Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Norwich School (formally King Edward VI Grammar School, Norwich) [nb 1] is a private selective day school in the close of Norwich Cathedral, Norwich.Among the oldest schools in the United Kingdom, it has a traceable history to 1096 as an episcopal grammar school established by Herbert de Losinga, first Bishop of Norwich.
The Wherry School, Norwich; Further education. Dereham Sixth Form College; ... Thetford Grammar School, Thetford; Special and alternative schools
In 1910, the Education Committee decided to merge the King Edward VI Middle School in Norwich with the Municipal and Presbyterian Schools for boys to create the new City of Norwich School, a boys' grammar school, which was to be built at Eaton. [1] [2]
King Edward's School, Yeovil, Somerset; King Edward VI Community College, Totnes, Devon; Christ's Hospital, Horsham, West Sussex; Norwich School in Norwich, Norfolk, previously King Edward VI's Grammar School; Retford King Edward VI Grammar School, Retford, Nottinghamshire Now known as Retford Oaks Academy; Sherborne School, Dorset, also known ...
The Canon Slade Grammar School: CE mixed state mixed comp. Mount St Joseph School: RC girls state mixed comp. [17] Thornleigh Salesian College: RC boys state mixed comp. Bradford: Bradford Girls' Grammar School – girls ind. girls academy Bradford Grammar School – boys ind. mixed ind., HMC St Joseph's College: RC girls state girls comp. Bromley
Sir William Paston's Free School (known as Paston School) was founded on the present site in 1606 by local magistrate and landowner Sir William Paston. An all-boys boarding grammar school, it sent most of its pupils to Gonville College, Cambridge. In 1610, Sir William died and the Trustees created by his will continued to keep the school in ...
It was The Blyth School, a grammar school, which was built in 1929 in grounds owned by Philip Sewell, who died in 1906. It was named after Ernest Egbert Blyth. It had 750 girls in the early 1950s, 800 by 1956, 850 in 1964 and 800 in 1969. It was administered by the Norwich Education Committee.
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 .