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  2. 1553. William Capon left money in his will to establish a grammar school for poor scholars of Southampton. The King signed the necessary charter in 1553 and the school opened in 1554 in Winkle Street, an unfashionable part of the town, inside the city wall near God's House Tower gate.

  3. 1553. William Capon left money in his will to establish a grammar school for the poor scholars of Southampton. The King signed the necessary charter in 1553 and the school opened in 1554 in Winkle Street.

  4. King Edward VI School – History and Alumni is a full and detailed history of the School. It was published on Shakespeares birthday, April 23 2008. The book tells of the development of King Edward VI Grammar School through the centuries – the buildings, the masters and the boys.

  5. The Grammar School of King Edward VI at Stratford-upon-Avon (commonly referred to as King Edward VI School or shortened to K.E.S.) is a grammar school and academy in Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire, England, traditionally for boys only.

  6. Dec 10, 2013 · King Edward VI Grammar School in Louth claims to be one of the oldest schools in the country, with its origins in the C8. Documentary evidence indicates that from the C13 it was funded by the town’s religious communities, guilds and a charity funded by Thomas of Louth in 1317.

  7. The King Edward VI Grammar School was originally founded in 1552. It was rebuilt in 1855-7 by Decimus Burton. It is built in a neo-Tudor style. In 1874 the boarding-house wing (behind) was extended. In 1896 science rooms and a gymnasium were added. Then in 1937 a new hall was also built.

  8. King Edward VI School (also known as King Edward's, or KES) is a selective co-educational private school founded in Southampton, England, in 1553. The school was founded at the request of William Capon, who bequeathed money in his will for a grammar school for the poor.