In 1868 it was decided to move the school; now the number of students reached 55. The property is Drottninggatan 108 was an enclosed courtyard with two more houses. A woman who came to play a big role in the early school years on Drottninggatan was Jenny Müller. She was the daughter of one of six Swedish women who in 1858 was exiled in the so-called convert process. These women had converted to Catholicism and had to leave Sweden. Jenny Müller thus grew up in France. In 1862, 18 years old, she returned to Sweden. In 1870, two years after the school's relocation, mademoiselle Modelon died only 41 years old on 13 April. In the coming years on Drottninggatan the school changed radically. Between 1872 and 1878 the number of students doubled from 43 to 112. And where the school initially had poor students the bourgeoisie now started to put their children in the school, there was certainly an attraction to the French language and culture, which they believed to be refined. The school did not deny students based on politics or economics, and famous socialist
Hjalmar Branting enrolled his daughter Sonja in the school in 1897, where she was well received. During the 1880s had sanitary conditions deteriorated substantially in Stockholm and
Albert Lindhagen presented a plan that would transform Stockholm into a modern stone town. Drottninggatan, where the school is now based, would change and the school building were to be demolished. Therefore, the school again had to look for new properties. At the end of 1909 they found what they were looking for, at Döbelnsgatan 7 and 9. A major renovation was needed because there were homes in the houses, and October 1, 1910 the school bought the property for 230 000, in today's money 12,200,663 SEK . The last graduation at Drottninggatan 108 were held on 30 May 1911. ==Döbelnsgatan and the hills surrounding St. John's Church==