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  1. Newcome's School was a fashionable boys' school in Hackney, then to the east of London, founded in the early 18th century. A number of prominent Whig families sent their sons there. The school closed in 1815, and the buildings were gutted in 1820.

  2. Newcome's School was a fashionable boys' school in Hackney, then to the east of London, founded in the early 18th century. A number of prominent Whig families sent their sons there. The school closed in 1815, and the buildings were gutted in 1820. In 1825 the London Orphan Asylum opened on the site.

  3. His father established Newcome's School there, a noted private academy. Richard Newcome was his uncle. His paternal grandfather was Peter Newcome, son of Henry Newcome the nonconformist minister, and his maternal grandfather was Benjamin Morland; the school was previously run by Morland.

  4. Newcome’s School in Hackney. George’s great grandfather, Henry Newcome was a pupil of Hackney Academy, as school began by Benjamin Morland as its first headmaster. Henry subsequently married Morland’s daughter, Lydia, himself becoming headmaster of Hackney Academy in 1721.

  5. Henry Newcome. Died 1797. He was the eldest of five sons of Henry Newcome, the headmaster of Newcome s School at Hackney, an establishment which educated a large number of future members of parliament and other prominent individuals in the Whig interest.

  6. Hackney School: School buildings with pupils playing in foreground Hackney School, also known as Newcome's School - London Picture Archive support@londonpicturearchive.org.uk

  7. Stratford Canning began his education at a Dame's school at the age of four. At the age of 6 he left to attend Mr. Newcome's school in Hackney. Thanks to help from George Canning, he attended Eton for ten years, then King's College, Cambridge in 1806–7.