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  1. Hace 2 días · Shrewsbury School is a public school (English fee-charging boarding school for pupils aged 13 –18) in Shrewsbury. It was founded in 1552 by Edward VI by Royal Charter, to reconstitute the town's collegiate foundations of the 6th and 10th centuries which were disestablished in the reformation.

  2. 25 de abr. de 2024 · In front of the old buildings of Shrewsbury School (1552), now in use as a library and museum, stands a statue of Charles Darwin, who was born in Shrewsbury in 1809. Shrewsbury’s main industries include malting and the manufacture of rolling stock, machine tools, safes, and electrical equipment.

  3. Hace 5 días · There are indications in Domesday Book that the college of canons which had served St. Chad's in Anglo-Saxon times had ceased to exist. Canons, presumably of St. Chad's, are mentioned only once and then in the past tense; (fn. 19) elsewhere the institution is referred to either as 'St. Chad' or as a 'church'.

  4. Hace 2 días · Charles Darwin (born February 12, 1809, Shrewsbury, Shropshire, England—died April 19, 1882, Downe, Kent) was an English naturalist whose scientific theory of evolution by natural selection became the foundation of modern evolutionary studies.

  5. Hace 4 días · In 1924 Shrewsbury school for mentally defective children was set up in the buildings of the former Shrewsbury Road elementary school. It continued until the Second World War. Lansbury school for educationally subnormal children was built in Park Avenue, adjoining the Sussex Road schools, in 1954.

  6. Hace 6 días · Shrewsbury School is celebrating a unique double as both Heads of School have been offered places to study at Harvard University for the first time in the school’s history. Out of a field of more than 54,000 applicants, Head Girl Nat T and Head Boy Luke W are two successful students that will be heading to the prestigious Harvard ...

  7. Hace 6 días · The 1797 Rugby School Rebellion was a mutiny of the boys at Rugby School after the headmaster, Dr Henry Ingles, demanded that boys from the fifth and sixth forms should pay for the repair of a local tradesman's windows after they had been smashed by the school's pupils.