High School, Astley; St Peter's Catholic High School; Saints Peter and Paul Catholic High School; The Salesian Academy of St John Bosco; St Mary's Catholic High School, Leyland
The school was founded by Alderman William Preston, one time Mayor of Liverpool, and the Vicar of St. Margaret's, Anfield, Reverend John Sheepshanks. The school opened in 1879 by the parish dignitary and MP for West Toxteth, Mr TB Royden. The school's first Headmaster was Mr E Crossley and an early teacher and benefactor was Mrs Gertrude Langton.
The Academy of St Nicholas, previously known as Enterprise South Liverpool Academy (ESLA), is a joint Roman Catholic and Church of England secondary school located in Garston, Liverpool, England. The school is co-educational from years 7 to 11 including the sixth form, All Saints Sixth Form College, for ages 16–19. The school opened in a ...
The school is jointly sponsored by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Liverpool and the Anglican Diocese of Liverpool. The Academy of St Francis of Assisi offers GCSEs and BTECs as programmes of study for pupils, [4] while students in the sixth form have the option to study from a range of A-levels and further BTECs. [5]
St Edward's College is a co-educational Catholic school with academy status in the UK located in the Liverpool suburb of West Derby.Founded in 1853 as the Catholic Institute, the college was formerly a boys grammar school run by the Congregation of Christian Brothers, known widely as the Irish Christian Brothers.
The school became a catholic comprehensive in 1983. The Salesian Sisters of St John Bosco are also known as the Daughters of Mary Help of Christians. It was known as the St John Bosco High School until September 2004 when it became an Arts College. [2] In March 2013 the college became a National Teaching School.
The sisters were called to Liverpool in 1851 at the behest of Fr. James Nugent to help educate the poor families in the area. The sisters opened a fee-paying school at Woolton Hall in 1950. This school later became a voluntary aided Grammar School and then merged with Notre Dame Mount Pleasant High School in 1970 to form Notre Dame Woolton.