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  1. North Foreland Lodge was a private boarding school for girls in England, originally established at North Foreland in Kent. Displaced from there by the Second World War, in 1947 it settled at Sherfield Manor in Sherfield on Loddon, Hampshire, until its closure in 2003 shortly after being acquired by another school, Gordonstoun.. In 2004 Gordonstoun sold the school site to a group of schools ...

  2. North Foreland Lodge was a private boarding school for girls in England, originally established at North Foreland in Kent. Displaced from there by the Second World War, in 1947 it settled at Sherfield Manor in Sherfield on Loddon, Hampshire, until its closure in 2003 shortly after being acquired by .

  3. North Foreland Lodge. Public group. ·. 56 members. Join group. Anyone who went to North Foreland Lodge in Sherfield-on-Loddon in Hampshire must join!!!!!

  4. North Foreland Lodge era un internado independiente para niñas en Inglaterra, originalmente establecido en North Foreland en Kent. Desplazado de allí por la Segunda Guerra Mundial , en 1947 se instaló en Sherfield Manor en Sherfield en Loddon , Hampshire, hasta su cierre en 2003 poco después de ser adquirido por otra escuela, Gordonstoun .

  5. Location, Area, Boundaries, Landform and Setting. The site currently known as Sherfield School has been previously known as North Foreland Lodge School, Sherfield Manor, Buckfield House and Archer Lodge. It is situated on the A33, approximately four miles north of Basingstoke and twelve miles south of Reading.

  6. From Archer Lodge in 1830 to Buckfield House, Sherfield Manor, North Foreland Lodge and now in 2009 Sherfield School, this site has been one where an imposing mansion has blended well into its landscape. The main house was designed in 1897/8 by Fairfax Wade but the garden designer is not known.

  7. In 1947 Mitchell sold the mansion, some land and the walled garden to a school, North Foreland Lodge who retained the garden until 1973 (Cunningham 2009). The buyer hoped to be able to develop the garden site but having failed he sold to Mr Loren Butt who recognized the quality of the Palm House and the glasshouse ranges despite the derelict state in which they stood.