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  1. 350. Liverpool Institute High School for Girls, Blackburne Place, Liverpool, England, was a girls' grammar school that was established in 1844 and closed in 1984. It was situated off Hope St to the north-east of Liverpool Cathedral in the area close to the University of Liverpool and Catharine Street (A5039).

    • 1986
    • Liverpool
    • 1844
    • Grammar school
  2. The Liverpool Institute High School for Girls, as Blackburne House was formerly known, closed its doors in 1986 and the building remained unused until 1992. We reopened the doors to a totally transformed Blackburne House in 1994, following an extensive programme of regeneration.

  3. Blackburne House School Old Girls Network. WELCOME. This website is for former pupils of the Liverpool Institute High School for Girls, more commonly known as Blackburne House School.

  4. By the 1850s a formal art school was evolving from the evening classes and in 1856 this diversity was recognised by another name change – The Liverpool Institute and School of Arts. A girls' school was founded and opened in 1844 under the name Liverpool Institute High School for Girls .

    • 1985
    • Liverpool
    • 1825
    • Grammar school
  5. By the 1850s a formal art school was evolving from the evening classes and in 1856 this diversity was recognised by another name change - The Liverpool Institute and School of Arts. A girls' school was founded and opened in 1844 under the name Liverpool Institute High School for Girls.

  6. The Liverpool industrial schools, in Kirkdale, were built in 1845, at a cost of £32,000; are in the Tudor style; atford industrial education to about 1,150 pauper children; and have, wthin their grounds, a model of a ship, for teaching the duties of seamen. — "The industrial ragged schools, in Soho-street ; the servants' industrial school ...

  7. Blackburne House was the first school for girls in Liverpool, and was sited directly opposite the Mechanic's Institution, a school for boys on the other side of Hope Street. Holt was the director and president of the school until he died in 1861, when the school was taken over by the Mechanic's Institute.