Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. With the help of social media and the determination of a few old students Pinner Old Students Association (POSA) was revived in 1998 for all old students of the school and the college and there has been a lot of old student activity ever since. There are well-established events such as the annual open day at the old school premises in Beaulieu ...

    • Register

      To join Pinner Old Students Association (POSA) please fill...

    • Membership

      During the 45 years of the life of the school and college...

  2. THE place for former students of the County Grammar School and later Junior & Sixth Form Colleges. The Official Facebook Page of Pinner Old Students' Association (POSA) for all old students of the...

  3. Pinner County Grammar School was a grammar school in Pinner, Middlesex, from 1937 to 1974. From 1974 to 1982 it became Pinner Junior College and then Pinner Sixth Form College. Pinner County Grammar School was built to accommodate 508 boys and girls by Middlesex County Council at a cost of £48,619. It was officially opened in ...

  4. 27. Sept. 2013 · FORMER students and teachers are gathering next week to mark the 75th anniversary of Pinner County Grammar School, which taught more than 7,000 pupils over the years. The Beaulieu Drive school opened in 1937 as Pinner County School and later became Pinner County Grammar, then was Pinner Sixth Form College until its closure in 1982 after a long ...

  5. The following information has been provided by Pinner Old Students Association, whose website can be found at www.pinneroldstudents.co.uk. We are grateful for their support, and for the wealth of information that they have about the history of the site. In August 1897 Percy Rayner, aged six, visited Downs Farm in Cannon Lane to play with the ...

  6. Pinner County Grammar School was a grammar school in Pinner, Middlesex, from 1937 to 1974. From 1974 to 1982 it became Pinner Junior College and then Pinner Sixth Form College. Pinner County Grammar School was built to accommodate 508 boys and girls by Middlesex County Council at a cost of £48,619.

  7. The school, which provided a grammar school education, was renamed the Royal Pinner School, Hatch End, in 1965. By this date it was in financial difficulties (fn. 98) and it was closed in 1967, although a Royal Pinner School Foundation was set up to help pupils who had been receiving a free education.