Edith Elizabeth Maria Creak (1855 – 1919) was one of the first five students at Newnham College, Cambridge and the founding head of two girls' schools: Brighton and Hove High School, at the age of twenty, and King Edward VI High School for Girls in Birmingham.
She was employed by the Girls' Day School Trust and at the age of twenty she became the head of their new school in Brighton. It was called "Brighton High School", and it was the Trust's tenth school when it opened in June 1876. It was based at Milton House on Brighton's Montpelier Road, and it initially had seventeen pupils. She moved the school in 1879 to its permanent location at "The Temple" on Montpelier Road.
In 1883, Creak became the founding head of the Girls' Day School Trust's new girls' school in Birmingham. She was a successful head but as she grew older, she became more conservative. She had supported women's suffrage, but she turned against the idea and established a Birmingham branch of the Women's National Anti-Suffrage League in 1908. Her attitude led to her resignation in 1910. She died on 20 May 1919.
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