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Central Lancaster High School

Lancaster High School (LHS) is a coeducational secondary school located in Lancaster, England. Located on Crag Road on the Ridge area in east Lancaster.

1. History

Lancaster High School originally opened in 1966 as Castle Secondary Modern School but in 1986 amalgamated with Greaves Secondary Modern School from the south side of Lancaster, moving all the Greaves pupils up to the larger more modern site on Crag Road and renaming the two amalgamated schools as Central Lancaster High School. The two sites that belonged to Greaves School were either demolished or renovated and made into flats and houses. The school was awarded specialist Arts College status. The school catered for pupils aged 11–18.

Lancaster High School was represented in the English Schools FA cup by its year 11 team in 2010/11. They enjoyed success by reaching the semi-final stage and narrowly missed out on reaching the final. Previously a community school administered by Lancashire County Council, in October 2018 Central Lancaster High School converted to academy status. The school is now sponsored by The Bay Learning Trust. After their £8 million new Ashton building opening in 2024. The school went through a name and uniform change ready for the next academic year in September 2025. Changing from Central Lancaster High School to Lancaster High School. Changing their uniform from black to navy. Changing their logo from a red 'C', to the Lancaster castle and the Lancashire rose.

1. Curriculum

Virtually all maintained schools and academies follow the National Curriculum, and are inspected by Ofsted on how well they succeed in delivering a 'broad and balanced curriculum'. Key Stage 3 contains years 7, 8 and 9- and in years 10 and 11 the students study subjects that will be examined by the GCSE exams at 16. The school operates a two-week timetable consisting of five one-hour lessons per day. This equates to 50 periods over the fortnightly cycle. Statutory obligations are met through PHSE, Social Development and careers lessons. In years 10-11 it guides pupils into a wide range of subject options.

1. = Key Stage 3 =

Years 7, 8 and 9 are delivered through a broad and balanced curriculum, allowing pupils to develop skills and knowledge across a wide range of subjects. Teaching is mainly mixed ability.

1. = Key Stage 4 =

All pupils study maths, English Language, and English Literature. Students have an option to pick either triple science or combined science in year 9 when picking their subjects to study for GCSE. The school ensures that the Ebacc is available to all pupils as part of the curriculum design, although there is no compulsion for pupils to opt for the Ebacc suite of subjects:a significant majority of pupils do studying history, geography or French (or a combination of all three). Other options are available in years 10 and 11, including: ICT/Computing, Music, PE, Art, Travel & Tourism, Business Studies, Textiles, Performing Arts (Dance/Drama), Design & Technology (Resistant Materials), Child Development & Care, Catering, and Practical Horticulture.

1. Former Sixth Form

The Lancaster High School opened a sixth form in September 2011. The Mayor of Lancaster officially opened it. The sixth form courses were offered as part of the North Lancashire Learning Partnership which also included Carnforth High School and Our Lady's Catholic College. It was closed at the end of the academic year 2017–2018, the school converted to an eleven to sixteen academy.

1. Sport

Lancaster High School has a very successful history of football, with the U16s boys' team reaching the semi-final of the English Schools FA CUP in 2011. In 2014, the year ten boys' cricket team won the district trophy for the first time beating all the other schools in the area, while in 2015 the year eleven boys won the district football cup beating Heysham High School at Morecambe Football Club's Globe Arena ground. They also have a very successful year ten girls' sports team, who won the district trophy in football and also reached the fourth round in the English Schools FA Cup.

1. References
Nearby Places View Menu
470 m

War Memorial, Lancaster Cemetery

The War Memorial, Lancaster Cemetery, was built to commemorate those lost in the Crimean War. It was erected in 1860, and designed by the local architect E. G. Paley. Its estimated cost was £120–140, but Paley made no charge for it. The monument is constructed in carboniferous limestone and consists of an obelisk on three steps. Its inscriptions include the names of the local men who died in the war. The obelisk stands 34 feet (10 m) high. The monument is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade II listed building.
563 m

Lancaster Cemetery Chapels

The Lancaster Cemetery Chapels are the three chapels, each built to serve a different denomination, in the main cemetery of Lancaster, England. The chapels stand around a central point at the highest part of the cemetery. They were all built in 1854–55, and were designed by the local architect E. G. Paley. The chapel to the west of the central point served the Anglicans, that to the east the Non-conformists, and the chapel to the north was for Roman Catholics.
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621 m

Williamson Park, Lancaster

Williamson Park in Lancaster, England, was constructed by millionaire James Williamson, 1st Baron Ashton, and his father, also called James Williamson. Its focal point is the Ashton Memorial. The park now covers an area of 53.6 acres (217,000 m2), having been extended in 1999 onto adjoining land, Fenham Carr, following a grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund.
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667 m

Bulk, Lancashire

Bulk is an area of Lancaster, Lancashire, England. It was formerly a township and a civil parish. The placename Bulke was recorded in 1346. The manor of Neuton was recorded in this area in the Domesday Book but by 1318 Newton was described as a hamlet within Bulk. The civil parish of Bulk was in Lancaster Rural District until 9 November 1900 when most of it (179 houses) was incorporated into the civil parish of Lancaster, with 9 houses going into the civil parish of Quernmore. The population of the civil parish of Bulk was 116 in 1871, 117 in 1881, and 671 in 1891. Bulk lies north of the city centre of Lancaster, and on the same side, the east, of the River Lune. The parish extended along the river to a point south of Halton on the other bank, the boundary then turning south and curving round towards Lancaster. There was a church mission room in Bulk by 1914. The mission's World War I war memorial has been relocated to the redundant St John's Church in Lancaster, and carries the names of 33 men from Bulk district, 30 of whom survived. The 11th Lancaster Scout group was based at the mission in the 1940s.