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・ King Library
・ King Library (Miami University)
・ King Lie of Zhou
・ King Lincoln Bronzeville Neighborhood Ass'n v. Blackwell
・ King Ling College
・ King Ling of Chu
・ King Ling of Zhou
・ King Liu
・ King Lizard
・ King Lizzard
・ King Long
・ King Lot
・ King Louie
・ King Louie Bankston
・ King Louis
King Low Heywood Thomas
・ King Ludd
・ King Lumber Company Warehouse
・ King Ly Chee
・ King Lysen
・ King mackerel
・ King Magnus' Halt railway station
・ King Maker (TV series)
・ King Malabo
・ King Mandhata
・ King Mango Strut
・ King Manisarus
・ King Manor
・ King Mansion Dōjimagawa
・ King Marsile


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King Low Heywood Thomas : ウィキペディア英語版
King Low Heywood Thomas

King is a private, co-educational day school for pre-kindergarten through grade 12 in Stamford, Connecticut. The school serves children and families in the Fairfield County, Connecticut and Westchester County, New York areas.
==Formation and history==
King Low Heywood Thomas is the product of the convergence of three distinct independent schools that, from the beginning, shared similar educational missions.
The oldest of the schools, Low-Heywood, was founded by C.E. Richardson in 1865 and was located in downtown Stamford. In 1883, Louisa Low purchased Mrs. Richardson’s School for Girls. Her niece, Edith Heywood, was her assistant.
In 1875, Hiram King, a Dartmouth College graduate, was asked by several local families to form a private boys' school. King’s Day School was also located in downtown Stamford and had several homes before settling on Colonial Road in 1933. Twenty-five years later, the school building burned to the ground and was relocated to a replacement building. Five years later, the King School moved to the Simon Estate, the summer home of singer/songwriter Carly Simon and her family. The Simon House still stands on the campus, and serves as the location of many of the administrative departments of the school.
In the meantime, the Low-Heywood School was forced to move from its downtown location to Shippan Point to make way for the main post office building. The school was successful but in 1944, the heirs of Louisa Low and Edith Heywood sold the property on which the school was located. Within a month of the sale, the school relocated to Judge Lockwood’s estate on Courtland Avenue and, in 1969, finally settled into the Walker estate adjacent to the King School on Newfield Avenue.
While all this was going on in Stamford, a few miles away in Rowayton, Mabel Thomas created a school on her parent’s summer estate. Opening in 1922, the Thomas School was intended to be both a day and boarding school. According to a story in the Norwalk Hour, the school would offer “lessons in the morning and after a wholesome hot dinner, there will be games and sports in the afternoons, both indoor and outdoor, under the supervision of a physical director.”
In 1974, the neighboring Low-Heywood and King schools began coordinating their educational and extracurricular programs in the Upper Schools. In 1975, the Thomas School merged with the Low-Heywood School at the latter’s Newfield Avenue campus under the leadership of Headmistress Elizabeth Rockwell (Sue) Cesare, who steered the school through decades of growth. Cesare had been a graduate of the old Low-Heywood School on Shippan Point and had a deep love for the school. Both the King School and Low-Heywood-Thomas School maintained individual identities, although students could move back and forth between the schools for some classes ( called "coordination"), until 1988, when the King & Low-Heywood Thomas School were joined into a truly coeducational school. The Lower School and Middle School were located on the former King Campus while the Upper School took over the former Low-Heywood Thomas Campus. In July 2008, the School's name was officially changed to King Low Heywood Thomas, and its official nickname became "King."

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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