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King Edward VII School (KES) or King Edward School Lytham was a grammar, direct grant grammar and independent school for boys, founded in 1908 and situated in the coastal town of Lytham St. Annes, Lancashire.
King Edward VII and Queen Mary School (KEQMS) was an HMC independent co-educational school in Lytham St Annes, Lancashire, England, formed in 2000 by the merger of King Edward VII School and Queen Mary School. It merged with Arnold School, Blackpool, in 2012 to form AKS Lytham.
King Edward VII and Queen Mary School was supported by the Lytham charities, whose origins lay in the relief fund established following The Lytham flood in 1719. As the charity flourished, it broadened its outlook and developed an educational strategy which involved supporting local schools in Lytham and St Annes.
The School, to be called King Edward VII, Lytham was built by Messrs. William Eaves of Blackpool costing in all £59,424, a sum that could be afforded because of the wise investments following the sale of land in Blackpool.
King Edward VII School. King Edward VII School was erected at Fairhaven (on part of the Fairhaven Golf Club links) on Clifton Drive, alongside St.Paul's Avenue which was at that time the boundary between Lytham and St.Annes.
Information about King Edward VII School held in the Heritage Group archives . SUBLIMIS AB UNDA. It was built in 1908 by the Lytham Schools Foundation to school 200 boys. In 2000 it merged with Queen Mary's to form KEQMS remaining in the same building.
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