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  1. Royal School for Daughters of Officers of the Army. Coordinates: 51°23′49″N 2°21′55″W. Royal School for Daughters of Officers of the Army. The Royal School for Daughters of Officers of the Army was a girls' boarding school situated in Bath, England. In 1998 it was incorporated into the Royal High School.

  2. www.royalhighbath.gdst.net › our-school › our-historyOur history - Royal High School

    The Royal School. The founding of the Royal School for the Daughters of Officers of the Army was in large part due to Mr Alfred Douglas Hamilton, a renowned philanthropist. During the Crimean War Mr Hamilton established the Officers Widows and Orphans Fund and the idea for the Royal School grew.

  3. On 24 August 1865, it opened as the Royal School for Daughters of Officers of the Army, modelled after the Royal Naval School for girls, a boarding school founded in 1840. [5] In 1998, the Royal School amalgamated with the Bath High School for Girls, which was established by the Girls Public Day School Company in September 1875 at ...

  4. The Royal School for Daughters of Officers of the Army was a girls' boarding school situated in Bath, England. In 1998 it was incorporated into the Royal High School. The Royal School for Daughters of Officers of the Army grew out of the Officers' Widows and Orphans Fund, initiated by...

  5. Royal School for Daughters of Officers of the Army Last updated October 08, 2023. Royal School for Daughters of Officers of the Army. The Royal School for Daughters of Officers of the Army was a girls' boarding school situated in Bath, England. In 1998 it was incorporated into the Royal High School. [1] Contents. Early history; War years; Pupils

  6. The Royal School Bath. About. The school was founded in 1865 as the Royal School for Daughters of Officers of the Army. Royal status came from Queen Victoria who, along with Florence Nightingale, wanted to provide education for daughters of officers lost in the Crimean War.

  7. The Royal School opened in Bath, Somerset, in 1865, its proposed objective being ‘to bestow upon the Daughters of necessitous Officers of the Army, at the lowest possible cost, a good virtuous and religious Education, in conformity with the principles and doctrines of the Church of England’.