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  1. Stoke Brunswick School was a small co-educational day and boarding independent school for children aged 3 to 13 years, situated in Ashurst Wood, West Sussex, near the town of East Grinstead. It was the former junior school (after St. George's School in Ascot , Berkshire ), of British Prime Minister Winston Churchill (then known as ...

    • 2009
    • Christian
    • West Sussex
    • Other Independent School
  2. Stoke Brunswick School was a small co-educational day and boarding independent school for children aged 3 to 13 years, situated in Ashurst Wood, West Sussex, near the town of East Grinstead. It was the former junior school , of British Prime Minister Winston Churchill .

  3. Stoke Brunswick School | Facebook. Private group. ·. 84 members. Join group. About this group. Stoke Brunswick School was a small co-educational day and boarding independent school for children aged 3 to 13 years, situated in Ashurst Wood, West Sussex, near the town of East Grinstead.

  4. Growing older, Winston passed the age of in-home learning and moved toward boarding school. During his childhood education, Churchill maintained a poor academic record. He attended three schools: St. George’s School in Berkshire; Brunswick School (since renamed Stoke Brunswick School) in Hove; and Harrow School.

  5. To start with the school only had a few boys and was not financially viable so we threw ourselves into the enterprise of making it a success. This involved amalgamating another failing school in Seaford and so we soon became Stoke House and Brunswick. Over the next 21 years we built up the school until it was one of the best of its kind in Sussex.

  6. 16 de ene. de 2019 · Historical Documentation Pertaining to and a Virtual Tour of. Dutton Hall. of Dutton, Cheshire, England. now. Stoke Brunswick School (Dutton-Homestall) in East Grinstead, Sussex. Selecting the place name links in the title above will zip you off to map views of the locations.

  7. Dutton Homestall, surrounded by around 14 hectares of gardens, was bought in 1958 as the site for Brunswick School which, from 1965 with the addition of Stoke House, became the present Stoke Brunswick School.