St Aidan's Catholic Academy, a Roman Cathoic secondary school in Sunderland, Tyne and Wear, England
Ashbrooke Hall, in Ashbrooke Road, had originally been built for glassmaker James Hartley in 1864 by architect Thomas Moore, whose masterpiece was Monkwearmouth Station.
•
St Aidan's Catholic Academy (formerly St Aidan's Catholic School) is a Roman Catholic boys' secondary school and sixth form with academy status, situated in the Ashbrooke area of Sunderland.
Academy Awards | Catholic Church | United States Military Academy | Russian Academy of Sciences | National Academy of Sciences | American Academy of Arts and Sciences | Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film | United States Naval Academy | United States Air Force Academy | Bishop (Catholic Church) | Royal Academy of Music | Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences | Brooklyn Academy of Music | Phillips Academy | Royal Military Academy Sandhurst | Phillips Exeter Academy | The Catholic University of America | Chinese Academy of Sciences | British Academy of Film and Television Arts | National Academy of Engineering | Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts | Academy of Fine Arts | Catholic Monarchs | British Academy | Academy Award for Best Picture | Bulgarian Academy of Sciences | Aidan Quinn | United States Conference of Catholic Bishops | Polish Academy of Sciences | Catholic University of Leuven |
He educated pre-school in Marcellis School, continued primary at St Aidan's Catholic School in Sydney, secondary at John Forrest Secondary College in Perth and later transferred in OB Montessori Center in Manila.
Jenny attended St Aidan’s Primary School in Winstanley before attending St Edmund Arrowsmith School in Ashton in Makerfield.
The £50 million project involves the football club, the University of Wolverhampton, St Edmund's Catholic Academy, the Archdiocese of Birmingham, and Redrow, the construction company founded by Wolves owner Steve Morgan.
St Aidan's Church of England Academy, a Church of England secondary school in Darlington, County Durham, England
In the 7th century Northumbria was ruled by the pagan leader Oswald who, upon converting to Christianity, established, with the help of St Aidan, a monastery at Lindisfarne, the Holy Island.