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  1. West Heath Girls' School was an English girls' private school established in 1865, initially in London and from 1932 near Sevenoaks, Kent. It closed in 1997. History. Philip Bennet Power and his wife, Emma, undertook the education of their own daughters at their Abbey Wood home, West Heath House.

  2. The school, founded in its current form as a charitable trust on 14 September 1998 as the Beth Marie Centre, is based in 31 acres (13 ha) of parkland on lease from Mohamed Al-Fayed, who contributed almost £3 million towards the school. The building formerly housed West Heath Girls' School, a girls' school with around 100 boarding pupils ...

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  4. Nov 20, 2023 · At the age of 12, Diana moved schools to join her sisters Sarah and Jane at West Heath Girls' School in Sevenoaks, Kent, in 1973. The exclusive institution boarded around 100 girls at the time.

  5. [1] Like her sisters, Lady Fellowes was educated at West Heath boarding school near Sevenoaks in Kent. Sources say she was an excellent student, achieving the status of school Prefect and passing a good number of A-level exams. To paraphrase Andrew Morton, Lady Fellowes acquired a "hatful" of O-level and A-level exams. [2] Marriage and children.

  6. West Heath School may refer to: West Heath Girls' School (1865–1997), a girls' boarding school in Kent, England. West Heath School (special school) (1998–), a special school in Kent, England. Category: Disambiguation pages.

  7. At the age of 12, or "junior high" age, she moved schools once again, this time to West Heath Girls' School in Kent, England, where both of her sisters also went.

  8. Lavinia Cohn-Sherbok (born Surrey, England) is a novelist, the author of numerous books about Judaism and Christianity, and was the Principal of West Heath Girls' School . Biography. She was educated at Benenden School, Girton College, Cambridge, and the University of Kent, Canterbury.

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