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Milham Ford School

Milham Ford School
Marston Road site, Oxford Brookes University.JPG
View of the main building from Jack Straw's Lane
Established 1890s
Closed 2003
Type Community school
Religion Church of England
Location Harberton Mead
Oxford
United Kingdom
OX3 0DF
DfE URN 123249 Tables
Gender Girls

Milham Ford School was a girl's secondary school in Oxford, England, located in the suburb of New Marston on Marston Road.

The origins of the school started in the 1890s (probably 1893), when two sisters, Emma and Jane Moody, started a private nursery school for boys and girls, located in their house in Iffley Road, east Oxford.

By 1898, the school had moved to a cottage in Cowley Place, south from The Plain, on the River Cherwell close to Magdalen Bridge and Magdalen College School. The school was named after the "Milham Ford" across the river close to this location. The original Milham Ford was used to talke stone during the building of Christ Church, Oxford, the largest college of Oxford University, to avoid damaging Magdalen Bridge. There was also a Milham Bridge here, but this was demolished during the English Civil War.

In 1904, the school was sold to the Church Education Corporation by Emma and Jane Moody. The original cottage was enlarged in 1906. It began as a private foundation but in 1923 was sold to the City of Oxford local education authority, which rapidly expanded it by adding huts as extra classrooms.

In 1939, the school moved to new and larger premises on a 16-acre (6.5 ha) site between Harberton Mead (which was its address) and Marston Road, south of Jack Straw's Lane. The original foundation stone from 1906 was moved to the new site in Marston. One of the huts was later dismantled re-erected in Cowley as a bandhall for the City of Oxford Silver Band.


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