[5] The Hall that was leased to Woodleigh School, owned at the time by their descendants, the Howard-Vyse family, is a Grade II listed building.
[6] The entrance gates on the east side of Langton Hall and the flanking wall, dating from the middle of the 19th century, were added to the listed buildings register in 1966.
[21] Emphasis was placed on the creative arts, in the form of drama, literature, writing,[22] both in the classroom and by organising[23] and taking part in regional and national events such as Youth Speaks[24] and the Kids Lit Quiz.
[25] Sports classes were run every day,[26] and pupils, including Tom Hoggard and Jack Garrity, competed at county and national level in football and cricket.
Pupils created cards to help them learn about the properties of food,[31] and with the help of the Headteacher, they developed this into a Top Trumps style game.
The Grocer magazine ran an article about the initiative which aimed to raise funding from public and private sources in order to distribute the game free to every school in the country as part of the national "Year of Food and Farming.