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Connaught School for Girls

1932 establishments in EnglandAcademies in the London Borough of Waltham ForestEducational institutions established in 1932Girls' schools in LondonLeytonstone
Secondary schools in the London Borough of Waltham ForestUse British English from February 2023

Connaught School for Girls is a single-sex girls' secondary school and comprehensive school situated in Leytonstone, London. It educates up to 636 girls between the ages of 11 and 16. In February 2013 it became an academy.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Connaught School for Girls (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Connaught School for Girls
Dyers Hall Road, London Leytonstone (London Borough of Waltham Forest)

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N 51.56629 ° E 0.00461 °
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Connaught School for Girls

Dyers Hall Road
E11 4AE London, Leytonstone (London Borough of Waltham Forest)
England, United Kingdom
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call+442085393029

Website
connaught-school.co.uk

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Leytonstone Library
Leytonstone Library

Leytonstone Library is a public library in Leytonstone, London and a grade II* listed building. The library was built in 1934 for Leyton Urban District Council, and is now managed by the London Borough of Waltham Forest. The building's ground floor is let out to retail units with the library on the floor above, which allowed for the construction of a much larger building than would have otherwise been possible. This makes Leytonstone Library an early example of a library being constructed as part of multi-function buildings with both municipal and commercial services, according to Historic England who describe it as "a suburban branch library of considerable architectural ambition ". The front of the building and its entrance lobby, however, was still built in a grand art deco style under the instruction of librarian of the borough, Edward Sydney, with the intention that it should "reflect the pride of the local authority in its library service". During the Second World War, The British Ministry of Information commissioned a series of photographs of the library's interior showing patrons freely browsing the catalogues for use in war propaganda to show a stark contrast with Nazi book-burning, making the library a symbol of freedom and democracy.Following a £1.5 million investment from Waltham Forest Borough Council and an 11-month closure ending in September 2015, the library's facilities now include a theatre hall, upgraded ICT facilities and faster wi-fi, and dedicated sections for adults, teens and children.