place

Bitterne railway station

1866 establishments in EnglandDfT Category F2 stationsFormer London and South Western Railway stationsRailway stations in Great Britain opened in 1866Railway stations in Southampton
Railway stations served by Govia Thameslink RailwayRailway stations served by South Western RailwaySouth East England railway station stubsUse British English from May 2015
Bitterne Station
Bitterne Station

Bitterne railway station is located in eastern Southampton, England. It is on the main Southampton to Portsmouth coastal line, and serves the suburbs of Bitterne, Bitterne Manor, Bitterne Park and Midanbury.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Bitterne railway station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Bitterne railway station
Bitterne Road West, Southampton Saint Denys

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address External links Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Bitterne railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 50.918 ° E -1.377 °
placeShow on map

Address

Bitterne

Bitterne Road West
SO18 1AQ Southampton, Saint Denys
England, United Kingdom
mapOpen on Google Maps

linkWikiData (Q4919061)
linkOpenStreetMap (7172241115)

Bitterne Station
Bitterne Station
Share experience

Nearby Places

St Mary's Independent School, Southampton
St Mary's Independent School, Southampton

St Mary's Independent School, formerly named St Mary's College, was an independent day school for boys and girls in Southampton, Hampshire, England. The school was located on the site of a former a country house called Bitterne Grove, built c1790 by Richard Leversuch. In 1910 it was bought by the French order of the Brothers of Christian Instruction and renamed as St Mary’s House. Initially it was a centre for students who were exiled from France due to anti-clerical laws passed there in 1903 and training for the Brotherhood, until the centre was relocated to Highlands College, Jersey, in the Channel Islands. In 1922 it became the first Secondary School for Catholic boys in Southampton, under the name of St Mary’s College, and opened with five Brothers and 30 pupils. During the Second World War rapid expansion of the school took place; the number of pupils passing from 200 at the start of the War to 400 at the end. In 1992 the junior department started taking girls and in 2000 the senior department was opened to girls, and latterly approximately 25% of the pupils were girls. Former pupils are known as Old Simmarians.From 1925 to 1964 Rev Brother Maurice worked at the school. Before WWI he had been sent as a teacher amongst the Blackfoot Indians in Montana and Eskimos on the Yukon River. During the war he served with great distinction in the French Medical Corps. He was twice wounded and also mentioned three times in dispatches for gallantry. He was awarded the Croix de Guerre with palm and two stars, as well as the Médaille Militaire and, for his bravery on the battlefield of Verdun in 1916, the Legion of Honour Military Medal. He was twice headmaster of St Mary’s (1928–31 and 1937–43) and later head of its prep-school, Charlton.In 2013 Ofsted judged the school as 'Good'. In 2018 another inspection judged it to 'Requires Improvement'. In 2019 it was reinspected and judged 'Inadequate'.In 2020 the school went into administration following financial difficulties which had been "significantly impacted" due to the coronavirus pandemic. The school was acquired and refurbished by private investors and re-opened in Sept 2021 as a school for children aged 7–16 with social, emotional and mental health needs, under the new name of Yarrow Heights School.