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  1. Hollies Convent FCJ School. The Hollies Convent FCJ School was a girls' direct-grant Roman Catholic grammar school in south Manchester, England. History. In 1820, Marie-Madeleine d'Houët, also known as Marie Madeleine Victoire, founded the society of the Faithful Companions of Jesus in Amiens, France.

  2. www.hollies-fcj.orgHolliesFCJ

    The Hollies FCJ Convent School, which had educated girls in Manchester since 1853, was lost to future generations and now the very buildings were to be destroyed. So many struggles for survival had been fought and won down the decades but the final battle was over. The FCJ nuns continued their work elsewhere. The school premises in Fielden Park ...

  3. The Hollies FCJ Convent School | Facebook. Private group. ·. 381 members. Join group. About this group. A Facebook page for Hollies Alumni who are interested in supporting the re-building of the old Hollies MSN site that was lost when MS closed access to it. Jan 2018.

  4. www.hollies-fcj.org › against-the-oddsHolliesFCJ

    The book ‘Against the Odds’ tells the story of the school's struggles, through times of religious upheaval, wars, recessions and massive social and economic changes. It chronicles the good times and the bad times, charting the schools progress from a few small classrooms in a convent house to a purpose built school that was demolished ...

  5. The Hollies Convent FCJ School was a girls' direct-grant Roman Catholic grammar school in south Manchester, England. Contents. History; Grammar school; Comprehensive; Demolition; Structure; Alumni; See also; References; External links

  6. 24. Apr. 2008 · The Hollies FCJ Convent School. Mersey Road. West Didsbury. Manchester 20. Private. Only members can see who's in the group and what they post. Visible. Anyone can find this group. History. Group created on April 24, 2008. See more. Manchester, United Kingdom. Members · 1.3K. Activity. 8 new posts today. 18 in the last month. 1,319 total members.

  7. official opening of the new chapel. By Easter of that year "the Hollies" had become the school and "the Acorns" the convent. By 1935 there were 245 children at "the Hollies", including some boarders, and the need for more space led to the purchase of "Oak Bank" in 1938. The war prevented its use for school purposes but its cellars were ...