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King Edward VI Grammar School (Louth) : ウィキペディア英語版
King Edward VI Grammar School, Louth

King Edward VI Grammar School (sometimes abbreviated to KEVIGS) is a grammar school located in Louth, Lincolnshire, England.
== History ==
King Edward VI Grammar School is one of the oldest schools in the country. As early as the 8th century schooling was available at Louth,〔(Louth, LIN ). GENUKI. Retrieved on 19 March 2013.〕 but the oldest reference to a school is in a passage by Simon De Luda, the town's schoolmaster, in 1276.〔 According to records the school was funded by the town's religious and merchant guilds, and a Chantry established by Thomas of Louth in 1317.
The dissolution of the monasteries in 1548 placed the future of education in Louth at risk.〔(History of Louth ). Allseasonsuk.com. Retrieved on 19 March 2013.〕 Leading figures in the local community petitioned the King, Edward VI, to secure the school's future, and on 21 September 1551 the school was given a plot of land and money raised from three fairs by the king,〔 which was administered by a Foundation which exists to this day. In 1564, Elizabeth I granted the manor of Louth and some additional property to support the school.〔
Until 1964 King Edward's was a boys' school. In 1903 a girls' boarding school for 400 pupils was established nearby in Westgate House on Westgate, which became King Edward VI Girls' Grammar School. Both schools amalgamated in 1965 when administered by the Lindsey Education Committee. In the same year the amalgamated school took pupils from age 14–18, as part of the 'Louth Plan' which stipulated that education be provided by one selective 14–18 school and three 11–16 high schools (Monks' Dyke, Cordeaux and John Birkbeck). When the Louth Plan was rescinded in 1997 the school returned to receiving 11–13 year olds as part of its intake. The school achieved Foundation status in 1998 and became a Specialist Science College in 2003.
School male boarders lived at The Lodge on Edward Street until 1971, afterwards at The Sycamores on Westgate, and later at an old maternity hospital on Crowtree Lane next to the main school building. Girls boarded at Masson House and The Limes houses on Westgate.
In 2007 the school made the news after agreeing to pay a former teacher £625,000 - the largest ever teacher compensation package - following a 3 year long battle by teachers' union NASWUT, after he was permanently crippled by an electric shock caused by faulty wiring in a science lab. 〔http://www.tes.co.uk/article.aspx?storycode=2434511〕
Previously a foundation school administered by Lincolnshire County Council, King Edward VI Grammar School converted to academy status in September 2015. However the school continues to coordinate with Lincolnshire County Council for admissions.

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