which housed
Newington Academy for Girls from 1824 On returning to England in 1824 and with the assistance of the Quaker scientist and abolitionist
William Allen and his third wife
Grizell (1757–1835) Corder opened
Newington Academy for Girls in Fleetwood House in
Stoke Newington, the organisation of which she based on the school in Ireland she had recently left. Newington Academy for Girls issued its first prospectus on 14 August 1824 and it began taking pupils shortly thereafter. Corder was the headmistress of the new school, other founders of which included Anna Hanbury, mother of
Sir Thomas Buxton, 1st Baronet,
Luke Howard, pharmacist and meteorologist, Edward Harris, father-in-law of
Alfred Tylor, and
Samuel Gurney, banker. The first prospectus proposed "an Establishment in our religious society on a plan in degree differing from any hitherto adopted, wherein the children of Friends should not only be liberally instructed in the Elements of useful knowledge, but in which particular attention should be paid to the state of mind of each individual child". According to
Fleetwood House, "It started with twelve pupils, but more than doubled in three years. Subjects included Astronomy, Physics, and Chemistry, which were taught by William Allen; the languages available included Latin, Greek, German and Italian as well as French." Allen hired the poet and revolutionary
Ugo Foscolo to teach Italian, according to the
History of the County of Middlesex William Allen also made his telescope available for the use of the girls. For 15 years she was on the revising committee of the Morning Meeting. In 1841 Corder published
A Brief Outline of the Origin, Principles, and Church Government of the Society of Friends in which she emphasised her commitment to traditional Quaker dress, manners and teachings. ==Retirement and writing==