Leeds Grammar School (LGS) was founded in 1552 by Sir William Sheafield to provide free, subsidised or fee-paying education, according to need. In contemporary times, LGS is an independent fee-paying school, (in the UK also known, confusingly, as a Public School), and is a member of the Governing Bodies Association and of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference.
The school has been sited at a number of locations in Leeds:
- Its original location is thought to have been The Calls, by the River Aire, near the centre of the city.
- In 1624, John Harrison, a great Leeds benefactor, moved the school "to a pleasant Field of his own which he surrouded with a substantial Wall and in the midst of the Quadrangle built the present Fabrick of the school"
- The school was moved to a site on Woodhouse Moor in 1859. This site was subsequently sold to the University of Leeds.
- Most recently, in 1997, LGS moved to a purpose-built campus at Alwoodley Gates.
- The school will merge with Leeds Girls' High School in 2007.
Past pupils
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