In December 1931 Lady Hoskyns gave out the prizes; she attended the same Cambridge college as the headmistress.
[1] The speech day on 15 February 1938 was given by Prof Charles Melville Attlee (1894-1971) of University College Nottingham.
Due to lack of room, some girls chose to travel to Wisbech High School in preference.
The new school was officially opened Friday 20 March 1959 by Sir Herbert Butcher, with chairman of Holland Education Committee.
21 year old trainee classics teacher Miss Jennifer Jane Stearman, of 21 Redfearn Close in Cambridge, who taught with Mr Les Churchill, was killed in a vehicle collision, in a Morris 1000, with a truck on the evening of Sunday 18 February 1973, at the southern end of the A1073 Crowland bypass.
[8] A new £1.3m block would open in 1985, with construction starting in May 1984,[9] which would allow all teaching to take place on one site from January 1986.
[10] It was officially opened in March 1986 by Frances Manners, Duchess of Rutland; her mother featured in the 2021 A Very British Scandal; the Duchess was pleased that Lincolnshire retained grammar schools, saying 'freedom of choice is the sign of a free society'.
[12] The £559,000 technology centre was officially opened on Thursday 14 October 1993 by Prof Richard Kimbell, of Goldsmiths College.
[13] A new six-classroom £409,000 Languages block was approved by Lincolnshire County Council in May 1994, to start construction in December 1994.
[18] On 28 April 1983 13 year old Melanie Hampson had a serious javelin accident, and was taken to the Pilgrim Hospital.