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Tyngsborough High School (THS) is a high school at 36 Norris Road in Tyngsborough, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, United States. It has approximately 484 students as of 2019, [ 8 ] and is part of the Tyngsborough school district.
Georgetown High School, Georgetown; Gloucester High School, Gloucester; Ipswich High School, Ipswich; Lynnfield High School, Lynnfield; Manchester-Essex Regional Junior-Senior High School, Manchester-by-the-Sea
Tyngsborough Middle School (grades 6–8) Tyngsborough High School (grades 9–12) Additionally, Tyngsborough is home to Greater Lowell Technical High School, a public vocational school which serves the towns of Tyngsborough, Dracut, and Dunstable as well as the city of Lowell. There is also one private school in Tyngsborough, the Academy of ...
Greater Lowell Technical High School; I. ... (junior hockey) T. Tyngsborough High School; U. U.S. Route 3 Business (Concord, New Hampshire) ... Wikipedia® is a ...
The Winslow School and Littlefield Library are a pair of historic municipal buildings at 250 and 252 Middlesex Road in Tyngsborough, Massachusetts. Built in 1890 and 1904, both are architect-designed buildings of high quality, funded by local benefactors. The buildings were listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1990. [1]
Born in Chelmsford, Massachusetts to Ernest Wilkins and Edith Packard, [4] Esther Wilkins grew up in the nearby town of Tyngsborough. [2] Her father was a handyman, and her mother was a secretary. [4] She graduated from Lowell High School [5] in 1934. [6] In 1938, she graduated from Simmons College in Boston. She first enrolled in the nursing ...
The first graduation class of the high school was spring of 2011. The graduating class had 100% acceptance into a 4-year college. The students are split into groups of approximately 9 students called an "advisory". The advisory is led by a member of the high school staff who helps the students with school work and high school life.
From 1865 until his death, he resided in North Billerica, and officiated in adjoining churches. [ 2 ] He was a successful lecturer, spoke several languages, was a member of many learned societies, and at one time edited the New England Historical and Genealogical Register (1866 and 1867).