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Boarding and day school for students aged 11-18. Christ’s Hospital is widely known in the UK for its outstanding education principle and its diverse breadth of students.
- About CH
Christ’s Hospital (CH) is one of the famous Royal Hospitals...
- Admissions
To contact our admissions office please email:...
- Facilities to Hire
Christ’s Hospital offers its amazing facilities to hire and...
- Contact Us
Tel: 01403 211293 Fax: 01403 211580 Email:...
- Old Blues (CHOBA)
All Old Blues automatically become a member of CHOBA when...
- Remote Access
hello@christs-hospital.org.uk. Quick links. About CH Job...
- Expeditionary Education Appeal
In June 2023, Christ’s Hospital launched an Expeditionary...
- Boarding Life
Some ninety boys and girls enter Christ’s Hospital each...
- About CH
Christ's Hospital is a public school (English fee-charging boarding school for pupils aged 11–18) with a royal charter, located to the south of Horsham in West Sussex.The school was founded in 1552 and the royal charter granted in 1553 (26 June, 7 Edw. VI). Since its establishment, Christ's Hospital has been a charity school, with a core aim to offer children from disadvantaged backgrounds ...
Christ’s Hospital’s history, one of the oldest boarding schools in England. Christ’s Hospital (CH) is one of the famous Royal Hospitals of London, whose foundation marked the beginning of the social services in Tudor England. Inspired by a sermon by Nicholas Ridley, Bishop of London, the young King Edward VI instructed the Lord Mayor, Sir ...
6 de dic. de 2022 · Christ’s Hospital | A City Institution for 350 Years. Posted on December 6, 2022. in architecture, Churches and Graveyards, City of London, Hidden Gems, Look Up London. 2 Comments.
In common with many, Christ’s Hospital was founded on the site of a former Catholic monastery which was dissolved during the Reformation. Christ’s Hospital, also known as ‘The Blue Coat School’, was established to care for and educate poor orphans from London, accepting both boys and girls.
CH, founded for the orphan children of poor Londoners, was given its Royal Charter in 1553 by Edward VI, as part of a foundation which included St Thomas’s Hospital (for the sick) and Bridewell Hospital (for idle vagabonds). CH used the old Grey Friars Monastery buildings which Henry VIII had given to the City of London in 1546.