This site is presently occupied by the 2004 buildings of the Longley Park Sixth Form Centre. The site was previously occupied by Firth Park Grammar School (established on site 1920) which was housed within the enlarged buildings of a high status residence 'Brushes House' which had been created by the enlargement of a pre-existing farmstead in the 1780s by John Booth III (who was one half of the Booth and Walker partnership that founded Cupola works at Rotherham (see HSY 544). The site has been a farmstead since at least 1547 when it may have been taken by the state at the dissolution of the Chantries. Letters Patent of Queen Mary (Hunter 1869, 239). Evidence for a structure predating an early 18th century farmstead was encountered during archaeological work on the site in 2004, but no dating evidence for this structure was encountered (Gidman 2004) Recent redevelopment of the site has left little historic legibility.