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Danegrove Primary School

AC with 0 elementsCommunity schools in the London Borough of BarnetEast BarnetGrade II listed buildings in the London Borough of BarnetGrade II listed educational buildings
Primary schools in the London Borough of Barnet

Danegrove Primary School, formerly Littlegrove Mixed School and Oakland School, is a primary school in East Barnet in north London. It is on two sites, Ridgeway Avenue and Windsor Drive. The school buildings at Ridgeway Avenue, which joins Daneland, are grade II listed with Historic England.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Danegrove Primary School (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Danegrove Primary School
Cat Hill, London East Barnet (London Borough of Barnet)

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Wikipedia: Danegrove Primary SchoolContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

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N 51.644 ° E -0.159 °
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Address

Danegrove Primary School (Foundation - Year 1)

Cat Hill
EN4 8UD London, East Barnet (London Borough of Barnet)
England, United Kingdom
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Phone number

call+442084494024

Website
danegroveschool.co.uk

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Nearby Places

Oak Hill Wood
Oak Hill Wood

Oak Hill Wood is a 10-hectare Local Nature Reserve (LNR) and a Site of Borough Importance for Nature Conservation Grade I, in East Barnet, London. It is owned by the London Borough of Barnet, and part of it is a 5.5-hectare nature reserve managed by the London Wildlife Trust.It is an ancient woodland, dominated by pedunculate oak, hornbeam and ash. A shrub layer includes hawthorns, field maples and wild service trees, and among the ground flora are bluebells and wood anemones. Breeding birds include tawny owls, nuthatches, tree creepers and stock doves. A small stream flows through the wood to join Pymme's Brook, which is also a Site of Importance for Nature Conservation, in the neighbouring Oak Hill Park.There is also an area of meadow which contains common wild flowers such as lady's bedstraw and common knapweed. It has common butterflies such as gatekeeper, common blue and large blue.Oak Hill Wood dates back to at least the 11th century, when it was owned by the Church. After the dissolution of the monasteries, Church lands were sold in 1536–38 and incorporated in the Oak Hill Estate. In 1930 East Barnet Council acquired the land, and Oak Hill Park, including Oak Hill Wood, was opened to the public in 1933. In 1997 the wood was designated a Local Nature Reserve. An area of rough grassland in Oak Hill Park is included in the LNR.There is access from Mansfield Avenue, Daneland and Brookside, as well as from Oak Hill Park.