Baroness Thatcher

Author name

Margaret Thatcher was Britain's first female Prime Minister and the longest serving PM for over 150 years. She was born on 13 October 1925 in Grantham into a shop-keeping family and attended Huntingtower Primary school followed by Kesteven and Grantham Girls school. She was joint head girl before going to Oxford to study Chemistry.

Her father Alfred Roberts was a local councillor, and then Alderman and Mayor of the town and with others founded the Rotary Club of Grantham becoming President in 1936-37. There is a Margaret Thatcher exhibition in Grantham Museum. Lady Thatcher was very proud of her time at KGGS and gave the school much credit for the education she received there.

RECENT ARTICLES

31 Oct, 2023
John Wesley rested at the White Lion Inn (later the Blue Lion) on 18th February 1747. He also preached to a large crowd at the back of a house on Watergate on 9th July 1781.
30 Apr, 2022
This plaque was placed by the Rotary Club of Grantham to thank NHS and Key Workers who worked during the recent pandemic.
29 Apr, 2022
Angel and Royal plaque The Angel Inn was a 15th century gatehouse inn. King Richard III received the Great Seal here in 1483. The inn was renamed The Angel and Royal in 1866. The plaque was unveiled in June 2022.
30 Sep, 2021
Manuel Immanuel was thought to have been born around 1758. He may have been the son of a painter and illustrator of manuscripts of the same name in London. He was an immensely talented artist, and also designed scenery and interior designs of theatres. He used transparencies and lamps to illustrate his work, often illustrating full size animals such as elephants. In 1805 The New Street Theatre on Red Lion Street in Boston was built to house Robertson’s Touring Company. When it was completed in January 1806, it could accommodate 1,079 people. It was reported that the interior decorations from ‘the Masterly pencil of Mr Immanuel, evince a taste and genius, which add to the reputation he already acquired as an artist’. Whilst in Boston he joined the local Lodge of Freemasons. In 1809, there were many celebrations to commemorate King George III, who had acceded to the throne nearly fifty years before. At St Ives in Cambridgeshire, Mr Immanuel, who was at that time living in Bedford, painted a large transparency and was given huge acclaim for his work. At was noted that he had recently produced a similar piece in Huntingdon.
Show More
Share by: