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St Barnabas Church, Hove

19th-century Church of England church buildingsAnglo-Catholic churches in England receiving AEOChurch of England church buildings in Brighton and HoveChurches completed in 1883Grade II* listed buildings in Brighton and Hove
Grade II* listed churches in East SussexJ. L. Pearson buildingsUse British English from September 2013
St Barnabas' Church, Sackville Road, Hove (NHLE Code 1187547) (July 2013) (3)
St Barnabas' Church, Sackville Road, Hove (NHLE Code 1187547) (July 2013) (3)

St Barnabas Church is an Anglican church in Hove, part of the English city of Brighton and Hove. It was built between 1882 and 1883 to serve residents of the newly developed streets to the south and west of Hove railway station, which had opened in 1865 and had stimulated growth in the previously undeveloped area between the Brunswick estate to the west and Cliftonville to the east.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article St Barnabas Church, Hove (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

St Barnabas Church, Hove
Sackville Road,

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N 50.8346 ° E -0.1774 °
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Address

St. Barnabas Church

Sackville Road 88
BN3 3HE , Aldrington
England, United Kingdom
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Website
stbarnabashove.co.uk

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St Barnabas' Church, Sackville Road, Hove (NHLE Code 1187547) (July 2013) (3)
St Barnabas' Church, Sackville Road, Hove (NHLE Code 1187547) (July 2013) (3)
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Nearby Places

Aldrington railway station
Aldrington railway station

Aldrington railway station, sometimes known by its former names of Aldrington Halt and Dyke Junction, is a railway station that serves the area of Aldrington in Hove, in East Sussex, England. The station is 1 mile 74 chains (3.1 km) from Brighton on the West Coastway Line. Dyke Junction Halt was opened in 1905 by the London, Brighton and South Coast Railway with short wooden platforms. In 1932 new longer platforms were constructed on an adjacent site nearer Hove to the previous platforms. They were renamed Aldrington Halt and later rebuilt in concrete by the Southern Railway. It is situated just east of the former junction with the branch line to Devil's Dyke, which opened in 1887 and closed in 1939; the layout and curvature of certain roads and buildings immediately north-west of the station indicates where the branch ran. The station was staffed during peak hours until approximately 1990, after which the hut which served as a ticket office was demolished. By 2009 the old concrete shelters had been replaced with reinforced plastic shelters which are now the only features on the platforms. Ramps lead down to street level. There are ticket-issuing machines at the entrances to each platform. Pre-purchased tickets can also be collected on these machines. There is no footbridge connecting the platforms with each other. However, there is a tunnel under the railway lines at the western end of the platforms which was originally built to allow the local farmer to move his cattle between fields which became separated with the arrival of the railway.

Hove Park School

Hove Park School is a mixed secondary school and sixth form centre located over two sites in Hove, East Sussex, England. The school is located over two sites in Hove: The Valley campus educates pupils aged 11 to 13 and 17-19 (academic years 7, 8 and sixth form), while the Nevill campus educates pupils aged 14 to 19 (academic years 9, 10 and 11), This has recently changed to other sixth form more space. The school offers GCSEs, NVQs and A Levels. In 2002 the school was accredited as a specialist Language College. Although the specialist schools programme has ended Hove Park School continues to specialise in languages, and offers courses in French, German, Spanish and Mandarin, as well as extra-curricular courses in Japanese and Arabic, as well as some more common languages. The school also participates in the European Union funded Interreg IVa programme, which organises regular educational and cultural exchanges with pupils from Europe. In August 2012, the school was first in Brighton and Hove for Most improved schools, being 2nd in the South East and 12th Nationally. Since then, an increase in their ofsted rating which sees them rise from a "satisfactory" rating to a "good rating", the second highest rating by ofsted. Most recently, they have issued students with their own Apple devices, and are one of the first schools in the country to do that. Moves by authorities in 2013–14 to convert the school into an academy were opposed by many parents and teachers, campaigning as Hands Off Hove Park. In September 2014, Hove Park's then headteacher Derek Trimmer urged governors to oppose academy status, and the governors voted against the academy proposal.