Longridge Towers School

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Lonridge Towers School Badge
Longridge Towers School
Type Independent day and boarding
Headmaster Tim Manning
Location Berwick-upon-Tweed
Northumberland
TD15 2XQ
England Coordinates: 55°44′54″N 2°03′57″W / 55.74839°N 2.06579°W / 55.74839; -2.06579
Local authority Northumberland
DfE number 929/6001
DfE URN 524369 Tables
Students 250~
Gender Coeducational
Ages 4–18
Website www.lts.org.uk

Longridge Towers School is a non-selective co-educational independent day and boarding school at Berwick-upon-Tweed, Northumberland, England, for children between the ages of four and eighteen. It is the only independent school in the town and the only independent school in the county which educates children from reception to sixth form.

School history

The main house was built during the 1870s and was once a hotel and military barracks. In 1949 it became an Ursuline convent school and remained so until 1983 when the order left Northumberland. It was then sold to a charitable trust and named Longridge Towers School. It now has some two hundred and fifty pupils and a liberal ethos. Most children are day pupils, but it also has one boarding house.

Building history

The Longridge estate was acquired, through his marriage, by Sir Hubert Edward Henry Jerningham, KCMG., FSA., who from 1881-5 had been a Liberal Member of Parliament for Berwick-upon-Tweed. He was thereafter Colonial Secretary of the British Honduras (Belize)(1887-1889), Colonial Secretary (1889-1893) and Lieutenant-Governor of Mauritius (1892-1893), and Governor of Trinidad and Tobago (1897-1900). The principal building, erected as his stately home, at great cost, incorporated the very latest innovations including a hydraulic lift and gas lighting to all parts of the main house. The portico is said to have been built for a visit of the Prince of Wales just to make sure he did not get wet when alighting from his coach. When it was completed it was one of the largest private houses in the north of Northumberland, and Sir Hubert lived there until his death in the early 1920s. Lady Jerningham (d.1902) had been Annie, daughter of E. Liddell, of Benton Park, and widow of C.T. Mather of Longridge, and her statue sits on the Elizabethan town walls in Berwick-upon-Tweed looking towards the distant school. The building was afterwards, for a while a hotel, until it became a convent school.

References

    • Kelly's Handbook to the Titled, Landed and Official Classes 1903, p.823.

    External links

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