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  1. Grammar school. In 1901 it was accepted in trust by the London County Council and renamed St Marylebone Grammar School. After World War II it recovered. Under headmaster Philip Wayne it developed artistic activities, acquired shared use of playing fields in Sudbury Hill, and established a country base in the village of Forest Green, near Leith ...

  2. School numbers had risen, one might say dramatically, from the 91 in 1910 to 160. In January 1920, a new Headmaster was appointed, G.S. Penney, who had been public school educated, obtained a first in Classical Tripos at Cambridge and had been teaching at St Pauls School.

  3. The Old Philologians Association is the former pupils' association of St Marylebone Grammar School, which was founded in 1792 and was closed in 1981.

  4. The Old Philologians Association is the former pupils' association of St Marylebone Grammar School. The school, which was founded in 1792 and was closed in 1981, resided on Marylebone Road and admitted male students for their secondary education.

  5. ST. MARYLEBONE GRAMMAR SCHOOL (THE PHILOLOGICAL SCHOOL) In 1792 Thomas Collingwood and other charitablyinclined gentlemen founded a school in Mary Street (later renamed Stanhope Street, N.W. 1). Here they gathered to read lectures, the boys being required to listen and then to write essays.

  6. St Marylebone Grammar School. This page summarises records created by this Organisation. The summary includes a brief description of the collection (s) (usually including...

  7. St Marylebone Grammar School ( SMGS) was a grammar school located in the London borough of the City of Westminster, from 1792 to 1981.