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Great Ayton Friends' School

1841 establishments in England1997 disestablishments in EnglandDefunct schools in North YorkshireEducational institutions disestablished in 1997Educational institutions established in 1841
Grade II listed buildings in North YorkshireGrade II listed educational buildingsGreat AytonQuaker schools in EnglandUse British English from February 2022
The Friends School Great Ayton1
The Friends School Great Ayton1

Great Ayton Friends' School (1841–1997) in Great Ayton, North Yorkshire, England, was an independent, co-educational, agricultural boarding school, run by the Religious Society of Friends (the Quakers). The school was situated on High Green on an estate of around 70 acres (280,000 m2). The River Leven (a tributary of the River Tees), ran through the school grounds and was bridged in several places.

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Great Ayton Friends' School
High Green,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 54.48785 ° E -1.13265 °
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High Green

High Green
TS9 6BF
England, United Kingdom
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The Friends School Great Ayton1
The Friends School Great Ayton1
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Roseberry Parkway railway station

Roseberry Parkway railway station (also known as Nunthorpe Parkway) is a proposed railway station which would be between Nunthorpe and Great Ayton railway stations on the Esk Valley Line, in North Yorkshire, England. The station was proposed in August 2019 by a joint project between Redcar & Cleveland and Middlesbrough Councils and the Tees Valley Combined Authority. The project is "aimed at easing road congestion and improving access to East Cleveland".A parkway station near Nunthorpe has been proposed since at least 2009 when funds were made available by the UK Government for studies into improving transport links in the East Cleveland area. The station was listed as Nunthorpe Parkway in the Tees Valley Metro Project documentation of 2010, though this maintained that any future station would be constructed after 2014. Roseberry Parkway station would serve an estimated population of 70,000 people and seek to encourage 30,000 car journeys away from the Marton Crawl, a name applied to the gridlock along the A-roads (A172 and A171) leading northwards into Middlesbrough.Although an exact site is not yet proposed, it is suggested that the station is situated in the shadow of Roseberry Topping and would be a transport hub connecting pedestrians, bikes, cars and buses with trains. Trains to Middlesbrough would run half-hourly, with the prospect of trains to Whitby being doubled. Local opinion on the proposals was mixed, with some suggesting a revamp of the station at Teesside Airport as a preferred option for a rail and bus interchange.