In 1898 the
Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur came to Leeds and to the two-classroom parish school of St Anne's situated behind it. In 1904 the main part of what is now the Sixth Form College was built and opened as Notre Dame Collegiate School for Girls from the age of eleven to fourteen. Notre Dame was one of three catholic
direct grant grammar schools in Leeds, and the second that was all-female from 1946. It later was known as Notre Dame Grammar School. The school was handed over to the
diocese in the 1970s when the
Sisters of Notre Dame changed their focus to education in developing countries. The school became Notre Dame High School in 1978, a catholic comprehensive school for ages 13–19 with around 650 girls. All the other Catholic direct grant schools in Leeds also changed this year. The sixth form college was formed in September 1989 as the sixth form centre for Catholic education in Leeds. It was decided to merge the boys and girls sixth forms together in one college (from, Notre Dame High School itself,
Mount St Mary's, St Michael's College and
Cardinal Heenan Catholic High School). For nearly ninety years before this, a girls' school was present on the same site. This was one of a network of girls' secondary schools in England and Scotland which belonged to the
Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur. Admissions for girls (Year 3, age 13–14 years old) ceased in 1989, with the school pupils present moving up each year, and a growing number of Sixth Form admissions. ==Admissions==