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  1. This group of newly settled Ohio Quakers, most of whom migrated north in protest of the institution of slavery in the South, began plans for a boarding school for both boys and girls as early as 1814, to be modeled on Quaker boarding schools in Philadelphia.

  2. Sep 30, 2015 · During the Regency era, boys as young as thirteen were sent to Eton to board either in the College itself, or they lodged in the town in what became known as ‘Dame’s Houses’ with a landlady or ‘Dame’ overseeing the house.

  3. I went to boarding school (not Eton or Harrow!) from the age of 6 to the age of 17 in the 80s and 90s. A mixed boys and girls prep school till I was 14, then an all boys senior school for the rest. Both were in the North of England.

  4. Their education also differed significantly from that of the poor and working class child. Boys went to private schools and then on to secondary schools and universities. They lived at home or attended boarding schools where they came home only on holidays.

  5. A boy would receive his education from a tutor and then sent to boarding school, while a girl remained home with her studies concentrated on the domestics of a Victorian household. Boys started school around the age of seven and continued into their early 20s graduating from the university.

  6. Sep 14, 2018 · During the Cold War, the KGB notoriously recruited several public-school-educated British boys as spies and double agents, but Russia’s relationship with the status-symbol boarding schools...

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  8. Unlike day schools, boarding schools provide an immersive environment where students not only study but also participate in extracurricular activities and socialize under the same roof. This residential model aims to foster independence, responsibility, and a close-knit community spirit among students.

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